by Sean Hollister from The Verge - All Posts on (#6TQTR)
Using the non-touch screen on an older Bambu P1P 3D printer. | Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge Bambu Lab, the company behind my favorite 3D printers, has given itself one hell of a week. Now, I've got answers to some of my burning questions, answers which you might also hopefully appreciate. But first, some backstory.Since last Thursday, some creators have pledged not to buy Bambu printers anymore, even removed some of their 3D models from its online repository, after the company revealed it would add a new proprietary authentication mechanism that could keep you from using third-party tools to remote control your printer.While you'd still be able to stick a file on an SD card and physically put it into your printer or use Bambu's proprietary cloud, the old way of printing remotely from a third-party slicer would be no more - unless you downloaded a new proprietary Windows and Mac Bambu Connect" desktop app to be the middleman between your slicer and Bambu's hardware.Unauthorized third-party software will be prohibited from executing critical operations" - BambuWhile Bambu was clear early on that this would be an optional update, one you could simply choose not to install, the company also positioned it as a necessary one to secure printers against remote hacks.... Read the full story at The Verge.