awesome! I've been thinking how to do it. Like if I highlight from Kindle or Calibre, how do I get them to Anki. However as an avid Anki user for language studying, one issue I found is that the most difficult part is keeping up with sheer amount of review from Anki. I could have hundreds of review, but not having enough time to study them. And I would imagine reading would generate a lot of highlights users want to remember, which would make it much more difficult. So now I am thinking the filtering and condensing parts of such method should be emphasized.
Yeah, I feel this pain. I don't have any really great ideas on this front. I've started to have different review sessions using the filter function in Lurnby, but it doesn't really solve the fact that the amount to review just continues to grow.
On that end, having been using this tool and process for about a year now, I've come to the feeling that I shouldn't worry about that and just think of it as a part of my daily process.
Rather than being goal oriented about remembering something, I've just started to trust that the information is in the system and the system works. Things naturally and serendipitously appear in my review feed and my memory and retention of them improve, but in a less planned way than it might be with a more focused process.
I interviewed with quite a few companies in the SF Bay Area for firmware and embedded software engineer positions since August. Most of them require onsite from 3 to 4 days a week. I think you can definitely work onsite software jobs in firmware and embedded positions.
I guess then - why not go all-plastic, or all-metal. I fear that if there's large differences in temperature, you're going to start having a really bad time.
You can for that matter pick a glassy self-healing core near the appropriately made metal shaft, continuous rubber as you fill out the radius, and coated harder (UHD) nylon at the outer, but who's to care to make it like that? Ship it with the dough hooks, maybe.
Or as you suggest, printing open-grid metal-inclusion ceramics could go swimmingly for the less green home refactory applications. There goes little Sigfried, recasting his molybdenum iWatch band with the concentrated symmetry-breaking solar from the shed.