Monday, February 28. 2011Oskar's Unveiling at NYPPS, and the 17x17x17 Drink upThere's been so much going on in the Shapeways community recently, sometimes it's been a little hard to keep up. Before we let the time get too far away from us, I wanted to be sure to give everyone a glimpse into one of the coolest things that's happened in the month of February -- Oskar's trip to NY, the unveiling of his incredible 17x17x17 and the first gathering of Shapeways community members since we opened our office in NY.
On Saturday, Feb 12th, I swung by the New York Puzzle Party Symposium with my coworker, Ben, so we could see the unveiling of Oskar's cube for ourselves. He gave his presentation to a packed house of renown puzzle designers and experts. We couldn't wait to see and hold the 17x17x17, and experience how it worked.
One of the best parts of being there was getting the chance to meet Eric Vergo and Sky Zangas, two up and coming young puzzle designers who have developed a friendship with Oskar.
Then came Tuesday evening's drink up on Feb. 15th. We rented out the private room at Red Sky (a bar nearby our NY office) and got to see and experience Oskar's creations in a laid back, more intimate setting.
Continue reading "Oskar's Unveiling at NYPPS, and the 17x17x17 Drink up" Sunday, February 27. 2011Kinect 3D Scanner Hack for 3D Printing
Fabricate Yourself by Karl D.D. Willis of Interactive Fabrication
Fabricate Yourself is the latest project by Interactive Fabrication for the 2011 the Tangible, Embedded and Embodied Interaction Conference uses the Microsoft Kinect as a 3D scanner to then generate STL files for 3D printing... In November 2010, Adafruit Industries offered a bounty for an open-source driver for Kinect (Thanks to Johnny Lee) which has led to some awesome projects but this is the first to our knowledge to incorporate the 3D depth map for 3D printing, software developed using openFrameworks open source C++ toolkit. To print at the 3x3cm size they only needed to use one quarter of the full Kinect resolution, below is a full resolution scan, The holes are due to occlusion of the projected IR light and general depth camera noise. This is obviously a very early iteration of something we are sure to see more of, possibly with two Kinects used simultaneously someone will be able to remove the 'shadow' to get a full 3D scan of an object which will be an awesome way to make 3D printing more accessibe for repair jobs, to copy and modify existing objects, to reduce the CAD barrier and it just looks like fun.... I do hope he releases the code..
Karl D.D. Willis also brought us the Beautiful Modeler which used the iPad as a 3D modeling interface including tilt control and multi-touch.. For video of the Fabricate Yourself project read on...
Continue reading "Kinect 3D Scanner Hack for 3D Printing" Friday, February 25. 20113D Printing the Next Trillion Dollar Industry
SAI Business Insider article comes to the conclusion that 3D Printing is the next trillion dollar industry, recognizing that Shapeways is one of the major players and "One of the reasons why you hear about 3D printing is that there's a small but vocal and growing hobbyists community who enjoy making small doodads. The hobbyist component of 3D printing doesn't sound impressive, until you realize that the first people who cared about things like cars, planes and personal computers were hobbyists." Rock on!!!!, Read on...
![]() Phil Renato and Students Visit the NY Office, Share Their Wisdom With the Shapeways CrewLast Thursday Nancy and I had a great time showing Phil Renato and his students, Patrick, Caitlin, Hattie, Ryan, and Katie around the Shapeways office and talking shop. In addition to being a Shapeways community member (you can check out his shop here), Phil is the Founding Chair of the Allesee Metals/Jewelry Design Program at Kendall College of Art & Design. He's also the person that took a miniature model of one of Baroba's trademark bunnies and coated in with clear auto polyurethane, red base, and a heavy clear to result in this beautiful specimen: ![]() (Check out more images like these on Phil's Flickr stream) Since Phil and his students work in a state-of-the-art studio at Kendall surrounded with metal working, wax injection systems, laser welding and 3D printing, they're embedded in the world of digital fabrication in a way that some of us only dream of.
Continue reading "Phil Renato and Students Visit the NY Office, Share Their Wisdom With the Shapeways Crew" Thursday, February 24. 2011New colors available: Indigo & Dark Grey
Hello all! I am pleased to announce we have new colors options available for purchase for our Strong & Flexible line.
In addition to our Black Strong and Flexible, and our Winter Red Strong and Flexible (we're extending); we will also be adding Indigo Strong and Flexible and Dark Grey Strong and Flexible to the family. ![]() Personally, I really like the Indigo. It looks like a rich, vibrant blue in some lights, and look more purple in other lights. We are going to order some more models and take better pictures as the models come through. The Winter Red, Indigo, and Dark Grey will be available until the end of May 2011. The pricing for these new colors will stay the same as our previous colors, $4 start up cost + $1.99 / cm3. I'm looking forward to all the cool designs we'll make together with this new palette. Enjoy! Models used for testing courtesy of boredom.is.me aka Kevon R of microboat. Wednesday, February 23. 2011Mini Axial Flux Power Alternator
No, apparently it will not power the Delorean, but this mini axial flux power generator by Sam Dekok, self confessed 'Wind Nerd' is part of an experiment to make a scale wind turbine. Order yours now and get your geek on!!!
Get more details here, I will not distort them with my ignorance Tuesday, February 22. 2011Customized Keychains of Kaetemi
Check out these sweet looking (but not tasting) customizable full color 3D printed keychains.
Collect all 6 shapes, the heart would have been perfect for Valentines Day, it's never too late.. Sunday, February 20. 2011IP, 3D Printing & DMCAAn Epic Journey into the Grey Spectrum of IP, Creative Commons, Moral Rights & 3D Printing Many of you may now be aware of the recent exchanges that have taken place over the 3D printed Impossible Triangle (Penrose Triangle) first posted on Shapeways on the 9th of Feb. In a matter of days a sequence of events unfolded that are indicative of the speed that 3D printing community moves when something exciting happens, both good and bad. It has raised serious issues that we need to discuss as a community to ensure the vibrancy and innovation is not crippled by legal interference.
Ulrich Schwanitz first uploaded his item on the 27th of January 2010, which was to be the first ever 3D printed Penrose Triangle. He then received the print on the 9th, took a few simple images and made a mind disturbing video that showed that indeed he had succeeded in making a truly amazing optical mind twister. We saw his item in the 'It Arrived' forum and reached out to a few of our press connections to share what we thought was a very cool design, the press agreed and sites such as Notcot and Fastco Design posted the item and generated a torrent of interest in the geometric wonder. This led to a bit of conjecture on the internet with a couple of people figuring out a solution including Constantine Zuev and soon after with a 3D model by Artur Tchoukanov where Joris posted the solution on the I.Materialise blog on Feb 16th and Artur also released the 3D model onto Thingiverse.. (but you may not be able to see it right now). So, the Fastco article gets updated with Artur's CG renders and boingboing posts about Artur's solution on the 17th but unintentionally omitted to mention the 3D item was first realized by Ulrich. Ulrich is disappointed that his concept solution has been leaked (perhaps a simple "I solved it" would have been enough without releasing the solution as a cad file) and that he was not attributed as the inventor on boingboing. Upon notification that Ulrich designed the original 3D model Cory Doctorow updated his post as soon as he could to rectify the omission. It does not end here as Ulrich, disappointed at the decision of Artur to render the original design worthless by releasing it into the public domain also sent a take down notice to Thingiverse under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act...
Continue reading "IP, 3D Printing & DMCA" Wednesday, February 16. 2011Stainless Steel: What's happening here?
Hi, I'm Nancy, the Product Lead for Materials and Content at Shapeways. I know maybe some of you are confused and frustrated with the Stainless Steel design rules,
and the disappointing rejection notices you get regarding wall
thickness and other violation of design rules. I'd like to take some
time and update you on what we are doing at Shapeways to address this.
First, I'd like to recap some of the important design rules.. While visiting our suppliers, I took a quick video of me playing with the Stainless Steel in the Green State (a fragile stage in the middle of the process). See how fragile and easily breakable this is? And this piece is actually 3 mm or over! The current version of our Stainless Steel design rules can be found here, in detail. There's also a blog post
that describes some of the nuances. But more importantly, here's what
we're cooking up to deal with the confusion over these rules. Continue reading "Stainless Steel: What's happening here?" Keep the Internet Neutral not Neutered
Michael Weinberg of Public Knowledge, the Author of It Will Be Awesome if They Don’t Screw it Up: 3D Printing, Intellectual Property, and the Fight Over the Next Great Disruptive Technology has another pressing cause that needs your immediate action!!
US Congress is getting ready to decide if we will have any Net Neutrality rules at all. If the proposed bill passes it will not only repeal the FCC's current rules, but also prevent the FCC from making any net neutrality rules in the future. Without government-backed Net Neutrality rules ISPs will be free to pick and choose which websites work and which websites don't. What does this have to do with me? I hear you asking. Once ISP's have the power to throttle or open the network based on content it means they will start demanding money from sites for high speed access and making deals to choke competitors. If suddenly a competitor to a web service you use, be it Shapeways, Vimeo or BitTorrent started choking the service it could completely cripple the site, imagine waiting 4 times as long for your content to upload/download? The barrier to entry for internet start-ups like Kickstarter, Shapeways and Etsy would be raised to the point where many great ideas would never be realized. Once the proposed bill is passed it can NEVER be turned back!!!! Click the image below to take action... Thanks again to Michael Weinberg of Public Knowledge for pointing this out, let's not let it happen. Tuesday, February 15. 2011Shapeways starts own 3D printing productionWe are really excited to announce that we have our own 3D printer! |
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