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    You'll Download Physical Objects Sooner Than You Think, Thanks to Kids Like These

    File-sharing site The Pirate Bay caused an Internet stir last week when it introduced a new content category called "Physibles," essentially designed to allow people to pass one another physical objects for download. The term refers to data files that are actually able to become physical objects via 3D printing technology.

    Before long, The Pirate Bay said in a blog post, "you will print the spare parts for your vehicles.”

    [More from Mashable: Stephen Colbert’s Head Launched Into Space by 3D Printer Maker [VIDEO]]

    Some saw the announcement as an overhyped publicity stunt. Others saw a powerful revolution of how humans acquire essential goods. But one expert Mashable spoke with this week said that 3D printing is indeed bound for the mainstream -- and even sooner than The Pirate Bay might think.

    "If you want to draw that parallel, we are kind of in the early 1980s of the computer industry right now, when it was just moving from mainframes into home computers," said Hod Lipson, a Cornell University associate professor of both Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering and Computing & Information Science.

    [More from Mashable: Will 3D Printing End Mass Manufacturing? [PICS]]

    "I see a big future for 3D printers in personal-scale applications that will unfold over the next decade."

    That big future will probably include kids like Riley Lewis and Vernon Bussler (right and left, respectively, in the accompanying photo).

    Riley and Vernon are eighth graders. Along with a small cohort of classmates at Discovery Charter School in the Bay Area, they're already getting pretty deep into the world of 3D design and printing. After Riley developed a strong interest and aptitude for 3D printing a couple of years ago, a company called 3D Systems donated a 3D printer worth several hundred dollars for him to use at school.

    The class of some dozen students is one a very small number of middle school labs beginning to delve into the emerging industry. The group's work has been featured in a Popular Science blog post, and they have already produced items including dice, jewelry and replacement parts for the printer. Their progress reflects a tangible future for the medium that exists outside of exclusive laboratories and research facilities.

    "It's just amazing to have an idea and then be able to create a perfect rendition of it, something you can physically hold and touch," Riley told Mashable.

    Vernon said that their classmates react with "a combination of 'that's cool' and 'I don't get it.'"

    According to Lipson, more and more people will begin to "get it" in the coming years.

    "When you unleash this capability to make physical objects in any shape or form, the implications are tremendous in nearly every aspect of our lives," he said.

    In its blog post announcing "Physibles," The Pirate Bay claimed that "You will download your sneakers within 20 years."

    But that will actually happen "a lot sooner," said Lipson, who co-authored a report on printing physical objects for the White House's Office of Science and Technology Policy.

    Lipson said he foresees 3D printers existing in a variety of different scales and applications. Machines at home might produce food and toys. (A team led by Lipson unveiled a food printer last year.) Neighborhood centers analogous to Kinko's or Home Depot might provide more high-end services. And specialty shops might print their own replacement parts, for example an auto body shop printing spare car parts.

    Meanwhile, kids like Riley and Vernon will continue to passionately tinker away, not dissimilar to how home enthusiasts helped high-powered institutions develop the computer decades earlier. Riley said he is especially enthusiastic about pursuing the printing of physical objects into college and beyond.

    But what does Riley most want to print right now? "Another 3D printer," he said.

    What do you think the future holds for 3D printing? What do you most want to print at home? Let us know in the comments.

    Photo courtesy of Dave Lewis

    This story originally published on Mashable here.

     

    45 comments

    • Jeff  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      Awesome.... let's put more people out of work!
      • d h 3 mths ago
        People don't need to work now, we could have robotic manufacturing plants, farms, etc. and everyone could have everything they ever wanted, but then there wouldn't be classes and well hell we can't have that.
    • Brent  •  3 mths ago
      So when can I download Jenna J, or make a Lucy LIU like fry did from futurama?!!!
    • catmandenny  •  3 mths ago
      I download physical objects all the time. At breakfast, lunch and dinner.
    • Slayer  •  Southfield, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      Can't wait to download a car!
    • David  •  3 mths ago
      Try reading the 'Skylark' science fiction series by E. E. "Doc" Smith and then reconsider the content of this article. I think of the phrase: Yesterday's science fiction is today's science fact. I wonder where we will be in another hundred years, that is, if we are still around.
    • Hozer  •  Springfield, Massachusetts  •  3 mths ago
      Can it print money ?
    • Mr.Jones  •  Carmel Valley, California  •  3 mths ago
      This is the strangest thing I've heard about in a while. Mini home fabricating machines, instead of running to the store for a new toothbrush and some plastic cups, you fabricate them in your garage. The article on the link, 'report on printing physical objects' is pretty interesting. It compares how in the 1980's the personal computer emerged, where as before computers were only big clunky mainframes in office buildings. The following bit I cut/pasted from the article...
      'Personal manufacturing machines, sometimes called “fabbers,” are the pint-sized, low-cost descendants of factory-scale, mass manufacturing machines. Personal-scale manufacturing machines use the same fabrication methods as their larger, industrial ancestors, but are smaller, cheaper, and easier to use. Home-scale machines, such as 3D printers, laser cutters, and programmable sewing machines, combined with the right electronic design blueprint, enable people to manufacture functioning products at home, on demand, at the press of a button. In just a few hours, these mini-factory machines can produce a simple object like a toothbrush, or make complex machine components, artisan-style jewelry or household goods. Within a few years, personal manufacturing machines may be sophisticated enough to enable regular people to manufacture complicated objects such as integrated electronic devices.A number of converging forces are bringing industrial-scale design and manufacturing tools to a tipping point where they will become cheap, reliable, easy, and versatile enough for personal use. The rapid adoption of personal manufacturing technologies is accelerated by low cost machinery, active online user communities, easier-to-use computer aided design (CAD) software, a growing number of online electronic design blueprints, and more easily available raw materials.'
      If the home fabber gets used the same way as the personal computer, theres going to be a lot of people fabbing sex toys, and I'm sure the next step is 3D porno...lol. Modern technology...gotta love it! But I still don't understand how a 3D fabber can make food... jesus...if they can fab a 12 pack of beer...it'll sell a million...lol
    • m,s  •  3 mths ago
      i want to download tons of money lol
    • Devon  •  Doylestown, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      I want to print the printer, wait I foresee a chicken and egg debate
    • Teddy  •  3 mths ago
      TAKE STOCK!
    • Matthew  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  3 mths ago
      I have built models and used rapid prototype machines before which are basically 3D printers that melt plastic into a shape. But printing sneakers would take it to a completely different level.
    • Venutian  •  3 mths ago
      When PCs came out, people didnt know what they would do with them. Then word docs came (and spreadsheets), but mainly internet, email, and pictures (and vids). Without that, we probably still would not widely use them at home.

      I really can't envision the email or internet or word doc of the 3D printer. I can't think what I would use it for? Unless it can really print another computer, or actual good sneakers made of cloth, leather, and rubber. If its just stupid plastic parts, it seems limited to inventors or modelers. I'd rather buy a nice product made of wood, stone, glass, or metal than print a bland plastic replacement. Printed food no way yuck.
    • zzzzlordcharmyzzzz  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  3 mths ago
      It doesn't seem that fascinating, at least not to a computer enthusiast. It's not an actual printer; it's more like a computer-programmed (automated) machine that already has all the parts/ingredients in some form of container, and the user gives the computer the dimensions, shape, and the quantity of the item needed.
      That's not printing...well, at least, not in the actual sense of printing. And considering there are billions of items and zillions more of specifications, a family will probably have to cough up an arm and a leg just to have a 3D shoe.
      I think I'll just keep ordering my stuff from Amazon
      • Brandon 3 mths ago
        you put it quite nicely zzzzz but I'll just say it sounds retarded and severely impractical no matter how advanced things get.
    • abram  •  Eden Prairie, Minnesota  •  3 mths ago
      One step closer to a replicator...
    • -----  •  Batavia, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      Just think if you can "print" it here you don't have to outsource the production to China!
    • Mike from Maryland  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  3 mths ago
      I would like to print Reese Witherspoon
    • -----  •  Batavia, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      This "technology" has been around for awhile... Automotive biz has been using it for years to try out prototype parts to test form, fit and function.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Commerce, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      I can't wait to see how the big corporations will try to use copyright to prevent this; being able to make it entirely with your own time and funds at home? Copyright for 3D printable goods might as well not exist at that point.
      • pg 3 mths ago
        I think it will be more like an current app-store in mobile phones. You'll have a 3D printer, there will be a store where you can buy an item that you want and it will be "printed" in your 3D printer when you pay for it. This way the copyright and all will be easily managed. Of course there will be hacks, jail-breaks and all that :)
      • zzzzlordcharmyzzzz 3 mths ago
        Don't worry about copyright. Worry more about how many 'printers' you'll need to purchase for every different item you need.
    • Robert  •  3 mths ago
      Wow my head is about to explode! This is some crazy stuff. It seems like a sci-fi film. How you can just print things is beyond me. How 8th graders are able to be working on R&D is what is going to make my head expolde. How we have already printed objects is crazier than going to mars.
      • Ryan 3 mths ago
        and more useful than going to Mars
    • G  •  Omaha, Nebraska  •  3 mths ago
      hp will sell the printer for 50 bucks and the ink cartridges for 500 and youll need 3 to make the printer work. each cartridge will print only hslf of whatever you are tring to make before empty.
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