Comment on A Simple Software Change to Add "Bricklayer" Mode to Slicers Delivers Truly Water-Tight 3D Prints
Kowowow@lemmy.ca 4 days ago
Would be nice to see on cura
Comment on A Simple Software Change to Add "Bricklayer" Mode to Slicers Delivers Truly Water-Tight 3D Prints
Kowowow@lemmy.ca 4 days ago
Would be nice to see on cura
empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 days ago
You won’t ever see it in a commercial / OTS slicer implementation for a while, fucking Stratasys still has a patent on it and they love lawyers. This guy finally just said fuck it and wrote it himself.
TootSweet@lemmy.world 4 days ago
That’s putting it generously, isn’t it?
This video from a year ago goes into why the patent they have today isn’t valid. (Short answer: prior art. They patented it in 1995 and that expired in 2015 in the U.S. and 2016 in Europe. Then they re-patented it in 2020, which isn’t really something they can do, but the patent office granted it anyway, probably unaware of the prior patent. There’s kindof a “new claim” in the later patent, but there’s prior art for that as well in the form of a 2019 feature request on PrusaSlicer’s Github.)
I get that Stratasys has lawyers and money and might theoretically be able to win even a case with as little merit as a patent case regarding that 2020 patent would have. But I’m not sure I’d go so far as to say they have a (valid) patent.
squaresinger@lemmy.world 3 days ago
That’s a core problem with the patent system:
Kowowow@lemmy.ca 4 days ago
Man I really don’t want to switch to something else
KyuubiNoKitsune@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 days ago
Same, I don’t get the popularity of Prusa Slicer and definitely not Bambu/Orca slicer, those last ones are awful.
ouRKaoS@lemmy.today 3 days ago
I had horrible stringing issues running a couple test prints in Orca.