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The Future’s So 3D

Rapid prototyping puts quality in consumers’ hands

Taran March @ Quality Digest
Thu, 02/24/2011 - 04:30
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Back when I was yardstick high, a well-dressed couple on TV kept breaking into the show I was watching to enthuse about a new technology that was going to cook a complete steak dinner during the hour-long program. It was an early demonstration of an appliance that would become both more efficient and commonplace: the microwave.

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I’m reminded of that incident as I read about technology’s new wunderkind, 3-D printing, variously known as additive manufacturing, fused deposition modeling, selective laser sintering, and multi-jet modeling. Whether a do-it-yourself kit, desktop model, or factory-floor production system, their basic function is the same: to read pretty much any 3-D file—STL, WRL, PLY, or SFX—and convert it into a tangible object made from a variety of materials.

I find this fascinating, a magic-wand-meets-ultimate-engineering moment in human development. And if the word online is any indication, so do many others, the most zealous of whom consider 3-D printers harbingers of a new industrial revolution.

 …

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Comments

Submitted by jgrout on Thu, 02/24/2011 - 11:11

I resemble that remark

I read with interest that by virtue of the makerbot that sits in my office, I am an "oddball" and a "mad scientist."   Then I got to thinking ... hey, wait. You are exactly right. Both monikers fit.  Messing around with cheap 3D printers is good work if you can get it.

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Submitted by Taran March @ … on Thu, 02/24/2011 - 11:37

In reply to I resemble that remark by jgrout

Just envious

My apologies for "oddball," but "mad scientist" is a term of respect. What have you made?

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Submitted by garryforster on Wed, 05/28/2014 - 22:18

Now a days 3D printing

Now a days 3D printing becomes preferable way for product prototyping. Using 3d Printing technology manufacturer can easily design more attractive model for product that can attract customers.

Regards,

Garry @ 3DStuffMaker

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