Results 51 to 60 of 95
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10-16-2014, 06:08 PM #51
- Join Date
- Oct 2014
- Location
- Layton UT
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- 33
The sky is the limit but I see the most promise lying in the field of medical technology and being able to print customized replacement parts for human beings.
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10-17-2014, 08:23 AM #52
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- Oct 2014
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- 13
Vehicles including airborne land and sea, engines, electronics and everything. Also living spaces.
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10-17-2014, 01:51 PM #53
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- Oct 2014
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- 314
The same stuff we are today, everything we can.
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10-17-2014, 02:56 PM #54
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- Oct 2014
- Location
- Milan, Italy
- Posts
- 34
Airplanes and space veichles, with advanced molten metal 3D printer unaffected by the porosity of SLS printed parts.
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10-25-2014, 03:54 PM #55
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- Oct 2014
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- 34
Hopefully replacement organs, the use of 3d printing in the medical field looks promising! I feel that in ten years there will be far more 3d printers in the household. So a site like amazon where you just pay for what you want and print it is what I expect to see in ten years.
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10-31-2014, 09:28 AM #56
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- Oct 2014
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- 36
The ability to print organics directly onto a receiving surface. For example, one loses a hand in some sort of accident; medical personnel are brought in with a printer, sample the patients tissue and print a new hand right on the wrist using genetically compatible materials.
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10-31-2014, 06:43 PM #57
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- Oct 2014
- Location
- OH
- Posts
- 28
I think medical will be huge first. custom splints, braces, (replacement parts is so strange to think about). Dentistry - think invisiline. manufacturing - replacement part models will be sold in place of huge warehouse of car/appliance/electronic part. integrated electronic components.
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10-31-2014, 09:59 PM #58
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- Oct 2014
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- 21
We will be printing in multi metals at home.
Big box stores will have a area for 3d printers.
And in 40 years nano tech will start to replace 3d printers but I still conceded that a printer, eather way its past the singularity.Last edited by badscr; 10-31-2014 at 10:01 PM. Reason: better ans
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11-08-2014, 08:33 AM #59
In 10 years 3D printers will be pretty common in all types of professional settings and also some homes. The continued increase in computer processing power will allow their regular use beyond prototyping and specialty manufacture in applications such as data visualization and image representation.
Regarding home use, I believe that Food 3D Printing could very well become the "killer app" (to borrow from Hod Lipson). The current food trends such as customization, indulgence, and return to "real" food will converge with the mega trends like social media and the app economy to results in new appliances leveraging the technology we currently call "3D Printing" but may be branded differently. Current if early examples of this include the Foodini (http://www.food-fabbing.com/blog/foo...od-3d-printer/) and the ChocaByte (http://www.food-fabbing.com/3dp/choc...te-3d-printer/).
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11-14-2014, 11:42 AM #60
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- Nov 2014
- Posts
- 32
fully assembled functional electronic gadgets
Printing time- Is this right?
09-13-2024, 07:51 AM in General 3D Printing Discussion