I'll be honest, I wouldn't be against some sort of standardized RFID system for 3D printers. Every version of every brand has it's own special behavior that can be tweaked, and when you try out a new filament, it takes some time to get it "just right". Having some system that would automatically pre-load settings for the filament you have loaded would be great. But... it would have to feed back into the slicer, because you're running your own slicer and not leaving that up to the machine/cloud, right?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.
That's the real problem. Any meaningful push to tag filament would really just be a push to restrict filament.At least HP subsidizes the printer to get you locked into their toner or ink. Bambu charges full price for the printer then will still gouge for the rest.
That doesn't mean you have to give up your control over your hardware. Requiring a printer phone home to " the cloud" to print is absolutely insane. There's no reason my printer needs to touch the internet. There's no reason I should have to authenticate with the mothership just so I can send a print 10 feet across my office.At least in my local nerd community, more people are wanting a 3D printer to supplement their hobbies, not have the printers BE the hobby. It's still a geek toy but I think those days are numbered.
Every IoT [Internet of Things] device has these problems
do tell? i just checked the Prusa blog and don't see anything that seems related. what happened?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.
Might be on Joseph's personal twitter/bluesky account. He's his own person, and won't post company blog updates for his own schadenfreude, despite his name being on the company.do tell? i just checked the Prusa blog and don't see anything that seems related. what happened?
Take a look at Solvol.Almost purchased an A1 today as my first 3D printer; decided to wait until tomorrow and now...any recommended alternatives?
Speedrunning the enshifitication
You can shutoff the purge block then that space becomes available.One annoyance with the X & P (&A?) printers is there is a 20 x 28mm dead zone at the front that it needs to do its filament cutting op. That, plus the purge block, means you don't get the full 256 x 256 area. Well you can get around it with mono prints, but I don't think it's possible at all with multi-colour, or if it is it would be very painful. None of the reviewers mention this that I know of.
For the specific example Aurich gave--using non-Bambu filament--is there a good way for them to even force the issue?
As I understand it, the current filament recognition system picks up an RFID on the spool. Does removing the RFID from a Bambu spool and taping it to another not look like a relatively simple work-around? I get the impression that fooling this check would be, if anything, easier than fooling Keurig coffee pots.
Just to make it more clear since I didn't fully explain it before: zero Bambu printers have RFID readers built into them to even read the spool chips. X1C, P1S, A1, A1 Mini, none of them have it. They haven't a clue what you load up, it's not Keurig.
Bambu has an add-on for their printers, the Automatic Material System aka AMS, which takes multiple rolls and does auto switching. That has the RFID built in. But those are optional and plenty of printers don't have them.
So this idea that they could lock their printers to only their filament is simply not possible. It's literally FUD.
I don't know why we can't just criticize them for what's happening instead of made up scenarios that aren't based in reality.
There's an old blog post you can read here:do tell? i just checked the Prusa blog and don't see anything that seems related. what happened?
I'm fine with the outrage. Let them know we don't like it. I don't like it.Yeah, as a concrete prediction, I think people are getting ahead of themselves with that: there are multiple paths to enshittification, and we don't really know which way Bambu is trying to go here yet. My own guess would be some kind of cloud service subscription thing rather than an HP/Keurig/Juicero-style supply lockdown. But who knows. Looking 12 moves ahead just isn't really possible yet.
Still, I think the instinct to look far ahead and prepare for the worst possibilities is a good one here. While we may not know exactly what the board looks like 12 moves ahead, we do all know how the game is played by now. There's a vanishingly small chance that this was their last move, after all. While the next move may take months (gotta wait for the furor to die down), it is almost certainly coming. And then it'll just be three squares forward, one square back until they take the whole board. Mustering early collective outrage and taking drastic preemptive action right now is critical. For consumers, the only winning move in this particular game is not to play.
Almost purchased an A1 today as my first 3D printer; decided to wait until tomorrow and now...any recommended alternatives?
I've been following this whole thing, off of Ars, here in our forum, talking to people in Discord, reading comments on Hackaday, watching videos, and what I've noticed is the people who are the most mad are the ones who don't own Bambu hardware (and tend to tell you they would never buy it). And the people who are the most sanguine and "let's see what happens" are the ones who do own it, and will actually be affected by changes.
That's why it feels like FUD.
He owns and runs a company that does electronics repairs. He is very pro-right-to-repair, as that is central to his business, but it makes sense for him to move somewhere that as you claim is pro-business.Some of his choices are a little odd like choosing to move to and pay taxes in company loving, 0%(?) corp tax Texas while being entirely anti company
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.
Recurring revenue is what all companies want, but they already have it. People who buy their printers end up buying lots of their filament, especially small businesses. Frankly, I'm surprised that people are treating this like a US company cash grab when it seems much more likely to be a Chinese company information grab.I also don't think it'd be crazy for the people most squarely in that market to eventually shrug, and cough up the extra $20/mo subscription or whatever this ends up as, because that's still the best deal they've got.
But that's the problem. Enshittification (usually) works.
Yea , I’ve had Prusas, my main problem with them is that they sat on their laurels and the XL was a delay after delay disaster that eroded trust in the brand they had built up for quality products .. especially when the first year or so of units turned out a mess. Also , that all in price is just not competitive these days.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.
I don't mean to say its perfect, nothing is - but it was a groundbreaking device, and for their own sake DO wish they would market the earliest releases as alpha & beta (which they are). Those tags are well gone now, and its amazing.
ETA: i have owned an earlier mk, an mk4(later upgraded to mk4s - Prusa bends over backwards to bring all their customers forward as new & bigger things are developed). I have several other brands of FDM, one SLa, friends with bambo A1's and an X1 - in no way is bambu more reliable. More reliable than the old creality's at bambu's price point - but not mlre reliable than any prusa.
You might be confusing sentiment from ppl who have opted to do full builds themselves, and done it poorly. that definitely happens - eg just like in Voron builds... Prusa sells fully assembled for everything as well, and they are well known to be great.
Agreed. At work, we use Ultimakers with multi material stations for printing parts for experiments, and if you use Ultimaker's own filament you'll get stuff like type and color loaded automatically from RFID tags, so it's annoying when using third party filaments to have to manually select it - it just working across manufacturers would be nice.I'll be honest, I wouldn't be against some sort of standardized RFID system for 3D printers. Every version of every brand has it's own special behavior that can be tweaked, and when you try out a new filament, it takes some time to get it "just right". Having some system that would automatically pre-load settings for the filament you have loaded would be great. But... it would have to feed back into the slicer, because you're running your own slicer and not leaving that up to the machine/cloud, right?
I don't know about trying to lock down what filament people use or such, but the products being good or not has nothing to do with whether a company goes for a lockdown or not. There are a lot of examples by now in basically all technological fields where a company got greedy and decided to try and implement a full lockdown even with mediocre products -- the two are simply completely separate concepts, the latter is driven by shareholder demand and/or CEO's attempts at keeping revenue growth increasing forever and not product quality or popularity.Suggestions that they're going to lock down their printers to only use their filament etc are just FUD or conspiracy theories. They make good printers, but not that good.![]()
You can get a cheap Chinese printer like an Ender 3 and upgrade the shit out of it. Don’t expect good results out of the box but it is easy to upgrade. I got a direct drive extruder, auto leveling, new springs, new mainboard (with new firmware), octoprint server, and new bed.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 don’t want something that can start a fire connected to the internet. Nope. You should never print unsupervised anyway. The whole feature is just stupid and destined to get somebody killed eventually.cloud connected nonsense
My concern over Bambu isn't the filament; my biggest worry is that they will go the Cricut route, and move all local slicer/etc to their servers, and then require a subscription. Yeah, we can probably have someone jail break the things to make it work, but as some have said, I want to use the printer for hobby and other random stuff; I have no interest in having my 3d printer be a hobby in-and-of-itself.
PLA autoignition temperature is nearly 400C, and ABS nearly 500C. The only way it's going to catch fire is if you could somehow burn out the windings on one of the stepper motors, and then you have to hope there's enough flammable in that motor for it to spread.I don’t want something that can start a fire connected to the internet.
You're going to stay up and monitor an entire multi-day print?You should never print unsupervised anyway.
I wouldn't say most people seem to be criticizing Bambu for doing something they aren't. What people are doing doing is looking at how Bambu has behaved so far, noting they seem to be making moves that could easily combine quite suddenly to significantly alter the nature of what Bambu is selling, and looking at all the other businesses in recent years which have done exactly that.Just to make it more clear since I didn't fully explain it before: zero Bambu printers have RFID readers built into them to even read the spool chips. X1C, P1S, A1, A1 Mini, none of them have it. They haven't a clue what you load up, it's not Keurig.
Bambu has an add-on for their printers, the Automatic Material System aka AMS, which takes multiple rolls and does auto switching. That has the RFID built in. But those are optional and plenty of printers don't have them.
So this idea that they could lock their printers to only their filament is simply not possible. It's literally FUD.
I don't know why we can't just criticize them for what's happening instead of made up scenarios that aren't based in reality.
You can get a cheap Chinese printer like an Ender 3 and upgrade the shit out of it. Don’t expect good results out of the box but it is easy to upgrade. I got a direct drive extruder, auto leveling, new springs, new mainboard (with new firmware), octoprint server, and new bed.
Those upgrades cost, but not nearly as much as a ready-made printer that does the same and you will never ever have to deal with OEM bullshit or vendor lock in.
Nah. They fucked up and people are letting them know.Maybe. On the other hand, if that is representative of the attitude from their customers, it might be exactly why they feel like they can get away with it.
What are you basing this on though?As you say, Bambu is very savvy, and has done a really good recognizing the huge market out there for a hobby level printer that "just works", one that enables hobbies, rather than being the hobby. It's probably a good assumption that they'll be just as savvy about extracting exactly as much rent from that market as it will bear.
Again, where is this $20 a month idea coming from? For what? What are you talking about exactly?If that's the case, I don't think it's crazy to take this move as a sign that they think that level is a bit higher than they're getting now, and are taking steps accordingly.
I also don't think it'd be crazy for the people most squarely in that market to eventually shrug, and cough up the extra $20/mo subscription or whatever this ends up as, because that's still the best deal they've got.
But that's the problem. Enshittification (usually) works.
Agreed. At work, we use Ultimakers with multi material stations for printing parts for experiments, and if you use Ultimaker's own filament you'll get stuff like type and color loaded automatically from RFID tags, so it's annoying when using third party filaments to have to manually select it - it just working across manufacturers would be nice.
With how it works with the slicer, we just use Ultimaker CURA, so it's integrated through that and a network connection to the printer.
I also find the security claims... interesting. Where I work, there's reasonable info-sec concerns that shape things (all computers have to run a standard build of Windows/macOS/Linux, nothing goes on the cloud, etc). Despite that, the printers are allowed on the network and just work - no cloud connection, nothing like that.
And if Ultimaker can make it work well enough (it's damn near just plug them in, do some basic setup, and start printing) and secure enough without cloud connected nonsense, than Bambu can too.
Pretty much nobody but Bambu has a good AMS system. It's a super half assed ecosystem right now. That will change eventually.Not too many people mentioning it, but you could check out Qidi.
I had some terrible experiences with couple different printers years ago, but got back into it with a deeply discounted Q1 Pro last summer and haven't looked back. I'm sure they're not quite as plug and play as BL printers, but I've gone through 15kg or 20kg of plastic now without having to do that much more than push the start button. Bonus that it runs pretty much stock Klipper firmware, barely even skinned. And their support is reportedly excellent.
Only real downside I see is no (stock) AMS. There's one in the works, but only for the new top of the line model. I may attempt to bolt on an ERCF or something to the Q1 someday, but it'd be a bit of a project.
The OrcaSlicer devs released info before this blew up saying that BambuLab contacted them about the upcoming changes, and when the OrcaSlicer devs asked to be given authorization so that they could continue to be used without the restricted functionality available in Bambu Connect, they were told that BambuLab would not support direct slicing from 3rd party slicers anymore (sorry for the Xitter link).For those using 3rd party slicers (specifically OrcaSlicer), the update will prevent Orca from having full control over the printer as it currently does, but it won't prevent you from using OrcaSlicer (or using any other slicer for that matter).
This developer LAN mode wasn't listed in the initial blog post. People were left to take BL at face value when the post said LAN users would need an access key through Bambu Connect as well, tying local printing to BambuLab's cloud infrastructure.Those that will be affected the most are those in print farms that rely on 3rd part automation software (most often Home Assistant), which is why Bambu is offering the developer option in LAN mode to keep these types of systems working.
Perhaps more importantly, not only is this firmware update not out yet, but it's being released in an opt-in beta capacity first, and no one will be forced to upgrade to this firmware (Bambu makes several references in it's blog posts about staying on the current firmware).
You misunderstood the anger, since this wasn't about closed source vs open source (as you pointed out, every BL enthusiast knew it was closed source), but about BL saying they would "create an ecosystem for 3rd party developers" and then deciding to alter the deal.Speaking of open source, I have found myself somewhat amused by the hand wringing coming from the open source community about how Bambu has betrayed their trust, when Bambu never once tried to hide their closed source nature.
Except that Apple never endorsed jailbreaking, while BambuLab endorsed 3rd party devices interfacing with their printers.It's kind of like buying an iPhone with the intent to jailbreak it, only to get upset with Apple when the close the loophole allowing jailbreaking.
Prusa has long given highly detailed guides to repair and replace components in their printers, arguably giving the shoulders for BambuLab to stand on.In addition, while Bambu is significantly more closed source than competitors, they've also kept their printers fully repairable with a bevy of parts available for purchase on their website (for a very reasonable price) and a very comprehensive wiki with step-by-step guides on how to repair/replace things; something that can't be said for other brands out there.
BambuLab's AMS system is very good at multicolour printing, and acceptably good at multimaterial printing for those who can't spare the expense of a tool changer or independent dual extruder system. It is at the cost of being far and away the most wasteful multicolour system on the market, but for people concerned with reliability above all else, it's the best choice for those who don't need the 16 colours of Creality's CFS.Hopefully competitors will catchup with Bambu's offering, especially when it comes to their AMS units (automated material system - allowing you to make prints using multiple colors/materials in a single print), as right now there just isn't anything on the market that matches what the Bambu printers can do.
I don't much sympathy for a company that mischaracterizes criticism, edits their previous posts without notice, and then removes previous versions of their posts from the major archive service all in the service of trying to tighten their control over printers beyond what they previously advertised. If they had taken this position from the start, perhaps they wouldn't have been quite so successful.On a side note, the fact that Louis Rossman is now involved in all of this just makes me shake my head.
They already have that info if that's the play. Like, they've had it for years, the cloud thing has been there from the start. There's no grab.Recurring revenue is what all companies want, but they already have it. People who buy their printers end up buying lots of their filament, especially small businesses. Frankly, I'm surprised that people are treating this like a US company cash grab when it seems much more likely to be a Chinese company information grab.
Did they really though? I don't think that's accurate. They provided a pathway for people who wanted to their own firmware and be on their own, which is I think fine. But the Panda Touch was never endorsed. The opposite. They warned them it was based on a crack that they weren't leaving in place.Except that Apple never endorsed jailbreaking, while BambuLab endorsed 3rd party devices interfacing with their printers.
I agree. I’ve owned more than my share of 3D printers over the years, and the Bambi is the first one to just be an appliance that just prints with none of the hassle.It's unreasonable because it doesn't pass the smell test, that's why.
Like, leaving out everything about it that doesn't make sense from a business or market perspective, and there's a lot, the simple fact is the printers don't have a mechanism to even do it.
AMS units have RFID, but not the printers.
The real truth is Bambu is a lot like Apple, and not because of the company or their products, but because the name alone is enough to turn discussions into weird fanboy wars. This "they're about to get you!" talk has been around for years.
You can buy "ready-made" printers from Creality. Get anything from the K-family and you can pull it out of the box, slap it on your workbench, hit the "calibrate" button while you unload your filament, and start out-printing your Ender 3 without doing anything.You can get a cheap Chinese printer like an Ender 3 and upgrade the shit out of it. Don’t expect good results out of the box but it is easy to upgrade. I got a direct drive extruder, auto leveling, new springs, new mainboard (with new firmware), octoprint server, and new bed.
Those upgrades cost, but not nearly as much as a ready-made printer that does the same and you will never ever have to deal with OEM bullshit or vendor lock in.
I don't have to expose my Brother laser printer to the internet, authenticate with Brother's servers, and send all my print jobs through Brother. Why does it make sense for my 3D printer to require that?I agree. I’ve owned more than my share of 3D printers over the years, and the Bambi is the first one to just be an appliance that just prints with none of the hassle.
In this debate I wonder a bit that we seem to foist the idea that 3D printing companies must be entirely open and hacker friendly. If you change your private APIs and break a third party, you’re now the enemy of the community.
I get that people fear the business model will change. I think the idea that suddenly your printer will be a brick if you don’t pay a subscription is a bit “out there” to say the least. But I suppose anything is possible.
I don’t think it’s reasonable to expect Bambu to ensure hacked up third party add-ons work forever, but for those who bought the third party items without realizing the third party was relying on reverse engineered integrations, its Bambu that will take the blame for changing their internal protocols.
For the rest of us who just want something that works without endlessly tweaking and fixing, and haven’t paid attention to third party add ons, this all just seems like a tempest in a teapot. The thing continues to print like it always has.
I mostly agree with you that people are running well ahead of what the situation is, with talk of subscription fees, locking down print farms, whatever. We don't actually know what Bambu intends at this point, and people are getting a bit wild with the speculation then running ahead as if that speculation is fact. I think at the core of this is a lack of trust though, and that's understandable when Bambu is acting like this.I've been following this whole thing, off of Ars, here in our forum, talking to people in Discord, reading comments on Hackaday, watching videos, and what I've noticed is the people who are the most mad are the ones who don't own Bambu hardware (and tend to tell you they would never buy it). And the people who are the most sanguine and "let's see what happens" are the ones who do own it, and will actually be affected by changes.
That's why it feels like FUD.
This is why I get frustrated.Love it when hardware companies move into the subscription service. #Cricut
Certainly will be sustainable.
Big agree, the Ender 3 as a go to is way long past making any sense.You can buy "ready-made" printers from Creality. Get anything from the K-family and you can pull it out of the box, slap it on your workbench, hit the "calibrate" button while you unload your filament, and start out-printing your Ender 3 without doing anything.
The Ender 3 was the go-to "cheap but you'll work for it" printer forever. But it's long in the tooth. If someone wants an X1 but they don't want Bambu, do not recommend them a fucking Ender 3 plus replacement parts for every functional part of the printer.