When I knew I was to become a parent for the first time I admittedly got rather excited when I found out that it was a boy. Like so many of us blokes my immediate thoughts were about all the practical toys I could ‘legitimately’ buy.
Song lyrics in a post about 3D printing — not tried this before, but it really couldn’t be more appropriate to my musings this week. While I am sure many of you will disagree, I reckon I could do worse than Whitney as my muse — have you guessed yet?
You may feel that the title of this column is a little misleading — surely every design you produce should be perfect? Not so says Dan Johns, a Senior Engineer on the Bloodhound Project…
For as long as humans have been able to move they have wanted to move more quickly. In the beginning, it was for survival. Then it was for growth and development. And now?
It pays to keep an eye on Kickstarter and Indiegogo these days, and the sedgwick DLP 3D printer is a perfect example of why. Low in cost, high in resolution... interested much?
Kevin Quigley runs his own successful product design agency and has been a first hand witness to the evolution of digital tools for product development — which includes but is in no way limited to 3D printing — over the last couple of decades ...
A cool story from Wired this week — how 3D printing, specifically from a MakerBot in this instance, is being used in the visualization and design of Broadway sets.
A cool story from Wired this week — how 3D printing, specifically from a MakerBot in this instance, is being used in the visualization and design of Broadway sets.
After my previous post about challenging hype, which was followed by a week that saw a slew of new articles of the nature I challenged, it seems it is all going to get worse before it gets better.
Gold, Silver and now Bronze. No, not a cheap effort to cash in on the Olympics, but i.materialise's line up of metals, completed last week with the addition of the habitual third-place metal.