Best Buy via eBay has
Bambu Lab X1-Carbon 3D Printer Combo w/ Automatic Material System on sale for
$799.99.
Shipping is free.
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Bambu Lab X1-Carbon 3D Printer Combo w/ Automatic Material System on sale for
$799.99.
Shipping is free, otherwise free store pickup is available where stock permits.
Thanks to community member
SplendidMint7685 for finding this deal.
About this item:- Large 256mm x 256mm x 256mm Build Volume
- Dual Auto Bed Leveling
- High-Speed CoreXY with 20000 mm/s² Acceleration
- Compatible Printing Materials Up to 300°C
- Built-In Camera Monitoring
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Top Comments
you can still get 3rd party hardware (pates, extruders, hotends, ect.), but the SW... after have other brands for years and futzing with all sorts of opensores solutions, nah, i want SW designed for the tool that does exactly what it should every time.
as for print jobs through the cloud... i'm much more concerned about my camera feeds, they can have my print jobs
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to the point, there aren't limitations to buying/mounting 3rd party tires/rims on a vehicle (aside from adding spacers or some nonsense that will wear suspension/driveline hardware), it's not a hack... please stop using the word.
your example of the Type-R, it's a vendor designed/tested product... again, not a hack, please stop using the word. re-tuning a Type-R once received or swapping a larger turbo in, yeah, you voided the warranty... it breaks, its on you, not them.
which brings us back to the original guy you quoted, hacking or modifying products is on you and shouldn't be the vendors responsibility... so vendors control that by blocking access to functionality.
I love hacking too, but I understand that's at my own risk. A lot of people don't understand that, so when costs go up we were faced with either lowering costs or raising prices. We did not want to raise prices for the vast majority of buyers who just want to use the hardware as it was designed, so we lowered costs by making it much harder to hack. It's unfortunate, but it's a tale as old as time... a few dishonest people (trying to get their hacking mistakes repaired/replaced at the manufacturer's expense) spoil the fun for everyone.
Edited to clarify what I meant by dishonest.
For a casual user of the PS3 not wanting to resort to illegal methods, sure, you could choose not to update the console to keep Linux support, but then you couldn't do anything online at all, as PSN would prohibit anyone logging in with anything lower than the current firmware release, and then newer games also wouldn't run on the older firmware.
What made the update process itself even worse was that if you did accept the firmware upgrade, and you previously had a Linux partition on the console, this more or less orphaned the Linux partition on the hard drive, leaving it there taking up space, but with no way for you to ever access it again.
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