The Future is Here, 3D Printing/Manufacturing Becoming Feasible
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- Saladin
- added this
It works like this. First you call up a blueprint on your computer screen and tinker with its shape and colour where necessary. Then you press print. A machine nearby whirrs into life and builds up the object gradually, either by depositing material from a nozzle, or by selectively solidifying a thin layer of plastic or metal dust using tiny drops of glue or a tightly focused beam. Products are thus built up by progressively adding material, one layer at a time: hence the technology’s other name, additive manufacturing. Eventually the object in question—a spare part for your car, a lampshade, a violin—pops out. The beauty of the technology is that it does not need to happen in a factory. Small items can be made by a machine like a desktop printer, in the corner of an office, a shop or even a house; big items—bicycle frames, panels for cars, aircraft parts—need a larger machine, and a bit more space.
At the moment the process is possible only with certain materials (plastics, resins and metals) and with a precision of around a tenth of a millimetre. As with computing in the late 1970s, it is currently the preserve of hobbyists and workers in a few academic and industrial niches. But like computing before it, 3D printing is spreading fast as the technology improves and costs fall. A basic 3D printer, also known as a fabricator or “fabber”, now costs less than a laser printer did in 1985.
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I seriously couldn't even believe this when I read it, the future is going to be amazing.
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- groups:
- Community, Tech, Co-Evolution, Transhumanism
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- tags:
- Tech, Economy, Science, Technology, 3 more
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Dynamic_Aberation
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I can't wait until this technology reaches digital photography. It will change how you look at each scene...
- 2 years ago
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Dynamic_Aberation
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Dagum
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So long as government doesn't get in the way, 3D Printing/Manufacturing could lead to the mass decentralization of society. No longer will huge corporations with massive amounts of labor and capital be necessary. Many of societies activities will not need to be organized on a grand scale because an individual could pop out into their garage, put in the materials cartridge for the product they need in the machine and boom. Good to go.
- 2 years ago
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Dagum
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figgdimension
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Dagum:
exciting new development
- 2 years ago
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figgdimension
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Dagum
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I saw this the other day when I got the print issue in the mail. It's like personal micro- manufacturing. It's incredible. I am still trying to wrap my head around the potential broader implications for society.
- 2 years ago
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Dagum
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Dagum
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Dagum:
Obviously this will likely shake up the manufacturing game even more. But I think there will be much more of a potential for jobs in mining and gathering of raw materials.
- 2 years ago
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Dagum
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EdJoyProductions
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http://studio.wp.pl/i,3dfoodprinter,mid,1105179,wideo.html?ticaid=1bc77
This technology is very cool.
- 2 years ago
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EdJoyProductions
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Saladin
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Rs7RQpO8p0
LOOK AT THIS SHIT.
It's completely amazing.
- 2 years ago
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Saladin
