Tag Archive for 'MakerBot'

A SuperForest Visit To MakerBot Industries!

picture-54

Oh man…

There are times when I really want to throw down some heavy verbage. Use words like “amazing” and “incredible” and “totally paradigm shifting.”

None of those words or phrases could come close to expressing the level of excitement I have for what Bre Pettis, Adam Mayer, and Zach Smith are creating at MakerBot Industries in Brooklyn. All in a tiny mini-warehouse that will one day have a bronze plaque that reads: Here Stood MakerBot!

picture-73(photo by Buck Ennis in Crains)

Last Friday, they were kind enough to throw wide their doors and invite the world over to see the lab where the MakerBots are made, tested and shipped.

Like Charlie Bucket, I was lucky enough to go…

Y’all get how big this is going to be, right? The implications of this technology (and it’s affordability!) are huge.

Because we’ll be able to make anything we want! Instantly! Right in front of our eyes.

Your glasses broke? Print some new ones.
Out of chopsticks? Print some new ones.
Need a stopper for your bathtub? Print one out.

So that’s cool, right? Melt some plastic into cute little shapes?
It’s so much bigger than that.

Adam, Bre, and Zach have made it so that nearly anyone could have their very own 3-D printer, (and if you can’t buy one, you can just ask them politely and they’ll give you plans to make your own. It’s open-source!) so very quickly you will see refinements and advances in home 3-D printing.

If anyone can buy one, then anyone can hack one and improve upon it. So very soon you will see cheap, high-quality, publicly accessible, 3-D printing everywhere you go.

You might not ever need to buy anything again. What an amazing planet that would be! A factory on every desktop!

You can order the MakerBot CNC machine with a special attachment nozzle that let’s it squirt out frosting instead of melted plastic. It’s called the Frostruder. This means that you can frost in 3-D, homes!

And like Carla’s post yesterday pointed out, using a 3-D printer to print out food is but a short hop away. Print out a pizza! Print out some fries! Print out the napkins and plates! Compost everything you don’t use!

That’s the world we’re rapidly heading into. 3-D printing of food and goods will allow us to conserve resources in a way never before imaginable. Everything will be custom. Every meal and every object will be perfectly suited for the one who prints it out.

That means that the manufacturing and shipping of many goods will soon be over. This will have a massive impact on our species carbon usage, as everyone has exactly what they need, exactly when and where they need it.

Ladies and gents, it can take but a whisper to cause an avalanche, and the MakerBot boys are bellowing! Watch as the world shakes off the old inefficiencies that have plagued it.

I do love drama, but MakerBot and 3-D printing totally warrant the gushing enthusiasm.

Bre Pettis, Adam Mayer, and Zach Smith, for your open-source awesomeness and for working to free mankind from mass-production, SuperForest salutes you!

Visit makerbot.com & thingiverse.com!

And read the MakerBot blog!

And special thank to Bre for so generously giving me a tour and printing me out my lovely ring!
picture-67

We shall watch with excitement as MakerBot grows and improves.

-Jackson

Jackson’s Journal (8/21/09): My New Hat!

picture-66

Good Morning SuperForest!

Man, it is hot, hot, hot, nasty hot here in NYC. The streets are at that treacherous stage where all the accumulated gum has melted and is now just waiting for you to put your flip-flop clad foot in it, that it may stick to you, and force you to drag one foot down the sidewalk like a Frankenstein, and have everyone look at you like you’ve stepped in poo.

For protection from the sun, I purchased two of these fine hatros! In lovely primary colors to show the world that my head is down to party.

And by party, I mean sit at home in my underwear and hat in front of the AC. I’m editing two videos today. My trip to MakerBot Industries (!) and an lovely interview with Cathy and Noah from The SouperDouper Sandwich Explosion Plastic Inevitable.

How are you SuperForesters dealing with the Summer heat? Beach times? Icy snowcones? Head in freezer?

A special thanks to Mr. T-style, back of the neck-protecting, lightweight, awesome hats.

Love,

Jackson

jackhat

Coming Up: SuperForester Jackson’s Trip To MakerBot Industries!

photo32

Good morning, SuperForest.

Oh man… Last night was something special.

Last night I took two pounds of cherries and a subway ride out to MakerBot Industries in Brooklyn. There, Bre Pettis his very own self printed me out this epic ring, right in front of my eyepieces, using his customized MakerBot CNC machine. Goo.

photo4

I brought my flip and shot amazing footage of MakerBot’s open house… Which will be up NEXT WEEK! Huzzah!

Walking into the MakerBot workshop, seeing the boxes of MakerBots all ready to be shipped around the world was a moment I’ll never forget… This was like walking into Steve Job’s garage. Or the Wright brothers bicycle shop. The magnitude of rapid 3-D printing’s effect on our lives cannot be overstated, and right now MakerBot are in the lead.

I’m a fan for life of what Bre, Adam, and Zach are doing.

picture-83

With this ring I thee wed, MakerBot.

photo22<3 Lulz!!!!

Video tour coming up next week!
Read SuperForest every day for strong bones and whiter teeth!

Go, MakerBot!

SuperForest Swoons Over MakerBot!

picture-21

The amazing Bre Pettis is at it again! I first geek-crushed over Bre when I used to watch his MAKE videos, then he went rogue and started his own sweet site.

picture-31

Now he’s teamed up with Adam Mayer and Zach Smith to bring us the MakerBot – (very nearly) the worlds first affordable, open-source, 3-D Printer!

Watch:

Martha Vader – A MakerBot sings the imperial march and makes a Darth Vader Head from MakerBot Industries on Vimeo.

And here’s a more detailed explanation of the MakerBot, courtesy of Adam Meyer at GoogleTechTalks.

The basic MakerBot kit is $750. A deluxe kit that contains all the tools one would need is $950, or you can buy a MakerBot fully assembled for $2,500.

Check out MakerBot.com
And definitely check out the MakerBot vimeo page.

When you’ve got your MakerBot, check out Thingiverse, another Bre Pettis creation. Thingiverse is an online catalog of 3-D models that you can download, tweak, and print out for yourself. All free! Whee!

When we can cheaply and easily print any object we need, will we still have stores? If so, what will they look like?
If we still have stores, will we have as many stores, or less?

Life is so fun.

Massive thanks to Bre, Adam, and Zach for putting out the MakerBot!
Thank you to wired.com for the heads up!