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David Tucker

4K Netflix launches next month: Is 2014 the year that 4K finally reaches mass market? |... - 1 views

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    2014 is the year of 4K Displays.
David Tucker

Apple's CarPlay will put iOS on your dash, already has critical mass of car makers on b... - 1 views

  • Apple rolled out its CarPlay iPhone connection for cars at the Geneva Motor Show this week with Ferrari, Mercedes-Benz and Volvo demonstrating the application, and 13 other automakers also signed on to ship “down the road,” as Apple copywriters put it. CarPlay replicates the iPhone interface on the car’s center stack display, uses the car’s built-in controls, and takes orders from Siri as well. It goes far beyond Siri Eyes Free. 
  • Any car with a USB jack or streaming Bluetooth is capable of playing music and hands-free calling from an iPhone. CarPlay adds significant robustness through the replication of the iPhone display on the center stack display and the ability to call on more of the functionality of your phone.Apple Maps is supported for navigation. Apple says CarPlay intuits possible destinations from recent calls and messages you’ve gotten. Free navigation from your iPhone might make it tough for automakers to charge more than a couple hundred dollars for built-in navigation. If a car costs less than $20,000, some automakers might just give up. They’ll be stuck with the cost of putting in an LCD display ($100), but they may be stuck with unsold cars if they don’t and the completion does.Apple says CarPlay provides access to music, podcasts, and audiobooks, as before with simpler USB or Bluetooth connections. CarPlay supports iTunes Radio as well as selected third-party apps, such as Beats Radio, iHeart Radio, Spotify, and Stitch
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    Apple is finally coming to the car industry!!!!!
Jane Sundell

3D Printers May Be As Hazardous To Your Health As Cigarettes, According To New Study - 1 views

  • Typically a 3D printer will heat up a thermoplastic feedstock, extrude it through a nozzle, then deposit it onto a sort of landing pad where your item is built. Similar processes are known to emit harmful emissions in industrial environments, but the difference here is that in a factory, an operator might be required to wear certain protective gear and there might be better ventilation. In your home? Not so much.
    • Jane Sundell
       
      Con
  • 3D Printers May Be As Hazardous To Your Health As Cigarettes, According To New Study
Jane O'Kelly

20 great examples of print in 3D | 3D printing | Creative Bloq - 0 views

  • Paleontology has been using the same, solid tools for around 150 years. However, Dr. Kenneth Lacovara of Drexel University decided it was time for the art of digging up dinosaur bones to catch up with technology. Palentologists can now use the required skills to print in 3D to make replicas of their bone findings to send to doctors and scientists around the world. This way, the discovery can be truly researched without restrictions.
  • Have you ever wanted to eat your own face? Well, thanks to print in 3D, now you can! The 'Eat Your Face Machine' (EYFM) is a 3D printer developed by David Carr and the MIT Media Lab. The EYFM scans your face and then recreates it onto a block of chocolate. The end result being your face, in chocolate, ready to eat. NOM!
  • Brazilian footwear company Melissas caught the 3D printing bug and have been creating incredible fashion designs ever since. The shoes are made out of a proprietary plastic called Melflex using injection-molding and 3D printing. Any left over material is saved and used for the next print in 3D project, so the process is nice and green! These invisible shoes were created by Andreia Chaves.
Gabby R.

3d printing: getting hotter in the market - WhaTech - 0 views

  • It is being intensively used currently in lots of fields particularly in medical where you can create an artificial limb that fits you perfectly.
  • McDonalds is toy-ing with the idea of using 3D printing to let kids choose and create their own toy,
carly mantia

Despite plastic gun ban, 3-D printed firearms still have a future  - NBC News... - 0 views

  • Earlier this year, Cody Wilson, the 25-year-old founder Defense Distributed, a Texas-based group that promotes the use of 3-D printed guns, fired a .380 caliber bullet from a plastic gun called the "Liberator." The shot landed at a dusty firing range in central Texas, but was apparently heard in the halls of Congress.
  • On Monday, the U.S. Senate addressed those concerns by voting to extend the Undetectable Firearms Act for another 10 years, mirroring similar action last week by the House. The legislation, expected to be signed by President Obama, continues the ban on the sale or possession of firearms that aren't detectable by X-ray machines or metal detectors, a category that could include 3-D printed guns.
  • “In 1988, when we passed the Undetectable Firearms Act, the notion of a 3-D printed plastic firearm slipped through metal detectors, onto our planes in secure environments was a matter of science fiction,” Rep. Steve Israel, D-N.Y., said on the House floor. “The problem is that today it is a reality.”The law, as extended, requires 3-D guns to have a metal strip that would make them visible to metal detectors. Some Democratic senators wanted stricter controls, including a requirement that 3-D printed guns have permanent metal components.
Jeniyah Smith

Can We Really 3-D Print Limbs for Amputees? - Travis M. Andrews - The Atlantic - 0 views

  • But many of the approximately 34 million people around the world living without a natural limb don’t have access to this process at all. <div><a href="http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?iu=%2F4624%2FTheAtlanticOnline%2Fchannel_health&t=src%3Dblog%26by%3Dtravis-m-andrews%26title%3Dcan-we-really-3-d-print-limbs-for-amputees-%26cat%3Dbody%26pos%3Din-article&sz=300x185&c=95731236&tile=3" title=""><img src="http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/ad?iu=%2F4624%2FTheAtlanticOnline%2Fchannel_health&t=src%3Dblog%26by%3Dtravis-m-andrews%26title%3Dcan-we-really-3-d-print-limbs-for-amputees-%26cat%3Dbody%26pos%3Din-article&sz=300x185&c=95731236&tile=3" alt="" /></a></div> The motivation to research and create more advanced prosthetic limbs is not financial. The money poured into research isn’t often recouped, simply because there aren’t enough customers. And it isn’t cheap for those customers, either.
Emily Siegel

» Pros And Cons Of 3D Printing - 0 views

  • making processes finish faster
  • company has the design they can just make the prototype on their own.
  • Aside from the longer time spent in manual work, injury is also a big possibility especially to the person making the prototype.
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  • One of the disadvantages of using 3D printing is the possible manufacturing of dangerous weapons. As we all know, anyone can get almost anything from the internet – including designs of dangerous weapons. If these design fall into the wrong hands especially those that have 3D printer, they could make dangerous weapons easily. Aside from that, 3D printing could also be used for counterfeiting. Designs of different objects can easily be duplicated and sold as counterfeits by unsuspecting customers.
    • Jane Sundell
       
      Con
  • One of the disadvantages of using 3D printing is the possible manufacturing of dangerous weapons. As we all know, anyone can get almost anything from the internet – including designs of dangerous weapons. If these design fall into the wrong hands especially those that have 3D printer, they could make dangerous weapons easily. Aside from that, 3D printing could also be used for counterfeiting. Designs of different objects can easily be duplicated and sold as counterfeits by unsuspecting customers.
    • Jane Sundell
       
      Con
  • The pros of using 3D printing would include making processes finish faster. In a design company for example, the usual process would be first come up with the design of the new product. Once the design has been approved, they send the design to a third party company to make the prototypes. The prototypes would be sent to the company for final checking and modifications. Overall, this would take weeks. With the help of 3D printing, this process would be shortened because once the company has the design they can just make the prototype on their own.
  • The pros of using 3D printing would include making processes finish faster.
Jane O'Kelly

Meet The Man Who Created The 3D Printed Gun - Business Insider - 1 views

  • Last year, Wired included him in its list of the deadliest people on the planet, alongside Qassem Suleimani, head of Iran's special forces, and the former Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi, though Wilson's notoriety is not to do with human rights abuses and killing. It's for uploading a bit of software. A bit of software that could unleash a whole new world: one in which anyone can download a set of blueprints and print their own gun at home. Wilson made news when he unveiled plans for the Liberator in 2012, but in May last year, he went one step further: he successfully fired it, and uploaded the plans on to his website, Defense Distributed. Two days later, the US state department removed them, but by that time they had been downloaded 100,000 times. This is a cat that is well and truly out of the bag. The 3D gun is with us whether we like it or not. Mostly not, I would say. It's a gun. It works. And any nut with access to a 3D printer can print one in the privacy of their bedroom and then … well, you get the picture. The plans include a metal shank so that it'll show up in an x-ray scanner, but it is the work of moments to remove it. And while it is an argument that has a different resonance in the US, where any aforesaid nut can simply go out and buy a gun in a shop, and the rights of nuts to go and buy such guns is enshrined in the constitution, even there, it has caused shock waves. In Britain, where we hope our robbers carry nothing more than a big stick and arm our police officers accordingly, it's a potential societal revolution that none of us asked for.
  • Last year, Wired included him in its list of the deadliest people on the planet, alongside Qassem Suleimani, head of Iran's special forces, and the former Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi, though Wilson's notoriety is not to do with human rights abuses and killing. It's for uploading a bit of software. A bit of software that could unleash a whole new world: one in which anyone can download a set of blueprints and print their own gun at home. Wilson made news when he unveiled plans for the Liberator in 2012, but in May last year, he went one step further: he successfully fired it, and uploaded the plans on to his website, Defense Distributed. Two days later, the US state department removed them, but by that time they had been downloaded 100,000 times. This is a cat that is well and truly out of the bag. The 3D gun is with us whether we like it or not. Mostly not, I would say. It's a gun. It works. And any nut with access to a 3D printer can print one in the privacy of their bedroom and then … well, you get the picture. The plans include a metal shank so that it'll show up in an x-ray scanner, but it is the work of moments to remove it. And while it is an argument that has a different resonance in the US, where any aforesaid nut can simply go out and buy a gun in a shop, and the rights of nuts to go and buy such guns is enshrined in the constitution, even there, it has caused shock waves. In Britain, where we hope our robbers carry nothing more than a big stick and arm our police officers accordingly, it's a potential societal revolution that none of us asked for. But then, that's generally the way with societal revolutions. Listening to the radio, just before setting off to meet Wilson, I hear a bulletin that includes the news that the Home Office has updated its firearms rules to make it clear it is illegal to manufacture, sell, purchase or possess 3D printed guns.
  • Last year, Wired included him in its list of the deadliest people on the planet, alongside Qassem Suleimani, head of Iran's special forces, and the former Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi, though Wilson's notoriety is not to do with human rights abuses and killing. It's for uploading a bit of software. A bit of software that could unleash a whole new world: one in which anyone can download a set of blueprints and print their own gun at home. Wilson made news when he unveiled plans for the Liberator in 2012, but in May last year, he went one step further: he successfully fired it, and uploaded the plans on to his website, Defense Distributed. Two days later, the US state department removed them, but by that time they had been downloaded 100,000 times. This is a cat that is well and truly out of the bag. The 3D gun is with us whether we like it or not. Mostly not, I would say. It's a gun. It works. And any nut with access to a 3D printer can print one in the privacy of their bedroom and then … well, you get the picture. The plans include a metal shank so that it'll show up in an x-ray scanner, but it is the work of moments to remove it. And while it is an argument that has a different resonance in the US, where any aforesaid nut can simply go out and buy a gun in a shop, and the rights of nuts to go and buy such guns is enshrined in the constitution, even there, it has caused shock waves. In Britain, where we hope our robbers carry nothing more than a big stick and arm our police officers accordingly, it's a potential societal revolution that none of us asked for.
    • Jane O'Kelly
       
      Guns Debate
David Tucker

Cube 3D Printer - Home 3D printer to turn your ideas into real objects - 1 views

  • Plug and play simplicity Voted MAKE magazine’s “easiest to use” and “most reliable” 3D printer. Straight out of the box - you can get started immediately with the Cube's simple setup. Just plug it in and start. The only 3D printer certified for safe at-home use by adults and children.
    • David Tucker
       
      Pro
  • The Cube 3D printer has Wi-Fi so loading is a breeze. Send your prints to the Cube from your computer.
    • David Tucker
       
      Pro
  • Print in vibrant colors The Cube uses material cartridges in 16 different colors including vibrant colors, neutral colors, metallic silver and glow in the dark.Order cartridges
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  • Your Cube 3D printer comes with 25 free 3D files designed by professional artists.
  • Cube is the only 3D printer certified for safe at-home use by adults and children. It's certified by TÜV Rheinland.
    • David Tucker
       
      Pro
Alyssa Stein

3D Printing Defintion - 0 views

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    3D printing or Additive manufacturing is a process of making a three-dimensional solid object of virtually any shape from a digital model. 3D printing is achieved using an additive process, where successive layers of material are laid down in different shapes. 3D printing is also considered distinct from traditional machining techniques, which mostly rely on the removal of material by methods such as cutting or drilling.
jbowder

6 Cool examples of 3D printing - Tech2 - 1 views

  • As bizarre as it may sound, it’s possible to 3D print a house.
Jane O'Kelly

20 great examples of print in 3D | 3D printing | Page 2 | Creative Bloq - 0 views

  • What if you wanted to create confectionery based on body parts and didn't want to bother with moulds? Researchers at Cornell University's Creative Machines Lab have developed a printer that uses liquid ingredients such as batter or cheese instead of plastic. Fancy a scallop in the shape of the space shuttle ready to deep fry? No problem. A cake with a hidden message printed on the inside? Simple. While Cornell's printer is still in the prototype stage, a team from the University of Exeter already claims to have perfected a 3D chocolate printer for customisable treats.
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    What if you wanted to create confectionery based on body parts and didn't want to bother with moulds? Researchers at Cornell University's Creative Machines Lab have developed a printer that uses liquid ingredients such as batter or cheese instead of plastic. Fancy a scallop in the shape of the space shuttle ready to deep fry? No problem. A cake with a hidden message printed on the inside? Simple. While Cornell's printer is still in the prototype stage, a team from the University of Exeter already claims to have perfected a 3D chocolate printer for customisable treats.
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