Clan x86
General Forums => General Discussion => Topic started by: AntiVirus on June 22, 2006, 03:03:17 am
-
http://english.ohmynews.com/articleview/article_view.asp?article_class=4&no=299900&rel_no=1
Consider recent advances in inkjet printing. The same basic technology in a $100 home printer has been used by researchers at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine in North Carolina for the printing of "bio-ink" skin tissue as potential grafts for burn victims. It may also provide the basis for the printing of complete artificial organs such as kidneys and livers.
-
Wow, that's really awesome.
-
Wow, that's really awesome.
Agreed. It'll be interesting.
-
That's... weird. I still don't get how it works but whatever.
-
Sounds like the 3-D printers :X
@Warrior: stfu, don't even start.
-
That's... weird. I still don't get how it works but whatever.
Conductive and electricity producing polymers: essencial circuitry. What's there left to "get?" :P
-
I meant how does it print that stuff out.. I've never been able to print on anything except paper/cardboard/tagboard..
-
I meant how does it print that stuff out.. I've never been able to print on anything except paper/cardboard/tagboard..
You MUST be stupid. :D (<3)(jk)
I'm assuming there is something new in this printer that allows it to print on that other stuff. Your printer isn't as up-to-date as this one. :)
-
I meant how does it print that stuff out.. I've never been able to print on anything except paper/cardboard/tagboard..
Polymers can be applied to paper using inkjet technology...
-
Holy crap that's elite! The muscles and the batteries and the robotic fish zomg?
I wonder if it can create 3D images of Jordan Capri.
-
I wonder if it can create 3D images of Jordan Capri.
LOL!
Wow, that is pretty interesting.
-
From /. :
According to this article (http://www.e4engineering.com/Articles/295021/Teaching%20robot%20dogs%20linguistic%20tricks.htm) at The Engineer Online, researchers led by the Institute of Cognitive Science and Technology in Italy are developing robots that evolve their own language, bypassing the limits of imposing human rule-based communication. The technology, dubbed Embedded and Communicating Agents, has allowed researchers at Sony's Computer Science Laboratory in France to add a new level of intelligence to the AIBO dog. The robot dog has learnt to see a ball and tell another one where the ball is, if it's moving and what colour it is, and the other is capable of recognising it.
-
From /. :
According to this article (http://www.e4engineering.com/Articles/295021/Teaching%20robot%20dogs%20linguistic%20tricks.htm) at The Engineer Online, researchers led by the Institute of Cognitive Science and Technology in Italy are developing robots that evolve their own language, bypassing the limits of imposing human rule-based communication. The technology, dubbed Embedded and Communicating Agents, has allowed researchers at Sony's Computer Science Laboratory in France to add a new level of intelligence to the AIBO dog. The robot dog has learnt to see a ball and tell another one where the ball is, if it's moving and what colour it is, and the other is capable of recognising it.
That is fucking amazing!