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Thursday, November 21, 2024
With Core ONE, Prusa’s Open Source Hardware Dream Quietly Dies
Hackaday: Yesterday, Prusa Research officially unveiled their next printer, the Core ONE. Going over the features and capabilities of this new machine, it’s clear that Prusa has kept a close eye on the rapidly changing desktop 3D printer market and designed a machine to better position themselves within a field of increasingly capable machines from other manufacturers.
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The debate between free use and keeping a hold on the industry will be a continuous argument in the maker space community and the release of Core One is no different. The idea of group knowledge and growing as the entirety of human kind is conflicted by the need to make a profit. This article highlights the community's love of altering and quick self repairs on their devices through Open Source materials. Some companies are able to provide this information to their customers but many companies believe that in doing so they will lose their corner of the market. I find it really interesting that customers are also torn on this idea. Some chose to buy from companies that have better programs but don't release their designs to the public while others only buy from companies that are open source so they can hack and edit their machines. Overall I think whether or not a company has open source policies doesn't matter. What really matters is the consumer base they are selling to.
The unveiling of the Prusa Core ONE feels like a bittersweet milestone in the evolution of 3D printing. It’s an undeniably impressive machine—high-speed CoreXY motion, an enclosed chamber, and Prusa’s trademark reliability and support. Yet, the real headline isn’t its cutting-edge features, but what it represents: Prusa stepping away from their open source roots. It’s like seeing a once-passionate indie artist go mainstream, trading ideals for sustainability in a competitive market. At the same time, I can’t ignore the realities of the market. Prusa’s cautious approach to releasing design files reflects the pressures of competing with manufacturers who prioritize speed and cost efficiency over community values. While the company blames open source for enabling clones, it’s hard to ignore that their real competition—companies like Bambu—didn’t need to replicate Prusa’s designs to gain an edge. If anything, Bambu surged ahead by pushing technological boundaries faster than Prusa could keep up.For the end user, this raises an interesting paradox. The Core ONE will likely deliver everything a consumer could want—quality, performance, and support—but at the cost of transparency. It’s still more repairable and modifiable than most consumer products, but the magic of open source has dimmed.
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