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Wired September 2005 Clive Thompson |
The Dream Factory Some scholars claim every house will eventually have its own personal fabricator, from which users can design anything from engine-block parts to tap dance soles. The author uses existing software to design a guitar which is then custom built. |
BusinessWeek December 19, 2005 |
The Best Of 2005's Bunch Book Reviews: The Big Picture: The New Logic of Money and Power in Hollywood by Edward Jay Epstein... Conspiracy of Fools: A True Story by Kurt Eichenwald... DisneyWar by James B. Stewart... etc. |
Wired December 2004 |
Trackback Sprint's Customer Service Makes Me Feel... Mark Cuban for Senate?... Being smart seems to make you unpopular... etc. |
Popular Mechanics November 2007 |
Fab at Home, Open-Source 3D Printer, Lets Users Make Anything Hod Lipson, a Cornell University computer and engineering faculty member, says "we need a machine that can fabricate anything, not just complex geometry, but also wires and motors and sensors and actuators." |
IEEE Spectrum September 2010 Paul Wallich |
3-D Printers Proliferate But desktop manufacturing isn't yet ready for your desk |
Wired May 2003 Brendan I. Koerner |
The Lab that Fell to Earth Once the center of the technology research universe, the storied MIT Media Lab is now teetering on the brink of breakup -- or, even worse, irrelevance |