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05-24-2014, 09:42 PM #1
I think the idea is more than a complete failure to be honest, considering the amount of print failures ALL machines can be capable of, the ability to stream the file once to the machine is just idiotic. They better have pretty good stream monitoring in effect if they are going to be detecting the printing state of peoples printers while they are printing it out - otherwise how would they ever know if the print was successful?
Was the print unsuccessful because of the printer? or the STL? or the streaming process failed?
How do you stream a file to a printer and then disconnect from the streaming service and let the printer take over while there is no background service to keep it going? there isn't... not with the current machines, and the SD card doesn't work like that in most machines, it reads, it doesn't write - so there goes putting it on the SD temporarily to send to the printer.
I could go on for hours honestly, the whole thing is flawed beyond belief - and the fact CG trader is charging $144 for a plastic 5" figure of a licensed product like a Storm Trooper (and many other licensed products) is pretty lame considering the actual amount of plastic involved, which would be probably worth about $2-3 if you printed it at 10%infill.Last edited by Geoff; 05-24-2014 at 09:49 PM.
Hex3D - 3D Printing and Design http://www.hex3d.com
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05-25-2014, 08:36 AM #2
Agreed... There are way too many variables to think the first time you started a print, it was going to work. And on something like this, I suspect I would have to play with different support material settings until I found one that was compatible with the design, printer, and plastic.
And looking at it from a different perspective... You are dealing with the Open_Source communities when you play with 3D-Printers. If this business really did get going, you would have reverse .STL compilers showing up very quickly that would capture the stream and save it as a normal .STL file. My guess is the reverse .STL compilers would be prevalent within 2 months.
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05-28-2014, 09:50 PM #3
Yep, I would give it less than 2 months even, the way these hackers are with games and such, they literally have the cracks out the day after release, so I'm sure once you introduce a type of regime there will be someone who wants to break it down, and in the case of programming, there is always a smarter cookie out there
Hex3D - 3D Printing and Design http://www.hex3d.com
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