Kolanaki,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

I keep them all in a little Tupperware so they don’t roll all over the place. And then I am real careful not to knock the Tupperware off the table.

GladiusB,
@GladiusB@lemmy.world avatar

I did this until I started fixing my kid’s Switch too. So I bought a silicone mat. Legit one of the best 10 dollars from Amazon I have spent for fixing electronics.

tias,

How does a silicone mat help?

GladiusB,
@GladiusB@lemmy.world avatar

It’s got cut outs that hold smaller screws and parts. Plus it’s sticky against the table so it doesn’t roll away.

hungryphrog,

Just use a magnet.

Reygle, (edited )
@Reygle@lemmy.world avatar

NVME screw: phases outside of our dimension before even reaching the floor

Also I really want to know why this can’t be tapped for a standard case screw or even a chassis thumbscrew. Been pissing me off since msata and nvme even became a thing. Such great storage and it can’t be mounted with a standard @!#%^ing screw that everything else uses WHY?

uis,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

It’s M2. Regular computer screw is M3. M3 is 1mm bigger than M2.

Reygle,
@Reygle@lemmy.world avatar

Somebody somewhere should change this- sure leave the pathetic screw for laptops but in desktops there’s no reason for it.

LaSaucisseMasquee,

Could we have fractions of inches instead please ?

Pyr_Pressure,

Best I can do is decimals of inches

uis,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

M2 for M.2

Blackmist,

And why are there multiple sizes of NVME screw?

uis,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

It seems most of screws have same size, but different thread pitch.

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