Archive for the ‘3D printing’ category: Page 116
May 22, 2016
HP’s New Jet Fusion 3D Printers Can Print Electronics Inside a Product
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: 3D printing, electronics
HP has announced that they will be releasing their first generation 3D printers by the end of the year. The Multi Jet Fusion Technology allows 3D printing at half the cost and ten times the speed.
HP has released two new 3D printer models, the Jet Fusion 3200 and Jet Fusion 4200—their first products on the market since the company entered the 3D printing arena in 2014. These high-end printers do not need lasers (like most rivals in their range) and will be available by the end of the year.
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May 19, 2016
This college student 3D printed his own plastic braces for $60 — and they actually fixed his teeth
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: 3D printing, education, health
Ever dream of becoming a dentist? Or, have family members needing new dentures? Or, know that one person who would look good if they only had some teeth. This 3D Printer is your answer.
An undergraduate at New Jersey Institute of Technology made his own plastic braces using a 3D printer, $60 of materials, and a healthy dose of ingenuity — and they actually worked.
Amos Dudley had braces in middle school, but he didn’t wear a retainer like he was supposed to, so his teeth slowly shifted back.
May 18, 2016
Here’s How Nike Will (Probably) 3D-Print Your Next Shoes
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: 3D printing
May 17, 2016
Want to build a moon base? Easy. Just print it
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: 3D printing, space
What I really want to do is to use the machine to complete the Sagrada Familia. And to build on the moon.
Why carry building materials from Earth into space, when we can build structures by 3D printing using materials found out there?
May 13, 2016
‘Radical life extension’ coming, futurist says
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: 3D printing, bioengineering, computing, life extension, nanotechnology, neuroscience, Ray Kurzweil
KITCHENER — Big jumps in life expectancy will begin in as little as 10 years thanks to advances in nanotechnology and 3D printing that will also enable wireless connections among human brains and cloud computers, a leading futurist said Thursday.
“In 10 or 15 years from now we will be adding more than a year, every year, to your life expectancy,” Ray Kurzweil told an audience of 800 people at Communtech’s annual Tech Leadership conference.
Kurzweil, a futurist, inventor and author, as well as a director of engineering at Google, calls this “radical life extension.”
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May 7, 2016
Disney’s 3D Printer Produces Models Almost Instantaneously Using Light
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical
Disney Research has designed a new 3D printer that utilizes light on photosensitive resin so that models can be printed out as whole objects instead of by the layer, cutting down 3D printing from hours down to just minutes.
Disney Research has patented its design for “a nearly instantaneous” 3D printer that uses light to cure resin selectively to produce an entire model out of a stereolithography (STL) file all at once. Notably, this significantly cuts down printing time. Or at least, it will if it makes it to market.
“Presently, 3D printing is extremely slow and time consuming. For example, it may take several hours to print a single 3D object even if the 3D object is relatively small (e.g., several inches in diameter and four to 12 inches tall),” the patent stated. It continues, “the 3D printing process that uses conventional 3D printers such as an FFF-based 3D printer is limited in its speed by the speed of the mechanism moving the print head to each new position on a print layer.”
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May 7, 2016
3D printing industry to triple in four years to $21B
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: 3D printing, electronics
Impressive; and this is only what we know about the commercial market. Think about what this means to the black market and dark web’s trading sites.
Another question; how good are the forgeries? One that will be even more tricky with 3D. How do you know for sure you’re carrying a Hermes or wearing Chanel glasses or not. Not to mention art, etc.
The 3D printing industry is expected to triple its revenue mainly through the consumer electronics and automotive industries, each of which will contribute 20% of total revenue.
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May 7, 2016
Materialise CEO on medical 3D Printing
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: 3D printing, biotech/medical, government, health, law enforcement, robotics/AI, terrorism
I do love and believe in the benefits of 3D printing; however, as a technologist and concerned informed citizen I do worry about this technology getting the hands of drug lords, terrorists, and other criminals. With Medical 3D printing; illegal drug manufacturing can change overnight and expanded to new levels of mass production. Also, illegal weapon production can be enhanced as well with 3D printing.
At this point, law enforcement in 1st and 2nd world countries are going to face harder times than they ever have in the recent past and before. 3D Printing and AI are truly going to take an already difficult situation for government and their law enforcement teams extremely tough in the coming 3 to 5 years; and hope they and tech come together to figure out a good go forward plan to ensure right benefits are received and progress not slowed down while keeping everyone safe.
Materialise incorporates more than 25 years of 3D printing experience into a range of software solutions and 3D printing services, which together form the backbone of the 3D printing industry. Materialise’s open and flexible solutions enable players in a wide variety of industries, including healthcare, automotive, aerospace, art and design, and consumer goods, to build innovative 3D printing applications that aim to make the world a better and healthier place.
May 7, 2016
Get mom a life-size 3D-printed replica of yourself for Mother’s Day
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: 3D printing
Weird
Nothing says “I love you” like dumping an obscene amount of money on a Groupon so you don’t actually have to spend any real time with your mother.