The Gear Patrol Podcast is our weekly roundtable discussion focused on products, their stories, and the culture surrounding them. A Silicon Valley startup called Carbon has introduced the next 3D ...
This is the second and final article in this interview series. (You can read the first article, which focuses heavily on CLIP inventor and Carbon3D CEO Joseph DeSimone, here.) I was fortunate to ...
This article is the first in a series. The second article focuses on CLIP's materials capabilities and more. I was fortunate to conduct a phone interview last week with a prolific inventor and serial ...
(Nanowerk News) 3D-printed microscopic particles, so small that to the naked eye they look like dust, have applications in drug and vaccine delivery, microelectronics, microfluidics, and abrasives for ...
STREETSBORO, Ohio--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Technology House (www.tth.com), an integrated prototype and manufacturing firm, is one of just five sites in the country selected to offer the innovative new ...
Stanford engineers have designed a method of 3D printing that is 5 to 10 times faster than the quickest high-resolution printer currently available and is capable of using multiple types of resin in a ...
On-site production through CLIP makes things like digital dentistry possible. This material relates to a paper that appeared in the March 20, 2015 issue of Science, published by AAAS. The paper, by ...
Redditor [No-Championship-8520] aka [Eric Potempa] has come up with an interesting DIY take on the Continuous Liquid Interface Production (CLIP) process currently owned and developed by Carbon Inc.
A new process for microscale 3D printing creates particles of nearly any shape for applications in medicine, manufacturing, research and more -- at the pace of up to 1 million particles a day. A new ...
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