The Beginning Of The Bionic Man
Posted in: Today's ChiliWhile it certainly feels like our bones are hard, they aren’t. In fact they are actually not dead, un-reactive material either. Many don’t realize that bones are flexible, to a point, and they are very much living tissue. The familiar and visible exterior of the human bone is merely a casing that protects an important network of nerves, blood vessels and material that allows growth of the bone as well as the marrow.
Mankind’s Giant Leap Forward
Posted in: Today's ChiliThere is only one thing that is better than being an inventor, and that is to be an inventor amongst a group of international minds, best in their fields and willing to contribute to your idea. When the spirit of the lone inventor meets the force of global collaboration, the results can reach the moon.
The color of 3D printed objects is usually limited to the color of the filament that they’re made of. But the Iris 3D printer by Mcor Technologies can print objects in practically any color, allowing for more realistic replicas or sophisticated products and prototypes. That’s because it follows grandma’s recipe: it prints using paper. It also needs grandma though.
Iris uses Letter or A4 size paper to print, but it cheats a bit. Before using Iris, first you have to print cross sections of the object to be printed on a conventional 2D printer. But you can’t just use any type of ink. Mcor developed a special type of ink that soaks through paper to ensure that the finished product doesn’t have bits of white paper showing through.
When the cross sections are printed, you feed those sheets to Iris. The machine will then cut the paper and add adhesive to the cross sections, layer by layer until the object is finished. Resolution for the printer is 5760 x 1440 x 508 dpi on the X, Y and Z axes, respectively.
Who would have thought? The great thing about the Iris is that the objects you make with it are biodegradable and recyclable. However, just like ink printers, Iris costs a lot to use. You have to shell out $15,866 (USD) per year to rent one. But it’s not too bad, considering Mcor will also provide the materials and additional service along with the printer itself.
[via Quartz]
The Player Content Revolution
Posted in: Today's ChiliI’m sure most of you have heard phrases like "free market" and "free economy" before. If you’ve ever done business online (or spent any time online, really), you’ve at least experienced it. The open nature of the digital world has changed something fundamental about what it is to be a consumer, about what it is to do business.
This has, in turn, caused a revolution in the games industry. Let’s talk about that.
Edward Snowden—the former NSA contractor who revealed
Cardboard Robot Decorates Mugs
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe Robot Barista in Texas
Posted in: Today's ChiliWhen
it comes to getting your custom blend coffee drink, who do you picture getting
it from? The odds are good that you probably picture a happy looking barista
handing you a warm cup of your favorite drink with a paper capped straw peeking
out of the top. One company
in Austin, Texas, Briggo Coffee, has put a coffee robot on a University of
Texas campus.