Ending the Wild West of Smart Spools
An open-source initiative by Prusa Research creating a single smart spool standard that works across all brands and ecosystems. This allows printers and users to read and write data directly on any spool, making 3D printing more reliable and intuitive for everyone.
3D printers have become incredibly user-friendly, but interaction with filament is still a very manual process. To improve the user experience and streamline the workflow, we need smart spools.
A smart spool carries all the important information about the material and its workflow, unlocking key features:
Instantly identifies the material type and color, significantly reducing user error and leading to a simpler, more reliable workflow.
Real-time data tracking, such as the amount of remaining filament, so you always know the exact status of your material.
Enables effortless inventory management and full traceability by allowing you to log custom data.
Some smart spools already exist, but they lack the core principles of universality and interoperability. It's like every brand suddenly decided to use a different filament diameter.
Smart spools are often locked to their specific hardware and filament. This makes them unusable with any third-party machines, forcing users into a closed ecosystem.
Many smart spools just refer to an online database, forcing you to rely on the manufacturer's cloud service. No internet? Your "smart" spool becomes dumb.
Current Smart Spools offer little to zero reusability. This read-only design prevents any updates to live data, and once the filament is depleted, you have no choice but to throw the 'smart' spool away.
If you’re looking to relive the peak of 90s couch-potato culture, "The Best of Beavis and Butt-Head"
collections are the ultimate way to experience the duo’s most "excellent" (and controversial) moments. Originally released by
and MTV, these sets often include fan-favorite episodes like "Innocence Lost" and "Chicks 'N Stuff". Essential Highlights & Fan Favorites According to IMDb and community consensus on
, here are the top-tier episodes and moments that define the series: The Great Cornholio
: Beavis’s legendary caffeine-fueled alter ego remains the most iconic moment in the show’s history. Speech Therapy : Consistently ranked among the top episodes
for its absurd dialogue and the duo’s unique "intelligence". Choking Scene
: A standout moment where Butt-head chokes, and Beavis manages to save his life while learning a "valuable lesson" (sort of). Classic Insults
: The show’s vocabulary, featuring gems like "fart-knocker," "bung-hole," and "butt-munch," became a cultural staple of the era. Which Collection is Best? Collectors often debate which set to track down: The Best of Beavis and Butt-Head (Time Life/MTV DVDs)
: These are prized for containing episodes that were later edited or omitted from other releases. Mike Judge Collection
: A more polished release curated by the creator, though some fans on
feel it’s too "clean" compared to the original broadcasts. The "King Turd" Collection
: An unofficial fan-made project highly regarded for including the original music video commentaries that were mostly removed from official DVDs due to licensing issues. Quick Stats
My favorite Drama: Beavis and Butthead : r/BeavisAndButthead
The following is a curated compilation of the absolute "best" moments from Beavis and Butt-Head , spanning the original 1990s run to the modern revivals. The Most Iconic Episodes The Great Cornholio (Season 4):
This episode solidified the show's most famous running gag. After a massive sugar rush from eating too much candy, Beavis transforms into "The Great Cornholio," pulls his shirt over his head, and demands "TP for my bunghole" while wandering the school in a trance. No Laughing (Season 2): THE BEST OF BEAVIS AND BUTTHEAD
Principal McVicker forbids the duo from laughing during Sex Ed week, threatening expulsion. Watching them physically tremble and sweat while trying to hold back giggles at Coach Buzzcut’s lecture is widely considered one of the funniest sequences in TV history. Beavis and Butt-Head Are Dead (Season 7):
The original series finale where a misunderstanding leads the entire school—especially the long-suffering Mr. Van Driessen—to believe the boys have died. Their "resurrection" arrival at their own wake is a masterclass in their oblivious brand of chaos. Prank Call (Season 6):
The boys discover the name "Harry Sachz" in a phone book and launch a relentless prank-calling campaign. The segment is legendary for the escalation of Harry’s rage and the boys' complete lack of self-preservation. Legendary Musical Moments "I Got You Babe" with Cher:
In a surreal 1993 crossover, the duo teamed up with Cher for a rock-infused cover of her classic hit. The accompanying music video, featuring the boys in their signature shorts alongside a leather-clad Cher, remains a peak pop culture artifact. Music Video Commentary:
Half the show's genius was the couch segments where they roasted MTV’s lineup. Memorable targets included: Grim Reaper:
Butt-Head’s visceral reaction to the lead singer’s high notes in "See You in Hell". Katy Perry:
In the 2011 revival, Beavis reveals a surprising love for "Firework," leading to a bizarre moment where he puts explosives in his pants to "be a firework" himself. Milli Vanilli:
Their wordless, horrified reaction to "Baby Don't Forget My Number" before quickly changing the channel. The Big Screen Highlights
Title: Deconstructing the Dumb: Identifying the Best of Beavis and Butt-Head
Introduction For five original seasons (1993–1997), a revival season (2011), and a recent Paramount+ film (2022), Beavis and Butt-Head has remained a paradoxical pillar of American animation. Beneath the giggling, crotch-grabbing, and alleged encouragement of couch fires lies a sharp satire of suburban malaise, music television, and teenage stupidity. Identifying the “best” of this franchise requires moving past simple notoriety to examine episodes that perfected their rhythm, sharpened their social commentary, and delivered the most memorable moments of meta-humor and slapstick idiocy.
The Golden Era (Seasons 3–5) While the first two seasons established the formula—two slacker teens obsessed with sex, heavy metal, and nachos—the show hit its creative peak between 1994 and 1996. This period benefited from a larger animation budget, tighter writing, and the infamous “Fire” fiasco (after a real child allegedly set a fire mimicking the show), which paradoxically forced the creators to balance satire with self-awareness. The best episodes from this era include:
“The Great Cornholio” (Season 4, Episode 21) – The definitive Beavis and Butt-Head episode. When Beavis consumes too much sugar (or finds a capybara—canon ambiguous), he transforms into “Cornholio,” a ranting, TP-demanding alter ego. The episode brilliantly contrasts Butt-Head’s helpless annoyance with Beavis’s sudden poetic gibberish. The line “I need TP for my bunghole” entered the lexicon permanently.
“Way Down Mexico Way” (Season 5, Episode 1) – A two-parter that sees the duo accidentally cross the border while chasing a nacho truck. This episode represents the series’ best use of long-form failure, as their idiocy leads to a drug cartel misunderstanding. The visual of them being smuggled back in a piñata is peak physical comedy.
“Citizen Butt-Head” (Season 5, Episode 16) – A parody of Citizen Kane. Butt-Head is elected student body president through sheer apathy, only to destroy the school’s PA system. The episode mocks political ambition by showing that absolute power means absolutely nothing when you just want to watch Terminator 2 on VHS. If you’re looking to relive the peak of
Best of the Music Video Segments The original run’s genius lay in interstitial segments where B&B mocked real MTV videos. The best ones are not merely mean-spirited but incisive:
The Revival’s Best (2011 & 2022) The 2011 revival (season 8) proved the formula timeless. “Werewolves of Highland” updates their ignorance for the smartphone era: they try to use a GPS to find a werewolf, only to end up in a composting class. The 2022 film Do the Universe cleverly sends them through a wormhole to present-day liberal arts college, where their unapologetic horniness and anti-logic upend DEI seminars. The best moment: Butt-Head correctly solving a quantum physics equation by accident, then dismissing it for “a skanky co-ed.”
What Defines “The Best”? Critics often mistake “best” for most controversial (e.g., the “Frog Baseball” pilot, where they torture a frog). But true quality lies in:
Conclusion The best of Beavis and Butt-Head is not a single episode but a layered artifact of 1990s anomie wrapped in crude drawings. From Cornholio’s existential demands to Butt-Head’s accidental presidency, the show’s finest moments work because they refuse to teach a lesson. In a television landscape that demands redemption arcs and moral takeaways, B&B remain gloriously, hilariously static. And for viewers willing to listen past the giggles, that is the truest satire of all.
Recommended Viewing List (The “Best” Top 5)
This guide highlights the absolute essentials of Beavis and Butt-Head
, from the most iconic episodes of the original 1990s run to standout moments from the modern revivals. The Most Iconic Episodes
According to fan rankings from IMDb and Ranker, these episodes define the series' peak idiocy: The Great Cornholio
(S4, E31): Perhaps the most famous episode of the entire franchise. A massive sugar rush transforms Beavis into his legendary alter ego, Cornholio, who wanders the school demanding "TP for my bunghole". No Laughing
(S2, E12): Principal McVicker threatens the duo with expulsion if they laugh in school. This becomes nearly impossible when they are forced to sit through Coach Buzzcut’s sex education unit. Butt Flambé
(S7, E38): Widely cited as one of the funniest episodes, Beavis accidentally sets his rear end on fire, leading to a hospital visit where Butt-Head is mistaken for a doctor and "supervises" a heart transplant.
(S7, E22): A health-and-safety nightmare where Beavis’s total lack of tool skill results in a series of horrific—yet comical—accidents. Beavis and Butt-Head Are Dead
(S7, E41): The original series finale. When the school mistakenly believes the duo has died, Mr. Van Driessen delivers a touching (and hilariously misguided) eulogy while the boys are actually just at home watching TV. Essential Specials & Movies Beavis and Butt-Head Do America
(1996): The theatrical film where the duo treks across the country to find their stolen TV. It famously features an airplane scene where they nearly crash the plane while Butt-Head hits on an air hostess. Beavis and Butt-Head Do Christmas Title: Deconstructing the Dumb: Identifying the Best of
(S6, E7): A double-parody of holiday classics like It's a Wonderful Life and A Christmas Carol, showing a peaceful Highland where the duo was never born. Frog Baseball
(1992): The original Mike Judge short that started it all, featuring the boys playing the titular "game" in a field. Top Music Video Commentaries Best Beavis and Butthead Episodes - IMDb
Best Beavis and Butthead Episodes * 1. No Laughing, Part 1. S2.E13. Beavis and Butt-Head. 1993–2011. 11m. TV-14. TV Episode. 8.4 (
Beavis and Butt-Head, the iconic 90s duo created by Mike Judge, became cultural legends by masterfully blending lowbrow slapstick with sharp social satire. Their "best" moments often involve catastrophic failures in mundane situations, their brutal music video critiques, and Beavis’s legendary sugar-fueled transformations. Top Fan-Favorite Episodes
"The Great Cornholio" (Season 4, Ep 31): Widely considered the most iconic episode, it features Beavis going into a hyperactive trance after consuming too much sugar, pulling his shirt over his head, and demanding "TP for my bunghole".
"No Laughing" (Season 2, Ep 13): Principal McVicker forbids the duo from laughing during sex-ed week. The resulting struggle as Coach Buzzcut intentionally uses "dirty" words is a masterclass in tension-based comedy.
"Woodshop" (Season 7, Ep 22): A high-voted favorite where the duo’s complete lack of safety or skill turns a school woodshop class into a chaotic disaster zone.
"Beavis and Butt-Head Are Dead" (Season 7, Ep 41): The original series finale, where a misunderstanding leads the school to believe they've passed away, resulting in a hilariously sentimental memorial for two people who aren't even gone. Iconic Music Video Critiques Top 10 Beavis & Butt-Head Episodes - IMDb
In the early 1990s, MTV changed the landscape of animation and comedy forever with two teenage delinquents who possessed a shared IQ barely in the double digits. Created by Mike Judge, Beavis and Butt-Head was not just a cartoon; it was a cultural phenomenon that satirized the slacker generation, the American education system, and the very nature of teenage boredom.
Here is the "Best Of" breakdown of their legendary run.
1. Beavis and Butt-Head Do America (1996) The road trip movie from hell. Mistaken for hitmen, they travel from the Hoover Dam to Washington D.C. in search of their stolen TV. The soundtrack is legendary (White Zombie, The Ramones, Isaac Hayes). The best line: After accidentally destroying a federal agent’s car, blowing up a dam, and causing a national security crisis, Butt-Head turns to Beavis and says, "Dude... we are never gonna score."
2. Beavis and Butt-Head Do the Universe (2022) A shockingly clever sequel. They are transported to a space station, cloned, and sent to a 2022 "diversity summit" at a university. The humor lies in watching 90s slackers react to iPhones, woke culture, and gender-neutral pronouns. They don't understand any of it, and they never try to. When a feminist professor accuses them of "mansplaining," Beavis just stares. "We don't have a plan, lady."
You cannot discuss the best of Beavis and Butt-Head without addressing the cultural tsunami known as Cornholio. In "The Great Cornholio," Beavis consumes too much sugar, pulls his T-shirt over his head, and transforms into a manic, poetic, toilet-paper-demanding alter ego. "I am the Great Cornholio! I need TP for my bunghole!" This single sketch transcended the show, becoming a Halloween costume staple and a linguistic touchstone for 90s kids. But the best part? Butt-Head's deadpan reaction to his friend's psychotic break.
Beavis and Butt‑Head arrived on MTV in 1993 as two loud, dimwitted teenagers with a singular mission: laugh at everything, make everything worse, and somehow become cultural icons in the process. Created by Mike Judge, the show’s crude humor, satirical edge, and uncanny knack for capturing a certain 1990s malaise made it far more than a cartoon of two slackers — it became a mirror for youth culture, television tropes, and the commercialized angst of an era.
Instantly read or write in any orientation. This eliminates the need to rotate the spool to find the "correct" position.
Stick a blank tag on any filament spool you own, flash it using your printer or a phone app, and simply re-use it once the spool is empty.
A single tag works even for 2kg spools, ensuring live data is always perfectly in sync. Two-tag designs cannot guarantee this.
A 3D printer or any compatible device instantly reads all data the moment the spool is loaded.
Instantly read or write in any orientation. This eliminates the need to rotate the spool to find the "correct" position.
Stick a blank tag on any filament spool you own, flash it using your printer or a phone app, and simply re-use it once the spool is empty.
A single tag works even for 2kg spools, ensuring live data is always perfectly in sync. Two-tag designs cannot guarantee this.
A 3D printer or any compatible device instantly reads all data the moment the spool is loaded.
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