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Making niche solutions is the point

My wife and I bought a Bambu P1S and I think the machine has had a duty cycle of 30% (excluding when we weren’t in town). It’s great fun. The majority of the models are ones we get from the Internet, it’s true.

But my wife used some base open source components to design a block that goes into the bits of a playpen that we used to have and transform it into something that docks with the wall instead of only with itself[0].

And I have designed with Claude a few small things like card holders for the board game power grid[1].

I wish there were better AI tools for interacting with modeling software. As it stands I use OpenSCAD with Claude and that seems as good as it can be. There are Solidworks AI startups but they’re like for professionals.

The Bambu P1S I have is quite low friction to set up. And I have an AMS2 Pro on top of it that feeds different kinds of filament (material and color) into the printer. I have just the one but now I wish I had more AMS hooked up.

0: https://wiki.roshangeorge.dev/w/Blog/2026-01-15/Modeling_Wit...

1: https://wiki.roshangeorge.dev/w/Blog/2026-01-11/Modeling_Wit...

7 minutes agoarjie

AI coding tools are providing non-programmers giving similar ability. Not production quality, but still useful to them everyday and they can tweak as they go.

2 hours agobarumrho

I think that is a fantastic insight that 'Making niche solutions is the point' with 3D printing.

Unfortunately, it is still very hard to _design_ niche solutions. The usability of CAD tools did not really improve at all in the last 20 years..

2 hours agoramboldio

CAD is complicated, yes. But the biggest pain point is that engineering requires a lot of adjacent knowledge about material, tolerance, mechanical design, tooling, and so on. Making things requires patience.

CAD is the easy part.

an hour agoArcanum-XIII

Once upon a time, the Unix philosophy was lauded in these venerated halls. "Do one thing and do it well."

Now the hype has seemed to shift to "do absolutely anything just barely well enough to get people to pay for it".

42 minutes agouoaei

Turns out attempting to pay the bills on unix philosophy didn't go very far.

29 minutes agopixl97

I should get a 3D printer

2 hours agodirewolf20

I've been telling myself that for as long as 3D-printing has been consumer tech (about 20 years ?) and now it's shifted to "I'll borrow one my friends' printers if needs be".

In truth every time an issue fit for 3D printing has come up in my life, I solved it easily with wood and cardboard. I'm starting to recognize I might be a craftsman at heart.

an hour agoBayart

Borrowing from a friend/library/work/low-cost maker space is the way to go unless you plan on printing with the thing for numerous hours per day on average. Having said that, once you start 3d printing, it becomes a tool you reach to more and more

an hour agoIncreasePosts

Even with my old/cheap Ender 3 Pro, I printed something overnight took 13.5 hrs, there it was

2 hours agoge96

I thought the same thing while reading this. But I worry that I'd get one and it'd just sit on a shelf somewhere collecting dust.

an hour agonozzlegear

Skip the too-cheap entry level and get something reliable. They’re great to have handy, but easy to fall into maintenance and calibration hell. Modern 3D printers have enough sensors and smarts to self-calibrate reliably. That’s essential to make it a tool and not a tinker toy.

28 minutes agopbronez

You might already have one, and just don't know it :-) If you don't, it's much cheaper to get one that the author considers a 3D printer.

From TFA:

> 1. I like to think that all printers are 3D, unless it's a printer in Flatland.

2 hours agogurjeet

It's actually a 4D printer unless it exists for just an instant, or an 11D printer if string theory is correct, or an 8==D printer if that happens to be the value in the variable D.