The Global Intelligram: Trotting Disruptive New Age Intelligence in a Limitless World
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Here is my piece from Edutopia: A Student Calls for a Learning...
The 100-Year March of Technology in 1 Graph
- In 1900, <10% of families owned a stove or had access to electricity
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Why Collaborative Storytelling Is The Future Of Marketing
Full Story: FastCompany
Hah! If only.
Reimagining business with a social mindset – Deloitte Tech Trends 2012
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My prediction for the next 5 years: demand for renewable energies will grow even faster than demand for Internet access. This is one of my core...
Mazda Envisions Creating Their Future Car Today
It’s a new bold design idea of a car that weighs less than 1,000 pounds, yet still packs a...
The Missing 20th Century: How Copyright Protection Makes Books Vanish
The above chart shows a distribution of 2500 newly printed fiction books...
Railroad Sensors Predict Derailments Wirelessly « Wireless Sensor Networks Blog
Union Pacific, the nation’s largest railroad company, says
3D Printing is the Future
If I told you that you could print your own jewelry, would you believe me? Your first instinct would be “Print Jewelry? This sounds ludicrous.” The best ideas have been called crazy initially, but new scientists are turning nay sayers into believers.
Using purely the raw material, design software and printing apparatus, this video shows us that products can be developed in-house.
Other similar videos include a 3D printer churning out customized cookies. Now that’s something else!
3-D Printer Makes Customized Cookies
The researchers at Cornell University have been cooking up a new appliance for your home — a 3-D food printer. They’ve been experimenting with all kinds of goo, including cheese, cookie dough and liquid turkey.
Robotic dinosaurs to be made with 3D printers.
Palaeontologists at Drexel University are using 3D printers to reconstruct dinosaur skeletons, which will be animated using robotics to see how the dinosaurs might have moved and behaved.
The team is first using a 3D scanner to analyse existing bones, before using a 3D printer to construct an exact replica of the skeleton. A mechanical engineer is working with the team to develop the robotic side of the project, but the 3D printing will also allow them to create small-scale models for educational use, and to create exact-size replicas for museum display, without the limitation on the number of copies made and materials and storage hassles of traditional casting methods.
The first goal is to have a working robotic dinosaur limb constructed by the end of 2012. A complete robotic dinosaur replica will take one to two years to create.
While 3D printers have been available for a few years, they have been slow to catch on with home users, instead finding niche markets like in medicine, where they have been used to print organs and tailored prosthetics for patients. The Pirate Bay launched a new category for 3D designs last month, predicting a world where “you will print your spare sparts for your vehicles. You will download your sneakers within 20 years.”
Who knows, maybe in the zoo of the future we will be wearing downloaded Nike shoes and watching a robotic Tyrannosaurus chase a newly cloned woolly mammoth!
(via 8bitfuture)
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