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Mycestro™ is a 3D mouse that fits on the index finger and allows you to control your computer with hand gestures and mouse functions. Via Umberto Sculpture, ManufacturingStories
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Rescooped by ManufacturingStories from Random, as it comesonto Innovation in Manufacturing Today Delete the scoop?
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A company making tissue for drug tests using three-dimensional printers is teaming up with Autodesk to learn ways that industrial 3-D printing of inanimate objects can be adapted to make living things. Via Kalani Kirk Hausman, ManufacturingStories
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Rescooped by ManufacturingStories from 3D Printing and Fabbing onto 3D Printing in Manufacturing Today
ManufacturingStories's curator insight,
February 27, 9:30 AM
Check out our NEW Pinterest Page. Lots of great ManufacturingStories!
Sworoba OyetKep's curator insight,
March 11, 3:55 AM
The people at Organovo Holdings have teamed up with autodesk to design bioprinting machine. This machines main idea and fuction is to have the capability to print living tissues and hopefully move on to a more complex task such as organs. Although presentlyhe people at Orgnovo are able to create a slice of tissue, they require alot more hard work to reach their goal of being able to create a whole liver.Being able to recreate human body parts with the aid of 3d printing may not be so far off into the future. This would be music to the ears of people who have lost limbs or have been critically damaged in someway. This could also mean that we are able to sustain a elderly persons vital organs for longer period of time. Delete the scoop?
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This Week in Engineering - Exploring the lunar far side; robot jumps with explosions; bionic eye; repurposing nuke detectors; herding cattle electronically; and moths drive a truck., Funny engineering video produced weekly. Via ManufacturingStories
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Printing out body parts? Cornell University researchers showed it's possible by creating a replacement ear using a 3-D printer and injections of living cells. Via ManufacturingStories
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For many years, architects and city planners from around the world have been trying to create the green ideal: an entire city built to strict environmental standards- highly functional while still retaining aesthetic value.
Here’s a look at some green building and community design that caught our attention in recent months and may (or may not) become reality in the next several years. Their physical footprints may be large, but by using features such as wind power, solar, rainwater recycling and advanced air quality controls, their carbon footprints don't have to be... Via Lauren Moss, Digital Sustainability
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Norm Miller's curator insight,
January 2, 4:32 PM
This is going beyond Mazdar in Dubai. The reality is that we need to transform existing cities since starting from scratch is rare. We need to retrofit cities more than build new ones, but still it is interesting. Delete the scoop?
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ManufacturingStories's curator insight,
December 24, 2012 9:29 PM
This is just an amazing piece of machinery & engineering! Delete the scoop?
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12 year old boy designs and 3D prints his own chess pieces, and donates any profits from sales to charity via Cubify Via ManufacturingStories
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March 18, 10:47 PM
Kids are just amazingly creative with technology! Delete the scoop?
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This is a vw bus toy that is also a small box. You can print different versions of different pieces and put it together the way you want. You can download th... Via ManufacturingStories
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February 24, 9:52 AM
Shows how an internal floor area can be added 1/2 up the sides. A real good primer on how it all works. Delete the scoop?
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Plane makers don’t mince words about the fastest growing market in aviation. “Single-aisle aircraft remain pivotal,” declares Boeing’s long-term market view. “Over the next 20 years, we project that 23,240 single-aisle planes will be delivered, representing nearly 70 percent of commercial plane deliveries and 45 percent of total delivery value,” Boeing says..Read More.. Via ManufacturingStories
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It may look unassuming, but this sleek black box is the culmination of a two-year long collaboration of more than 50 students from 7 different faculties of the Budapest University of Technology and Economics.
Initially envisioned by two architecture students and built for the European Solar Decathlon 2012 in Madrid, the goal of Odooproject was to encourage a new sustainable life by designing a house where as much time as possible can be spent outdoors. Odoo’s square plan has two primary elements: the north half enclosure and the south half outdoor terrace, bordered by the ‘summer wall’ to the south. The design allows comfortable living inside or outside throughout the year as the seasons allow. To provide a comfortable environment, as efficiently as possible, the house uses both active and passive systems. The compact form of Odoo reduces heat loss, while its organization means it has two south-facing facades. The glass façade exploits solar gain, to heat the interior during the winter, and the solar panels on the ‘summer wall’ generate power from the summer sun... Via Lauren Moss
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January 2, 6:11 AM
Des chercheurs japonais de l’université de Kyushu ont trouvé un moyen d’augmenter le rendement des éoliennes grâce à une « lentille » qu’ils placent autour des pales. Via kmouhoubi, Atlantis RH
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These youth social entrepreneurs are very inspiring, I recommend watching these short videos. Via nitsadevore, Elite Scales Delete the scoop?
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Marketing is changing before our eyes. As technology provides marketers with more reach, more control, and more information, marketing departments are becoming increasingly technical and data-driven. As a result, marketing operations are absorbing more responsibilities and control from their creative counterparts. However, the rise of the calculating marketing scientists should be viewed as an opportunity for more traditional marketing artists.
In a recent article, Stan Woods of Velocity Partners uses the scientist and artist monikers to distinguish between the creative-driven and data-driven marketers of the modern marketing department. Although a slight oversimplification, these distinctions hold a lot of truth about the current divide that exists within many marketing teams.
While these two differently-minded marketers take very different approaches to their duties, the marketing departments that will truly excel in this new age of marketing are those that recognize the value in both approaches. Companies need the data-driven approach of marketing scientists to track, measure, and optimize performance like never before, but they also need marketing artists to deliver innovative, creative campaigns that cut through the crowded marketplace.
We have put together the infographic above to help highlight the tremendous assets marketing artists and marketing scientists can bring to the table, and the advantage of finding a balance between the two.