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Title: 3D Printing: If You Can Draw It, You Can Make It
Added: Jun 23, 2010
Author: ForaTv
Duration: 2:36
Description:
Complete Premium video at: http://fora.tv/conference/wired_business_conference_2010Makerbot founder Bre Pettis demonstrates his 3D printer, which has the capability to make anything from toy cars to bottle openers to Darth Vader helmets. Pettis touts the growing success of Makerbot, saying "I think we're in a time where if you don't have one, your neighbor will have one."To view more highlights from the Wired Business Conference 2010 series, visit http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=527FFBDE013F4390-----The Makerbot Revolution: Welcome to the Age of Personal Manufacturing featuring Bre Pettis, Cofounder, Makerbot Industries; Cofounder, NYC Resistor.Disruption happens. A technology breakthrough. A shift in consumer demand. A rise, or fall, in a critical market. Any of these can rewrite the future of a company -- or a whole industry. If you haven't faced this moment, you will soon. It's time to change the way you run your business. Now what?How you decide to respond is what separates the leaders from the left behind. Today's smartest executives know that disruption is constant and inevitable. They've learned to absorb the shockwave that change brings, and can use that energy to transform their companies and their careers.At the second WIRED Business Conference, presented in partnership with MDC Partners, you'll hear from industry leaders on how to respond to change, and how to use it to your advantage. Through one-on-one conversations between speakers and Wired editors and interaction with the speakers, you'll see how disruption is transforming the way smart organizations make decisions, keeping them on a steady path to growth. - WIREDBre Pettis makes things that make things. Passionate about invention, innovation, and all things DIY, Pettis builds infrastructure for creativity. He is a founder of Makerbot, a company that produces robots that make things, and a founder of NYCResistor, a hacker collective in Brooklyn.Besides being a TV host and video podcast producer, Pettis has created new media for Etsy.com, hosted Make's podcast "Weekend Projects," and has been a schoolteacher, artist, and puppeteer.Chris Anderson is editor in chief of WIRED, a position he's held since 2001. During his tenure, the magazine has received eight National Magazine Awards and seven additional nominations.
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Channel: Tech
Tags: printers demo demonstration printed models modeling design prints 2d build images manufacturing fora.tv foratv fora tv makerbot bre pettis wired business conference
printers demo demonstration printed models modeling design prints 2d build images manufacturing fora.tv foratv fora tv makerbot bre pettis wired business conference
Youtube Comments: 42
ananiasacts Says:
Jun 24, 2010 - When does the version that uses omni-pluripotent stem cells to create living things come out?
macpduff Says:
Jun 25, 2010 - As I recall, he entered the "drawing" into the computer program. The computer then built layer by layer using a very fast setting liquid. I remember he brought home a little "sports car" about 2" long which was the size limit then. The details were a little rough (as these guys mention), but pretty awesome. It was early technology which he was working on. The concept was the same, but being developed for industry use. I wish I had seen it in action.
LokiClock Says:
Jun 25, 2010 - The ones I started seeing around 2006 were about 2 3rds as big as that table. Have we been able to make them that small the entire time, or is that an improvement from then?
LokiClock Says:
Jun 25, 2010 - Look up "NovoGen organs."
ddnguyen278 Says:
Jun 25, 2010 - Probably already exist in some secret lab. Your not the first to think of that, using these rapid protyping technologies coupled with tissue engineering. I read a few years back they were trying to grow neurons onto a silicon matrix, for a hybrid neron-chip platform.
ArcaneKarma Says:
Jun 26, 2010 - - nah, it used to be better.
iburnaga Says:
Jun 26, 2010 - Hey, no premium bs, and their talks are more fun.
notfunny103 Says:
Jun 26, 2010 - I never knew that, now that is truly awsaume :D
notfunny103 Says:
Jun 26, 2010 - This is pretty awsaume, but I wish it cost a bit less. I wantz one so bad lol :D
MrDaziam Says:
Jul 26, 2010 - where you read that? the fact that stem cell research is still a touchy subject in most places I doubt they would ok throwing them in a printer lol
Karred2 Says:
Nov 17, 2010 - The Imperial Prusa on thingiverse is in development, and it will cost in the neighborhood of four hundred dollars finished and printing.
patman0455 Says:
Dec 12, 2010 - Attempting???? They ARE doing it already at Rice University, in the bio-medical engineering lab. Prototype replacement spinal disks, hip joints, etc... are printed in 3D for graduate studies.
123drue Says:
Jan 28, 2011 - there goes my bottle making empire
kousoulides Says:
Feb 19, 2011 - ChildKiller!!
CropDuster33 Says:
Mar 8, 2011 - this could be the end of ALLOT of things. Who needs an economy when everyone can print things.
XskittlezzXxx Says:
Apr 27, 2011 - Sorry But It Said If I Can Draw It I Can Make It?? Sooo I Drew This Awesome Pic Of A Hawt Scene Boy Can I Build Him An Make Him Mine !?!?!??!??! xD hahaha lmao Im JK I Know That Could Never Happen! xD
Rubdos Says:
May 5, 2011 - Ever heard of reprap? It's a self replicating 3d printer ^^
BeamJinn Says:
Aug 12, 2011 - You're not talking about a reprap are you? ;)
Rusvi1 Says:
Aug 14, 2011 - dude, my comment is one year old...lol
goodcat1982 Says:
Dec 14, 2011 - Sorry Hiedi, i don't give a shit. :)
BLOXFilmingLC Says:
Mar 9, 2012 - u know one is 750$ so it will take u probaly 2 years to get that money and technology like this!!! perfect creation of futuristic model!!!
BLOXFilmingLC Says:
Mar 9, 2012 - the intro keeps sayng ecamsher ecamsher /\./\
mewmew12379 Says:
Apr 4, 2012 - 2 years to get the money? I get like twice that in one paycheck












iburnaga Says:
Jun 24, 2010 - TED's better.