News

Skid steers are great fun if you get to drive one on a construction site. [ProfessorBoots] has long been a fan of the diminutive diggers, and decided to make a 3D-printed version for his own pleasu… ...
A 20-foot-high printer recently 3D-printed the shell of a tiny house—not only the walls and floor, but the ceiling and roof, and overhangs—in just 24 hours.
While, in principle, there's no reason a good functional helmet can't be 3D-printed, that doesn't mean a helmet that you print at home will be safe to use! Safety gear is produced precisely and ...
The new Climacool Laced have an adjustable fit you can make more or less snug.
And, now, Disney has unveiled a new variation on 3D printing —a device that can print out what Diseney has been making in all forms since the very first sketch of Mickey Mouse: soft cute things.
A little more than twenty hours later a tiny and cute printed skateboard popped out. [Julian] got the files for his 3D printed skateboard from Thingiverse and printed them off on a MakerGear M2.
So, no, you probably won’t see 3D printed cheese on your plate tomorrow, since scientists are only now figuring out how printing could alter the structural and functional properties of your food.
Columbia University engineers have created a 3D printer to make food, primarily a slice of Nutella and peanut butter cheesecake.
Dutch designers Eric Klarenbeek and Maartje Dros have created a bioplastic made from algae that can be 3D printed into virtually any product, creating a system that has the potential to completely ...
Now you can 3D-print things that connect to Wi-Fi without batteries or electronics Scientists print mechanical objects that can communicate with Wi-Fi devices.
Meet Charlie and Billy, the most adorable little robots in all the land. Billy, the first iteration, is a combination of 3D-printed parts, an Arduino Leonardo, and dual DC motors to form a hexapod ...