The industrial purposes are near limitless. In the end it makes no difference if it is the industrial or home printer that drives the technological development of 3d printers (spoiler, the driving force will be the industrial sector); both will reap the benefits. I feel the home printer won't become widespread until the technology matures further.
Sure, the industry will drive for bigger and better printers. That doesn't necesarly mean you can use em at home.
Also, even if a person didn't have their own printer, they will be able to pay to use one from a business. For instance, I can get conventional printing done at a Staples store. Many universities already have 3d printers available for students to use.
This I'd find much more likely to happen than home printers. Though I'd still question what you'd want to print yourself, as opposed to just having it printed by your local furniture store or something based on a customer's order who can organise and maintain the various patterns as well as get specialised printers for specialised jobs. It'd cut transportation costs & the need for storage, while also being relativly efficient as everyone can use it, so it's not just the one print job per year.
Technology is a tricky thing to predict. At one point (during its infancy) people could not imagine what the internet would be useful for. 20 years ago who could have predicted the various widespread uses of smart phones? Remember those grainy phone cameras... what was the use of them? Now the cameras are a major driving force of smart phones. I remember when streaming services were just coming around and they were originally shunned because we had video rental stores.
True, but at least most of those had (some) fairly obvious potential consumer uses. They might not seem super usefull or even frivolous, and the competition might seem waaaaaaay better at the time. But at least you can see what they'd potentialy be used for. And of course some new uses were invented along the way that noone saw coming. But at least the potential was visible. Here this is much less so.
- cost effectiveness - cut out the middle man and transport costs
- serving remote locations - now it doesn't matter if there are no stores near by or if shipping is astronomically expensive
- unusual and very specific items - things that businesses might not find profitable to store can now be easily stored and sold digitally
- custom items - people can make things for themselves
- "Etsy" type items - connect small level creators and consumers, just sell them the printing file
- convenience - no shipping time, no need to leave your home
Honestly the possibilities are nearly endless. Those are just a few a thought of off the top of my head. There will undoubtedly be things we can't even imagine.
Those might be advantages, but for what items would that actually be worth the effort as a consumer? Who buys enough etsy stuff to want to print it yourself? Plus, most people are lazy and clumsy, putting together ikea furniture already pushes them to their limits. As long as any assembly at home is still required people are probably going to prefer just having someone do it for them. Not to mention that printing even something as small as wargaming miniatures already requires quite a big printer, who has the space to print say, a closet even if it comes in parts? And lastly, a lot of objects that could potentially be printed also last relativly long. I mean, an obvious one to print could be small household objects like cups. But buying an entire printer just to print some cuttlery and and a bunch of plates every 10 years seems a bit ridiculous.
I mean, there's probably someone somewhere who can make it work. But it doesn't seem like something that'd become a household object anytime soon.
It's funny how far this thread has deviated!
Can't be the worst deviation you've been a part of
It's kinda like GW said "let's milk once again the lotr cow, grab as many money as we can and then... who cares".
meh, makes me curious why they still have the license though. The tolkien estate seems to generally want to keep some control over the license and not hand it out to random nonsense from what I remember.[/QUOTE]