Dado and Dome are small desk fan bodies, so the slicing question is direct: keep the fan opening clean, keep the shell stable, and avoid turning a simple airflow object into a messy support problem.
Dado is the more block-like design. Its value is directness: a compact fan body that looks simple and prints without asking the user to decode a complicated sculpture.
Dome is softer and more rounded. That makes the silhouette calmer, but the slicer still has to handle overhangs and surface quality carefully because the whole object is visible on a desk.
The two videos belong together because they show the same product family from two shapes. Fan housings are not about material drama like polypropylene bottles or TPU shoes; they are about orientation, clean openings and enough wall quality around the fan.
A good slicing guide for these designs should help the maker see the finished object before printing: where the fan sits, which face becomes visible, and why the print orientation changes the result.

Dado
A printable desk fan that adapts to your setup. Roll it onto a different face and the angle changes — no screws, no fiddling. Snaps onto any standard PC fan in seconds.
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Dome
A desk fan that finally looks like an object, not a plastic gadget. Soft sculptural dome, hidden electronics, a quiet breeze right where you need it.
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