73 pointsby Murfalo2 hours ago8 comments
  • bri3d23 minutes ago
    This looks to be a clone of the prior state of the repository that caused all the Bambu drama earlier this week.

    I did a ton of research because I didn't understand what people wanted here, and this is what's going on:

    Right now, Bambu have adjusted their system into two modalities:

    * "default" or "Cloud" mode, where you get an app, remote monitoring, but you have to use Bambu Studio or Bambu Connect to send prints. They implemented this by adding cloud auth to their "internal API;" the client application has to get a token from Bambu's servers, even if the request it eventually makes is a "local" one.

    * LAN / Developer mode, where the device displays a token and you put it into your app. This disables all of the remote monitoring but in exchange, clients can send prints locally.

    What users want is to "have their cake and eat it too;" they want the local token authentication _and_ the cloud authentication enabled at the same time. This isn't actually possible, so this plugin approximates it by emulating the interface to the cloud authentication to make the "Bambu Network" cloud RPC calls from a local slicer (one of these calls is a local_print call, so ostensibly this allows you to send prints without running them through the cloud, although with all of the online functionality still enabled and required, this seems like a pretty brave thing to trust).

    Personally, I find the Bambu reaction distasteful, and there's an argument that the offline mode only exists due to similar outrage, but I don't see the current system as particularly bad and find the appetite to restore "untrustworthy" cloud functionality a bit amusing.

    • xg152 minutes ago
      > where the device displays a token and you put it into your app.

      This sounds really unpleasant to use. Maybe users just want a better UX for the local mode?

  • amazingamazing9 minutes ago
    I have an Ender3 that I use plugging in a microsd card to do prints with. What am I missing here? Seems like you can do the same with these printers. People want to use the cloud?
    • jagged-chisel3 minutes ago
      I think people like having an option for remote over the network communication. The cloud is not technically required for that. Bambu made it required for no good reason.
    • proxytoshia minute ago
      [dead]
  • Murfalo2 hours ago
    • Aurornis22 minutes ago
      That’s a vibe coded AI slop website if I’ve ever seen one. It even has a careers page that they didn’t try to edit out.

      There’s basically no information there. Is this just a copy of the other GitHub repo that was removed and someone is trying to rebrand it as their own? Or did they do some different work?

      • em-bee14 minutes ago
        That’s an LLM generated website if I’ve ever seen one

        the explanation for that is here https://youtu.be/II2QF9JwtLc

        basically louis found that not using AI to design his website drastically reduced the hits he would get from google.

        • andhug7 minutes ago
          It’s still AI slop, even if your favorite youtuber built it.
      • 12 minutes ago
        undefined
  • nubinetwork29 minutes ago
    > This version of OrcaSlicer restores full BambuNetwork support for Bambu Lab printers

    I thought that was the point, that people didn't want to be tethered to their servers?

    • javawizard7 minutes ago
      People want the option.

      There are many reasons one might prefer OrcaSlicer over Bambu Studio. One might be perfectly fine using Bambu's cloud services while preferring OrcaSlicer for different reasons; this is for those people.

      Others might not want to use Bambu's cloud services at all; OrcaSlicer as it currently exists is fine for them.

  • h4kunamata20 minutes ago
    Two words: Good luck!

    At this poting BL is just like USA tech companies, touch their food and you are toasted. Sell your printer while you can get the its worth back.

    • hungryhobbit16 minutes ago
      Our food toasts people when touched?
  • Our_Benefactors28 minutes ago
    For a moment I thought this was a way to get cloud printing restored to bambu printers without leaving lan-mode, would have been nice
  • mahgnous14 minutes ago
    [dead]
  • hsuduebc234 minutes ago
    If Bambu Lab responds to this criticism with lawyers instead of clear technical answers, it will only make the forced cloud requirement look more suspicious.

    To me, this is an obvious security risk. These printers are often used in labs, startups, engineering teams, and potentially even government environments. If print data, models, logs, or usage patterns are routed through a company controlled infrastructure, that creates a real opportunity for corporate espionage or data harvesting.

    I would not be surprised if Bambu Lab eventually faces the same level of scrutiny that Huawei network devices did.

    • drum5527 minutes ago
      I’ve been running mine offline for years, I don’t know why other people haven’t been. They’re the only competent and reliable printer that isn’t a project car in itself, but they’re obviously not completely trustworthy. Easily fixed with an air gap, updates work just great from a USB drive.
      • thot_experiment11 minutes ago
        idk, my 10 year old makerbot 2 has been pretty reliable, ever since Prusa slicer came out and I tuned a profile for it maybe 6 years ago it's been spitting out quick dimensionally accurate prints. i use it all the time, probably go through a spool every month or two and all i've had to replace is the cooling fan for the extruder once

        i'm mostly printing small mechanical parts and i can't say i have any complaints, i assume a modern prusa would be much better, surely there are other FDM printers that are good?

      • SchemaLoad12 minutes ago
        I tried it but switched back to the online mode because being able to remotely check in via the app is very useful to check the print hasn't failed.