Comments
GRCooper t1_j7u4dyh wrote
Wow! They’re 3D printing workers now? The future sure is amazing!
Gari_305 OP t1_j7u510o wrote
Not necessarily u/GRCooper more like from the article and video in which they'll have metal table top 3d printers for the everyday consumer.
This market will grow to be that of 1 billion with-in a few years which will then grow their workforce.
Basically think formlabs but for metal materials.
---nom--- t1_j7u6nlv wrote
3d printing a workforce of employees is such good idea. You may not even need to pay them.
FuturologyBot t1_j7u6wlt wrote
The following submission statement was provided by /u/Gari_305:
From the article
>The pilot facility aims to prove out Fabric8Labs’ ability to economically 3D print very complex parts, especially using copper, for its top target markets, which include semiconductor heat sinks and radio frequency antenna parts.
Also from the article
>To keep central processors in powerful computers for overheating, manufacturers deploy heat sink structures to better ventilate the space around the processors. Fabric8Labs can produce these increasingly intricate designs at scale through its non-thermal metal 3D printing process.
Note: This is a demo of their pitch they provided 2 years ago in order to provide reference and some context of their technique
Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/10xto98/san_diego_startup_to_build_3d_printing_factory/j7u3w86/
[deleted] t1_j7udok9 wrote
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[deleted] t1_j7uyqmq wrote
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VitaminPb t1_j7v5fqb wrote
Depends on how much for the raw materials and if they are printed ready to work or do they need their neural network models trained?
MpVpRb t1_j7v6hcg wrote
Terrible headline, interesting tech that uses electrochemical metal printing instead of sintered powder
momolamomo t1_j7y2cuz wrote
It will triple its workforce. Which workforce? Developers?
[deleted] t1_j84oy6u wrote
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Gari_305 OP t1_j7u3w86 wrote
From the article
>The pilot facility aims to prove out Fabric8Labs’ ability to economically 3D print very complex parts, especially using copper, for its top target markets, which include semiconductor heat sinks and radio frequency antenna parts.
Also from the article
>To keep central processors in powerful computers for overheating, manufacturers deploy heat sink structures to better ventilate the space around the processors. Fabric8Labs can produce these increasingly intricate designs at scale through its non-thermal metal 3D printing process.
Note: This is a demo of their pitch they provided 2 years ago in order to provide reference and some context of their technique