3D printing is the next great convergence point for disruptive technology, innovation, engineering, creativity, jobs and global competitiveness. Many people view 3D printing as a scifi-in-real-life technology still on the horizon.
Using a 3D scanner to map a patient’s mouth, CSIRO researchers and Australian dental company, Oventus, can now print a mouthpiece which prevents dangerous pauses in breath during sleep.
Adventurous 3D print fans have some new 3D models to get excited about this week. The MakerBot® Digital Store is thrilled to announce two new models that take 3D printing to a whole new level and time.
Puget Technologies announces Amazon, the largest online retailer in the world, will sell the award-winning IdeaWerk high performance 3D printer. The deal will place the printer before Amazon’s more than 209 million active customers.
The ExOne Company ("ExOne"), a global provider of three-dimensional ("3D") printing machines and printed products to industrial customers, announced today that its research and development department, the ExOne Material Applications Laboratory ("ExMAL"), has qualified Inconel® alloy 625, a nickel-based alloy.
Stratasys Ltd., a global leader of 3D printing and additive manufacturing solutions announced today that Chairman Scott Crump will be inducted into the Minnesota Inventors Hall of Fame (MIHF). Crump co-founded 3D printer manufacturer Stratasys Inc. with his wife, Lisa, in 1989.
Tinkerine Studios Ltd., a Canadian 3D printer company that manufactures and distributes 3D printers and software, today announced the launch of DittoPro, the 3D printing industry's first affordable prosumer (the market segment that offers professional-grade equipment at a consumer level price) 3D printer.
Optomec, a global leader in 3D Printing systems for production applications, announced today that the company recently established a marketing partnership with Technology Education Concepts (TEC), a leading provider of academic engineering technologies.
Forget everything you know about what a loudspeaker should look like. Scientists at Disney Research, Pittsburgh have developed methods using a 3D printer to produce electrostatic loudspeakers that can take the shape of anything, from a rubber ducky to an abstract spiral.
Soft and cuddly aren't words used to describe the plastic or metal things typically produced by today's 3D printers. But a new type of printer developed by Carnegie Mellon University and Disney Research Pittsburgh can turn wool and wool blend yarns into fabric objects that people might actually enjoy touching.
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