Anything and everything goes in here... within reason.
Mon May 14, 2007 6:57 pm
According to
this article that's been making the rounds, in 10 years we're all going to have 3D printers that will make custom plastic items.
Will this technology really make the leap to the home market? Will this destroy the market for little plastic trinkets? Will we be able to make 3D printers with our 3D printers?
I can't wait to find out.
Mon May 14, 2007 7:04 pm
Will we get 3D scanners? Then we can scan objects and send them over the internets and print them out. Like gifts.
Mon May 14, 2007 7:44 pm
We'll have scanners that can scan you into the computer - places like this will have real people actually talking!
Mon May 14, 2007 8:11 pm
Paul wrote:Will we get 3D scanners? Then we can scan objects and send them over the internets and print them out. Like gifts.
You'd need a 3D monitor though.
Mon May 14, 2007 9:19 pm
Igg wrote:Paul wrote:Will we get 3D scanners? Then we can scan objects and send them over the internets and print them out. Like gifts.
You'd need a 3D monitor though.
...No. You'd just have a 3D model on the screen. Sort of like, you can display a 4D object in 3D space, to an extent.
Anyway, I saw an ad for one of these... $$0,000 right now, but soon it'll be cheap enough that slightly-above-average income can buy one.
For now, it's really only practical to architects.
Mon May 14, 2007 9:23 pm
Oh yeah, I've heard about these. I believe there's an article about it in the most recent Popular Science magazine.
On a show on the Discovery Channel a few months ago, they were talking about how 3D printers could one day allow us to print out organs, so if we needed a new heart or something there wouldn't have to be a waiting list for donors; you'd just get a new heart printed out.
Tue May 15, 2007 6:36 am
Call me once it can resin cast (sexy anime figurines all round...)
Wed May 16, 2007 7:43 pm
If someone looses a bit of bone, or has a bone that needs to be set, the missing area where the bones should knit together can be scanned. Then, like making a missing jigsaw puzzle peice, the printer can print out a peice that will fit perfectly in the area. These peice can be used and bone will grow around the piece, and the bone will set better than if a person had used screws or metal plates.
I remember reading about this, and it sounded very nice.
Wed May 16, 2007 8:18 pm
Dragonfire wrote:Oh yeah, I've heard about these. I believe there's an article about it in the most recent Popular Science magazine.
On a show on the Discovery Channel a few months ago, they were talking about how 3D printers could one day allow us to print out organs, so if we needed a new heart or something there wouldn't have to be a waiting list for donors; you'd just get a new heart printed out.
I saw that show! Anyway, this would be awesome, but I hope it is cheap enough to buy for the normal family.
Thu May 17, 2007 4:34 am
These have been around for a while now. I read about them in one of Science News, Discover, or Popular Science over a year ago, and shortly afterwards saw them mentioned in "Discoveries This Week" on the Science Channel.
Thu May 17, 2007 2:44 pm
I've seen shows on the discovery channel about companies that already use 3D printers. They use them to make models of things they are designing, like aircraft or cars, or whatever have you.
Fri May 18, 2007 6:35 am
Uncle Xyzzy wrote:Igg wrote:Paul wrote:Will we get 3D scanners? Then we can scan objects and send them over the internets and print them out. Like gifts.
You'd need a 3D monitor though.
...No. You'd just have a 3D model on the screen. Sort of like, you can display a 4D object in 3D space, to an extent.
Anyway, I saw an ad for one of these... $$0,000 right now, but soon it'll be cheap enough that slightly-above-average income can buy one.
For now, it's really only practical to architects.
Zero thousand dollars isn't exactly what I call expensive.
Fri May 18, 2007 8:34 am
CWisgood wrote:Uncle Xyzzy wrote:Igg wrote:Paul wrote:Will we get 3D scanners? Then we can scan objects and send them over the internets and print them out. Like gifts.
You'd need a 3D monitor though.
...No. You'd just have a 3D model on the screen. Sort of like, you can display a 4D object in 3D space, to an extent.
Anyway, I saw an ad for one of these... $$0,000 right now, but soon it'll be cheap enough that slightly-above-average income can buy one.
For now, it's really only practical to architects.
Zero thousand dollars isn't exactly what I call expensive.

I'm pretty sure he meant $4,000.
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