-
3D printing may shape a new manufacturing revolution
January 20, 2013 Editor 0
Additive manufacturing, more commonly known as three-dimensional (3D) printing, is consumer and industry ready. It is gaining momentum as a viable tool for home use and the manufacturing of parts, from scissor handles to titanium aircraft spares.
Go to SourceRelated Posts
The factory of the future
Demand information sharing in supply chains: the impact of lead-time and inventory to backorder cost ratio
Structuring and quantifying the value contribution of supply chain initiatives
SA moves to use titanium-ores platform to build new high-tech industry
The Planning Fallacy and the Innovator’s Dilemma
Beyond adoption – fruit farmers in Ethiopia are innovating with their Africa RISING technologies
Categories: Science
Tags: Additive, Manufacturing, titanium
Startups Win Gauteng Innovation Competition Global warming: The new black
Subscribe to our stories
Recent Posts
- SL Crowd Green Solutions September 21, 2020
- Digital transformation in the banking sector: surveys exploration and analytics August 3, 2020
- Why Let Others Disrupt You? Take the Smart Self-Disruption Journey! August 3, 2020
- 5 Tips for Crowdfunding During the Pandemic August 3, 2020
- innovation + africa; +639 new citations August 3, 2020
Categories
Archives
Popular Post-All time
- A review on biomass-based... 0.9k views
- Can blockchain disrupt ge... 682 views
- Prize-winning projects pr... 678 views
- Apply Now: $500,000 for Y... 605 views
- Test Your Value Propositi... 533 views