Maker Pro Newsletter – 11/07/13

Maker Pro Newsletter – 11/07/13

“You’re not putting goo in your machine, you’re putting in chemistry.”

From the editors of MAKE magazine, the Maker Pro Newsletter is about the impact of makers on business and technology. Our coverage includes hardware startups, new products, incubators, and innovators, along with technology and market trends.

Please send items to us atย makerpro@makermedia.com.

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News


3 Robots in theย News

cyphy-robot

CyPhy Works, headed byย Helen Greiner, formerly of iRobot, which makes hovering, tethered robots, popped out of mostly stealth mode toย announceย that it had received $7 million from a group of investors.

hibot-snake

Japanese companyย HiBot, which specializes in robots for extreme environments, will unveil the latest version of its snake robot at the International Robot Exhibition this week in Tokyo, according toย IEEE Spectrum.

muwa

Also at this week’s robot exhibition in Tokyo: a novel robot that can fly, float, and roll. From researchers at the University of Tokyo. Another tip of the hat to coverage byย IEEE Spectrum.

Briefly

A sculpture by Richard Dupont, currently on display at the Museum of Art and Design in New York City.

A sculpture by Richard Dupont, currently on display at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York City.

Researchers atย Cambridge Universityย areย making progressย on graphene-based ink that could pave the way for cheap, printable electronics.

Stratasysย has a new thin, rigid, prototype-friendlyย material. Here are theย specs.

Theย freemium modelย is coming to hardware, according to a Hack Things blogger.

Twoย Shapeways-printed designs have made it into the newย Neiman Marcus catalog.

Theย Museum of Arts and Designย in New York City is running a large survey ofย digitally fabricated works.ย Wiredย has aย galleryย of some of the best objects.

Researchers are teaching robots to beย less stabby.

3D Systems stock spiked onย rumorย that IBM will acquire it.

Features


More 3D Scanningย Options

3D scanning with the Structure Sensor attached to an iPad.

3D scanning with the Structure Sensor attached to an iPad.

As new 3D printers continue to tumble over each other into the marketplace,ย scanning options are picking up the pace as well โ€” a counterbalance on the input side of the 3D equation.

Some recent developments:

Theย Structure Sensorย last weekย blew past its Kickstarter goalย to raise over a million dollars. The price of the unit for backers is $349. The project seems to be targeting not just 3D printing enthusiasts, but also gamers interested in creating layers of augmented reality.

Around the same timeย Microsoft Researchย announced software that enablesย scanning from a smartphone. To muster the necessary computational power, each scan will make a round trip from smartphone to the cloud and back.

CIOย magazine’s blog is predicting that the new Microsoft product will enable “lots of good stuff,” but mostly “creepy gifts that incorporate your likeness, and eerily specific video games.”

As all this was going on, Engadget was publishing aย tepid hands-on reviewย of the much-ballyhooedย Digitizerย fromย MakerBot, which is much more expensive than some of the new entrants ($1,400). The review’s conclusion: the unit has potential, but is currently for experiment-inclined hobbyists only.ย According to the reviewer, the 3D scans the reviewer made were underwhelming.

And way up on the lofty industrial scanning level,ย Creaform, a developer and manufacturer ofย portable 3D scanners, wasย acquiredย for $120 million by Ametek, a manufacturer of electronic instruments and electro-mechanical devices.

Finally, a report from research firmย Markets and Marketsย predicted that the global 3D scanning market is expected to grow at an estimated compound annual growth rate of 14.6% from 2013 to 2018. Promising markets include prototyping, quality control/inspection, cultural heritage, reverse engineering, and dentistry.

MadeSolid Promises Premium Materials for Your 3Dย Printer

3D Prints using MakeSolid materials.

3D Prints made with MadeSolid materials.

Are you willing to pay for premium resin for your 3D printer?

MadeSolidย just tested the market onย Indiegogoย and the answer seems to be yes.

The MadeSolid team has a compelling message: “You’re not putting goo in your machine,” one of the co-founders says. “You’re putting in chemistry.”

But an unrelatedย study,ย by research firm IDTechEx, shows that it could be an uphill battle for outsider companies like MadeSolid. Many 3D printer manufacturers, the study reports, are effectively “locking end-users into their own materials supplies through key coding and RFID tagging under the guise of ‘quality control.’”

This kind of control could also keep 3D material prices high in the short term.

Material lock-in may be unsustainable in the future, however, as more manufacturers enter the marketplace and users start demanding better prices. That could result in “downward price pressure,” according to the report, and aย market for independent companies like MadeSolid.

First Products from the Quirky-GEย Partnership

The first five products from the Quirky-GE 'Smart Home' partnership

The first five products from the Quirky-GE “Smart Home” partnership, frolicking.

Six months ago, New York domestic hardware startup Quirky and global corporate giant GE formed a partnership to share patents and create a line of “connected home” products and software.

Last week, the two companies launched their first collaborations. All are home-oriented, wi-fi-connected, and app-controlled: from an egg minder to a variation on perhaps Quirky’s greatest success: the Pivot Power flexible power strip.

Theย Quirky + GE pageย features most of them.ย The glue that binds them all together is “Internet of Things” software called Wink.

A recentย profileย inย Inc.ย details some of Quirky’s future plans, including a new brand identity and retail stores.

Events


This Weekend: Engadget Expand in New Yorkย City

Join the MAKE team at Engadget Expand in New York, this weekend, November 9โ€“10 at Javits Center and Experience the Future of Technology, the theme for this premiere event.

Designed for tech enthusiasts and gadget geeks, the weekend offers an opportunity to hear from favorite consumer electronics luminaries and to get hands-on with some of the latest new devices on the show floor.

MAKE will roll out its hot-off-the-press, next-generation 3D printer guide, featuring reviews of 23 of the newest personal printers.

MAKE project leader and 3D printing guruย Anna Kaziunas Franceย (@akaziuna) will explain the elaborate review process and rigorous tests the MAKE team designed to put the printers through their paces.

The MAKE booth will spotlight some of the top performers, with the review team talking about features that elevated one printer over another, and what the price differences deliver in terms of performance and benefits.

Get your ticket today.

Mini Makerย Faires

More than 70 are currently scheduled for this year, around the world. Check theย Maker Faire Mapย to find the closest one to you.

Coming up in this month:

Tagged

DC Denison is the co-editor of The Maker Pro Newsletter, which covers the intersection of makers and business. That means hardware startups, new products, and market trends.

DC manages customer stories at Acquia, the digital experience company.

View more articles by DC Denison
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