During this episode of “On the Whiteboard,” Editor Pamela Woon goes to Makerhaus and its ten,000-square-feet of fabrication prototyping – a membership workshop that options 3D printing for things like jewellery, toys, and nearly something you'll style with 3D code.
While 3D printing isn’t thought – nevertheless – it’s solely a matter of your time before it's, with the potential to grind out progressively complicated creations as simply as printing a Word document. In fact, customers can purchase a 3D printer at Microsoft retail stores this fall and at Staples for $1,299.
With the Windows eight.1 update, the vision of desktop producing began to appear real. we tend to discerned Windows eight.1 can have intrinsical support for 3D printing. And a replacement project from Microsoft analysis pioneers techniques to imbed distinctive data (such as serial numbers) within 3D written objects decipherable by a rate scanner as an economical various to adding external radio-frequency ID (RFID) tags, electronic chips or bar codes.
About the series
The whiteboard is that the place to begin for a few of technology’s biggest concepts and most compelling stories, and with this new film series, the main focus is on simply that – the stories, ideas, people, places and things that create Microsoft tick. These small documentaries can take viewers behind the curtain, however conjointly to the intersection of culture and technology, Woon explains.
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