Overheard in the tech blogosphere:

3-D printers

Feb 1 2008   4:41PM GMT

3-D printers in homes and businesses will grow 100-fold



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
predictions, 3-D printers
The technology lets users send a file of a 3-D design to a printer-like device that will carve the design out of a block of resin. A manufacturer can make scale models of new product designs without the expense of model makers. Or consumers can have models of the avatars they use online. Ultimately, manufacturers can consider making some components on demand without having an inventory of replacement parts. Printers priced less than $10,000 have been announced for 2008, opening up the personal and hobbyist markets.

Gartner Highlights Key Predictions for IT Organisations and Users in 2008 and Beyond

Nov 27 2007   2:26AM GMT

Overheard: More 3D printer magic



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
3-D printers

This seems very surreal…but it’s real. The future is now.


Nov 19 2007   4:41PM GMT

Overheard: Easy bake oven for grownups



Posted by: Margaret Rouse
3-D printers, nantotech
fabber.jpg Hod Lipson has developed a 3D fabrication-on-demand printer that can be built from a $3,000 kit. How cool is that?

Fabbers  build 3D objects by carefuly depositing materials drop by drop, layer by layer.  Slowly but surely, with the right set of materials and a geometric blueprint, you can fabricate complex objects that would normally take special resources, tools and skills if produced using conventional manufacturing techniques.

Lose a chess piece? Need a new pair of flip flops? Make it yourself with a 3-D printer. You may have seen similar technology used on American Choppers, but now you can afford to bring it on home. This rapid kind of prototyping takes a CAD design, transforms into horizontal cross-sections and then creates each cross-section in physical space, one after the next until the model is finished.