Inside 3D Printing Conference Chicago: Day 1 Top Stories

Inside 3D Printing Chicago: Day 1
Day 1 of the Inside 3D Printing conference in Chicago kicked off in high gear and built momentum throughout the day. Below are the top stories from the day.
MakerBot and Stratasys Take Center Stage at the Inside 3D Printing Chicago Keynote
Scott Crump of Stratasys and Bre Pettis of MakerBot kicked off the Inside 3D Printing conference in Chicago with a vision of the future 3D printing.
3D Printing Sparks Innovations in Art – MGX by Materialise at Inside 3D Printing Chicago
Joris Debo talks about a brave new art world pioneered by Materialise with their Mammoth Stereolithography 3D printing technology.
Microsoft Confirms Plans to Take 3D Printing to the Masses at Inside 3D Printing Chicago
Microsoft wants to create a consumer operating system that is available to everybody that works fluidly with 3D printing.
Top Photos from Inside 3D Printing Chicago Conference Day 1
We are covering the Inside 3D Printing conference in Chicago this week. Here are some of our top photos from the conference on day 1.
Stay tuned or follow us on Twitter @on3dprinting for more updates from Day 2.
Canadian Actress Ellen Page Tweets “No F ing way” About 3D Printing – Our Response

Ellen Page Tweets about 3D Printing – Our Response
Canadian Actress Ellen Page, known for her roles in in Juno, Inception, X-Men: The Last Stand and other films, tweeted yesterday about the 3Doodler 3D printing pen:
no F ing way “@UberFacts: This is a 3Doodler — The world’s first 3D printing pen that can actually draw in the air. pic.twitter.com/no7yxQO687”
— Ellen Page (@EllenPage) July 10, 2013
Ellen, it is real. A pen that makes things. In fact, 3Doodler raised $2.3 million on crowdfunding site Kickstarter!
Did you know you can also 3D print bone, chocolate, and even houses?

Here are some quick guides to things you can make with a 3D printer.
Practical 3D Printing: 10 Things to Make With a 3D Printer
10 practical things you can 3D print.

Wow: 3D Printing a Lunar Base with Material Already on the Moon
How would you go about constructing livable habitats on the moon? Foster + Partners proposes to use 3D printing with material already on the moon.

CC image by Josh Jensen
Top Photos from Inside 3D Printing Chicago Conference Day 1
We are covering the Inside 3D Printing conference in Chicago this week, from the MakerBot and Stratasys keynote, to innovations in art by MGX, to Microsoft’s confirmed support for 3D printing and more.
Below is a gallery of some of our top photos from the conference on day 1.
Photos by On 3D Printing contributor Lisa M. Pérez, co-founder of Heart Design Inc.
Microsoft Confirms Plans to Take 3D Printing to the Masses at Inside 3D Printing Chicago
Software giant seeks to make 3D printing seamless for home use
In late June, during their annual Build Conference, Microsoft announced that Windows 8.1 would support 3D printing. This sparked many questions among people as to why Microsoft would get involved and how would they get involved. Jesse McGatha, a 14-year veteran at Microsoft, is one of the key people in charge of leading 3D printing innovation within the software giant.
Today, at the Inside 3D Printing Conference in Chicago, Mr. McGatha began his talk by addressing the question: Why would Microsoft be involved in 3D printing? He explained, “when you have over 70% of 3D printing already happening on a Windows operating system, it makes sense that Windows actually supports that.”
McGatha expressed that one of his main goals is to have an application that can talk to a server and can talk to a device in a clean and consistent way. Moreover, Microsoft will focus on the individual home consumer and on how to can make that user experience as simple and as seamless as possible. Microsoft wants to create a “consumer operating system that is available to everybody” that works fluidly with 3D printing.
Essentially, Microsoft is looking to make 3D printing a plug-and-play process. Now that the cost of 3D printers is becoming accessible for individuals to have at their home thanks to innovations from MakerBot, among others, it is important to have a PC operating system that makes it very simple for people to 3D print things.
Jesse McGatha showed the audience a sample user interface for how Windows 8.1 would interact with 3D printers (see gallery below). While the actual product might look different when it comes to market, the idea is to make the printing process very similar to how a user would go about printing a regular Word doc or PowerPoint presentation today. Some things as simple as having print queues and a print spooler are features Microsoft is tackling to make the user experience straightforward.
At the moment, 3D printing can be a tedious process that requires multiple different software packages and several programs to connect the computer to the 3D printers. The complex process can be a deterrent for the mass adoption of 3D printing technology in the household.
After listening to Mr. McGatha, it is obvious why Microsoft would jump into the industry to make it user friendly and help catalyze bringing 3D printers into people’s homes.
Authored by On 3D Printing contributor Rodrigo Garza Zorrilla, technology entrepreneur and advisor.
3D Printing Sparks Innovations in Art – MGX by Materialise at Inside 3D Printing Chicago
MGX by Materialise Leads the Charge in 3D Printing and Artist Collaboration
At the Inside 3D Printing conference in Chicago, Joris Debo talked about a brave new art world pioneered by Materialise with their Mammoth Stereolithography 3D printing technology. Materialise is a Belgian based company that is involved in additive manufacturing (3D printing) in many industries like software development, rapid fit (automotive & aerospace), biomedical (CT & MRI scans) & orthodics among others. Debo is the Creative Director at MGX, which is the consumer goods division for Materialise and he is especially passionate about using 3D printing technology to “create objects that are both art and functional.”
MGX has become a company that closely works together with artists to come up with new pieces that would be very difficult and extremely labor intensive to make without 3D technology. Joris noted, “When I arrived in the company eight years ago, there were two people that were not engineers. Over the years, we’ve commissioned people, like Patrick Jouin, for a new era of digital aesthetics.”
MGX is in multiple collaborations with artists and fashion designers like Iris Van Herpen for example. Van Herpen has revolutionized fashion with mesmerizing futuristic designs that push the boundaries of art and fashion. In fact, a lot of her pieces are found in museums after they hit the runway. Debo notes how like Van Herpen, the “people that make these dresses are the new craftsmen.”
3D printing also allows the combination of traditional art with very high end furniture that matches the art. Joris pointed out how if you have a Jackson Pollock in your home and you want something to match the Jackson Pollock, an artist can custom create a piece or multiple pieces of furniture to match the Jackson Pollock using MGX’s 3D printing technology. Debo further noted how it’s “not only about 3D printing but about craftsmen that can finish the pieces.” This applies to pieces of furnitures, sculptures and even art replicas like museums have begun to use recently.
Joris discussed how art pieces or historical artifacts are sometimes too fragile to travel the world and thus insurance companies will not cover their repair if broken. Moreover, some artifacts, like King Tut’s mummy for example, are irreplaceable and is too risky to move regardless of the financial cost. To show King Tut’s mummy in New York City, National Geographic partnered with MGX in order to make a perfect replica that allowed people to feel they were actually looking at the real King Tut. These kinds of partnerships make it clear as to why museums like the Smithsonian is investing in 3D printing technologies that allow for their rare pieces from fossils to sculptures to be replicated. In sum, 3D printing technology is not only revolutionizing the industrial world, but it is already changing the aesthetics and culture around us, from clothing to furniture to historical artifacts and art pieces.
Authored by On 3D Printing contributor Rodrigo Garza Zorrilla, technology entrepreneur and advisor.









