Are we upside down because not everyone pays their dues, or is it because the amount is too small to keep up?
Not so much not paying, it's more to the fact that it's not consistent. We have a lot of newer members that signed up, paid a month or 2, then diapered. Some will miss a month, then catch up the next, or I'll receive dues in the middle of the month, and some at the first of the month. things like that.
It's OK for now, but when we get moved we will be establishing different levels of membership and things like that. I just wanted to show a typical month for those wanting to know what the money was for since I have been slaking on the books
Both I sure hate when they get diapered. Are Depends included in the monthly dues?
Last Edit: Aug 18, 2017 15:16:34 GMT -5 by ZionPhil
OpenLOCK System is an open source scenery locking system. OpenLOCK System will allow you to build interlocking scenery items, swap walls and floors, it connects 360 and will tessellate perfectly.
OpenLOCK is based on the 1 inch square Dungeon Tile
The purpose of releasing the OpenLOCK System as Creative Commons Public Licence is to encourage others to develop cross compatible scenery and to provide a convenient platform for the community. You can use the OpenLOCK System files to make your own tiles and distribute them under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial CC BY-NC.
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International Public License
Poppy Humanoid is an open-source and 3D printed humanoid robot. Optimized for research and educational purposes, its modularity allows for a wide range of applications and experimentations.
You can buy all pieces by yourself BOM link, or buy robot without printed parts on one of Poppy distributors.
About Poppy Project
Poppy is an interdisciplinary platform gathering beginners and experts, scientists, educators, developers, and artists, that all share a vision: robots are powerful tools to learn and be creative.
The Poppy community develops robotic creations that are easy to build, customize, deploy, and share.
I would like to thank everyone at The MakerHive for the help and suggestion for correcting this problem with my printer. The correct solution was to decrease the Y axis acceleration. The printer was trying to drive the stepper motor faster than it could turn.