Category Archives: News
Top 3D Printing Headlines Last Week: Beef, Bald Eagles, New Zealand, Australia

A roundup of the top news On 3D Printing brought you from August 14 to August 19.
Tuesday, August 14
- Neil Gershenfeld Speaks With RadioNZ (New Zealand), Talks 3D Printing
- TangiBot has a Kickstarter Project for a Much Cheaper MakerBot
Wednesday, August 15
Thursday, August 16
Friday, August 17
Saturday, August 18
- Video: Beauty and the Beak; a Bald Eagle’s 3D Printing Story
- Shapeways Friday Finds: Cool Shades for the Summer
Sunday, August 19
Bald eagle photo by andrewprice001 used under Creative Commons license.
Google Employees Treated to 3D Printed Pasta by Renowned Chef

3D printing is showing up everywhere; now even in the Google campus cafe.
Chef Bernard Faucher is using 3D printing technology to design specialty pasta. ”My food has a very distinct and customisable shape,” says Chef Faucher.
Google is well-known for its employee perks, including free meals every day prepared by exceptional chefs. Now through 3D printing, Googlers can truly taste and see something unique.
Google cafe photo by rwentechaney used under Creative Commons license.
3D Printed Meat for Dinner: Peter Thiel Backs Bioprinting Startup

Peter Thiel, the entrepreneur-investor turned billionaire who co-founded PayPal and was an early investor in Facebook, is investing in 3D printing again. Last time we covered Thiel, he was backing a 3D printing entrepreneur in his 20 under 20 Thiel Fellows program. This time, Thiel is looking to shake up the food industry through an investment in a startup called Modern Meadow.
Modern Meadow is using a technique called bioprinting to produce meat that is more environmentally-friendly than traditional raised livestock.
“If you look at the resource intensity of everything that goes into a hamburger, it is an environmental train wreck,” Modern Meadow co-founder Andras Forgacs told CNET.
“Modern Meadow is combining regenerative medicine with 3D printing to imagine an economic and compassionate solution to a global problem,” said Lindy Fishburne, executive director of Breakout Labs, a project of the Thiel Foundation. “We hope our support will help propel them through the early stage of their development, so they can turn their inspired vision into reality.”
Reports suggest that Modern Meadow has raised over $250,000 from the Thiel Foundation.
Below is an excerpt from Modern Meadow’s Department of Agriculture grant application, which explains their project in more detail.
Present farm and industrial meat production methods and technologies have a number of associated problems including health risks (infectious animal diseases, nutrition-related diseases), resource intensity (land, water, energy), damage to environment (green house gas emission, erosion, biodiversity loss) and ethical challenges (animal welfare). With increasing worldwide demand for meat, it is expected that some of these problems will become critical. The objective of this proposal is to develop a fundamentally new approach to edible meat production. The approach is based on bio-printing, a novel tissue engineering technology. In this technology, conveniently prepared multicellular aggregates (the bio-ink particles) are delivered into a biocompatible support structure according to a design template (compatible with the shape of the desired biological construct) by a computer-controlled delivery device (the bio-printer). Biological assemblies form after deposition of the discrete bio-ink particles, through morphogenetic processes akin to those evident in early embryonic development, such as cell sorting and tissue fusion. The resulting construct is transferred to special purpose bioreactor for further maintenance and maturation to make it suitable for use (e.g. implantation in medical applications). So far, bio-printing has been applied to build three-dimensional tissues and organ structures of specific architecture and functionality for purposes of regenerative medicine. Here we propose to adapt this technology to building meat products for consumption. The technology has several advantages in comparison to earlier attempts to engineer meat in vitro. The bio-ink particles can be reproducibly prepared with mixtures of cells of different type. This allows for control in composition that enables the engineering of healthy products of great variety. Printing ensures consistent shape, while post-printing structure formation and maturation in the bioreactor facilitates conditioning. As meat is a post mortem tissue, the vascularization of the final product is less critical than in medical applications (although important for taste an objective to be further pursued in Phase II). Overall, this process allows for greater structural precision than other approaches and higher throughput for eventual scaling to industrial production. We anticipate that this Phase I application will result in a macroscopic size (~2 cm x 1 cm x 0.5 mm) edible prototype and will demonstrate that bio-printing-based in vitro meat production is feasible, economically viable and environmentally practical. Successful in vitro meat engineering addresses a number of societal needs, thus the commercialization of the method has high market potential. The consumer acceptance of such products may not be without challenges. We expect it will first appeal to culinary early-adopter consumers and the segment of the vegetarian community that rejects meat for ethical reasons. With reduction in price, it can reach the masses with religious restrictions on meat consumption (people restricted to Hindu, Kosher, Halal diets) and finally populations with limited access to safe meat production.
Via CNET.
Livestock photo by Mr. T in DC used under Creative Commons license.
Printing Nano-Electronics on Everything: Phones, Planes, Fish Tanks

Imagine you could print a thin layer of micro-electronics on any surface. With 3D printing, this is now a reality – reports the Economist – and that makes any surface a smart surface.
It’s not traditional copper, but rather micro-building blocks of silver.
Silver is a better conductor of electricity than copper, which is typically used in circuits, but silver is expensive and tricky to print because it melts at 962°C. However, by making silver into particles just five nanometres (billionths of a metre) in size, Xerox has produced a silver ink which melts at less than 140°C. That allows it to be printed using inkjet and other processes relatively cheaply, says Paul Smith, the director of research at the laboratory. Only minuscule quantities of silver are used and there is no waste, unlike chemical-etching processes.
Xerox’s PARC research centre in Palo Alto, California, is developing ways to use such inks. These can print circuits for various components, including flexible display screens, sensors and antennae for radio-frequency security tags. With the emergence of additive-manufacturing techniques, it starts to become possible to print such things directly onto the product itself, says Janos Veres, the manager of PARC’s printed-electronics team.
So how difficult would it be to print a phone complete with all its electronic gubbins? Optomec is developing applications which could provide some of the necessary steps. Besides antennae these include edge circuits for the screen, three-dimensional connections for chips, multiple-layer circuits and touch-screen parts. It would also be possible to print the battery. The biggest challenge would be to print the chips that are the brains of the phone. These contain millions of transistors in a square millimetre and are at present made in silicon-fabrication plants costing $10 billion or more. Yet embedding even some circuitry means phones could be made slimmer, as well as reducing the costs of materials and assembly.
The impact of this research is astounding. Now any glass surface can become a phone, planes can have intelligent electronics on their wings, and fish tanks can observe and adjust the water temperature.
Read the full story at the Economist.
Foxconn construction photo by Bert van Dijk used under Creative Commons license.
TangiBot has a Kickstarter Project for a Much Cheaper MakerBot

We have continued to review Kickstarter projects on 3D printing.
Here’s a new contenter. The TangiBot is a Makerbot Replicator clone. The same performance and features of The Replicator at a roughly 33% discount.
Why should you buy a TangiBot? Here’s what the Kickstarter page says:
Quite simply, because the TangiBot is a Makerbot Replicator clone, the TangiBot is the best 3D printer on the market with a very active community of owners. Here is a quick list of the benefits of buying a TangiBot:
- 2/3 the price of the Makerbot Replicator (discount of $550-700)
- The highest quality 3D printer
- The best features
- You can get it fully assembled and tested in Acrylic
- 100% compatible with all MakerBot Replicator Parts
- A very active community of owners
- Thousands of designs available to download online
- Design your own parts, toys, games, and models
TangiBot has raised $14,112 of its $500,000 goal with 24 days to go. Want to see TangiBot succeed? Visit the TangiBot Kickstarter project.




