Latest in 3D Printing Thread

Well, thin air isn't the word I'd use if I was writing this.:eusa_eh: Still 3-d printers can do some amazing stuff.

be more amazing if you didn't have haul the printer and the ingredients around with you everywhere

Support science and you'll have that one day! :tongue:
Molecular assembler - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Molecular machine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Molecular assembler finally created
Assembler Books

50 years from now this could be the next big thing. "Air" or what's its made of into something you like. hehe

Making something out of nothing is very God-like. What a coup for scientists to be able to pull it off. The ultimate goal.
 
be more amazing if you didn't have haul the printer and the ingredients around with you everywhere

Support science and you'll have that one day! :tongue:
Molecular assembler - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Molecular machine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Molecular assembler finally created
Assembler Books

50 years from now this could be the next big thing. "Air" or what's its made of into something you like. hehe

Making something out of nothing is very God-like. What a coup for scientists to be able to pull it off. The ultimate goal.

Nothing? Air is made out of molecules(co2, o2, etc) that this process just puts together into something. Do you know that everything around you are simply molecules in different phases(air=vapor, your floor=solid, water=liquid). The rocks in your back yard are certain molecules within a solid form. Think about it as this is simply humanity doing the same thing.

Want a apple? This can give you one.
Want a new computer? This can give you one.


Sounds pretty good and has nothing to do about god.
 
3D-printed Robohands help kids without fingers

Carpenter Richard van As made his own digits after losing his fingers in an accident. Now he's helping kids by 3D-printing prosthetics and running an Indiegogo campaign.

People who have lost fingers can try to get robotic hands that cost tens of thousands of dollars. Or they can try to 3D-print their own hand.

That's what Richard van As did after a woodworking accident in 2011 cost him four fingers. The South African carpenter decided to build his own fingers from hardware store parts but eventually turned to 3D printing.

Using a MakerBot Replicator 2 printer, he collaborated with Ivan Owen to create a prosthetic finger after much trial and error. They've since printed hands for four South African children who lack fingers.

3D-printed Robohands help kids without fingers | Cutting Edge - CNET News
 
Support science and you'll have that one day! :tongue:
Molecular assembler - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Molecular machine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Molecular assembler finally created
Assembler Books

50 years from now this could be the next big thing. "Air" or what's its made of into something you like. hehe

Making something out of nothing is very God-like. What a coup for scientists to be able to pull it off. The ultimate goal.

Nothing? Air is made out of molecules(co2, o2, etc) that this process just puts together into something. Do you know that everything around you are simply molecules in different phases(air=vapor, your floor=solid, water=liquid). The rocks in your back yard are certain molecules within a solid form. Think about it as this is simply humanity doing the same thing.

Want a apple? This can give you one.
Want a new computer? This can give you one.


Sounds pretty good and has nothing to do about god.

horseshit--if the printer media does not already contain the necessary apple molecules it can't print and apple
 
Making something out of nothing is very God-like. What a coup for scientists to be able to pull it off. The ultimate goal.

Nothing? Air is made out of molecules(co2, o2, etc) that this process just puts together into something. Do you know that everything around you are simply molecules in different phases(air=vapor, your floor=solid, water=liquid). The rocks in your back yard are certain molecules within a solid form. Think about it as this is simply humanity doing the same thing.

Want a apple? This can give you one.
Want a new computer? This can give you one.


Sounds pretty good and has nothing to do about god.

horseshit--if the printer media does not already contain the necessary apple molecules it can't print and apple


How do you think nature does it antiscience person? It uses "genes" to put the "molecules" together within the right way to form a apple.(Very simple put). :eusa_hand:
 
Last edited:
Nothing? Air is made out of molecules(co2, o2, etc) that this process just puts together into something. Do you know that everything around you are simply molecules in different phases(air=vapor, your floor=solid, water=liquid). The rocks in your back yard are certain molecules within a solid form. Think about it as this is simply humanity doing the same thing.

Want a apple? This can give you one.
Want a new computer? This can give you one.


Sounds pretty good and has nothing to do about god.

horseshit--if the printer media does not already contain the necessary apple molecules it can't print and apple


How do you think nature does it antiscience person? It uses "genes" to put the molecules together into a apple.(Very simple put). :eusa_hand:

so your "printer " can make genes ?
 
horseshit--if the printer media does not already contain the necessary apple molecules it can't print and apple


How do you think nature does it antiscience person? It uses "genes" to put the molecules together into a apple.(Very simple put). :eusa_hand:

so your "printer " can make genes ?

Molecules are Gene - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"A gene is a molecular unit of heredity of a living organism."

Now they're messing with things at this level--> Molecular assembler finally created

The computer power would be mind blowing but it is possible.
 
How do you think nature does it antiscience person? It uses "genes" to put the molecules together into a apple.(Very simple put). :eusa_hand:

so your "printer " can make genes ?

Molecules are Gene - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"A gene is a molecular unit of heredity of a living organism."

Now they're messing with things at this level--> Molecular assembler finally created

The computer power would be mind blowing but it is possible.

so you're answer is no ?
 
the other day i was watching a video

of a completer lower for an ar

built from legos

worked great
 
A molecular assembler, as defined by K. Eric Drexler, is a "proposed device able to guide chemical reactions by positioning reactive molecules with atomic precision". A molecular assembler is a kind of molecular machine. Some biological molecules such as ribosomes fit this definition. This is because they receive instructions from messenger RNA and then assemble specific sequences of amino acids to construct protein molecules. However, the term "molecular assembler" usually refers to theoretical human-made devices.

Molecular assembler - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Today we can't make a apple=no. Some day maybe.
 
Last edited:
Coming to a printer near you: Electronics manufacturing
Coming to a printer near you: Electronics manufacturing | Cutting Edge - CNET News

At PARC, researchers are developing a new technology for printing everything from transistors to smart labels to semiconductors.
PALO ALTO, Calif. -- Got a large roll-to-roll printer that you're not sure what to do with? You might have a future in electronics manufacturing.

It's still very early days, but researchers at the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) have been taking significant strides in developing a new technology that makes it possible to print electronic components like sensors, transistors, light-emitters, smart tags, flexible batteries, memory, smart labels, and more.

PARC's work can also bring a new element to 3D printing: adding electronic, sensing or optical functionalities to parts. Printing electronics shares one major trait with that very hot technology: It is additive rather than subtractive. That means, said Janos Veres, PARC's program manager for printed electronics, that rather than etching the components out of other materials, the new system uses specially concocted inks to generate the electronics from scratch. Those inks may be composed of molecules, nanomaterials, and even tiny suspended silicon chips.
 
Coming to a printer near you: Electronics manufacturing
Coming to a printer near you: Electronics manufacturing | Cutting Edge - CNET News

At PARC, researchers are developing a new technology for printing everything from transistors to smart labels to semiconductors.
PALO ALTO, Calif. -- Got a large roll-to-roll printer that you're not sure what to do with? You might have a future in electronics manufacturing.

It's still very early days, but researchers at the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) have been taking significant strides in developing a new technology that makes it possible to print electronic components like sensors, transistors, light-emitters, smart tags, flexible batteries, memory, smart labels, and more.

PARC's work can also bring a new element to 3D printing: adding electronic, sensing or optical functionalities to parts. Printing electronics shares one major trait with that very hot technology: It is additive rather than subtractive. That means, said Janos Veres, PARC's program manager for printed electronics, that rather than etching the components out of other materials, the new system uses specially concocted inks to generate the electronics from scratch. Those inks may be composed of molecules, nanomaterials, and even tiny suspended silicon chips.

inks---specially concocted inks. Everyone needs to carry the inks around with them just in case.
 
Coming to a printer near you: Electronics manufacturing
Coming to a printer near you: Electronics manufacturing | Cutting Edge - CNET News

At PARC, researchers are developing a new technology for printing everything from transistors to smart labels to semiconductors.
PALO ALTO, Calif. -- Got a large roll-to-roll printer that you're not sure what to do with? You might have a future in electronics manufacturing.

It's still very early days, but researchers at the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) have been taking significant strides in developing a new technology that makes it possible to print electronic components like sensors, transistors, light-emitters, smart tags, flexible batteries, memory, smart labels, and more.

PARC's work can also bring a new element to 3D printing: adding electronic, sensing or optical functionalities to parts. Printing electronics shares one major trait with that very hot technology: It is additive rather than subtractive. That means, said Janos Veres, PARC's program manager for printed electronics, that rather than etching the components out of other materials, the new system uses specially concocted inks to generate the electronics from scratch. Those inks may be composed of molecules, nanomaterials, and even tiny suspended silicon chips.

inks---specially concocted inks. Everyone needs to carry the inks around with them just in case.

no they do not use inks

thermoplastics and such

more expensive ones use aluminum
 
Coming to a printer near you: Electronics manufacturing
Coming to a printer near you: Electronics manufacturing | Cutting Edge - CNET News

At PARC, researchers are developing a new technology for printing everything from transistors to smart labels to semiconductors.
PALO ALTO, Calif. -- Got a large roll-to-roll printer that you're not sure what to do with? You might have a future in electronics manufacturing.

It's still very early days, but researchers at the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) have been taking significant strides in developing a new technology that makes it possible to print electronic components like sensors, transistors, light-emitters, smart tags, flexible batteries, memory, smart labels, and more.

PARC's work can also bring a new element to 3D printing: adding electronic, sensing or optical functionalities to parts. Printing electronics shares one major trait with that very hot technology: It is additive rather than subtractive. That means, said Janos Veres, PARC's program manager for printed electronics, that rather than etching the components out of other materials, the new system uses specially concocted inks to generate the electronics from scratch. Those inks may be composed of molecules, nanomaterials, and even tiny suspended silicon chips.

inks---specially concocted inks. Everyone needs to carry the inks around with them just in case.

Who said everyone will be carrying these around? Simply you will need to set this up with the right kind of "materials" to make this work. This is a step forward from the tech currently being used.
 
Coming to a printer near you: Electronics manufacturing
Coming to a printer near you: Electronics manufacturing | Cutting Edge - CNET News

At PARC, researchers are developing a new technology for printing everything from transistors to smart labels to semiconductors.

inks---specially concocted inks. Everyone needs to carry the inks around with them just in case.

Who said everyone will be carrying these around? Simply you will need to set this up with the right kind of "materials" to make this work. This is a step forward from the tech currently being used.

in some ways yes

still a cad program
 

Forum List

Back
Top