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Added on the 28/06/2019 09:21:25 - Copyright : Auto Moto EN
Brussels, Apr 1 (EFE), (Camera: Leopoldo Rodriguez).- People with access to 3D printers are helping healthcare workers printing sanitary material.Nicolas Usuwiel prints up to 600 protective visors daily and sells them for about 10 euros to hospitals that are fighting the coronavirus pandemic. FOOTAGE OF THE 3D FACE SHIELDS.SOUNDBITES OF NICOLAS USUWIEL.
A blind couple were able to "see" their unborn child's face through 3D printing after gynaecologist Mario Pellizari and specialist in diagnostic imaging, Mario Ledesma, sought out the help of a 3D printing technician who transformed a sonogram of a baby's face into a 3D print for Argentinian couple Daniel Iturria and Silvina Ibarra. Silvina is currently 29 weeks pregnant.
One new Russian tech company aims to provide a unique new service helps expecting mothers visualize their developing baby. After getting their tummies scanned with an ultrasound, mothers-to-be can now get that ultrasound data converted into a 3D picture of their as-yet-unborn child, which can then be printed into a full-scale 3D model. A company called Embryo 3D offers the unique service to expecting mothers at their offices in the Russian city of Ufa.
3D printing technology has expanded into the coffee business and a new latte art printer called the RippleMaker is the latest innovation to hit the market. Coffee lovers can finally drink their favourite hot beverage with a picture of anything they want, including art, famous celebrities, or even selfies printed on the foam. The Carrera Cafe in Los Angeles is one of the first coffee shops to begin offering this innovative new service.
Terrible tattoos may become a thing of the past thanks to a futuristic machine designed to 3d print tattoos under human skin. A French group of industrial designers calling themselves Appropriate Audiences created the world's first tattoo printing robot, dubbed Tatoue, to expand the artistic limits of tattooing by using a 3D-printer to create tattoos. All the user has to do is to upload their design and slide their hand in the machine. Would you ever consider getting inked up by a robot?
This is Soekchen a bumbling secretary bird that got a new lease on life after being fitted with a prosthetic leg. This feathered friend suffered a trauma to her leg and vets had to remove the limb. However, she's bouncing around again in the Walsrode Bird Park thanks to her new artificial limb. Soekchen is clearly overjoyed with being able to walk again and grateful to her carers for getting her the help she needed. The four-year-old bird got the new prosthetic leg which was built with the same 3D-technologies as prosthetics for children. In order to create anything with a 3D printer, you first have to make a 3D design using special software. The design is then used by the printer as instructions to form the shape you want. 3D printers place small bits of plastic down as layers, starting from the bottom of the design and slowly adding more layers on top until its ready. And what could have been another sad story turned into the happy ending as Soeckchen immediately became a superstar of the park, attracting more and more visitors. It's no wonder - Soekchen's strange walk seems to have the love of life built into it.