Reminder to avoid buying Bambu printers, or at the very least never connect it to the uppercase I Internet.
The sneaky chinamen region locked their printers.
How will I print my funko pops and articulated plastic waste now!
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None of the newer BL printers have been cracked yet. The X1C on an old firmware version is the only Bambu printer capable of running a custom interface.
I have interacted with a few X1Cs and they are great machines, but they feel very "Apple". The raw information such as mesh bed flatness, LIDAR flow calibration and resonance compensation is inaccessible to the user for no good reason despite them owning the machine. The printer can be run on LAN only mode and remotely controlled with OrcaSlicer (FOSS BambuSlicer) but to access the printer it requires using a binary blob and it completely blocks access to the camera.
Prusa printers are not exactly great for the price point and feature set either. It may be made in Eurostan but it has half the features at twice the price of a comparable Chinese printer. Their OpenPrintTag system looks promising but of course, no Prusa printer even has the hardware to read the tags!
There is a conspiracy about Bambu labs and the whole security bullshit locking out the 3rd party slicers and requiring the cloud print for everything, was that it was an attempt to crack down (keep an eye) on Chinese people printing firearms in China since a lot of the americans were talking about that on Xiaohongshu.
This is completely believable and I can't believe I have not heard about this before. With the US and Europe pushing for printer software locks, future tech will probably come straight from the factory with a rootkit and require submission of an ID and Address to a database to buy it.
To pirate SW you need to use it in an air-gapped Windows VM as it phones home with who knows what kind of data, meaning unless you are in Brazil or Russia you will get a lawyers letter in the mail. Every native SW document (this excludes exported STEP, STL, IGES etc) is marked with author info so in theory if you share any of those documents you could get caught.
It is such a shame that FreeCAD is so divergent from other standard CAD software. Blender is brilliant but for modeling parametric mechanical components it is a right pain.
I would look into Plasticity. It has the same geometry kernel as SolidWorks, looks capable of making G3 surfaces and has a perpetual license (200$), but it is not exactly parametric, it is more "push/pull". (Also I think the dev sounds like a troon) [
Plasticity Dev's YT] [
Plasticity Website]