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French Designer Uses 3D Printer to Create Humanoid Robot

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mrdon
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Re: Taking hobbyist robotics to a new level
mrdon   2/12/2013 3:43:41 PM
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Elizabeth M, Your quite welcome.  Time and resources are key to creating personal technology on your own time. Thanks for presenting this article to the Design News community.

William K.
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Platinum
3D printing: what can we make.
William K.   2/12/2013 8:41:08 PM
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This is indeed the starting of a new era in what can be made. The biggest limitations on what can be made have been reduced to limitations on material properties and limitations on what can be drawn in a 3D view. I am not aware of any printing system that works from the traditional three view drawings. The materials limitation is the same one that dogged DaVinci, in that the materials for his designs were simply not available yet. Likewise, the less expensive 3D printers are limited in material capabilities and material strength. Those systems delivering steel alloy parts are far above the hobby class, at least as far as prices go. Probably the best short term option would be for a way to purchase unused 3D printer time on machines able to use the desired materials. Sort of like "cloud" production facilities. Is anybody marketing that yet?

Cabe Atwell
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Blogger
Re: 3D printing: what can we make.
Cabe Atwell   2/14/2013 11:46:48 PM
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There are plenty of 3D printing companies out there willing to print your work for fairly cheap. However, I think you mean every-single 3D printer being used at all times. I have a friend who’s day job has one. It’s hardly ever used. How to organize a way to have it print any project, then ship it to the end customer seem impossible. However, I might be thinking too myopically. C

William K.
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Platinum
Re: 3D printing: what can we make.
William K.   2/15/2013 9:59:17 AM
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There certainly are a lot of 3D printers around, but a lot fewer of those able to print steel or other metals. That capability is a lot more expensive, both machine and supplies, and it seems that organizations that own such a machine that is not fully utilized could do printing for others to provide a better ROI, based on a greater sysem utilization. 

Ann R. Thryft
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Blogger
It's so French
Ann R. Thryft   2/20/2013 8:25:32 PM
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I keep looking at the photo of this robot--it's so French! By that I mean elegant, sophisticated and with lovely lines. And I'm saying that about a piece of plastic that barely looks like a person!

Elizabeth M
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Blogger
Re: It's so French
Elizabeth M   2/21/2013 3:41:07 AM
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Ha, Ann, your comment made me laugh! But it's true...the French obviously have that "je ne sais quoi" even when it comes to robots. They're like Italians that way--always paying attention to style, even in the most unlikely places. I think as far as humanoid robots go, this one is one of the most attractive. (Yes, it feels strange to say that about a robot!)

Ann R. Thryft
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Blogger
Re: It's so French
Ann R. Thryft   2/21/2013 12:21:17 PM
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I spent several years learning the language, but I also spent some time there as a young adult, and I think it forever changed my sense of cuisine and fashion. There's an immediately recognizable visual elegance (that word keeps coming up) to French design that's different from the sense of style in Italian design. If this were a robot designed by an Italian artist/designer, it would be subtly different.

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