3D printing apps are becoming a key part of how we create things. This blend of technology and art lets us turn ideas into real objects, with printers costing from $1000 to much more (Tech at GSA, ...
As most often the case, iOS usually gets its version of an app first before Android. Now fans of Google's mobile platform need not be green-eyed anymore. MakerBot has finally released an Android app ...
Out today from Microsoft is a 3D-printing application called 3D Builder that will help the amateur set dig into 3D printing, provided that they 1) have a Windows 8.1 machine, and 2) have a Windows 8.1 ...
More and more U.S. manufacturers are embracing 3D printing, but serious technical limitations are still a drag on the industry: There are limits to what kinds of materials can be used. The product ...
MakerBot brought the noise as well as the funk, as it were, to CES this year. The company, which is now a subsidiary of Stratasys, announced a trio of new 3D printers as well as new apps and a digital ...
Adobe on Thursday unveiled an updated Photoshop app that it said can simplify the 3D printing process. The 3D printing capabilities are part of a major upgrade to the Photoshop CC (creative cloud) ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Raspberry Pi is at the center of countless Internet of ...
For the past couple of years, 3D printing has started to slowly turn into a trend among geeks and hobbyists. It probably gained even more popularity since the Consumer Electronics Show at the ...
A big part of the 3D printing world includes the frequent adoption of open source tools, reinforced by community-driven support. Whether its files for printing or software for processing them, there ...
A new 3D printer that uses light from a smartphone display to create objects has already garnered more than $800,000 four days into a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign. The stereolithography 3D ...
NEW YORK — 3D printing was still decades away when Mattel debuted ThingMaker in the 1960s. As a primitive “at-home maker device,” it let kids produce bug-like Creepy Crawlers, mini-dragons, flowers ...