<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0">
	<channel>
		<title><![CDATA[Latest posts for the thread "Another 3d article... again"]]></title>
		<link>http://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/54.page</link>
		<description><![CDATA[Latest messages posted in the thread "Another 3d article... again"]]></description>
		<generator>JForum - http://www.jforum.net</generator>
			<item>
				<title>Another 3d article... again</title>
				<description><![CDATA[ Before I continue is it worth having a sticky made of this subject?<br /> <br /> From The Independent: <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/features/whats-the-big-deal-with-3d-printing-8225267.html" target="_new" rel="nofollow">http://www.independent.co.<span class="glossaryitem" onmouseover='gp(134);'>uk</span>/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/features/whats-the-big-deal-with-3d-printing-8225267.html</a><br /> <br /> <br /> <blockquote class="uncited"><div>10/25/12 What's the big deal with 3D printing?<br /> independent.co.<span class="glossaryitem" onmouseover='gp(134);'>uk</span>/lif e-sty <span class="glossaryitem" onmouseover='gp(441);'>le</span>/gadgets-and-tech/…/whats-the-big-deal-with-3d-printing-8225267.html… 1/2<br /> What's the big deal with 3D printing?<br /> 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<br /> Will Dean<br /> Thursday, 25 October 2012<br /> "The internet changed the world in the 1990s," says the programme. "The world is about<br /> to change again." As boasts go, it's up there. But can 3D printing beat the hype?<br /> If you're aware of 3D printing, but not sure how it works, then you could have done worse<br /> than head to the City of London last Friday for the world's first-ever consumer 3D print<br /> show, the catchily titled 3D Print Show.<br /> There, you would have met some of the biggest names in what – on the consumer side at<br /> least – is a small, but increasingly influential industry. Many of the attendees are watching<br /> 3D printing for the first time. The process involves using special printheads that transform<br /> computer-aided designs into real objects by adding layer on tiny layer of material to<br /> create objects. Think of it as the opposite of chipping away at granite to create a statue.<br /> For most of us now, that may mean the ability to tinker around and make little keepsakes.<br /> Engineers, meanwhile, will be able to print off plastic models, with component parts, of<br /> their designs. But, in the not-too-distant future it might mean that if your bike's handlebar<br /> breaks, all you have to do will be to log on to Cannondale.com, "download" the code of<br /> your new component and print it off.<br /> As intellectual property rights expire and components become cheaper, a new generation<br /> of industrial designers, programmers, hackers and hobbyists are combining to bring 3D print<br /> to regular consumers. You can now buy 3D printers for the price of a Macbook.<br /> The crowd at the show is a mix of people working in industries where 3D printers can<br /> immediately be used. But organisers have also sold tickets to the general public, giving<br /> many their first opportunity to see a 3D printer print.<br /> On one side of the main room there are 3D scale-size prints of a human foetus created by<br /> Jorge Lopes, a Brazilian researcher who fed ultrasound scans into 3D print software. On<br /> the other, there are examples from Sculpteo, a French company which allows users to<br /> create their own designs on their website. Its latest idea is to allow people to customise<br /> their iPhone cases with shapes of their own face or overlaid Google Maps terrains.<br /> Elsewhere, two young boys play Minecraft to demonstrate Paul Harter's Printcraft, which<br /> allows Minecraft users to transfer the objects they've created in the block-building game<br /> into real-life. Next to them, an engineer from Europac3D uses a hand scanner to replicate<br /> a 4x4 tyre.<br /> A separate room is dedicated to Makerbot Industries, a three-year-old desktop 3D-printer<br /> 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<br /> gone from three employees in 2009 to 150 today and it can't keep up with demand for<br /> machines such as the Makerbot Replicator 2. It costs about £1,400, looks great and could<br /> perhaps do for home manufacturing what the Apple II did for home printing.<br /> 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?<br /> independent.co.<span class="glossaryitem" onmouseover='gp(134);'>uk</span>/lif e-sty <span class="glossaryitem" onmouseover='gp(441);'>le</span>/gadgets-and-tech/…/whats-the-big-deal-with-3d-printing-8225267.html… 2/2<br /> Holy Grail of modern geekery – he's on the cover of this month's American Wired. The<br /> store, Pettis says, "allows people to come in and see 3D printing. People walk by (the<br /> shop), [look] and then turn by. When you go to buy jeans, you know what jeans look like.<br /> When people walk in the Makerbot store they have no idea what it does. Then they get to<br /> learn about it. Then they realise they can afford it. And then they buy it."<br /> Pettis is incredibly excited about the opportunities 3D printing affords. At a panel session<br /> between CEOs of several 3D-print firms, he tells the audience: "This is the most exciting<br /> time ever to be an engineer, an industrial designer, an architect. This technology has<br /> arrived to the point where you can make the things you want. The electronics are there<br /> to support it... This whole idea of an industrial revolution where you had people move out<br /> of the cottage industries where they worked at home and they went to the factory where<br /> the machines were. All of us here, we've kind of put the factory into a little box. The<br /> factory can be one person at home again."<br /> Which all sounds a bit much. After all, most of what these machines seem to make (so far,<br /> at least) are little plastic knick-knacks. And what the planet needs less than anything is<br /> more plastic to go straight into landfills.<br /> Thankfully, a highlight of the first day of the three-day show was the Makerbot-sponsored<br /> 3D4D challenge, in which <span class="glossaryitem" onmouseover='gp(134);'>UK</span> charity Techfortrade challenged designers and engineers to<br /> use 3D printing to help the developing world. Seven teams presented their ideas. Some<br /> were ingenious, such as Kenyan student Roy Ombatti's plan to turn recycled plastic into<br /> customised plastic shoes for Kenyans whose feet have been misshaped by the chigoe flea.<br /> The winners were Matthew Rogge and Bethany Weeks from the University of Washington,<br /> who proposed using the £10,000 fund to create a 3D shop in Oaxaca, Mexico, so local<br /> entrepreneurs could take old plastic and convert it into items such as rainwater capture<br /> systems or toilet systems.<br /> The trade show itself, and its evening events including a fashion show featuring 3D<br /> accessories and a gig using printed instruments, were proof of the fun to be had with 3D<br /> printing. But the 3D4D presentations proved that, given its lack of limitations and relatively<br /> low costs, the technology "has the ability to empower people and change the world",<br /> according to Pettis. With researchers already recreating human tissue and hoping to work<br /> out ways to "print" circuitry (so you could print off an iPod, say), you sense he's not far<br /> wrong.</div></blockquote>]]></description>
				<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/preList/484815/4909524.page</guid>
				<link>http://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/preList/484815/4909524.page</link>
				<pubDate><![CDATA[Thu, 25 Oct 2012 07:59:54]]> GMT</pubDate>
				<author><![CDATA[ Wolfstan]]></author>
			</item>
	</channel>
</rss>