Afriend sent me a file to print. Both in stl and obj and in mm and inches. He has sent me files before and they print fine. But this time when I open them in prusa slicer the object is so small you can hardly see it. Is the problem on his end or mine. The guy that is sending me the file knows what he is doing, a CAD specialist, and we can't figure it out. HELP!
We need more information. Also preferably the files too. STL files don't have a size, they are assumed to be in mm though as that is what PS expects. If it gets a very small file its now supposed to ask if the object was created in inches and scale it up if you answer yes. The software also has the inches tickbox now.
Not sure about obj format as its not something I commonly use. The usual zip of your saved project .3mf file and attach it would be a good start, and if you know how big the object is supposed to be that could help someone figure it out. Would also help to know what the CAD source program is in case anyone is familiar with that too.
Here's one of the files. The slicer does not ask to change from inches to mm but it shows up in inches. I checked/unchecked the little box to mm but the object does not get bigger. The object is roughly 8 long x 5 1/2 wide x 1/2 high inches. Don't know what the CAD program is but I'll find out. File attached.
if its supposed to be in inches then if you right click on the object in PS you can select 'convert from imperial units'. That scales it to 9.09"x6.25"x0.75" which sounds like what you were expecting.
The 3mf you attached had a mk3 selected . If that is what your printer is then its only out of bounds as the part in standing on one edge when imported in (as the model will have been modelled in that orientation). If you use the place to face tool the part fits easily on the mk3 bed.
I have been referring to the Fusion Digital Power Designer GUI 7.0 for the UCD90xxx Sequencer User Guide to help with my customer inquiries but came across a question I want to check and see if there's any additional details.
My customer currently has a system file (.tifsp) and wants to convert an individual configuration to a .csv data flash script file. There's some details in Chapter 5 about exporting the files but he mentioned that it required the Fusion Gui to be connected to the device. Is there a way to convert the files offline?
In an effort to further enhance public understanding of al-Qa'ida, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) on 1 November 2017 released additional materials recovered in the 2 May 2011 raid on Usama Bin Ladin's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.
With the release of these materials, the information remaining in the collection that has not been released publicly includes materials that are protected by copyright; sensitive such that their release would directly damage efforts to keep the nation secure; pornography; malware; blank, corrupted, and duplicate files. The entire collection has been available to the US Intelligence Community and Department of Defense organizations for years.
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) previously released documents from the collection on 20 May 2015, 1 March 2016, and 19 January 2017 after an interagency review spearheaded by the CIA. The releases align with ODNI initiatives for increased transparency - consistent with national security prerogatives - and the 2014 Intelligence Authorization Act, which required the ODNI to conduct a review of the documents for release.
CIA's 1 November 2017 release includes additional al-Qa'ida letters, videos, audio files, and communications, as well as routine family correspondence. As a result, it builds on the ODNI releases that provided material relevant to understanding the plans and workings of terrorist organizations. The material is posted in its original Arabic format and in as close to the original form as possible, modified only so the files cannot be edited.
Exploring the Collection
All of the material, which includes audio, document, image, video, and software operating system files, can be found on the All Original Files section of this page. To view material by category, refer to the Audio, Documents, Images, and Video pages. To view the material by the device from which it originated, refer to the Devices page. Lastly, to view Microsoft Office files of various ages and formats that CIA has converted to Portable Document Format (PDF) for ease of viewing, refer to the Converted Material page.
(Updated 8 November 2017)
Bin Ladin's Journal 1 November 2017 In addition to the computer files and digital media recovered in the May 2011 raid on Usama Bin Ladin's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, CIA recovered Bin Ladin's journal. As part of the 1 November 2017 release, CIA made available photographs of the journal, which includes an entry the day before Bin Ladin's death. Please note the photographs were taken in the urgent hours after the raid as the US Intelligence Community analysts reviewed the material in search of clues that would reveal ongoing al-Qa'ida plots, as well as the identities and locations of al-Qa'ida personnel, and other information of immediate importance.
Journal Download Links (118 MB): [pdf] [zip] [tgz] [zip md5] [tgz md5]
My colleague and I are both working on the same project and building an Storyline 360 project. They have the most up to date version of the file in question, and I'm currently on an older version of the file (that's file, not software version).
Now, this is only because he is working on what I guess we can call the "master" file if you will and updating it with a corresponding version number each iteration. I'm, at present, building some additional elements in an older version of the project file with the aim being that my colleague can simply copy and paste the required elements into his "master" version if you will, and save a new version.
To help with transferring the files over to my colleague, I'm deleting all the slides and any unnecessary stuff from my version to reduce the file size. So let's say, as an example, I've edited slides 8, 12 and 16. I then delete all the other slides leaving only those 3 I've done and save it under a different version/name.
The file size of this newly saved file with the unnecessary slides and stuff deleted, is just as big as the original file I was working with, defeating the point of deleting those slides I don't need to reduce the file size when uploading it for my colleague to then download the file later.
It seems that just by "deleting" something, although it disappears from the slide, the data itself is still remaining in the Storyline file. Is there a way to actually remove this data so the file size is reduced?
I ask because the file I'm working from has a load of videos and other multi-media content that I don't need to retain at all when uploading for my colleague to grab the bits I've done for them. It's like that despite deleting half a dozen videos and half a dozen slides, saving it as a new file doesn't reduce the file size.
I should also point out that the reason for doing this is that I want to keep the current template settings and colour palette. I know I could import a template, but of-late I've found this to be a tad hit and miss in specific areas so I didn't want the headache of having to go back through the template master slides and check each one.
I'm guessing SL is keeping track of deletions in the hidden temporary files inside the .story somewhere. Reopening and saving again means that "history" is no longer there so the files are actually removed when you save after reopening.
I just purchased your software and do not want to use my local C: disk for file management. I use Microsoft One Drive and want to store all my files there. Performance is not an issue for me. How can I do this?
Strongly suggest that you save your backups as zip files which are more stable on cloud drives. Make sure your set to keep a local copy and the folder where your active projects are should not be on one drive but on the computer. Remember every active project folder can be recreated from a zipped backup if that folder was lost. I use Google Drive this way as 2 dollars a month for 100 gigs of storage, which is much cheaper than the pay dropbox plan for 2 terabytes (nothing smaller).
I use thumb drives as an extra backup option when actively writing or editing a book in Scrivener as an additional backup source.
I also have Idrive backup my whole computer as an additional backup method. Paranoid and backup all my music and digital pictures with Idrive.
I wanted to use OneDrive as a seamless backup solution. OneDrive is a well established third-party service that is used by over 85 percent of the Fortune 500 companies having OneDrive and SharePoint across 250,000 organizations worldwide including on and offline banking. Because of the rigor and security provided with OneDrive I am not concerned. OneDrive only has as much control of my files as I give it.
Repeating above, best to have your Scrivener files local outside of OneDrive sync, but feel free to direct all the automatic Scrivener backup zips to a OneDrive synced folder. Watch though that if those zips get deleted or corrupted those flaws will pass up to OneDrive on next sync.
I figured out that Microsoft OneDrive works just fine with Scrivener. After setting up the proper folder structure I tested creating a project, editing it, backing it up, recovering it from the backup, then verifying the backup worked. Again, all under a OneDrive folder.
As said not a good idea to have your active project folder on one drive. This should be on local copy in computer.
Remember, a zip backup can recreate your project folder when extract it.
Also as Vincent said need at least one more backup strategy such as external drive. I use a 32 gig usb key.
I use google drive for zip backups saved locally as well and my third backup is the whole computer with IDrive.
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