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much like Robert Patrick emerging as the T-1000 from a puddle of liquid metal in "Terminator 2." Startup Carbon3D stepped out of stealth mode this week to introduce a new way to 3D-print objects.
This new 3D printing technology looks like science fiction. But it’s entirely real — the scientists who created it took inspiration from the futuristic liquid metal in the movie Terminator 2.
If 3D printing is truly going to revolutionize how we produce everything from cars, to computers, to weapons, it’s going to have to move past the current limitations of plastic as a printing ...
Do you have a 3D printer and a love of science fiction ... No, we're not talking about the Terminator itself, but Hollywood's efforts to continue and/or reboot the Terminator franchise.
A new approach to 3D printing promises to drastically speed ... "We were inspired by the scene out of Terminator 2 (with) T-1000," said Carbon3D CEO Joseph DeSimone. "By spatially controlling ...
(via TED) What we think of as 3D printing, says Joseph DeSimone, is really just 2D printing over and over ... slowly. Onstage at TED2015, he unveils a bold new technique — inspired, yes, by Terminator ...
Until now, 3D printed objects have been created by printing a series of 2D lines ... just like that scene in Terminator 2 where the T2 rises from a pool of molten metal. If you haven't heard ...
I mainly create and edit 3D parts in a program called Solidworks. After creating the parts, the files are exported in a printable format known as Standard Triangle Language (STL ... “Terminator” movie ...