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Posted by Murfalo 13 hours ago

Restore full BambuNetwork support for Bambu Lab printers(github.com)
449 points | 186 commentspage 2
asveikau 10 hours ago||
Squashing the git history is not cool.
jogu 6 hours ago|
Presumably the original dev that implemented the changes for this functionality that pulled the repo does not want to be associated so some level of squashing was required but yeah, the whole history was maybe a bit silly.
nubinetwork 12 hours 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 11 hours 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 11 hours ago||
this is it for me

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

ryandrake 9 hours ago|||
> i bought the dang thing, let me decide how I use it.

Amazing how controversial this statement is here in 2026.

parasubvert 8 hours ago||
[flagged]
iAMkenough 9 hours ago|||
there's not enough appeal with the investors and stock holders.

they're going to try to make everything you have a subscription, starting with the homes you might try to buy. they don't even live here, but there's no laws stopping them, because your representatives personally benefit from letting things go for certain corporations/people (the same thing after the Citizens United decision)

skeledrew 8 hours ago||
People want remote access to their printers, a feature which seems to be tied to Bambu servers.
amazingamazing 11 hours 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?
eddythompson80 9 hours ago||
Even with an Ender3 many, including myself, would connect it to a raspberryPi with octoprint to be able to send prints over the network. The SD card flow gets very tedious very quickly.
KyleBerezin 8 hours ago||
Oh god. OctoPrint, I forgot about that tool. Jesus, I'm still subscribed after all of these years. I do not want to know how much money I have been quietly bleeding for this tool.
lonlazarus 7 hours ago||
Subscribed? It's just free software that you can put on a Pi or something. Not sure what you'd be paying for.
eddythompson80 7 hours ago||
The creator has a patreon[1]. I did a one-time payment too because early on it really changed how I used my 3D printer and thought it deserved some support.

[1] https://octoprint.org/support-octoprint/

jagged-chisel 11 hours 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.
amazingamazing 11 hours ago||
Doesn’t it have a lan mode?
bdcravens 10 hours ago||
Yes, and aside from being able to send and monitor your prints from their mobile app (and there are third party implementation of a similar app), you really don't lose much by using LAN Mode, especially if you pair it with Tailscale.
snailmailman 6 hours ago||
The mobile app is quite nice. Print error and print finish notifications. Webcam view when I’m not near my printer. The ability to pause it remotely if something looks off.

I use LAN mode, plus a home assistant plugin to restore the lost functionality. The default webcam is pretty bad so I’ve also mounted a better one to my printer for a live video view that’s at more than 1fps.

The main thing I’ve lost by using lan mode is printing from my phone? I think there are ways to do that. But OrcaSlicer has so many options that are frequently worth adjusting over random presets other creators used; it’s a strictly better experience compared to printing on mobile.

I think there is some niche “cancel printing of one specific object” feature that I dont know how to use without the mobile app. If you are printing many objects at once, and one fails, you can cancel a specific part/object using the mobile app. Not sure how to do that with OrcaSlicer + lan mode, or if it’s even possible. (Edit: OrcaSlicer doesn’t support it. The home assistant plugin might? Bambu studio in lan mode doesn’t support it either, it requires the mobile app)

loloquwowndueo 11 hours 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_ 11 hours 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 11 hours 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).
_carbyau_ 10 hours ago||
The problem is trust. I don't want to get into an adversarial relationship with my printer over networking.

I could enable LAN mode and trust the mode does what it says.

I could trust others firmware reverse engineering to verify LAN mode does what it says.

I could isolate it on it's own wifi and I could block it at the home firewall from accessing the internet, to be sure.

But it was easier to simply leave it off my network.

stavros 10 hours ago||
Yeah, fair enough. I have a VLAN with no Internet access for those devices, it's convenient.
proxytoshi 11 hours ago||
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shevy-java 6 hours ago||
It was a mistake by BambuLab to piss off and alienate the community. They poked the bear; stung the bee; squashed the frog. This is literally the Barbara Streisand effect in the modern era. Now people are watching. Reputation went out the window already: "If they can sue one of us, they can sue all of us". (Well, threaten to sue at the least, aka applying financial pressure on that developer.)
Orygin 2 hours ago|
Good joke if you think more than 1% of their customer base will care about that.

Bambu is not (never has been?) targeting 3D printing hobbyist but everyday people; and for them cost/reliability is more important than running your custom slicer. Until there is a serious competitor that has a polished and cheap printer, Bambu can alienate all of the open source community and still be fine.

laweijfmvo 11 hours ago||
Imagine if traditional printers were this big of a pain to use… oh
pc86 9 hours ago||
As long as 3d printers are less than 50% harder to use than normal printers, they're dimensionally easier per capita.
burnt-resistor 3 hours ago||
Incidentally, almost all color 2D printers insert serial number tracing artifacts, and many 2D scanners and photo editing software prevent manipulation of images containing either EURion constellation circles or Counterfeit Deterrence System patterns. Interestingly, I didn't have a problem downloading, manipulating, or attempting to print currency-detected fragment images on iPadOS 18.x.
Our_Benefactors 12 hours 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
hsuduebc2 12 hours 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 12 hours 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.
nik282000 8 hours ago|||
They are an adversarial player in the market, actively trying to lock users into an ecosystem that is incompatible with other printers.

Like Adobe's 'creative' software and Onshape, they are working as hard as possible to make YOU pay more to have less.

chappi42 4 hours ago|||
As long as Onshape let THEIR servers work for MY public projects for free I don't see how your "make YOU pay more" statement applies.
Orygin 2 hours ago||
Same thing for the Bambu cloud. Like the feature? Use it under their terms. Don't? Use LAN mode and whatever slicer you want
parasubvert 8 hours ago|||
[flagged]
SchemaLoad 12 hours 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.
nirav72 10 hours ago|||
Bambuddy and tailscale was my solution to losing access to mobile app once I went lan-only. Has video stream ,monitoring and control. Plus home assistant integration via MQTT. Only thing I’m missing is the ‘AI’ spaghetti monitoring. But those are rare for me.
Mogzol 9 hours ago||
There's also the Openbu or LanBu android apps if you just want a basic app for monitoring from your phone like Bambu Handy did. Although if you want to access your printer from a remote network you'll still need tailscale or similar.
ThatPlayer 9 hours ago||||
Another feature locked behind the app is individual part cancelling which is nice for partial print failures.
_carbyau_ 11 hours 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"?

armamut 29 minutes ago|||
afaik, these kind of image analysis/computer vision algorithms are called AI by definition. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_intelligence]
SchemaLoad 8 hours ago||||
If the print has failed you can stop it from the app to prevent it becoming a huge mess and possibly causing damage to the printer.
mh- 10 hours ago|||
I'm curious what concise phrase you'd display to convey the same information to that audience.

"Computer Vision Model and Nozzle Telemetry Analysis Detect Print Error"?

Dusseldorf 10 hours ago||
"Print Error Detected"?
mh- 10 hours ago|||
I laughed pretty hard at this, and you're right. Problem solved.
Barbing 9 hours ago|||
“Print Error Detected (Maybe?)”

This isn’t a PC Load Letter we can trust!

sho_hn 11 hours ago||||
> They’re the only competent and reliable printer that isn’t a project car in itself

Prusa.

drum55 11 hours 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.

sho_hn 10 hours ago||
I've done zero debugging on my Prusa and it's been pretty much fire and forget. I had one spaghetti print failure in years on it, and it was my own fault for disabling supports and the print falling over :)

Automatic filament changes would be nice for sure, I look forward to upgrading to one of their new INDX models.

thot_experiment 11 hours 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?

neo_tang 7 hours ago||
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AmmyTang 6 hours ago|
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