Update: the lower foundation wall has been extended, and with more details added to the Batcave
It's a work in progress but it's coming along nicely...
Wirklich schade, dass Lego den „This-is-fine-Bausatz“ nie selbst herausgebracht hat.
#ThisIsFine #MOC #Klemmbausteine #Meme
6yo's micro build of General Grievous in 20 elements.
Preparing my #JavaScript talk as #FOSDEM
My #LEGO #MOC maxifig always gets a good reaction!
https://fosdem.org/2025/schedule/event/fosdem-2025-4227-25-years-of-javascript/
I recently finished building this #lego #mazdamx5 NA #moc. It's not perfect, in part because I chose to stick with the limited amount of parts that I had lying around, but I think the end result is actually fairly good. While it's not the largest build I've ever done, it's probably been the hardest due to the overall complexity of the subject and parts limitations.
What do you think?
@nsartor If all your media is stored on the Linux server, you can also login using SSH and play music using MOC or CMUS on the command line.
I'm busy writing a #Python program that creates (virtual) #Lego #moc files for #LEOCad. But, I've hit a #combinatorics wall, and my #maths-fu fails me here...
Are/is there any #programmer and/or #mathematician who can help me?
See picture for what I'm trying to do...
MOC is a console music player that supports themes. After a few hours coding with Python and PyQt, I already have a working application that creates custom themes for MOC.
If you feel adventurous, make your own theme for MOC.
Since themes are just text files, it is easy to create new ones. User defined themes are expected in ~/.moc/themes/.
Here is the adventure map.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/MOC
Looking to spicing up your MOC experience on Linux, just download a new theme from the internet.
There are some MOC themes on Github.
https://github.com/wimstefan/mocp-themes/tree/master
Download and save the theme file to the MOC theme directory
~/.moc/themes/
Launch MOC on the command line
$ mocp
Press "Shift + T" and select your theme.
Press "Enter" and your done.
CMUS and MOC are two audio players that are easier to use. They both just work out-of-the-box; you just install them and they just work without editing any configuration files.
Supposedly, MPD and ncmpcpp have more options and features but require editing configuration files to get them both to work properly. After editing a few files, I still could not get them working. Things do not have to be this hard to listen to audio files on Linux.
What is the best command line (console) audio player on Linux?