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Comment by anon7000

12 hours ago

I think you’ve done a good job disproving your point that no one is buying them. Golf is a very popular hobby.

The point of this thread: the maker movement isn’t dead simply because most people don’t care about CNC machines. In reality, there are loads of makers & people who love tinkering and building things for themselves, it’s easier than ever to do so (and to build very non-trivial products for yourself), and more and more people are able to get into this.

If the maker movement was actually dead, we wouldn’t be seeing an explosion of powerful, easy-to-use manufacturing tools available at lower & lower price points.

I guess your point is that it’s not exactly mainstream, not that no one is buying them. Which is true, but who cares.

Also, there is a massive tropical aquarium store in a random strip mall a few blocks from my house. It takes up like three units.

I don't know why I let myself get triggered by some rando who has convinced himself that just because he doesn't do something it must not be popular, but here I am.

  • Taylor Swift is very popular, therefore no one listens to anything but pop music. It's a very low effort argument.

    Obviously such a pursuit is going to never be something 1/2 of people do, you need:

    - space

    - ambition

    - aptitude

    - money

    - tolerance for huge amounts of frustration

    - some ability and openness to learn rapidly

    - enough time to devote to it

    - a space to allow noisy things to run for hours

    - the ability to acquire these things in your country

    Those aspects filter out a great percentage of the population, of course this will never be "mainstream". VR goggles aren't mainstream, why would you expect someone wanting to make their own CNC cabinets (or whathaveyou) to be moreso?

  • Yeah, I don't get why what I said bugged you so much either. This is downthread of people talking about the idea that was pretty current maybe 15 years ago that 3D printers were going to be like washing machines and everybody would just print whatever they needed at home. Instead, it's a somewhat niche hobby that never really broke out into widespread use.