10 comments

  • bri3d 1 hour 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.

    • mschulkind 1 minute ago
      You're missing two things from the whole picture: 1. Cloud mode works without local network access, so their server is involved in the transit of the data to the printer. This is pretty minor, but still within their rights to preserve. 2. For printing from the app, they actually run the computationally expensive slicing algorithm on their servers, so this is totally reasonable to protect.
    • oliwarner 33 minutes ago
      > This isn't actually possible

      This is only true due to a firmware they pushed last year. It's an artificial limit.

      There's no reason at all a local client couldn't just talk to a local printer without any cloud.

      Every problem BambuLabs have here is self-inflicted. They could allow simultaneous cloud and local queue management with or without authentication.

    • xg15 50 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?

      • unsnap_biceps 21 minutes ago
        I believe it's a one time pairing code, not each print. FWIW I like the design.
    • stavros 46 minutes ago
      Why should I have to send all my prints to Bambu when the printer is sitting right next to me? Why do I have to choose between being able to stop my printer remotely or Bambu not tracking my every move, when it's trivial to have both?
    • nullc 37 minutes ago
      > clients can send prints locally

      Using an AGPL violating mystery meat binary plugin that you run on your host, which potentially compromises any airgap you put around your printer (it attempts to connect to bambu servers, or did last time I checked it) and potentially your entire host.

  • djfergus 9 minutes ago
    What is Bambu’s motivation here? What do they get for damaging their credibility like this? Just usage data? Training a model on everyone’s STL files?
  • Murfalo 2 hours ago
    • Aurornis 1 hour 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-bee 1 hour 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.

        • Aurornis 38 minutes ago
          Vibe coding a slop website drastically increases your bounce rate and reduces trust in your project.

          This looks like the kind of fake foundation website someone vibecodes to trick people into downloading a Trojan horse.

          You can use an LLM to generate a website format and then take 10 minutes to review it and put real text on it.

          This is just lazy excuse making. Don’t let a smooth talking YouTuber override what you can see with your own eyes.

        • andhug 55 minutes ago
          It’s still AI slop, even if your favorite youtuber built it.
          • em-bee 42 minutes ago
            yes, but that is not the problem here. the problem is that google search favors AI slop that makes this the preferred method of webdesign.

            there is a huge difference between creating AI slop because i am lazy (which i think most people doing that are) and creating AI slop because otherwise google gives your website a bad rating.

            now you and i may not care about google ratings, but many other people do, and the end result will be that all websites that want good ratings will end up being AI slop.

            somehow we need to send google a message to stop that.

            • Aurornis 35 minutes ago
              The Google excuse doesn’t even hold water when you consider that the content of the website is so bad that it’s not even going to register for the relevant search terms. It’s just empty AI slop copy.

              What are they even trying to rank for? It doesn’t make sense.

            • nathanmills 36 minutes ago
              > somehow we need to send google a message to stop that.

              ...

  • nubinetwork 1 hour 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?

    • javawizard 55 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.

      • binsquare 41 minutes ago
        this is it for me

        i bought the dang thing, let me decide how I use it.

  • h4kunamata 1 hour 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.

  • Our_Benefactors 1 hour 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
  • laweijfmvo 48 minutes ago
    Imagine if traditional printers were this big of a pain to use… oh
  • mahgnous 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • hsuduebc2 1 hour 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.

    • drum55 1 hour 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.
      • SchemaLoad 1 hour 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.
        • _carbyau_ 38 minutes ago
          Mine is now offline.

          But when it was online, I never checked the app for failed prints. If the print has failed, I'll find out when I'm near enough to it to do something about it.

          When offline, it amused me when there was a "hairball" and the printer detected it advising "AI Detecting Print Error".

          At what level does an image analysis algorithm become "AI"?

      • thot_experiment 59 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?

      • sho_hn 48 minutes ago
        > They’re the only competent and reliable printer that isn’t a project car in itself

        Prusa.

        • drum55 36 minutes ago
          Yeah I’ve had one, still do, it never gets used because it’s a project car. Compared with one button press and coming back to a print in a few hours, it’s a constant nightmare of debugging, print issues, and manually changing filaments that aren’t stored in an airtight container and get wet. It’s not even competition, as much as I would like to support open source tools the Prusa stuff is an order of magnitude more expensive than a A1 Mini that will make a reliable print every time.

          It’s like saying a bicycle is a serious contender to a train, they both have kind of similar things going on but you’d have to be insane to suggest that they do as good of a job as one another at the things people actually want to achieve.

  • amazingamazing 57 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-chisel 51 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.
    • loloquwowndueo 47 minutes ago
      I can imagine not having to do the “save to sd card, eject, put in printer, fiddle with the printers crappy ui to select the print” flow might be attractive to some. Find the model you want in the web, click “send to printer”, done.

      I don’t mind the sd card thing, also happy with my bottom of the barrel ender 3.

    • _carbyau_ 46 minutes ago
      I have an Ender 3 too. And I have a Bambu machine - that I leave offline and use via microSD card as the Ender got me used to.

      I get it. The convenience of networking - when it works FOR the customer - is great.

      But networking controlled by corporations is a path to enshittification.

      • stavros 45 minutes ago
        At least your use case would be served well by enabling LAN mode, which doesn't let the printer talk to the internet, even if you want it to (and I want mine to).
    • proxytoshi 49 minutes ago
      [dead]