Best place for feedback?
I love the whole idea of Easy Print, so thank you for doing it.
I'm sure you guys are working on it, but so far, the only things I see that REALLY need to be added are:
1. Perimeter count
2. Nozzle size selection for pre-Buddy machines, assuming the Buddy ones get the nozzle size from your machine via Connect.
I realize the whole feature set of Prusa Slicer can't be added, but I think those two are vital.
RE: Best place for feedback?
Agreed, perimeter count needs to be an option
Formerly known on this forum as @fuchsr -- until all hell broke loose with the forum software...
RE: Best place for feedback?
Actually, every single function of Prusa Slicer needs to be available. Just in the beginning a limited feature set is okayish, but if people are supposed to use it, it all needs to be in there
RE: Best place for feedback?
Z_offset needs to be included, as well.
RE: Best place for feedback?
I've been using for a few weeks now and absolutely delighted.
I did have quite a few occasions where there was a failure to send a command, and one where the print got stuck midway due to filament snapping and causing a runout, that I couldn't diagnose without going to the printer - obviously its best to actually be in the room when starting the print, but its still useful. I keep all my printers in a spare room, so I can see a use case where I can close the doors to prevent a draft and start the print remotely from downstairs.
My requests
- a little more to the error messages other than - "printer needs attention" - maybe throw in the actual error? A lot of mine are just cases of the filament breaking or running out rather than anything major.
- a better way of handling failed requests - I had one case where I couldn't stop the print remotely (it had failed due to filament run out, but just got stuck there) and had to reset the printer
- remote resets would be nice - both for printer and the remote subsystem on the raspberry pi board
- remote installation of firmware would be a game changer for mk3 ecosystem