Archive for the ‘3D printing’ category: Page 79
Apr 16, 2018
This bridge was 3D printed in midair
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: 3D printing
Apr 8, 2018
New DIY 3D Bioprinter to Create Living Human Organs
Posted by Mean Raven in categories: 3D printing, bioprinting, biotech/medical, engineering, life extension
DIYers can bioprint living human organs by modifying an off-the-shelf 3D printer costing about $500, announce researchers who published the plans as open source, enabling anyone to build their own system. [This article first appeared on LongevityFacts. Author: Brady Hartman. ]
Scientists at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) developed a low-cost 3D bioprinter to print living tissue by modifying a standard desktop 3D printer and released the design as open source so that anyone can build their own system.
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Mar 22, 2018
How 3D printing is spurring revolutionary advances in manufacturing and design
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: 3D printing, space
A young startup called Relativity is pushing space technology forward by pushing 3D printing technology to its limits, building the largest metal 3D printer in the world. And other major companies anxious to try these new ways of manufacturing, too. Science correspondent Miles O’Brien looks at some of the amazing advances that’s launching the technology into a new era.
Mar 15, 2018
I’m excited to see legendary writer Richard Dawkins share my latest Newsweek article on 3D Bioprinting, transhumanism, and Quantum Archaeology
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: 3D printing, bioprinting, quantum physics, transhumanism
Hundreds of comments under his post today: http://www.newsweek.com/quantum-archaeology-quest-3d-bioprin…ife-837967
Mar 14, 2018
Mad Scientists Want to 3D Print Every Dead Person Back to Life
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: 3D printing, life extension, mathematics, quantum physics, transhumanism
This major religious site suggests I’m part of a group of mad scientists, but Quantum Archaeology is a very interesting idea that more people should ponder. The article also highlights the challenge of #transhumanism vs. religion and conservative attitutes: http://www.lifenews.com/2018/03/12/mad-scientists-want-to-3-…k-to-life/ #transhumanism
But the self-described secular transhumanist is perfectly serious in his posturing about the future of technology, life and death. Within 50 years, he believes scientists may be able to bring back people from the dead.
“After all, everything is matter and energy. And human life, human thoughts and human existence are mathematical, determinable calculations of that subatomic world of matter and energy,” Istvan writes.
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Mar 12, 2018
This House Can Be 3D-Printed For $4,000
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: 3D printing, habitats
- 03.12.18
- 6:00 am
- world changing ideas
This House Can Be 3D-Printed For $4,000 New Story, a company that builds housing in the developing world, has a new invention: a massive 3D printer that extrudes an entire four-room house in less than a day.
Mar 9, 2018
The quest to 3D-bioprint every dead person back to life
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: 3D printing, bioprinting, quantum physics, transhumanism
My new article at Newsweek on transhumanism, 3D Bioprinting the dead, and Quantum Archaeology:
Can radical scientific and technological advances really solve the problem of death?
Continue reading “The quest to 3D-bioprint every dead person back to life” »
Mar 5, 2018
These muscles can lift up to 1000x their own weight
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: 3D printing
Mar 5, 2018
Modified, 3D-printable alloy shows promise for flexible electronics, soft robots
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: 3D printing, engineering, nanotechnology, robotics/AI
Researchers in Oregon State University’s College of Engineering have taken a key step toward the rapid manufacture of flexible computer screens and other stretchable electronic devices, including soft robots.
The advance by a team within the college’s Collaborative Robotics and Intelligent Systems Institute paves the way toward the 3D printing of tall, complicated structures with a highly conductive gallium alloy.
Researchers put nickel nanoparticles into the liquid metal, galinstan, to thicken it into a paste with a consistency suitable for additive manufacturing.