Paper jams are the most basic weapon in copier vs. human warfare, but a few models of Xerox copiers are stepping up their game. They’ve been very stealthily going rogue and secretly changing a few key details of the docs they’ve been working on.
Many shops that use Square readers still have to accept checks and gift cards, but they haven’t had an easy time reconciling those physical payments with the digital variety. Thankfully, updated versions of Square for Android and iOS should bring harmony by recording and tracking payments in virtually any format. The new release is particularly friendly to iPads serving as registers, giving them both cash management tools and support for printing receipts over Bluetooth. Storeowners whose sales still involve lots of paper or plastic will want to grab the latest Square apps through the source links.
Filed under: Cellphones, Peripherals, Tablets, Mobile
Via: The Next Web
Source: App Store, Google Play
Last week we brought you inside the Common Press, a letterpress studio where printing methods of yore are reinvigorated in the name of art. As much as the Press is engaged in making new things, the technological history being preserved there is vast.
Mataerial 3D printer escapes the tyranny of layers, changes colors on the fly (video)
Posted in: Today's ChiliAnyone who has used conventional 3D printers knows that they work by stacking layer on layer, limiting just what they can create and where. Mataerial’s upcoming printer doesn’t abide by those petty rules. Its robotic arm draws instantly solid 3D curves rather than 2D slices, shedding the need for direct support or even a horizontal surface. It’s also not bound by traditional approaches to color. As Mataerial injects dye at the last moment, it can switch hues mid-stream and introduce subtle gradients. We’ve reached out for launch and pricing details, but it’s reasonable to presume that such advanced control won’t come cheap — we’d look to the 3Doodler for more affordable in-air artistry.
Filed under: Peripherals
Source: Mataerial
The good news is that you can now do more with the photos that you’ve captured using your smartphone. The bad news is that it doesn’t come for free – but then again, nothing good ever does, does it?
There’s a new app in town called Pixuru. It’s basically a one-stop shop to turn your favorite mobile images into displayable prints.
Choose from an array of frames and canvas finishes to achieve the final effect that you want, including the ability to print on wood or metal. You can also turn images into portable art by having it printed onto a case for your phone.
Click to View Embedded Video Clip
Pixuru promises to have your prints shipped out by two days and they also offer free shipping within the US. You can download the app for free for iOS now – an Android version is coming in about a month.
[via Gadget Review]
It may not be as easy as print, plug, and play, but designer J.C. Karich is proving that you can make a pair of working headphones with nothing but raw materials, a 3D printer, open source designs, and a little gumption. More »
We live in the future, so chances are you’ve got all manner of gadgets flashing and beeping at you to remind you what’s happening on any given day. But your toast isn’t in on all that fun. And why shouldn’t it be? If you had something like the Image Toaster, it could be. And maybe someday you will. More »
HP and Samsung offer setup-free printing on the Galaxy S 4, with others to follow
Posted in: Today's ChiliAs ubiquitous as wireless printing has become, there remains the occasional hoop to jump through for printing from mobile devices if you don’t happen to have either a special app or iOS gear that supports AirPrint. HP and Samsung are teaming up to remove many of the headaches for the Galaxy S 4: when the phone launches in April, it should have setup-free WiFi printing to almost 200 HP inkjets and LaserJets, as long as any given printer is either on the same network or is otherwise accessible through direct printing. Don’t expect ubiquitous support, though. Beyond being limited to the one phone, you’ll have to stick to some of its preloaded apps, including the browser, contacts, email client, photo gallery, Polaris Office and S Note. It’s far from a truly universal solution, then, but the two partners are at least promising zero-setup printing on both the Galaxy S III and the Galaxy Note II through firmware updates coming later in 2013. We’ll take the approach if it saves time snagging an old-fashioned boarding pass or some concert tickets.
Filed under: Cellphones, Networking, Mobile, Samsung, HP
Source: Android Police
Nowadays, we take most of our photos digitally and they stay digital. Photo paper and bulky albums are dead. So if you are compelled to print you photos for some reason, you might as well try to make it interesting, like printing them as tactile wood reliefs with the Photocarver. More »
We have seen many concepts, but this is the most realistic plan yet for humanity’s first Moon Base. It will be more efficient and cheaper to build than any other alternative, as it uses 3D printing to quickly transform raw lunar soil into habitable domes. More »