The awesome mouse sets out to conquer a problem I have yet to see solved in the maker community, a 6DOF, 3D-printable 3D mouse to use for CAD programs (and other modelling applications). I use a name-brand 3D mouse at work most days, but one day I came home and wanted the same capability here. After discovering the cost of a normal 3D mouse ($150-400) and realizing that only one company had a monopoly on 6DOF mice, I set out to make my own. One that is 6DOF, mostly 3D printable, cheap, and open source.
I really agree with you on principal. I have been to the library with a 3d printer and I even took their little workshop about how to use it.
I have been hesitant to actually do so because I feel like I would go all the way there and try something, wait for ages for it to print, then realize I made one little mistake, and have to go back home, fix it, make another reservation, make another trip down… The amount of iteration I anticipate while learning to use a technology like this is substantial. Historically I have been a very “trial and error” type of person---- heavy on the error.
I have always been curious, of people who use the public-access 3d printers, how many of them started out learning in that environment? I feel that it would be quite prohibitive to learn the basics. Maybe if you had learned it previously the shared printer could be a good resource.
Anyone here done much on library or other community 3d printers as a novice, and what was your experience?
That’s why I went the way of starting with a cheap $100 3D printer at home. The fast iterating is precious to me. However, if you want to print things off a website like Printables or Thingiverse, you don’t really need iterations as the original designer (hopefully) did it already.
I really agree with you on principal. I have been to the library with a 3d printer and I even took their little workshop about how to use it.
I have been hesitant to actually do so because I feel like I would go all the way there and try something, wait for ages for it to print, then realize I made one little mistake, and have to go back home, fix it, make another reservation, make another trip down… The amount of iteration I anticipate while learning to use a technology like this is substantial. Historically I have been a very “trial and error” type of person---- heavy on the error.
I have always been curious, of people who use the public-access 3d printers, how many of them started out learning in that environment? I feel that it would be quite prohibitive to learn the basics. Maybe if you had learned it previously the shared printer could be a good resource.
Anyone here done much on library or other community 3d printers as a novice, and what was your experience?
That’s why I went the way of starting with a cheap $100 3D printer at home. The fast iterating is precious to me. However, if you want to print things off a website like Printables or Thingiverse, you don’t really need iterations as the original designer (hopefully) did it already.