Pixelfed account: https://pxlmo.com/buffy
To be fair, they are very common birds in many places!
That does look like Rio Grande in New Mexico, indeed! I remember seeing videos of the place and thinking “damn this looks a lot like Colorado”.
But to answer your question: no, those pics were taken in Colorado!
One of the reasons I really like seeing your posts is that the birds are so exotic to me!
Shout out to @[email protected] and @[email protected] too!
I am half-joking because I know if I go to a different area I will spot other birds. But also I went to a place where there are (in theory) roughly 75 bird species inhabiting the space this month, and it’s clear that the vast majority of animals you see there are from the same species. You need to be consistent, persistent, and diligent to spot something “rare”. But that’s the joy of it, so it’s all good!
Thank you! I’m glad you like the photos.
I agree on the turtle! I decided to post the pics on Pixelfed first, then share them here. For some reason, I thought I’d share a different picture of the turtle on Lemmy, but this one is much more appealing indeed.
Thanks! I didn’t have the icc profiles correctly set, which might be one of the problems with my setup.
I was initially having issues with the Raster2CanonIJS
and Command2CanonIJ
binaries (that I copied to /usr/lib/cups/filter
): cups was raising some errors when executing the scripts. But after fixing those, I wouldn’t get any further errors or warnings, although the printer would simply be unresponsive while the job was set as “completed”. I will check if the problem was the lack of icc profiles under /usr/share/color/icc.
That I understand, but my problem is the ppd file includes paths like *cupsFilter: "application/vnd.cups-command 0 /Library/Printers/Canon/BJPrinter/Filters/Command2CanonIJ.bundle/Contents/MacOS/Command2CanonIJ"
. I extracted those binary files too, put them in a cups folder, and adapted the path to point at the correct locations, but the scripts don’t seem to work on Linux. Same thing for the turboprint thing, the commands like (canontoturboprint) are not doing anything from what I can tell
I could successfully decompress all the relevant files from the dmg file. Now I need to figure out a way of properly installing them in a cups directory. For instance, I don’t know where I should put /Library/Printers/Canon
. But it seems to me that I have all the files required to make it work.
Thanks for the recommendation! I tried both, but sadly it didn’t work.
I could extract the ppd file from the MacOS driver, but I still need to substitute some OS specific paths that lead to executable files and icc profiles, like *cupsFilter: "application/vnd.cups-raster 0 /Library/Printers/Canon/BJPrinter/Filters/Raster2CanonIJ/Raster2CanonIJS.bundle/Contents/MacOS/Raster2CanonIJS"
. Not that many, just two or three. I will most likely try to install the drivers on a MacOS VM and see if I can extract those files and place them in a Linux-specific cups directory (/usr/lib/cups
or something). I think so far the odds are even.
Update: It looks like I have all the binary files with me. Raster2CanonIJS, Command2CanonIJ, the ICC profiles and whatnot. I’m now looking for some guidance on where I should place those files on Linux, that would belong in /Library/Printers/Canon/...
, etc. on MacOS.
Thanks! It seems like the “dead link” is just telling us how to install any printer using CUPS, sadly. But the second link might help me, given that I can try to extract a ppd driver from the provided macOS drivers.
You are right, those are contradictory. I meant doing it for now and sandboxing the VM while I work on finding a solution. I’m now trying to extract the useful part of the MacOS drivers and see if I can run it natively on Linux.
Edit: I edited the original post slightly to address your point, which I fully agree with.
I can post more photos of that specific tree later this week
That’s awesome! Thank you for sharing that, because I actually looked it up and look what I found: https://www.lib.montana.edu/acoustic-atlas/acoustic-atlas-blog/posts/can-robins-hear-worms.html
I don’t know what science has to say about how smart they are, but they definitely seem to always know what they are doing. They have such complex behavior and are extremely efficient at eating and nesting. Indeed really fun to watch!
Haha, now I can’t unsee it! I guess the whole thing was more obvious in person.
Oh, then I’m glad that I posted it! What a coincidence.
Great photo, thanks for sharing! I love the background, too.
Haha, nailed it! I can hear this picture, too!
Thanks! I also like the geometry and colors of the playground in the background, it gives the photo a nice effect. That’s why I picked this one to post here.
That’s neat! The first peak you can see from right to left is Bear Peak, in Boulder. If you look more to the left from the top of Mt Morrison, you’ll be able to see Apache, Kiowa, and North Arapahoe peaks, which can be seen from where I was.