It's rent-seeking. It's always rent-seeking. They can make you pay money for something, so they will. That's how this game works.Security measure? Boxing out third-party tools? Or something more complex?
This was my thought. An explicit "LAN mode" that isn't actually locked to the local LAN? You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.A "security update" that requires local LAN use to also travel to/from a remote cloud server is NOT a security update. Printers should be totally walled off from the outside WAN, not required to talk to things out there. If the local printer owner chooses to poke a hole in the firewall to allow remote printing, then any bad stuff happening is on local owner.
Bambu, just admit what this really is, a first step toward more control over devices that end purchasers thought they owned.
Well, strictly it is an "update that impacts security" since it degrades it by requiring you not air gap it.... It's the kind of security update that says: Due to a new security update, your information now has a greater chance of appearing in a data leak.A "security update" that requires local LAN use to also travel to/from a remote cloud server is NOT a security update. Printers should be totally walled off from the outside WAN, not required to talk to things out there. If the local printer owner chooses to poke a hole in the firewall to allow remote printing, then any bad stuff happening is on local owner.
Bambu, just admit what this really is, a first step toward more control over devices that end purchasers thought they owned.
Besides a subscription fee for the required cloud service, they probably have plans to DRM the filament spools somehow "to protect the device" like HP, etc. do.A "security update" that requires local LAN use to also travel to/from a remote cloud server is NOT a security update. Printers should be totally walled off from the outside WAN, not required to talk to things out there. If the local printer owner chooses to poke a hole in the firewall to allow remote printing, then any bad stuff happening is on local owner.
Bambu, just admit what this really is, a first step toward more control over devices that end purchasers thought they owned.
Wait for reviews of Creality's Hi printer (essentially an A1 clone) and see if it's more open than BL.Almost purchased an A1 today as my first 3D printer; decided to wait until tomorrow and now...any recommended alternatives?
I'm a big fan of Prusa as being the open alternative - open hardware, software, open to mod, fantastic community, great quality prints, etc. almost the opposite fo bambu's approach.Almost purchased an A1 today as my first 3D printer; decided to wait until tomorrow and now...any recommended alternatives?
Bambu really schooled Prusa for sitting on their laurels. Nobody was really innovating in the consumer friendly space IMO.. then Joe Prusa got pretty bitter about Bambu eating their lunch at lower Chinese pricing instead of improving. Finally they're starting to catch up a couple years later with the Core One and MK4 (still at higher prices and with less refined input shaping). Their Prusa XL was a train wreck of delay and under-performance sadly.I'm a big fan of Prusa as being the open alternative - open hardware, software, open to mod, fantastic community, great quality prints, etc. almost the opposite fo bambu's approach.
They used to be a bit persnickety (which as a hobbiest is kind of the fun part to mod the crap out of it so it works "better" )to setup but once dialed in they are solid. But since not everyone wants to "dial-in" the perfect settings and just get to printing I think thier more recent models help eliminate some of the setup iteratons the older models had. I'd check out an MK4s as a solid choice, but the new CORE one looks pretty neat.
I'm sure there are a million comparisons between the two on speed, reliability, etc, but for me its the community and the fact that I can pretty much continue to upgrade my printer and repair it and use it for as long as I want however I like.
I mean, this is most startups these days... they're certainly not unique. Why deliver a compelling product when you can have annual recurring revenue from captive audience lockin, amirite ?How do you think Bambu Labs came out of nowhere to offer such an attractively priced product?
Venture capital. And now those investors want to start seeing some return.
This is classic early-stage enshittification.
Get a prusa - every bit as reliable, probably moreso over time as its open, designed to be repairable, and has a really long suppprted lifetime. Top rate print quality, best in (the consumer) industry support, too.I'm not happy they did this…
but I'm happy that if they were gonna do it, that they did it right when I was thinking "maybe I should buy a 3d printer before tariffs hit" and now I'll just stick to the sane world of just letting other people have that hobby and occasionally paying them to print things for me.
I know there are other brands out there but I don't think my interest in the tinkering and tweaking side of shit could be lower and Bambu's models seemed like the lowest-headache system.
Wait for reviews of Creality's Hi printer (essentially an A1 clone) and see if it's more open than BL.
Thanks, I will check reviews and wait for availability for the CORE and Hi.I'm a big fan of Prusa as being the open alternative - open hardware, software, open to mod, fantastic community, great quality prints, etc. almost the opposite fo bambu's approach.
They used to be a bit persnickety (which as a hobbiest is kind of the fun part to mod the crap out of it so it works "better" )to setup but once dialed in they are solid. But since not everyone wants to "dial-in" the perfect settings and just get to printing I think thier more recent models help eliminate some of the setup iteratons the older models had. I'd check out an MK4s as a solid choice, but the new CORE one looks pretty neat.
I'm sure there are a million comparisons between the two on speed, reliability, etc, but for me its the community and the fact that I can pretty much continue to upgrade my printer and repair it and use it for as long as I want however I like.
While this is true, it's hard to recommend the XL given it's teething issues and repeated delays and reported issues, to say nothing of the price. A lot of owners have been unhappy with it and it's widely acknowledged to be the first "not great" prusa product (unless you count the MMU).Get a prusa - every bit as reliable, probably moreso over time as its open, designed to be repairable, and has a really long suppprted lifetime. Top rate print quality, best in (the consumer) industry support, too.
I have had 3 - i chose kits as i like that kind of stuff. but they sell fully assembled, every bit as plug and play as bambulab.
Prusa also stands out with the XL (true multimaterial, not just multicolor), and their MMU unit generates MASSIVELY less waste than bambu's "poop" solution.
Also state support from their totalitarian regime for a strategic industry, and bringing the low-wage, steal every from the community not "bolted down" mass manufacture model to compete with printers offering open repairable designs.How do you think Bambu Labs came out of nowhere to offer such an attractively priced product?
Venture capital. And now those investors want to start seeing some return.
This is classic early-stage enshittification.
Creality K2 is supposedly quite nice. A1 mini works fine, just use it offline. X1 series is jail-breakable, but overpriced. P1 series is more reasonable but probably going out to pasture soon with the X1 when Bambu releases their new H2D printer soon-ish.Almost purchased an A1 today as my first 3D printer; decided to wait until tomorrow and now...any recommended alternatives?
I've been quite happy with my Creality K1. I use it exclusively for my business and it has run 24/7 some weeks.Almost purchased an A1 today as my first 3D printer; decided to wait until tomorrow and now...any recommended alternatives?
I own an xl 5 tool. All the early adopter issues are ironed out. Purchased intentionally as soon as that was the case, mid 2024.While this is true, it's hard to recommend the XL given it's teething issues and repeated delays and reported issues, to say nothing of the price. A lot of owners have been unhappy with it and it's widely acknowledged to be the first "not great" prusa product (unless you count the MMU).
Bambu made a far more reliable system at a cheaper cost with their AMS.. even if it is far slower and more wasteful.
It's worth pointing out that Prusa is pivoting away from open source as well, and Jo's reaction to this whole shit show has not been... Good.I'm a big fan of Prusa as being the open alternative - open hardware, software, open to mod, fantastic community, great quality prints, etc. almost the opposite fo bambu's approach.
They used to be a bit persnickety (which as a hobbiest is kind of the fun part to mod the crap out of it so it works "better" )to setup but once dialed in they are solid. But since not everyone wants to "dial-in" the perfect settings and just get to printing I think thier more recent models help eliminate some of the setup iteratons the older models had. I'd check out an MK4s as a solid choice, but the new CORE one looks pretty neat.
I'm sure there are a million comparisons between the two on speed, reliability, etc, but for me its the community and the fact that I can pretty much continue to upgrade my printer and repair it and use it for as long as I want however I like.
That's the Crux. Bambu was the first to really get people want the thing to just work. And most of their customers aren't using these features. Which makes this all seem like an unforced error. Had they opted to go with the Dev mode first they would have avoided all this in the first place.While this is true, it's hard to recommend the XL given it's teething issues and repeated delays and reported issues, to say nothing of the price. A lot of owners have been unhappy with it and it's widely acknowledged to be the first "not great" prusa product (unless you count the MMU).
Bambu made a far more reliable system at a cheaper cost with their AMS.. even if it is far slower and more wasteful.
https://www.prusa3d.com/product/prusa-core-one/Almost purchased an A1 today as my first 3D printer; decided to wait until tomorrow and now...any recommended alternatives?
This is a really complicated topic, and at least per available evidence today what you've phrased is false & misleading.It's worth pointing out that Prusa is pivoting away from open source as well, and Jo's reaction to this whole shit show has not been... Good.
Adding to what others have suggested. (All my opinion, usually coloured by my own experiences)Almost purchased an A1 today as my first 3D printer; decided to wait until tomorrow and now...any recommended alternatives?
Legend, thanksThis was never a security update worth any actual security. They were adding security by ... wait for it folks.. embedding a key in software that runs on uncontrolled/untrusted client computers. Surely that key would never be extracted easily! It's not like this exact thing happened to DVD's over a decade ago...
It's like they failed computer security 101 over there. Security through obscurity isn't security at all.
On the contrary, this was security theater at best. They're either bad at security, bad at communicating, bad at implementing their well-meaning aims, or have bad intentions down the line with putting stumbling blocks in people's way. It's not clear what exact mix of these things we are dealing with here, but the first two certainly seem already quite clearly true.
This is a PR dumpster fire and an own-goal they need to learn from.
Source: Have been 3D printing for over a decade, have 2 bambu printers, and am a big fan of those guys who made the X1+ jailbreak firmware for the Bambu X1 printer , have it on my X1 machine.
If you have an X1 printer and want to be free of this silliness, jailbreak your printer at: https://github.com/X1Plus/X1Plus .