Monday, July 23, 2018

3D Printers: Problem Solved?

Have you heard the term "3D Printer" and wondered what that was all about?

Here's a basic explanation:

The official term for this process is actually "Additive Manufacturing"  or "Rapid Prototyping," but the term 3D Printer seems to have stuck. It's called "Additive" because the process adds materials instead of subtracting, which is the case with a CNC machine. Those machines waste materials because they make the object but it will have to be trimmed.

A CNC machine:  "CNC" stands for Computer Numerical Control," which can involve milling, a lathe, or a grinder. Notice how large this machine is.


3D Printers make things in layers.They can use over 100 different materials , including plastic, metal (even titanium), nylon, and human tissue.  They have been used for over 30 years, but until recently were only used by businesses for commercial use and weren't available to everyone. They have become relatively inexpensive and easy to use so that some 'ordinary people' would be able to purchase one, and to understand the process of making things on these printers in our homes. Programs can be 'user-friendly' to make it possible for anyone to understand.
                                                   They could be helpful identifying or age-progressing images of missing people
 

A 3D printer can be very small or very large, depending on how large an item you want to create. You'll also need the materials to feed the machine. Then, you must have a computer program that 'understands' when you are telling it to make something. It's possible to use Microsoft Word when creating an object, but the computer needs to know what to do with your instructions. Once you have your concept of the object the way you want it, you send it to the 'printer' similar to when you send a document to your typical printer. The difference, of course, is that it isn't going to print on paper but rather manufacture what you sent to it using whatever materials your 'printer' is capable of. The printer 'understands' what the computer has instructed it to do.
 
Here's a great video that explains it further and shows some examples of what can be made using a 3D printer: https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=video+clip+3d+printer&&view=detail&mid=46FDAAF0AA077E6A5ABE46FDAAF0AA077E6A5ABE&&FORM=VRDGAR


                                                           Smallest known 3D printer, about the size of a carton of milk.


These printers are currently available starting at about $100 and up. Some can use multiple materials, some only one. Some can use several colors in one production and others, only one. Producing your object can take an hour or several days, depending on how complex it is.


If you aren't one to design something from 'scratch,' you can scan an item and then have the computer 'read' how it is made, then make a copy, using the right software.

How is this useful?  3D printers can make:
  • Manufacturer prototypes and models
  • Toys
  • Jewelry
  • Shoes
  • Artwork


  • Glasses frames
  • Parts for virtually anything from engines to dishwashers
  • Human organs, using human tissue, especially using the person's own cells to avoid rejection
  • Prosthetics: Artificial limbs, eyes, etc., braces, and possibly dentures
  • Models for study by medical students
  • Musical instruments


  • Our military has used it to make unmanned drones
  • In theory, you could make all the parts necessary to make another printer

 
Imagine being able to make that one part for a car or a replacement part for a broken appliance...especially if the part is hard to find..or plumbing pipes, or a thermostat, or a lock, just by firing up the 3D printer and sending a file to print.

Mattel's 'Thingmaker' first came out in the 1960s, but it's now a 3D printer...   https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=manufacturing+toys+3d+printer+thingmaker&&view=detail&mid=BEEB7FF30D6EAE52BD1EBEEB7FF30D6EAE52BD1E&&FORM=VRDGAR

If a child wants to connect his Legos to Lincoln Logs and you have a creative side, you could design some kind of adapter and print that out on your 3D printer.

                                                          Action figures made on a 3D printer-some assembly required?


                                A 3D-Printer made this model of a house---it would make a fun dollhouse, too.

  • Innovative medical technology will let us use 3D printers for health purposes as well:
  • Artificial outer ear with hearing aid, the ear is from human tissue.


  •          This boy's dad made him an artificial hand for $10.
Here is a video of 3D printing a forearm plus hand: https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=video+clip+3d+printer+making+a+prosthetic&&view=detail&mid=57B4920018E2378B87C557B4920018E2378B87C5&&FORM=VRDGAR



If you don't have your own 3D printer, as long as you have the instructions in your file, you can upload it to an online service and have someone else 'print' it at a reasonable price and ship it to you. In the future, these 3D print shops may be seen at your local mall just like any other business.

And what about the future? What will 3D printers be used for in a few years?

  • It is already being used for some airplane parts, and this will probably continue. These parts are lighter, making the plane more efficient to fly.
  • In the health field, titanium bone implants, orthodontics, and artificial veins and arteries may be made using 3D printing
  • 3D printers will probably be standard in schools from Kindergarten through college. They can be used to teach, creating models and copies to show students how things work
  • There is some discussion whether it might be a good idea to send 3D printers to disaster sites so that needed items can be produced on-scene---especially for health care
  • Items currently only available at museums could be copied, from historical clothing to animal bones, so that the 'cloned' exhibits can be brought around the country to people who can't travel to places such as the Smithsonian: http://www.3dprinter.net/3d-print-history-with-smithsonian-x-3d
  • A discussion on how 3D printers could be used in the space program: http://www.forbes.com/sites/stevenkotler/2013/10/21/the-future-is-here-how-3d-printing-is-opening-the-door-to-space-colonization/2/
What would you do with a 3D printer?


Monday, July 16, 2018

And They Lived Ever After...

Do you have a wedding to go to this summer? Here are some things you may not have heard about wedding traditions....


  • In Italy, they used to break bread over the bride's head as a way to wish her good luck...or.. something.. In time people realized wedding cake not broken over anyone's head was a much better option...


  • The original meaning of the word "bride" was 'cook.' See how that would go over now.


  • In ancient times, if the groom didn't show up for the wedding, his best man would then marry the bride. Win-win???


  • The veil of the bride was thought to protect her from evil spirits. It's not known if that would include her new in-laws.




  • There are about 100,000 weddings in Las Vegas every year and about 25,000 in Hawaii.


  • The bride originally stood to the left of the groom so he could ward off other suitors with his right hand. And what of left-handed grooms???
White socks? Really?


  • The most expensive wedding dress costs $12.2 Million. it has 150 carats worth of diamonds sewn onto it. It hasn't been sold yet...  You could totally wear it after the wedding to a cocktail party or to Target...


  • Queen Victoria's cake weighed 300 pounds. That's a lot of cake.



  • And you'd have to have plenty of cake to feed 30,000 people, which is the number that showed up for a wedding in Jerusalem in 1993.

Monday, July 9, 2018

And That's Just The First Line!

"The past is a foreign country, they do things differently there."

"Ships at a distance have every man's wish on board."


In order to get interested in a book, it needs to have a good first line to capture your interest. These are first lines from some books you may or may not have read.  The first is from a book titled "The Go Between," and was written by L.P. Hartley in 1953. The second was from "Their Eyes Were Watching God," by Zora Hurston, and that was written in 1937.  Don't those sound interesting? Do the opening lines make you wonder what the book is about?

Which of these books have you read? Look them up in your library for some great escapes!



     1. Mr. and Mrs. Dursley of Number 4 Privet Drive were proud to say that they were perfectly normal, thank you very much.

      2. I went to sleep with gum in my mouth and now there's gum in my hair........

     3. The night Max wore his wolf suit and made mischief of one kind and another, his mother called him "Wild Thing!"

      4. Once there was a tree, and she loved a little boy.

      5.  Call me Ishmael.

      6.  It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the season of Light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.

        7. The cold passed reluctantly from the earth, and the retiring fogs revealed an army stretched out on the hills, resting.
       8. You better not never tell nobody but God. 
       9. In my younger and more vulnerable years my father gave me some advice that I've been turning over in my mind ever since. 

      10. He was an old man who fished alone in a skiff in the Gulf Stream and he had gone eighty-four days now without taking a fish. 
      11. It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.
      12. When he was nearly thirteen, my brother Jem got his arm badly broken at the elbow.
      13. All children, except one, grow up.

      14. My suffering left me sad and gloomy.

      15. My high school friends have begun to suspect I haven't told them the full story of my life.

Here are the titles of the books they are from, the years written, and authors.
1-Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, 1997, J.K. Rowling
2-Alexander and the Horrible, Terrible, No Good, Very Bad, Day, 1972, Judith Viorst
3-Where the Wild Things Are, 1988, Maurice Sendak
4-The Giving Tree, 1963, Shel Silverstein
5-Moby Dick, 1851, Herman Melville
6-A Tale of Two Cities, 1859, Charles Dickens
7-The Red Badge of Courage, 1895, Stephen Crane
8-The Color Purple, 1982, Alice Walker
9-The Great Gatsby, 1925, F. Scott Fitzgerald*
10-The Old Man and the Sea, 1952, Ernest Hemingway
11-1984, written in 1949, George Orwell
12-To Kill a Mockingbird, 1960, Harper Lee
13-Peter Pan, 1911, J.M. Barrie
14-The Life of Pi, 2001, Yann Martel
15-A Long Way Gone, Memoirs of a Boy Soldier, Ishmael Beah, 2007

*Fitzgerald was from Minnesota



Here are web sites to give you some ideas for great reading:
Young Adult books:
Adult books: http://www.vulture.com/2018/01/10-of-the-most-exciting-book-releases-for-2018.html



Ask your friends to recommend books they have read. If you like an author, try another book by the same author. The library website can suggest books based on your interests. And don't be shy about asking your local librarian to suggest books you would enjoy. You can re-visit books you loved when you were little (and share them!). Try a genre (type) of book you don't normally read: Science Fiction, History, Biography, Self-Help (Life advice), books about animals, Religion....categories are almost limitless...
Here's how to find different non-fiction (facts) books by their numbers:


You and your friends might have interesting books you can swap, or some titles may be available for free download. Try taking a book outside and reading there on a nice summer's day. It's way better than texting. Honest.