After Amazon announced it was getting into 3D printing it was only a matter of time before the rest of the retail giants jumped on the bandwagon, first to do so is Tesco.
Pelican Imaging a developer of smartphone cameras are about to introduce their light-field lenses to the world, they will be able to measure depth and produce highly detailed 3D scans.
The Singaporean-based 3D Printing startup have claimed many things in their short lifetime, few believed any of those claims were possible. If the SmartObjects demo is anything to go by the future is bright.
MakerBot have announced that they will now be selling their 3D printers directly on Amazon.com's new 3D Printing store. Becoming the first of the 3D printing big hitters to do so.
Twinkind, a german based outfit, have opened a pop-up shop scanning and 3D printing photo-realistic miniature versions of their clientele. These have to be seen to be believed, absolutely stunning.
There's plenty of companies attempting to tap into all of those dormant desktop 3D printers out there. None of those are quite nailing it like 3D Hubs. Daniel O'Connor catches up with the co-founders Bram and Brian.
The swashbuckling Pirate3D are going donation crazy, not content with the pledges to African Institutions they've promised at least ten printers to public libraries.
The internet retail giants have launched a dedicated 3D printing section complete with printers, parts, accessories and materials. Is this the start of something bigger?