Kalcifer
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I wonder if he’ll make a video (if he hasn’t already) on why he chose to switch to Linux; I’m quite interested to hear what made him decide to switch, and I’m also very interested to hear what issues, if any, he encountered along the way.
Kalcifer@sh.itjust.worksto linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Since Xorg is getting old, looking at trying Wayland WMs0·3 months ago[…] [Hyprland] is made by a transphobe and a large part of the community is also […]
Do you have a source?
I think this is a very clever idea! Very cool! You mentioned that it was anodized to look like this [2]. The colors, to me, are reminiscent of the colors that steel produces when heated [1]. Is there any similarity in the process, or is this something completely separate?
References
- “Heat Tint (Temper) Colours on Stainless Steel Surface Heated in Air”. British Stainless Steel Association. Accessed: 2025-01-04T22:16Z. https://bssa.org.uk/bssa_articles/heat-tint-temper-colours-on-stainless-steel-surface-heated-in-air/.
- §“Heat tint colour chart”
- This chart shows the range of colours that form on the surface of stainless steel (described as an oxide layer), as a function of temperature, when it is heated.
- §“Heat tint colour chart”
- “Titanium Sunset”. @scribbler@lemmy.world. “Art Share” !artshare@lemmy.world. sh.itjust.works. Lemmy. Published: 2025-01-04T21:47:50Z. Accessed: 2025-01-04T22:30Z. https://sh.itjust.works/post/30589186.
[…] I’ve been experimenting with creating art by selectively anodizing titanium. […] This piece started off as a photo of a beach at sunset that I color mapped into the anodized Ti spectrum and printed.
- “Heat Tint (Temper) Colours on Stainless Steel Surface Heated in Air”. British Stainless Steel Association. Accessed: 2025-01-04T22:16Z. https://bssa.org.uk/bssa_articles/heat-tint-temper-colours-on-stainless-steel-surface-heated-in-air/.
Neo-neolithic? 😜