Eyewear maker Oakley will use HP's Jet Fusion 3D printer to prototype for multiple product lines. Oakley is looking to create functional parts for its sports, equipment and eyewear. The plan is to ...
(Nanowerk News) MIT researchers have invented a way to integrate “breadboards” — flat platforms widely used for electronics prototyping — directly onto physical products. The aim is to provide a ...
Automotive prototyping has witnessed a transformative journey, much like the vehicles it aims to design. This evolution has been a testament to the industry's relentless quest for perfection, pushing ...
On Thursday, the German automaker said that the new Stratasys J750, a commercial 3D printer, will be utilized in the manufacture of tail light covers in automobiles. The Stratasys J750's lure lies ...
The printer, developed by mechanical engineer and Bitcoin tinkerer Andy "PizzAndy" Prokopyk under the Proof of Print name, replaces a standard heated print bed with a ...
Basketball was invented in 1891, and aside from switching to the now-iconic orange ball around the 1950s (and ditching an OG version with laces, akin to a football), not a whole lot has changed about ...
A hobbyist claims to have built a shoulder-fired guided missile prototype using 3D-printed components and off-the-shelf parts for a reported total cost of $96, according to project documentation ...
At the 2011 IFA Berline (Internationale Funkausstellung Berlin), Panasonic went all out with 3D, not only a new 3D pro-am camcorder, but also showing off the prototype for an upcoming 3D compact ...
Anaheim, Calif. — Mack Prototype Inc., a subsidiary of Mack Molding Co., has invested $150,000 in a new 3D printer to meet demand for large prototypes and production-grade parts. "One of the big gaps ...
The widespread adoption of 3D-printed construction seems more a case of when rather than if, and so far we've seen houses, a castle, and even a military barracks created using the promising tech. The ...
Acer wants to bring stereoscopic 3D to laptops, with a new SpatialLabs display that promises to float graphics right out of a laptop's screen without demanding you wear special glasses to see them.