Vets are not my elders, are not the reason this forum exists, and are not beautiful or unique snowflakes. They're laser enthusiasts with lots of free time (not necessarily in a loser-ey sort of way) and they have earned some level of respect, certainly.
That said, if one of them acts like a d*ck, I'm not going to cower in my own p*ss at the thought of confronting them, as you clearly would have me do. I'm going to point it out, like I would with any other person. You're not special, and neither is he. Get over yourselves.
Are we done yet? Or do you just like arguing over the internet that much.
Again, we obviously disagree and neither of our minds will be changed. Let's just stop whining about this one stupid little post.
I, for one, welcome the new guy. I hope that his experiences here will be primarily with those who are more accepting and less brown-nosing than you.
1. Many people are growing tired of the threads about every one of WL's new products. Myself included.
Agreed. However, I think this topic, if you read the original post, is more about the laser itself than about the company making it. I think that was mentioned in a very "matter of fact" sort of way.
2. Sure, I'm a dick. Now that we all agree, can we move on? :tired:
I feel an "I told you so" is needed here, but I don't know who to direct it at.
3. NIR/IR portable lasers are already available. O-like sells a 780nm, 808nm, and 980nm portable laser. These are relatively low power diodes, but still have potential to burn. IMO 1064nm DPSS is superior to direct diode IR because the better beam specs. I plan on making my own 1064 pen just as an addition to my collection...
1064nm lasers are available as high power portables and even in pen form. If you want an invisible laser to burn things with, 1064nm will be the way to go. The beam specs are great (not a multimode diode, but DPSS) but the downside is it will be completely invisible without an IR detector card or some IR viewing device.
Not a good idea to put Class IIIb/IV NIR/IR portable lasers on the market IMO. Especially not in powers exceeding 100mW. The dangers are too great.
The average consumer has no need for an invisible laser, much less at the higher end of the Class IIIb rating.
Yay, on-topic stuff!