Thursday, January 22, 2015

New 3D Printers Could Build Implants, Electronics

Several new 3D printers showcased at CES 2015 in Las Vegas earlier this month suggest that the 3D printing industry — best known for churning out brightly colored plastic doodads — could be turning over a new, more scientific leaf.
Amid the rough-edged replicas of superheroes and army tanks that adorned the expo's 3D printingspace stood a machine that prints tiny medical implants that dissolve inside the human body. Another printer uses a combination of conductive inks and filaments to print quadcopters already embedded with the electronics that allow them to hover in the air. One company displayed a prototype of a 3D-printed medical device that can automatically stitch up patients after surgery.
The message these companies are sending couldn't be clearer: 3D printing isn't just for makers anymore. Increasingly, this trendy technology is turning into a must-have tool for doctors, researchers and engineers, according to Nick Liverman, CEO and founder of Old World Labs (OWL), a Virginia-based company that designs dissolvable 3D-printed implants. [The 10 Weirdest Things Created By 3D Printing]








OWL's MC-1 and MC-2 printers were both on display at CES. The machines use a process known as stereolithography (SLA), in which lasers harden layers of liquid plastic, or resin, into three-dimensional shapes. This technique sets OWL's printers apart from other 3D printers on the market, such as MakerBot's Replicator or the Ultimaker 2, that use a process known as fused deposition modeling (FDM), not SLA.
OWL's 3D Printer.

This 3D printer by Old World Labs (OWL) prints objects in very fine detail, making it a good tool for researchers and engineers.
Credit: Old World Labs
In FDM, heated plastic is released layer by layer onto a platform to create a 3D object, a process that results in a much less detailed product with a rougher finish than objects created using SLA. Other 3D printers on the market also usestereolithography to build what Liverman calls "high-resolution" objects. But OWL's machines are more advanced than these printers, according to Liverman, who said that his company's machines print objects that are 200 times more accurate, or truer to their original design, than objects created with other SLA printers.
OWL is currently using its super-accurate printers to bring complex ideas to life. For example, cancer researchers who want to deliver localized treatments to patients are using OWL's machines to build what Liverman called "microfluidic devices." Such devices are highly detailed, containing tiny channels that circulate prescription drugs into a patient's body.
"You can also build custom implants, like tissue scaffolds," Liverman said. "You can inject stem cells into the scaffold that you build with the printer and then you can, for example, do a cartilage replacement on a knee." [7 Cool Uses of 3D Printing in Medicine]
During cartilage replacement surgery, the scaffold containing the stem cells would be implanted in the knee, where the stem cells grow to replace the missing cartilage, Liverman said. The scaffold, which is printed with what Liverman called "bioreabsorbable material," eventually dissolves harmlessly inside the body. OWL is currently working on obtaining long-term FDA approval for the resins used in its printing process. This would allow the company's clients, which include NASA and Virginia Tech, to print such scaffolds and other medical-grade devices and use them in real-world settings, not just in the lab.
Printable electronics
OWL wasn't the only progressive 3D printing company hawking its wears at CES. Harvard-based startup Voxel8 was there, too. The company's 3D printers have two extruders — one that prints in conventional plastic filaments and another that squirts out highly conductive ink.
"Coming off the printer is not just a plastic shape but a fully functioning electronic device," said Voxel8 co-founder Daniel Oliver.
At CES, Voxel8 showed off a quadcopter printed with its machine. The flying toy was built in layers — the structure of the device was printed in plastic with cavities carved out for the control logic board and the motors. The printer then used conductive ink (which takes the place of wires) on top of the plastic, connecting these electrical components. The ink, along with the imbedded electronics, eventually got covered up with more layers of plastic.
3D printed quadcopter.

This small drone was printed with Voxel8's 3D printer.
Credit: Voxel8
Of course, Voxel8's printer is designed to do more than just print tiny drones. The company will also be releasing new printing materials in order to try its hand at printing resistors, sensors and, for future models of its printer, even lithium-ion batteries. These objects are in addition to the custom circuit boards that Voxel8's printers have already perfected.
"We're talking about printing out a circuit at your desk in less than 30 minutes," Oliver said. This represents a vast improvement over earlier options for printing custom circuit boards, a process that, Oliver said, traditionally could take up to a month to complete.
Engineers and developers will not only be able to realize their designs much quicker with a Voxel8 printer, they'll also be able to try out unconventional geometries for their electronics, Oliver said. For example, rather than trying to get a rectangular circuit board to fit inside a curved object, it will now be possible to customize the shape of a circuit so that it fits inside objects of any shape or size.
"There's a trend to try to get 3D printing to create more useful things," Oliver told Live Science. "[We're] getting closer and closer to the idea that anything can be 3D printed."

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Big Data: 6 bold predictions for 2015


'Tis the season when industry soothsayers don their prognostication caps to make fearless forecasts for the coming year. What does the crystal ball say about big data?



We culled an assortment of 2015 predictions from big data executives and analysts. The overarching theme: Big data gets real next year, as does the Internet of Things. What do you think? Will these prophecies come true, or are better suited for the Psychic Friends Network?

Prediction #1: Big data proves it's more than just big hype. "In 2014 the booming ecosystem around Hadoop was celebrated with a proliferation of applications, tools, and components. In 2015, the market will concentrate on the differences across platforms and the architecture required to integrate Hadoop into the data center and deliver business results." -- MapR CEO and cofounder John Schroeder.

Prediction #2: On a similar note, 2015 will be Hadoop's "show me the money" year. "Hadoop has been rapidly adopted as 'the way' to execute any go-forward data strategy. However, early adopters must now show return on investment, whether it's migrating workloads from legacy systems or new data applications. Luckily, products and tools are evolving to keep pace with the trajectory of Hadoop." -- Gary Nakamura, CEO of Concurrent.
Prediction #3: Location services move indoors. "Indoor location technology and services will rapidly gain traction. Where previously WiFi was the primary enabler to position a mobile device indoors, its inability to calculate elevation, coupled with errors introduced through signal noise, has meant that using WiFi alone indoors was frequently not accurate enough. However, with BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy) beacons now increasing in number, these can combine with WiFi access points while using the device-embedded MEMS (Micro-electro-mechanical-systems) sensors to provide accurate location indoors." -- Juniper Research's "Top 10 Tech Trends for 2015" whitepaper.

 Prediction #4: Connected cars might grab the headlines, but other IoT devices will prove a lot more useful.    "Autonomous vehicles such as drones and self-driving cars will dominate public perception of the IoT. Less-glamorous connected objects will make the greatest impact on people's lives -- many without them even knowing it." -- Brian Gilmore, an Internet of Things and industrial data expert at Splunk

Prediction #5: You, too, can be a data scientist, no PhD required. "As data becomes more accessible and analytic tools become easier to use and readily available, data science won't be limited to those in the technology sector. In 2015, anyone with the right tools can draw powerful insights from data. "We're not blasting CS degrees but in 2015, data scientists' skillsets will be vastly different, especially as the ability to code will be less of a job requirement. Data scientists should take a page out of anthropology and understand that qualitative information can also provide answers to questions you didn't know you had." -- Lukas Biewald, CEO and cofounder of CrowdFlower, a data-mining and crowdsourcing service.

Prediction #6: The Internet of Things will have a big impact on customer service, with consumers expecting more personalized interaction with vendors. "The Internet of Things changes the entire customer service dynamic; rather than a limited number of customer communication channels, customer experience management (CEM) systems will be able to process live streams of data from fitness wearables, motor vehicles, home appliances, and medical instruments, to name only a few categories of connected devices on the horizon. When collected, correlated, and applied, the data from these devices will coalesce into an unprecedented view of the customer's needs, resulting in far greater competitive advantage for those who are aware of the possibilities." -- Keith McFarlane, CTO and senior vice president of engineering at LiveOps, a cloud-based customer service provider.