Also good for composting and making room in your recycling bin

  • SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    You’ve designed a niche solution to a problem that doesn’t exist.

    Use a box knife. Or, for a more versatile tool, get a Morakniv Companion.

    • kellenoffdagrid❓️@lemmy.sdf.org
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      5 months ago

      I mean that’s kinda the whole deal with 3d printing, it’s useful for really niche applications where you can just add a small amount of convenience to your life.

      Someone else commented about this being good for school kids so they can safely make cat scratchers to donate to animal shelters, and as a cat owner with a constant pile of recycling I can see this being actually useful if I wanna avoid spending $20-$40 on one of those fancier cardboard cat scratchers from Target or whatever.

      • SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I mean that’s kinda the whole deal with 3d printing, it’s useful for really niche applications where you can just add a small amount of convenience to your life.

        Is it? All I ever request to be printed is the proprietary part that prematurely broke as it was designed to do.

        Someone else commented about this being good for school kids

        Instead of teaching them to use scissors? We’re raising a generation that can’t think or do for themselves. They’re reliant upon consumption.

        as a cat owner with a constant pile of recycling I can see this being actually useful

        As an adult you think it’s more useful than a box knife? It’s not even going to be faster than a box knife with straight edge. And, why do you need a product to pet your cat?

        • angrystego@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Cutting carboard with scissors? It can be done, but it’s a chore amd the results are poor. I wouldn’t wish it on school children.

          • SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Cutting carboard with scissors? It can be done, but it’s a chore amd the results are poor. I wouldn’t wish it on school children.

            Your tools probably suck.

            Any knife and straight edge is faster and easier. Any warehouse worker knows this. Any compost bin is better than cat scratchers. Any environmentalist knows this.

            For scissors I recommend Fiskars titanium nitride. Just yesterday they gave me a nice curve in 1/16th aluminum. Cardboard cuts like a hot knife through butter. And, I bet they cost less than the materials used in the tool in the OP.

            Box knife reco: any metal housing without an auto-retract safety feature but with a retractable blade

            Knife reco: Morakniv Companion: cheap, sharp, extremely versatile.

            Aviation snips reco: Klein J1102S will take 12" cheater bars and be fine

            Fence: use a metal level instead of a metal ruler to prevent mistakes

            Learn how to make a jig for speed and accuracy in any repetive cutting task.

            • angrystego@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              Well, I don’t think we’re on the same page. I’m not really into OP’s design, but I also don’t think that school children use Fiskars scissors. Don’t know what’s wrong with cat scratchers. Cats love them, and if you use an environmentally friendly glue you can still compost them later. I do have good tools at home, but I trully appreciate your recomendations - that’s rather wholesome of you, thanks.

              • SirDerpy@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                For adults: box knife with a jig consisting of a fence and stop block

                For children: auto-retract safety knife and add a second fence to keep the blade enclosed

                A child learns nothing but dependance on stupid gadgets from the device in the OP.

  • kellenoffdagrid❓️@lemmy.sdf.org
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    5 months ago

    Looks like the specific design in this video is being sold here, but if you’d prefer something that isn’t behind a pay wall there’s a few options (like this one).

    Side rant: I’m all for people getting compensation for creative work but I feel like it’s wrong to put the source file behind a waywall instead of simply selling the actual print directly to people that don’t have access to a printer, that seems much more fair imo

      • kellenoffdagrid❓️@lemmy.sdf.org
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        5 months ago

        Oh definitely, I just think it’s easier to justify paying for a physical product than it is paying for a single file if you still need to manufacture it yourself. Still a valid business practice, I’m just biased toward “information should be free” and all that.

        • Captainvaqina@sh.itjust.works
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          5 months ago

          It’s $3 which is well worth the time saved by not having to design it from scratch.

          Someone had to use their skills to create it, do you think they should work for free?

          • kellenoffdagrid❓️@lemmy.sdf.org
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            5 months ago

            I don’t disagree, never said people should work for free. I recognize there’s a disjoint in believing good information should be free[ly accessible] and also that people deserve compensation for work, though. It’s just one of those contradictions I haven’t solved as far as my own beliefs.

            More than anything I was complaining, like I said it’s a totally valid business choice, I’m just a penny-pincher lol.

        • scrion@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          But it’s not just information, someone sat in front of their computer and put the work in to design it, then print it and iterate.

          You’re paying for that process, and for the time and effort the person took to acquire the necessary skills.

          However, there should be a noticeable price difference due to the easy scaling / replicatibility when distributing digital goods.

          I’m with you insofar as the final product feels like it should be 3 bucks, not the file.

          • kellenoffdagrid❓️@lemmy.sdf.org
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            5 months ago

            I replied to another response similar to yours so I won’t bore you unless you want to read more, but I mostly agree with what you said and I totally agree that the work itself to create the file is worth compensation. I’m just a penny-pinching bastard who would rather find out if the print is actually good before paying lmao.

            Pay-what-you-want, donations, and subsidizing with a higher price for the final product makes more sense to me in terms of these kinds of digital goods, but that’s besides the point, and I’m no expert on this kind of thing.

            Honestly I’d be willing to pay 5-8 bucks for the final product since it looks more polished than any of the free designs I’ve seen. But yes, fair points.

          • kellenoffdagrid❓️@lemmy.sdf.org
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            5 months ago

            That’s a fair point, I guess I think of digital goods in a different context.

            They definitely deserve compensation for their work, and how they chose to do it is absolutely valid. I think I’m biased toward open source hardware where the labor of creating their digital files is subsidized by selling the physical product instead. I realize that’s a risk and takes more effort though, so I totally understand why they didn’t do that.