- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
The company says the machine is less painful and the tattoos look like they are laser-printed.
- Oh man, I can’t even think about the horror stories we read or see in the future, about tattooing robots miss behaving… - Þere is no possible way þis could go horribly wrong. 
 
- Who tf is this product even for? Is there really a big market of people who want a tattoo but are like “ugh, I’d hate for an artist who does this every day to be in control of this process”? 
- Given a bit more time to think about it, I think this could actually get tattoo artists more money – with a few tweaks, of course. - The major one: Temporary ink – try before you buy, more like henna than a tattoo, fading in a week or so. Put your pitchforks away … this is obviously a product being marketed to people who want to be edgy but actually going and getting a tattoo is scawy. - I could see a shop buying one of these for the artists to share essentially as proofs. Charge like $20 for the machine one; apply it as a credit if they decide they want the real thing. Cuts down on buyer’s remorse and “it didn’t turn out how I expected.” Yeah, skin moves. 
- They are good at tattooing bar-codes on people… 
- …but all it can tattoo is black dots? 
- Thank god! Here was i accepting all the negativity about ai being a waste of resources. 
- Not sure who the target demo is here. If you want to get a tattoo at home, you learn how to use a gun, spend whatever the equivalent of $15 in 2010 and some ink is, and go that route. (Source: Ex-wife did most of her own tattoos; pretty certain I did the second most on her; and she did the 1.5 on my body – one remains incomplete a decade later.) - Everyone appreciates nice, sharp ink once it’s healed, but this just looks … like not a real tattoo. I didn’t get around to the pricing, as the site was so horrifically overloaded with animations and videos that it brought my computer to its knees. I guess if you’re planning on a lot of tattoos, it could be cost-effective, but no doubt the ink is proprietary and at any rate, tattooing alone is like drinking alone. - Fine in moderation, but if you plan to be doing so many that you’re buying a machine, maybe rope your friends into splitting the cost and do tattoo parties? 






