Any thoughts on ASUS including 3D printing mounting points for you to customize you MB? The picture below references a fan mounting bracket/grill and name plates. Gimmick or great?
Any thoughts on ASUS including 3D printing mounting points for you to customize you MB? The picture below references a fan mounting bracket/grill and name plates. Gimmick or great?
I personally love the idea of 3D printed and editable parts on PC hardware. I'd love to see someone do this with a mouse next. Design a mouse top to contour to my hand and mill it out of walnut or mahogany or something.
I personally love the idea of 3D printed and editable parts on PC hardware. I'd love to see someone do this with a mouse next. Design a mouse top to contour to my hand and mill it out of walnut or mahogany or something.
Looks like a gimmick for now, but could be useful with different placement: if the mounting points were over the internal header areas, you could create a custom 'unitary header' plug that holds your power button/LED header, front panel USB & audio, fans, etc into a solid block, which you can then insert and remove as one item when working on a machine.
3D printing support is cool, but you know they are going to charge an arm and a leg for that "support" even though it costs them next to nothing to do for their customers. It just feels like a gimmicky way to charge "gamers" more money for the same product.
If they do it better than Roccat and offer precise dimensions for those mounts and a modifiable library of all those 3D printed parts for free, good on them. If they do it like Roccat and just put up a fucking shapeways store, fuck 'em.
Once 3D scanning like this hits the mainstream, IP theft is going to be fucking nuts. I can't wait to see the fallout. Buy 900 dollar plastic designer glasses, scan the frames and thingiverse the shit. Gucci's gonna have a stroke.
At $1.4B a year profit over $8.8B revenue for 79,000 employees in 2015 alone, I think they can deal with any loss in hobbyist counterfitting.
But you are right about this aspect: people should be very wary about product authenticity in the later stages when 3D printing evolves to make it harder to spot physical differences. But this is already happening in some markets, just look for "cracked replica wheel".