A little ranting about automation and 3D printing ...
One thing that everyone should understand from the start is that the HUMAN FACTOR CAM NEVER BE DUPLICATED BY MACHINE.
The fact that humans are all different equates to human made "things", even the same "thing", ALWAYS being different as opposed to machine made where the "thing" is ALWAYS the same.
1. There are chess programs out there that can play at grandmaster strength, but that doesn't stop chess players from competing with each other. There is a bigger thrill of beating your human opponent over a chessboard then there is in beating a computer. Matter of fact, we know the popularity of computer games, why not just play them against the computer and be done with it? No, you still have human beings competing against each other for the highest scores, showing off there skills. That's the thing,
2. There are music programs that can duplicate a symphony orchestra with real sample sounds, but that doesn't stop musicians from practicing hours-on-end to improve there technique and perform on there instruments. Try listening to a movie sound track created by computer and sampled sounds, sounds great, I'll admit it, but then listen to a real orchestra perform the same thing...you will be amazed at the difference. The difference the HUMAN FACTOR makes.
3. There are programs that can duplicate great master painters or replicate real paintbrush strokes, but that doesn't stop art from being created with actual paint, by hand, by human beings.
4. Digital photography is a great innovation and helps us record things much quicker and, like on this forum, allows us to post our projects. The downside of digital photography is that we no long have to think as much. For example, when I started in photography, I took several rolls of film with me when I went to make a shot. The film only had 24 to 36 exposures on each roll, so I had to really think about the shot before taking it. Now with digital film, all I do is over and under expose thousands of shots, then go home, download on my computer and select and fix them up in photoshop at my leisure. Easy (for me anyway). It took more skill when using real film then digital because you actually had to know something about how light reacts to the film emulsion etc... Yes, you still have to know many things when using digital film, but one thing you have with digital that you don't have with real film...This is the great UNDO button.
5. There are sewing machines that automatically create embroideries, but why do fine sewers still hand make them.
6. You can buy models already built...they call them toys or collectibles, but there are still great modelers out there who spend days, weeks, months maybe even years on a project. Why? because they challenge the brain and develop human skills, inspire research on the subject at hand and in turn learn more about the history, which, in my opinion, makes a human - a better human.
I can go on and on but...
Don't get me wrong, I love technology, but I also understand the difference that the HUMAN FACTOR makes. When human beings have nothing to strive for they merely exist, but when they have something to strive for and work at it, they live.
There has always been a GREAT distinction between HAND MADE and MACHINE MADE. because every hand made object is different and shows the great craftsmanship and skill that a human can strive for whereas machine made is identical and has no human effort or skill behind it except for the the engineers and programmers involved.
3D printing is a great technology but whether the parts come in a box or downloaded for 3D printing, that's just the first step. The art is putting them together, sanding, filling, painting and detailing by HAND, learning the history and using the skills you've mastered to create a one-of-a-kind "THING" that can never be duplicated by machine.
Machine made is disposable because they can always be replicated when needed.
Hand made can never be replicated, thus will live on when we're gone.