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Plans, Printers, and Power to the People


RazzyJam

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Sorry this took so long to get out to everyone! The first two topics kind of ame out one after the other, and I got pressured by other workloads and wasn't able to keep that standard. So from now on, Im going to be releasing these Topics Every Wednesday! Sounds like a cool slogan or something. So, now that that announcement is made, lets get down to business!

 

So on my Organization thread the request came up about 3D printing. Perhaps it wasn't really a request, but It got me thinking, and I did a little bit o research. Im going to share what Ive learned with you, because there is some really frighteningly awesome stuff out there when it comes to 3D printing.

 

First off, the whole idea of model printers has been around for a long time. The concept was thought of in the late 50s in one of the many Futurist movements. It wasn't until recently that the technology became compact enough to reach a public market. Now desktop laser cutters, CNC mills, and Extrusion machines all are available to the public, bringing manufacturing right into your office. And, thanks to the rise of computers and free distribution of software, it is now possible to create - anything - right in your house. Websites like thingiverse literally distribute objects that you can just download right onto your computer and print. If I wanted, I could just go online, find a 3D model of Pinkie Pie, and BANG a little piece of Equestrian is now in my home. I could literally, email you a spoon. If that doesn't blow your mind I dont know what does.

 

This all really sounds like science fiction, but it exists. Today even. If we can print anything from Lego bricks to car parts in our homes now, what does the future hold, and how could this device change the way we live?

 

Lets start with where this device is going, because it is more certain than some of the more interesting and controversial subject matter that should be addressed later. As of right now, right at this moment, Scientists and doctors are working together to create Bio-Printers. Say you need a heart transplant or you drank yourself shifted and now you need a new liver or kidney, In the near future, doctors will be able to take YOUR genetic code and print you a brand new heart or liver or kidney. This technology sounds insane, but it is being worked on right now. Food companies are even looking into the technology so that you can print meats and edibles. Imagine just being able to print out bacon. The internet would rejoice!

Some of these technologies involve the use of stem cells, this is something that will most likely not be an issue in the future, considering the positives outweigh the negatives of the introduction of the technology. This is one minor controversy of the 3D printer, but what if I told you that the world could soon have to restructure its governments because of the 3D printer?

 

Recently there were some issues that involved 3D printing and corporation copyrights. If you are unfamiliar with Games Workshop's Warhammer, I suggest you look at their website, and see how awesomely expensive all of their awesomeness is. But because that it is cheaper to print 50 dollar models at home for under 5 dollars, hobbyists did just that. Games Workshop filed a law suit because their intellectual property was being stolen. But the question is... by who? If people just make a 3D model thats fine, but once it is distributed and downloaded how do you monitor that? Now before I jump ahead of myself and suggest that 3D printers are going to usher in some sort of Marxist Communism, allow me to blow your minds further. Thats right. there is Moar!

 

In Australia, hobbyists in possession of 3D printers have been printing weapons. Defense Distributed has 3D models of ACRs. Working ACRs that can be printed right at home. This goes against Australian Gun control laws, so naturally, something needed to be done. But once again, there is no one specific person that can be nailed down for distributing guns over the internet, and once these files are out there, there is no getting them back. It is now possible for armed revolutions to be staged on literal home fronts; Liberty could be yours at the click of a button.

 

So what do you guys think of 3D printers? Would you own one, and what would be the first thing you made? Post in the comments below and as always, brohoofs to you guys!

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All I know is I had a dream about making a radio controlled airplane from almost scratch. So i walked down to the corner store and viola what do you know? There was a radio controlled helicopter for 30 bucks. Weird.

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Damn, dude, you found a sweet topic. I personally think that 3d printers are very cool, and frankly I don't see a future where they don't eventually become used widely around the world, becoming not entirely dissimilar to, say, the replicators from Star Trek (though I don't see any way to make them not require materials to be fed into them in order to print things, so not quite the same as the replicator). I would most definitely like to buy a 3d printer once I get the money. The first thing I would make would be a model of a certain sword that I've designed (the sword is to be featured in a game I'm designing)

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Okay this is very, very, very important. Do these printers print things on the molecular level? I mean, could you print a nuclear bomb with this? Or just a model nuclear bomb because it doesn't have real plutonium.

 

I see this thing being the end of the human race.

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Okay this is very, very, very important. Do these printers print things on the molecular level? I mean, could you print a nuclear bomb with this? Or just a model nuclear bomb because it doesn't have real plutonium.

 

I see this thing being the end of the human race.

 

No I dont see nuclear weapons being printed out any time soon, but it is able to print other very small objects, such as electronic circuits.

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Okay this is very, very, very important. Do these printers print things on the molecular level? I mean, could you print a nuclear bomb with this? Or just a model nuclear bomb because it doesn't have real plutonium.

 

I see this thing being the end of the human race.

 

 

You can only print things you have the material for. Most commercial 3D printers use various types of plastic. It basically takes a 3D model from your computer, and puts down a layer of liquid plastic, waits for it to harden, puts down another, waits, puts down another... etc. It takes a few hours to print out a coffee mug.

If you wanted to build a nuke, it'd be easier to do it manually, than to figure out a way to make all the different elements in a printable form.

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