The 3D printer that fits into a suitcase

By | August 6, 2012, 4:15 AM PDT

A pair of MIT mechanical engineering students have developed a 3D printer which certainly goes by the name of portable — fitting neatly into a standard metal suitcase.
The era of 3D printing has firmly launched — in its latest developments, being used to turn homes into drugstores, creating weapons and even being used to mold 3D replicas of your fetus –  but it’s not just about a printer’s uses, but also its features.
Most 3D printers are bulky, brick-like and the average size of a kitchen table. However, as technology evolves — consider the mobile phone as an example — the components required to maintain performance can be made smaller and more lightweight. That’s where portability comes in.
PopFab, designed by MIT students Ilan Moyer and Nadya Peek of CADLab and the Centre for Bits and Atoms respectively, can be set up within moments. The pair claim that the 3D printer has traveled the world “as a carry-on item of luggage”, and its locations include Saudi Arabia, Germany, and various parts of the United States.
Described as a multi-tool, perhaps the Swiss Army knife of 3D printers, the video below shows the two students setting up PopFab bit by bit, and is part of a series that will show off the mobile 3D printer’s capabilities.
In just a few moments, the students assembled the printer through attaching the printing head to a fold-out arm. Next, they placed the printing material and connected a computer which is used to relay the design to the machine.
In the video, the printer is used to create a small, three dimensional fish. However, the portable design could potentially be used to perform different functions — change the toolhead, switch the service. For example, the team believe it could also be used to cut vinyl, perform milling or draw programmed designs.

 http://vimeo.com/user2707364/popfab1http://vimeo.com/user2707364/popfab1

Clone yourself as a doll


A shop in Toyko, Japan, is offering an unsual product made possible through 3D printing -- a doll-size replica of .. yourself.
Well, at least the head.
The Clone Factory will shoot fully dimensional mages of you, input the information into programming software, and produce a replica doll-head for you through 3D printing. Apparently, these dolls are popular for weddings -- mini-me on the cake, anyone?
It will only set you back $1,800 a time.

Could a new patent prevent a 3D printing free-for-all?

By | October 16, 2012, 2:13 AM PDT

A patent for a DRM system that aims to stop future 3D printer owners from printing whatever they please has been granted.
We may have imagined the day when cheap, commercial 3D printers invaded every household — letting us print everything from clothes to cars — but for companies that manufacture and design these products, a world where people could download these blueprints (think Wiki Weapons as an example), the future doesn’t look so rosy.
If you consider how Inkjet printers revolutionized the printing industry twenty years back and put the commercial printing guy out of business, the idea is not so far-fetched.
DRM systems are used heavily in the music, movie and video game industries, although it doesn’t stop people from playing the pirate — using websites to find and download torrents which can distribute illegal content. Earlier this year, torrent search website The Pirate Bay launched ‘Physibles’ — where you can download blueprints for anything from model cars to a pair of sneakers.
But would a new DRM patent make a difference?
The new patent was issued this week by the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office and is titled “Manufacturing control system.” Applied for four years ago, the patent describes a system where 3D printers will have to obtain “authorization” before printing items requested by a user.
In a nutshell, if you want to print that pirate blueprint of the latest Nike shoes, your printer will have to go through a database for permission. Unlikely, in theory.
“This is an attempt to assert ownership over DRM for 3D printing. It’s “Let’s use DRM to stop unauthorized copying of things,” Michael Weinberg, staff lawyer at Public Knowledge told TorrentFreak.
The patent has been issued to former Microsoft CTO Nathan Myhrvold’s firm Intellectual Ventures.