Brick layering is shifting layers just slightly so that they interlock with the adjacent row, like bricks side view on a wall. See the video for more clear explanation.

Cnc kitchen did a video on it as well https://youtu.be/5hGm6cubFVs

    • Cris
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      21 hours ago

      The video talks about the legal stuff and context 40 sec in (short version, the current patent hasn’t been granted in Europe where he lives yet. He also said apparently the patent is unlikely to hold up 🤷‍♂️)

      I don’t mean that as a passive aggressive jab at you not watching the video or something, just me chatting about its contents :)

      (Tone on the internet is hard lol)

      • @[email protected]
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        720 hours ago

        I didn’t even realize it was a video. Youtube has fried my brain and it has to have a shitty mr beast style shocked face thumbnail for me to realize its a video…

        • Cris
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          20 hours ago

          Lol, thats honestly very fair 😅

          My instance/client didn’t even show a thumbnail, but it displays it as a video link

    • @[email protected]
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      422 hours ago

      My take: A patent just keeps you from selling the product… So unless the slicer is sold, it’s okay?

      (I didn’t read/watch)

      • @[email protected]
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        18 hours ago

        At it’s most basic, a patent is a piece of paper you can wave around and hopefully scare off others from your idea. But, until a judge somewhere bangs a gavel and says Yea or Nay, it’s nothing more than asswipe. A patent fight is insanely expensive-- even for multi-national corpos. Hence all the cross licensing agreements among them.

        Source: I’ve held a minor niche patent, (it wasn’t worth the money spent beyond the cool factor), and I knew a person who held a patent on what was basically a rectangle with drilled holes in it. He wanted to sue another manufacturer that was was doing a direct knock off. He got told straight up 1.You can’t afford it. 2. It wouldn’t stand up in court. 3. So don’t bother.

      • @Hugin
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        920 hours ago

        Nope patents protect replication and use. Doesn’t matter if it’s sold, given away, or used internally by a company.