January 8, 2015
Mohenjo
Technical
3-D Printing, amazon, business, Business News, Fast Company, Hotels, human-rights, Lightpaper, medicine, mental-health, research, Rohinni, Rohinni CMO Nick Smoot, Science, Science News, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation

Click link below picture
.
How would you use light if it was paper-thin and could be applied to any surface anywhere? When Rohinni CMO Nick Smoot asked me that question, I was pretty stumped at first.
But he’s already figuring it out. That’s because Rohinni has developed a form of what it calls Lightpaper. It’s a way to print lighting and apply it to nearly any surface, in any shape, and for any situation. It’s a kind of stunning proposition that reminds me of the first time I heard about 3-D printing.
“With Lightpaper it’s more of a platform of light that we don’t even know how it’s going to be used,” explains Smoot. “All we know is that we’re trying to unlock the ability to create light.”
.

.
.
Click link below for article:
http://www.fastcolabs.com/3038890/rohinnis-lightpaper-is-incredibly-thin-and-printable
.
__________________________________________
July 30, 2014
Mohenjo
Technical
3-D Printing, 3-D printing technology, amazing toys, amazon, business, Business News, custom toys, fan fiction, Hotels, human-rights, magical ponies, medicine, mental-health, My Little Pony, nbc news, Pokemon, Pokemon creatures, printing technology, replicas of the tricorder, research, Science, Science News, Star Trek, technology, Technology News, toys, travel, tricorder, vacation
Click link below picture
.
Thanks to 3-D printing technology, custom toys could become the new fan fiction, a way for obsessives young and old to connect with the TV shows, movies and video games that they love.
Take “My Little Pony,” the children’s cartoon that captured the hearts of a group of grown men often referred to as “Bronies.” Earlier this week, Hasbro announced that it was selling 3-D printed “My Little Pony” toys designed by fans — most of them guys who just really loved the show.
But it’s not just magical ponies that people are creating. On the Internet, you can find everything from amateur-made Pokemon creatures to replicas of the tricorder from “Star Trek.”
.
.
.
Click link below for article:
.
__________________________________________
April 24, 2014
Mohenjo
Science
3-D Printing, 3d Print Heart, 3d Printed Heart, 3d printer, 3d Printer Heart, 3d Printer to Build Human Heart, 3d printing, a human heart, amazon, Artificial Heart, Bioficial Heart, biology, Build Human Heart, business, Business News, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, Impact Change, Ky., LOUISVILLE, medicine, mental-health, research, Science, Science News, Slideshow, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation
Click link below picture
.
It may sound far-fetched, but scientists are attempting to build a human heart with a 3-D printer.
Ultimately, the goal is to create a new heart for a patient with their own cells that could be transplanted. It is an ambitious project to first, make a heart and then get it to work in a patient, and it could be years — perhaps decades — before a 3-D printed heart would ever be put in a person.
The technology, though, is not all that futuristic: Researchers have already used 3-D printers to make splints, valves and even a human ear.
.
In this March 6, 2014 photo, a 3-D printer was used to construct these tiny two-ventricle cylinders at the University of Louisville, in Louisville, Ky. Researchers are working on a project to build a human heart using a 3-D printer and human cells. (AP Photo/Dylan Lovan) | ASSOCIATED PRESS
.
.
Click link below for story and video:
.
__________________________________________
July 21, 2013
Mohenjo
Technical
3-D Printing, amazon, Apple, aviation, business, Business News, Dev & Design, gadgets, Hotels, liquid metal, liquid metals, liquidmetal technologies, mashable, new patent, newsy, research, Science, Science News, Tech, technology, Technology News, transportation, travel, vacation, Work & Play

Click link below picture
.
We’ve already read about 3D-printing liquid metal. Now, a new patent awarded to Apple hints at the possibility of the company introducing liquid metals to the mobile market.
Apple is looking to incorporate 3D-printing liquid metal into its products, with the help of partner company Liquidmetal Technologies, whose patented fabrication processing rights were bought by Apple in 2010. The tech giant therefore holds the exclusive license for the development and sale of the processed liquid alloys.
According to Electronista, “The material is a group of alloys that have an atomic structure more similar to glass, with an amorphous quality.” This means the alloy can be molded into very complex shapes, all while maintaining strength.
Your next iPhone, iPad or even iWatch could potentially be encased in this printed alloy. As the technology develops, it’s possible that Apple may apply the material to even larger objects.
.

.
.Click link below for article:
http://mashable.com/2013/07/20/apple-liquid-metal-patent/
.
____________________________________________________