Staples Starts Selling 3-D Printer 65
An anonymous reader writes "Soon anyone will be able to head out to the store and buy a 3D printer: 'Staples, one of the leading office supply retailers in the U.S. announced it would begin selling 3-D Systems' entry level personal 3-D printer, The Cube. This is quite simply the single largest 3-D printer retail move to date by any 3-D printer manufacturer.' 'The Cube is one of a number of 3-D printers designed with traditional consumers in mind. Specifically, this unit can print items up to 5.5 inches tall, wide and long in one of 16 different colors. The retail bundle includes 25 free design templates to get users started but the real fun is designing and building something all your own.'"
cartridge based (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:cartridge based (Score:5, Informative)
commentary on http://hackaday.com/2013/04/26/cube-3d-printer-hack-lets-you-use-bulk-filament/ [hackaday.com]
Re:cartridge based (Score:4, Insightful)
The solution [Chris] went with still uses the cartridges to ‘trick’ the machine into printing. Basically the interface will tell you that you don’t have enough filament left, but as long as there’s a cartridge in place you can tell it to print anyway.
In other words, this hardware hack is only one firmware update away from being shut down. Once they remove the option to "tell it to print anyway" when the cartridge says it's empty, then the hack is no longer usable.
Re:cartridge based (Score:4, Informative)
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Uh, and what does that accomplish when the device is shipped to you with the latest firmware already installed, which disables the "print anyway" option?
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of course it would be a proprietary cartridge based piece of shit.
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:76083 [thingiverse.com] looks like you dont need to go buy their cartridges ;)
Re:cartridge based (Score:4, Funny)
of course it would be a proprietary cartridge based piece of shit.
but... but... these cartridges will helpfully warn you that you are running out at 50%-capacity and stop working at 30%-capacity. It is a very valuable service.
Re: cartridge based (Score:2)
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I've always found it hypocritical that the companies that engage in this sort of small-scale monopolistic and anti-competitive tactic - and there are thousands of them - are left completely alone by the regulatory agencies that are supposed to be preventing it.
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So, do you buy your phone or rent it via 2 year contract? Just checking.
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I don't have a cellphone, but if I did it would be purchased outright. While that tactic is monopolistic too, it's not a direct analog to the tactic we're talking about here. It's all bad, just not precisely the same kinda bad.
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Sorry, who rents a phone via 2 year contract?
Cell carriers do some weird stuff, but I've never seen them do that!
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Sorry, who rents a phone via 2 year contract?
Most carriers in Canada do that.
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lolwut
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Slow news day for you, is it? It's what happens when a manufacturer hasn't monopolized an entire market segment but is, say, monopolizing the consumables for its product lines by preventing third party companies from producing and selling consumables more cheaply or refurbing and reselling them, etc. Slashdot has covered many examples of this tactic; the best known example was Lenovo's chipping of laser toner cartridges and then trying to abuse the DMCA to prevent competing third party compatible cartridg
Re: cartridge based (Score:2)
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2 things.
1) It's not monopolistic if the company doesn't have a monopoly. Their business model is the same printer business model - cheap printer (it's 30% cheaper than a Makerbot), expensive filament. If you don't want this, go buy a Makerbot or othe
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You can just print a new one.
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Id buy a cartridge if I could rent a printer to print myself a scanner to scan the 3d printer and then print myself a printer , hopefully id be able to print the cartridge next.
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limited number of stores. (Score:3)
not in all.
still, it's not that easy to find brick&mortar normal stores which sell 'em.
Staples.com (Score:2)
still, it's not that easy to find brick&mortar normal stores which sell 'em.
Cube 3D Printers & Supplies [staples.com]
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i thought you asked if they would sell them over at Hot Topic, which created a funny mental image.
no, this is the natural progression towards crafters.
expect soccer moms to replace their scentsy franchises next year.
Staples huh... (Score:4, Funny)
So it will cost 3 times what you could get it for normally?
Seriously... Everything they sell is overpriced by at least 2x.
They're for office workers. (where people who come get stuff don't care how much their employer spends)
And for those emergency 'I GOTTA HAVE IT RIGHT NOW' type things.
"And no i don't wanna join your rewards club dammit. I just want this replacement mouse. No i really don't want to join. NO! i don't want to join. Just ring this up. It's $15. Here take my money. No i don't wanna join the rewards club and i'm REALLY sure."
Ah...Bonus Round! (Score:2)
So it will cost 3 times what you could get it for normally?
Seriously... Everything they sell is overpriced by at least 2x. They're for office workers. (where people who come get stuff don't care how much their employer spends) "
So seriously, I can use one of these things at work now, in place of more traditional benefits?
Approachable 3D Design Software? (Score:2)
Is there anything a typical na\"ive user can use?
Thus far I've been most successful w/ OpenSCAD --- I don't think that will work for most of Staples' clientele. I've tried pretty much everything here:
http://www.shapeoko.com/wiki/index.php/CAD [shapeoko.com]
But haven't found anything which really appeals --- is there anything I missed?
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Google SketchUp is the most recommended one.
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Yeah, and it's on that list and I tried it and it doesn't appeal (to me).
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I just remembered that I stumbled upon a completely different approach for 3D modelling for print recently: Printcraft [printcraft.org]. Maybe this works for you.
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Read the fine print on any "warranty" before spending any money on it. It's rare that they will actually do everything they imply when they sound too good to be true.
If you have questions, ask them... ask where in the warranty it says anything that you can't find, and if it's not explicitly written there, then get it in writing, and make sure that a manager signs off on it... not just figuratively, but literally.
One of two things will happen... either they will get frustrated and stop trying to sell y
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I love it (Score:4, Funny)
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my crystal ball (Score:1)
x 1000 (Score:1, Funny)
"That's pretty cool, Sheldon. What are you printing?"
"I'm printing some Warhammer figurines. Not the 40K ones, either. Only the real ones."
"That...that doesn't look like a figurine."
(looks) "What? Very nice. A cock. Ha ha, very funny."
Print electronic devices (Score:1)
I want to be able to 3-D print electronic devices. Spare parts, or even entire phones and computers.
lost half the audience (Score:1)
Specifically, this unit can print items up to 5.5 inches tall, wide and long in one of 16 different colors
seems women wouldn't be too interested in this quite yet
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Why limit length? (Score:4, Insightful)
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If the plate were