Switch Theme:

Another 3d article... again  [RSS] Share on facebook Share on Twitter Submit to Reddit
»
Author Message
Advert


Forum adverts like this one are shown to any user who is not logged in. Join us by filling out a tiny 3 field form and you will get your own, free, dakka user account which gives a good range of benefits to you:
  • No adverts like this in the forums anymore.
  • Times and dates in your local timezone.
  • Full tracking of what you have read so you can skip to your first unread post, easily see what has changed since you last logged in, and easily see what is new at a glance.
  • Email notifications for threads you want to watch closely.
  • Being a part of the oldest wargaming community on the net.
If you are already a member then feel free to login now.




Made in gb
Longtime Dakkanaut





Bournemouth, UK

Before I continue is it worth having a sticky made of this subject?

From The Independent: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/features/whats-the-big-deal-with-3d-printing-8225267.html


10/25/12 What's the big deal with 3D printing?
independent.co.uk/lif e-sty le/gadgets-and-tech/…/whats-the-big-deal-with-3d-printing-8225267.html… 1/2
What's the big deal with 3D printing?
Does it really mark the advent of a 'new industrial revolution'? Will Dean heads to the firstever 3D printing consumer trade show to find out if the hype is right
Will Dean
Thursday, 25 October 2012
"The internet changed the world in the 1990s," says the programme. "The world is about
to change again." As boasts go, it's up there. But can 3D printing beat the hype?
If you're aware of 3D printing, but not sure how it works, then you could have done worse
than head to the City of London last Friday for the world's first-ever consumer 3D print
show, the catchily titled 3D Print Show.
There, you would have met some of the biggest names in what – on the consumer side at
least – is a small, but increasingly influential industry. Many of the attendees are watching
3D printing for the first time. The process involves using special printheads that transform
computer-aided designs into real objects by adding layer on tiny layer of material to
create objects. Think of it as the opposite of chipping away at granite to create a statue.
For most of us now, that may mean the ability to tinker around and make little keepsakes.
Engineers, meanwhile, will be able to print off plastic models, with component parts, of
their designs. But, in the not-too-distant future it might mean that if your bike's handlebar
breaks, all you have to do will be to log on to Cannondale.com, "download" the code of
your new component and print it off.
As intellectual property rights expire and components become cheaper, a new generation
of industrial designers, programmers, hackers and hobbyists are combining to bring 3D print
to regular consumers. You can now buy 3D printers for the price of a Macbook.
The crowd at the show is a mix of people working in industries where 3D printers can
immediately be used. But organisers have also sold tickets to the general public, giving
many their first opportunity to see a 3D printer print.
On one side of the main room there are 3D scale-size prints of a human foetus created by
Jorge Lopes, a Brazilian researcher who fed ultrasound scans into 3D print software. On
the other, there are examples from Sculpteo, a French company which allows users to
create their own designs on their website. Its latest idea is to allow people to customise
their iPhone cases with shapes of their own face or overlaid Google Maps terrains.
Elsewhere, two young boys play Minecraft to demonstrate Paul Harter's Printcraft, which
allows Minecraft users to transfer the objects they've created in the block-building game
into real-life. Next to them, an engineer from Europac3D uses a hand scanner to replicate
a 4x4 tyre.
A separate room is dedicated to Makerbot Industries, a three-year-old desktop 3D-printer
manufacturer. It could be the Apple of this gathering. CEO Bre Pettis, one of three cofounders, looks more like the bassist in Wilco than the future Steve Jobs, but his firm have
gone from three employees in 2009 to 150 today and it can't keep up with demand for
machines such as the Makerbot Replicator 2. It costs about £1,400, looks great and could
perhaps do for home manufacturing what the Apple II did for home printing.
Makerbot has just opened its first retail store in Manhattan and Pettis has achieved the10/25/12 What's the big deal with 3D printing?
independent.co.uk/lif e-sty le/gadgets-and-tech/…/whats-the-big-deal-with-3d-printing-8225267.html… 2/2
Holy Grail of modern geekery – he's on the cover of this month's American Wired. The
store, Pettis says, "allows people to come in and see 3D printing. People walk by (the
shop), [look] and then turn by. When you go to buy jeans, you know what jeans look like.
When people walk in the Makerbot store they have no idea what it does. Then they get to
learn about it. Then they realise they can afford it. And then they buy it."
Pettis is incredibly excited about the opportunities 3D printing affords. At a panel session
between CEOs of several 3D-print firms, he tells the audience: "This is the most exciting
time ever to be an engineer, an industrial designer, an architect. This technology has
arrived to the point where you can make the things you want. The electronics are there
to support it... This whole idea of an industrial revolution where you had people move out
of the cottage industries where they worked at home and they went to the factory where
the machines were. All of us here, we've kind of put the factory into a little box. The
factory can be one person at home again."
Which all sounds a bit much. After all, most of what these machines seem to make (so far,
at least) are little plastic knick-knacks. And what the planet needs less than anything is
more plastic to go straight into landfills.
Thankfully, a highlight of the first day of the three-day show was the Makerbot-sponsored
3D4D challenge, in which UK charity Techfortrade challenged designers and engineers to
use 3D printing to help the developing world. Seven teams presented their ideas. Some
were ingenious, such as Kenyan student Roy Ombatti's plan to turn recycled plastic into
customised plastic shoes for Kenyans whose feet have been misshaped by the chigoe flea.
The winners were Matthew Rogge and Bethany Weeks from the University of Washington,
who proposed using the £10,000 fund to create a 3D shop in Oaxaca, Mexico, so local
entrepreneurs could take old plastic and convert it into items such as rainwater capture
systems or toilet systems.
The trade show itself, and its evening events including a fashion show featuring 3D
accessories and a gig using printed instruments, were proof of the fun to be had with 3D
printing. But the 3D4D presentations proved that, given its lack of limitations and relatively
low costs, the technology "has the ability to empower people and change the world",
according to Pettis. With researchers already recreating human tissue and hoping to work
out ways to "print" circuitry (so you could print off an iPod, say), you sense he's not far
wrong.

Live your life that the fear of death can never enter your heart. Trouble no one about his religion. Respect others in their views and demand that they respect yours. Love your life, perfect your life. Beautify all things in your life. Seek to make your life long and of service to your people. When your time comes to die, be not like those whose hearts are filled with fear of death, so that when their time comes they weep and pray for a little more time to live their lives over again in a different way. Sing your death song, and die like a hero going home.

Lt. Rorke - Act of Valor

I can now be found on Facebook under the name of Wulfstan Design

www.wulfstandesign.co.uk

http://www.voodoovegas.com/
 
   
 
Forum Index » Off-Topic Forum
Go to: