
Originally Posted by
planters
How many . . grease gun injures are there per year by unlicensed (shudder) users.
So I read this and think . . 'how does one injure themselves with a grease gun'? A quick Googling and minutes later I'm freaked out at accidental and intentional injections with these things. Ban 'em! Ban 'em! 
In all seriousness, I've watched the 'OMG, the future of lasering is dead' conversation pop up here again and again since I started watching this forum well over a decade ago. Why don't the lighting industry guys freak that everybody and anybody can buy lighting equipment (cheap Chi to the high end stuff) and do what they will with it? Doesn't safety, scale, skills and new technology/effects keep the medium and big guys going? Why doesn't this model apply to laserists?
It seems to me many laserists / operators have been slow to change other than increasing power, migrating to cheaper/easier laser technology, and increasing the number of projectors they own. Yes, the software has greatly improved, but that isn't thanks to the vast majority of laserists.
Wouldn't adapting to change, finding new and innovative applications for coherent light in the entertainment (and other) industries, continued attention to safe operation, and increased integration / interaction with non-coherent light sources place professionals at a competitive advantage just as similar practices are employed to be successful in just about every other established industry on Earth?
Longing for the days of lasers being big, expensive, difficult to acquire, and requiring rare skills to operate strikes me as counter-productive to success and could leave laserists standing in the shadow of LDs that strive to do new and different things.
Just my $0.02 from a hobbyist laserist/LD perspective.
Oh - and back to the point of this thread, I really enjoyed seeing the FB4 in person at FLEM. It looks like a cool device and something that will allow laserists and LDs to further progress their craft.
-David
"Help, help, I'm being repressed!"