Friday 28 February 2014

Print the Change : Go 3D

Who doesn't like Robert Rodriguez films? And, who doesn't love the movie-series Spy Kids? Here I am another fan of the series and would you care to guess my favorite gadget?
Yeah, yeah… All those spy-gadgets are cool, I know, but, the foodie in me won’t vote for any of them. I’ll go for the re-hydration machine that turns packaged articles into smoking hot McDonald burgers with just a spark! 

When I laze about, I just think in my mind… WOW! A single flicker and delicious fresh food in hand! And how I wished someday NASA will make it happen and I’ll be motivated to be an astronaut (or, even a kitchen plongeur for those culinary marvels). And, then a newsflash caught my eyes, PIZZA PLEASURE FOR ASTRONAUTS!! 




Not a drone/quadrocopter delivery from Domino’s but a garden-fresh one printed in space! PRINTED!!!

I confess being an easy-to-amaze person and a mere Telefax machine keeps me astounded till date but this is something which is ‘very very VERY’!

When I used this ‘Roman Holiday’ dialogue I couldn't avoid thinking of the protagonist, the timeless star Audrey Hepburn! I used to long for a breakfast date with the lovely and serendipitous ‘Holly Golightly’ at Madamme TussaudsBut it’s not a big deal these days as I can always own the exact same model now, thanks to 3D printing. All I’m gonna need is a few bucks, as low as  £30.

THE PRICE


In fact 3D printing has gone so cheap that people are printing plastic knobs of coffee mug lids  and all sorts of thingamajiggy with it. Even you can own a 3D printer of your own:

LumiFold photopolymerisation 3D printer - small and affordable
LumiFold photopolymerisation 3D printer - small and affordable
Photograph: Indiegogo
Can’t afford? Keep calm and outsource!
Many traders offer      'in store' 3D printing service besides retail giant Asda. The supermarket chain is trialing a new facility that allows shoppers to scan and replicate anything in ceramic. Shoppers can walk into the 3D scanning booth in Asda’s York store and replicate just about anything bigger than a shoe, including people and pets. The object is scanned within minutes in-store. The model is then sent to a specialist 3D printing company, which produces a ceramic print in up to 6m different colors at various sizes for as little as £40 within a few days shipping it back to the store, "ready to pick up with your next week's shopping".

Astonishing indeed, isn’t it?