tl;dr Don’t hate on people who got tricked into buying a Bambu printer. Direct your hatred to Bambu itself.
We all know about the anti-consumer Bambu Printer changes by now. But I think it’s important to remember not to make fun of people who already bought one. In fact, most agree with you that these changes are unacceptable. So those people already got kicked in the gut.
As someone who bought from Prusa instead of Bambu, I completely understand the feeling of “Ha, I told you so!” But spreading that on every post is actually counter-productive. Remember that most people who bought a Bambu printer did so because it topped every “best 3D printers” list, had tons of sponsored content, and were affordable easy-to-use printers. Not everybody heard about the potential for such anti-consumer changes to be made. And many who did know were often misled into thinking it wouldn’t happen.
Instead of being critical of individuals, be critical of Bambu themselves. Bambu are the ones who screwed over tons of people who love this hobby. If we want to see 3D printing be an open-source style hobby, then we need to help people see the value in that. So if anything, this is the chance for you to make more people aware of good, open systems. If you make fun of people and point fingers at them, you are just making them defensive. Don’t make them direct any hatred at you that could be directed at the company itself.
Hope this isn’t too preachy. I just wanted to get this out there.
Direct the “I told you so”'s at media. That favorite YouTuber? It’s their fault. Just watched a couple of them complain as if they weren’t the problem in the first place.
It was their job to make sure everyone knew the risks. They are advocates, and highly knowledgeable, and ignored those risks when making recommendations. Or at best, downplayed them. Sad, really.
I don’t think the printer got any worse …
I’ve put it in LAN mode, blocked it’s internet access in my router and I don’t plan to ever update the firmware. Also using orca slicer instead of bambu studio.
Prints perfectly fine. Worth every penny from my point of view.
( I agree though, that their move is extremely shitty and I won’t be recommending it to others because of that )
Bit you know what you are doing, and based on the terms of service, which says they can require updates for use, could be in violation.
I agree, everyone should do this, but everyone won’t know how.
Glad to hear you’re able to keep using it! No reason to get rid of good hardware. I hope other people do the same.
Yes.
You shit on the individual asshole executives. Not the people who got screwed. Not the company, which has no agency and can do nothing. The individual executives, including the board of directors.
Luigi has taught us well.
Most of the people posting angry rants about this news are not Bambu owners. On the other hand, most Bambu owners have no idea anything has changed, because we didn’t buy these printers to mod or install custom firmware on or use whatever slicer tickles our fancy this week, we bought them because they Just Work™, work great, and are very reliable. I owned a hobbyist machine before and I just don’t have the time anymore. I knew exactly what tradeoff I was making when I purchased from them, so condescending assholes can keep their patronizing I Told You So to themselves: this is not for you, you have other options and that’s OK.
Side note: I also run Windows and Linux on my PC. You can diss Windows all you want but it has its uses and you’re not winning any friends outside the Linux circle jerk community by being a raging asshole about it. The Bambu hate feels exactly the same.
The people that own them will definitely notice if they start making features require a subscription or deciding that you can’t print certain objects.
slippery slope
We can certainly display plenty of outrage when/if that happens. Most of their engineers are ex DJI-drones guys… do DJI drones have a subscription model to fly their drones?
The engineers aren’t the ones who generally get to make those decisions.
I agree with you though, no point jumping the gun and getting angry about something that might happen
Pssh. With my amazing, unerring genius foresight, I predicted this years ago. All the dumb, mindless drones should have seen this coming, it was sooo obvious! Plus, I’m a fundamentalist, so neither myself, my friends, nor family use anything but open-source software at home, work, and school.
Seriously, that’s how it comes across…
Bambu made 3d printing an appliance. Before Bambu there is no way my ~65 year old mother would be able to own and be self reliantly productive with a 3d printer.
Prusa was close, but comparatively much more expensive.
I don’t and won’t own a Bambu, but if nothing else they opened the world’s eyes to what is possible, now hopefully more friendly companies like prusa will learn from it.
They are good printers. It is just a crappy company showing their true colors… Which is sad for the consumers. Consumers are just the victims here. I never bought or owned a Bambu though. I always went with Prusa and now moving to Voron.
For those out of the Loop, what happened?
DRM They limit who can talk what to their printers.
Most noticeably you can only send and start prints (g-code) with their own program over the network. Either bambu studio or a “cloud” gateway from BambuLab. It is no longer possible to do this from within Prusa- or OrcaSlicer.
my take:
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~~ for the X1C they allow to install X1Plus firmware. The community asked for it. BambuLab allowed it back then and still does.~~ At the moment rooting an X1C isn’t possible. Either it is a broken promise (“We will give customers the choice to install third party firmware and root system at their own risk.”)or just a temporary issue.
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BambuLab sad that this will come. Only now that they have done it, most people are starting to notice.
I hope I’m wrong but it looks like they disabled the ability to do opt into the program.
I cannot join my X1C to the program currently. It just errors out or leaves me in a CloudFlare “are you human” loop.
To be fair, that’s most likely a CloudFlair problem and not a malicious action from Bambu. CloudFlair is a curse on the internet and websites that use it should be shunned and ridiculed.
This was happening a lot yesterday but I eventually got through to opt my machine in.
Interesting.
Awesome. Thanks.
So it sounds like you’ll still be able to put gcode on the SD card and start it from there, no?
Certainly. But that’s not what the vast majority of users want to do though.
I’d argue the same goes for using Orca Slicer. So a vast majority of people will still be able to continue using the Bambu Labs printers exactly how they have been, that’s great.
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Alternative thought - don’t worry about hating anybody or anything, just print shit and have fun. I don’t regret my A1 for one second.
Honestly, I’m just glad that going forward, when people ask which 3D printer to get, it’s no longer going to be “Bambu” 9 out of 10 times.
Still gonna be Bambu out of my mouth 9 out of 10 times. This change doesn’t affect most of my customers (to put it in perspective, I do over 1k unique 3D printer repairs per year).
I’m still an open source enthusiast/zealot - but the fact is, most “normal” people, don’t give a flying shit about this stuff.
This will be a footnote in my suggestions to them, however.
This 100%. Most people just want an easy experience without too much tinkering and bambu does just that.
Prusas are also set and forget
Yes, but…
I do agree partially with your statement. But (as always) it’s a little more complicated.
BambooLab was known for their walled garden approach and that they have apple as their idol. So in that sense, people buying it, did so oftentimes willingly and therefore enabled the company to pull these stunts. I’m not blaming the people for going with the most comfortable solution, but that’s usually what you get
Others are prepared to invest a lot of money with the knowledge that they are promoting open source. So since companies like Bambu only use open source for their closed source without the cost and without giving back to the open source community, the buyers of closed source actively harm the opensource community. As example Bambu is part of the reason why prusa, for example, is partially moving away from open source. So yes the bambu owners deserve it and I am happy.
That’s a very fair point. I also think the massive amount of outrage shows that many people didn’t know the full extent of what they were signing up for. So I think is varies from person to person.
I won’t buy my wife a Cricut for the same reason, it is a closed system that the company can decide to nickel and dime at will.
Surprised that they switched to Evil mode so soon, now everyone talks about this, and just a few days ago nobody cared and those who did were the loonies talking crazy.
Presumably now that the security keys are known, it is possible to jailbreak your printer and never deal with Bambu ever again.
I would be highly suspcious of anything running proprietary software and connected to the open internet, especially now that you’ve got ignorant states like NJ and NY looking to prosecute people who might be making anything that vaguely resembles a gun part.
Same goes for slicers. Some of those don’t respect privacy either.
This.
I got super unlucky here, and this news dropped literally the day after I bought an A1.I’m still going to try and force it into a usable no-internet state, but I don’t have high hopes right now.
I run a repair shop, and don’t own a Bambu Labs printer - also never will. I’m not their target.
However, out of the easily 100+ customers I know that use a Bambu; maybe 2 of them use a different slicer. Most people won’t be affected by this change and it’s only communities with enthusiasts like ours that will end up caring.
That said, Bambu printers are still a MASSIVE step ahead of even their closest competition. This probably won’t stop me from recommending them to consumers in the future, because while I am a zealot; first and foremost concern is that my customers are able to print reliably and easily.
Additionally – The community always figures this stuff out. Bambu Slicer is open source, and I’m sure it won’t take much for them to get around this tiny little speed bump.
This was my initial worry with them to begin with, and it seems to have been founded now; but until someone comes up with a comparable ecosystem, at the same price and quality of Bambu Labs, then it’s still a no-brainer to be purchasing them for 99% of people.
You should still get mad, be vocal, and complain - they’ve reversed course before on other things (Linux Firmware) - so enough of an outcry should poke them into doing something different.
What makes you think they’re not going to do something worse in the future? Knowingly pointing people towards an abusive company is signaling to that company that this is fine and we’re willing to bend over further.
Because I’ve seen every open source company I love do the same thing over time.
Makerbot. Ultimaker. Prusa.
Remember the “Dogbone” you have to break on the buddy-boards to be able to flash your own bootloader? None of you people stopped buying Prusa back when that happened…
This hasn’t been implemented yet, so we don’t know the full details - I’m gonna wait and see where the chips fall before being so reactionary. I’m also going to be a pragmatist, and not pretend that other machines out there don’t exist. Bambu will have competition soon - the K2 already seems to be picking up steam, and Creality has a pretty good history when it comes to this kind of thing. There’s plenty of competition in the market, and Bambu printers are good enough for most people for now.
Kinda like the Glowforge (a laser cutter) when it came out - it’s got all the proprietary locked down stuff, and their users don’t care. But real C02 lasers still exist, and are popular too. There’s room for both.
I’m not discounting those users who bought, and then had a ‘feature’ removed. I believe that’s terms for a class action if they don’t allow third party slicers to be used; but I don’t think that’s the full story of what’s going on here.
As someone who does own an X1. I haven’t yet tried the other options of slicer or gone deeper down the g-code rabbit hole. I’ve only had it a few months. I bought knowing that this was a possibility but did so because of the simplicity, quality, and not wanting to spend endless hours tweaking.
One oversight I did have was the possibility that this could eventually lead to a cricut type situation of having a subscription model to even use the hardware. This means I will not be upgrading and will be keeping a closer eye on the changes that are made.
I’m unconcerned. I knew what I was getting into with a walled garden ecosystem, and though I didn’t expect them to dive straight into the enshittification deep end, I figures they would eventually do something fairly shady. The real question is how long it will take to release the first X1C-Klipper refit.
As it turns out, there’s already a project… https://github.com/ChazLayyd/Bambu-Lab-Klipper-Conversion/blob/main/README.md
Same here which is why I jumped on the X1C now. Companies like this always release the good shit first and each future model always lose features and usability bit by bit.
This change is annoying but not the end of the world. I don’t regret my purchase one hit because the machine is top notch compared to what I had previously.