Category Archives: Tech news of the weird

3D printing is about to blow your mind.

It’s great to live in the Bay Area, where resources like TechShop and MakerFaire allow us to access the latest physical object technology developments. However, one thing New York is getting first is ShapewaysFactory of the Future. At this unbelievable 3D print-on-demand store, they are going to have 50 industrial 3d printing machines. In the very near future, you’ll be able to send in your file and have your object printed and then go pick it up, like having a poster printed at Kinkos. And the materials available aren’t just plastics, resins and nylon anymore- you can get metal and (food-safe!!) ceramic printed too.

At the London 3D Printshow last month, legendary British milliner Stephen Jones debuted his first wearable 3D printed hat! You can watch a video of the hat being printed and then worn on the runway here. Clone Factory in Japan is using 3D printing to make custom personal action figures and dolls. Materialise N.V., a huge rapid prototyping company, has a design division called MGX that makes housewares and accessories from files created by contemporary designers. Here in the Bay Area, Bespoke Innovations uses 3D print technology to design unique, uncannily beautiful custom artificial limbs. That’s one of theirs in the picture. Even lighting elements are now being printed, thanks to some awesome work by Disney Research – did you even know there was a research lab arm of Disney? I didn’t, until today!

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Geeky, math-y, science-y holiday cookies!

Lots of clever folks have come up with geeky designs for holiday cookies; there’s a bunch of wonderful “science cookie roundups” on Not So Humble Pie, created and curated by a biological anthropologist baker mom. I love the way the circuit board cookies use dragĂ©es (the little silver and gold balls that are actually banned in California) as solder dots. And you can get marvelous Science Cookie Cutters here.

But my favorite geeky cookie recipe is this one by Professor George Hart that’s been around almost as long as the web- Trilobite cookies! Groove on the nostalgia of the ’90s web page design and enjoy the charming description of the baking process (“mix ’til yucky”!), then try these remarkably delicious cookies yourself. They’re based on the classic Spritz cookie recipe, and this recipe explains the physical process of squeezing the cookies in more detail.

Also check out this awesome geeky cookie slideshow on Huffpost- love the pixel cookies!

This post originally appeared on the T324 blog. Continue reading