Morning Overview on MSN
'Necroprinting' uses mosquito tubes to 3D-print below cell scale
Engineers have turned one of nature’s most reviled body parts into a precision tool, using the hollow feeding tubes of dead ...
Additive manufacturing leaders are focusing on defense, helping the U.S. military move from 'futuristic visions' to ...
As the saying goes — when life gives you lemons, you make lemonade. When life gives you a two-ton surplus industrial robot arm, if you’re [Brian Brocken], you apparently make a massive 3D printer. The ...
3D printing objects using metal is a well-established technique, but it tends to be too complex, expensive, or imprecise to match traditional methods at scale. Armed with $14 million from Nvidia and ...
When it comes to the construction of a building, people often think about large cranes, loud machinery, and plenty of scaffolding, but 3D printing is seldom considered. However, could this view change ...
With the support of the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, has established a large scale 3D printing facility capable of the ...
After years of talk and small-scale pilots, 3D printing is finally poised for widespread use. In 2020, 3D printing was a $13.7 billion market and forecasted to more than triple, to $43.5 billion, by ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
New ‘necroprinting’ uses mosquito feeding tubes for 3D printing below cell scale
A research team from McGill University and Drexel University has transformed female mosquito feeding tubes into ...
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