For a bigger pegboard, I'd almost certainly go the plywood route, ideally with access to a CNC drill or a laser cutter through some community workshop. The hole precision mattered more than I expected, and getting a whole board right with a handheld drill was surprisingly tedious.
Going from rough idea to something your kid can actually hold in one evening is pretty great.
The Agent x Parent combo has become my favorite niche in LLM space. It's unlocked so much creativity at a time where we have the least disposable time.
Is one brand better than the other? Are they all pretty much the same by now?
[0] https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/08/3d-printers-print-br... [1] https://3dprintingindustry.com/news/bambu-lab-controversy-de...
So while I can't compare the whole market, I can definitely say the jump in ease of use was huge.
Prusa printers are great too, especially if you care about supporting a company that invested heavily in open source. I found them harder to justify on price, but I also understand why people choose them for that reason.
There have also been pretty public disputes around Bambu's use of open-source work from the Prusa/Slic3r ecosystem, so that is part of the decision too.
I did a bit of research and I agree with her. The other one that stood out was the snap maker U1 (it has a nice elegant solution for multi-colored prints, and promises to be open etc going forward).
I'm personally going with the P2S with AMS for the simplicity of the bambu ecosystem (though I'm conflicted about it).
Still after using the creality ender 3 for a long time I'm excited to see how much easier things can be. :)