boothin
The most important part of those instructions is usually to set it to half power
Exist but pretty rare or you have to solder them yourself. Here’s one I found on Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Plastic-AA-Battery-Holders-Block/dp/B01MQY5JZX
Reactions take a resource like an action, bonus action, etc do. You can see the resources that each reaction you have takes from your character window, there is a reaction button at the top somewhere. The purple star is the reaction resource and you should find that sentinel takes one of those, therefore you can only use it once per turn.
You missed their latest response a few hours ago
https://twitter.com/unity/status/1703547752205218265
Octoprint can only connect to 1 printer at a time, so if you want to use 2 printers at the same time you need 2 separate instances of octoprint. I use portainer so passing through a device is just a matter of finding the device path on the host machine and plugging its path into the portainer config under the runtime & resources tab. In a docker compose you’d use the devices key, for example
devices:
- /dev/ttyUSB1:/dev/ttyUSB1
You will likely need to create a separate alias for the host USB path though because devices can be found in a different order every reboot so the path will change. The USB device alias will be based on the device vendor and product id so it will be persistent. https://michaelgreenhill.net/persistent-addressing-for-usb-devices-in-linux/ is one site that explains the issue and how to deal with it
Luckily the S in USB stands for serial, so I have 3 printers connected to my server via USB and each one has its own octoprint docker container
Yes, there are differences between those things.
Poaching is cooking in hot liquid, but the liquid is not boiling or even simmering, so it is a lower temp than both.
Saute generally means you’re using a small amount of oil/fat and stirring/tossing the food to spread the oil/fat around on everything while cooking everything. Pan frying generally means you’re cooking a larger piece of something and not tossing it around.
Dude in the back is working on dessert with that CAKE
Your Firefox should be doing this automatically when it detects the system needs more memory. You shouldn’t need to do it manually in almost any case