Live from the Engadget CES Stage: an interview with 3D Systems’ Avi Reichental

CES 2013 is shaping up to be the biggest year yet for 3D printing. As more and more companies enter the market, the race to make the technology a consumer friendly proposition is heating up in a big way. 3D Systems, which has been offering up the technology to industrial consumers has been making a play in the home market with lower-priced offerings like the Cube 3D printer. We’ll be discussing the promise of at-home 3D printing with the company’s CEO Avi Reichental.

January 4, 2013 7:00 PM EST

Check out our full CES 2013 stage schedule here!

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This 3D Printer Churns Out 3-Color Objects as Big as a Basketball

We all know size matters. As, seemingly, does 3D Systems, because its latest desktop 3D printer is a whopper, with a build platform that can handle designs of up to 1,030 cubic inches. Yes, that is big enough to recreate a basketball. More »

3D Systems’ CubeX 3D printer does three color prints ‘as big as a basketball’

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3D Systems isn’t stopping with the release of one 3D printer at this year’s CES. Nope, the company’s launching a new, high-end model on our very stage. It’s calling the CubeX “the ultimate desktop 3D printer,” featuring a build platform that can handle prints up to 1,030 cubic inches (10.8 x 10.45 x 9.5-inches) — or as big as a basketball, hence the above image. The CubeX has three printing modes at resolutions up to 125 microns and three different print fill densities. Like its lower-priced counterpart, the printer can do PLA or ABS plastics and features a cartridge system for feeding in plastic. It’ll run you $2,499. More info can be had in the press release after the break — or by watching our stage interview with the company’s CEO.

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Despite Patent Lawsuit, FormLabs 3D Printer Company Amps Up Beta Unit Production And Looks To Hire

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FormLabs, the same folks that are bringing the Form 1 3D printer to market, has had a roller coaster year. After launching on Kickstarter with a huge reception — backers pledged almost $3 million during the course of the campaign — the company ran into an obstacle when 3D Systems Corp. sued both FormLabs and Kickstarter for patent infringement.

Today, however, the company has announced on its blog that things are still going well, with engineers “hard at work building ten beta Form 1 printers.” The beta units will have design upgrades from the alpha units the team has been working with, and will allow for further prototype testing.

The team hopes to optimize user experience, component durability and print accuracy during testing.

It’s unclear at the moment whether or not the impending lawsuit will affect FormLabs estimated ship times, but from the perspective of this blog post announcement it would seem that Maxim Lobovsky and co. are staying on track despite the slight derailment from 3D Systems.

In related news, FormLabs is currently using Kickstarter funds to grow out the team, adding a few new positions to the software team (which, by the way, has tripled since FormLabs launched on Kickstarter). The hope is that Form 1 owners can transcend the land of CAD and work in FormLabs very own creation software.

This jibes with FormLabs quest to bring 3D printing to the masses, not just the designers and engineers. If you’re interested in a job with FormLabs, check out the job postings here.

How 3D printing changed the face of ‘ParaNorman’

How 3D printing changed the face of 'Paranoman'

We drive around in circles trying to find the place. There’s no signage indicating our destination — no giant, looming cartoon characters or even a logo, just a faceless building in a maze of industrial parks, about 17 miles outside of Portland. It’s a beautiful drive of course, sandwiched on a vaguely winding highway by dense Pacific Northwest foliage, past Nike’s global headquarters. Compared to the world-class tracks and fields dotting the shoemaker’s campus, Laika’s own offices are an exercise in modesty (in spite of financial ties Phil Knight), virtually indistinguishable from the densely packed businesses that surround it. There are, perhaps, certain advantages to such anonymity — for one thing, it helps the studio avoid random drop-ins by movie fans hoping to chew the ear off of their animation heroes. It also means that our cab driver does a good three passes before finally getting out of the car and asking a smoker standing outside a nearby building where to go. He thinks about it for a moment and indicates a building — a large, but otherwise indistinguishable space.

The lobby doesn’t scream Hollywood either, but it certainly offers some less-than-subtle hints that we’ve found the place: a wall-sized black and white image of classic film cameras (ancient devices, someone tells me, that were utilized on the company’s previous film), and in one corner, a tiny room encased in glass, with Coraline seated at a table in its center. This building is the house that she built — or at least kept the lights on; “Coraline” was released after its planned successor “Jack & Ben’s Animated Adventure” failed to materialize. Inside, the cavernous space in excess of 150,000 square feet has become a bustling small town of creatives, laboring away in its recesses, many having traveled through several time zones to be in its rank, like carnies hopping from town to town. Stop-motion animation, after all, isn’t the most prevalent of professions, and while we’ve arguably entered a sort of golden age for the infamously labor-intensive art form, thanks in large part to the success of projects like “Coraline,” the number of studios actually investing in the form can be counted on one hand.

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How 3D printing changed the face of ‘ParaNorman’ originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Aug 2012 14:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Stop motion animated film ParaNorman taps 3D printers to create 31,000 unique facial features

Stop motion animated film ParaNorman taps 3D printers to create 31,000 unique facial features

Take one look at the upcoming 3D stop motion film ParaNorman and it’s easy to see that moviegoers are in for some stunning visuals come August 17th. Once you realize the contribution of 3D printing to the film’s creation, however, you’re likely to appreciate the movie on an entirely new level. In order to portray a wide array of emotions on the faces of the film’s 62 characters, animation studio LAIKA tapped 3D Systems and their ZPrinter 650 to generate over 31,000 individual facial parts for inclusion in the production — talk about working overtime. According to Brian McLean of LAIKA, “By using a color 3D printer we were not only able to push facial performance to new levels, but we were also able to achieve a level of detail and subtlety in characters’ faces that a few short years ago would have seemed impossible.” If you’ve yet to catch a preview of ParaNorman, just hop the break to see some of the printed handiwork.

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Stop motion animated film ParaNorman taps 3D printers to create 31,000 unique facial features originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Aug 2012 23:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cubify’s 3D-printed toy robots take cues from Lego, sport interchangeable parts

Cubify's 3D-printed toy robots takes cues from Lego, sport interchangeable parts

If the urge to create a robot petting zoo of your own hasn’t subsided since Maker Faire, 3D Systems’ new Cubify toy robots might help fill that void in your droid-loving heart. The 3D-printed bots may not boast electronic innards, but their LEGO-like swappable parts allow for some Frankenstein-inspired customization. Ready-made robots start at $4.99, while 3D source files ring up at 99 cents apiece, in case you’d rather extrude them using your own Cube hardware. Yearning to make a personal automaton army entirely of your own design? The company’s new beginner-friendly CAD tool, Cubify Invent, should help you craft that unique plastic platoon.

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Cubify’s 3D-printed toy robots take cues from Lego, sport interchangeable parts originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Aug 2012 09:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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