Desktop manufacturing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Desktop manufacturing or personal fabrication is the use of a personal computer to drive a printer that deposits (or catalyses) material in layers to form three-dimensional objects. It can be used for making prototypes or objects that have limited public demand. Neil Gershenfeld is one of the pioneers of this field.
[edit] See also
- Solid freeform fabrication
- Rapid prototyping
- Digital fabricator
- Rapid prototyping
- Von Neumann machine
[edit] References
- The Dream Factory, Wired
- 'Gadget printer' promises industrial revolution New Scientist
- Desktop manufacturing
- Punch "PRINT" for anything you want
- The RepRap Project: Creating wealth without money...
- The Clanking Replicator Project: Bootstrap your own self-replicating, rapid prototyping machine
- The Fab@Home Desktop Fabber Kit Project