
3D Printing - The Future of Fishing
3D Printing might be a new concept when it comes to fishing needs, but the proof is in the pudding.
3D Printing might be a new concept when it comes to fishing needs, but the proof is in the pudding.
A Texas-based maker has created a worthwhile device, it cuts down monotonous grinding during the gemstone production process.
Using your fingers to control your fidget spinner has become old news, now there is a device that will automatically spin it for you.
What could be better than a fidget spinner? How about a Zoetrope Fidget Spinner that shows animated silhouettes?
It’s hard to find something that people have not already done when it comes to fidget spinners, but there are two 13-year-olds from Virginia making money and a spinner that weighs a whopping 33 pounds plus.
Thanks to a breakthrough in bio-printing and infertility treatment, in the next couple of years these new approaches may be used on people.
How cool would it be to make your prototype or an interactive toy touch sensitive? The following is going to explain a cheap and straightforward way to do this. It is suitable for almost every shape and for different materials, which can be combined with different computer and mobile applications.
Wanting to use all the different materials 3D printing has to offer is very common after learning how to use your 3D printer. Plastic, wood, paper, metal, and glass are some of the materials available, but what about MEAT? Thanks to a group of enthusiastic Aussies, now you can.
Belgian company Tripodmaker launched a 3D printed rocket into space.
Width, height, and depth, also know as the three dimensions are the common parameters for any object in our reality. Instead of printing in these three dimensions, what if we added the 4th dimension to the printing process?
Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California has introduced a 3D printed “space fabric” prototype, which has amazing capabilities such as keeping astronauts warm all while looking fabulous.
There are many things we do habitually, like turning on the lights when we wake up. These such habits have inspired a group of designers from a Brooklyn company, Still Alive Lights, to create the Solar Flower, and other cool 3D printed illuminating devices.