While traditionally 3D printing has been used for rapid prototyping, by 2020 most things that are 3D printed will be industrial tooling or final products. Already more than half a million 3D printable files are listed on object sharing websites, with desktop 3D printers that can fabricate them priced from $500. Meanwhile doctors are learning how to bioprint replacement human organs.
3D Printing: Second Edition is written by Christopher Barnatt of ExplainingTheFuture.com. The book features over one hundred interviews, examples and illustrations, and is a valuable resource for all enthusiasts, entrepreneurs, designers, investors and students who want to remain up-to-date with the Next Industrial Revolution.
The complete contents of the book are as follows:
Preface
1: The Next Revolution -- explaining why 3D printing matters and its four key marketplaces.
2. 3D Printing Technologies -- detailing every technology on the market or in the lab.
3: The 3D Printing Industry -- a global overview of leading manufacturers, software providers and bureau services.
4: Direct Digital Manufacturing -- reporting on pioneers who are already 3D printing consumer products, industrial components and medical devices.
5: Personal Fabrication -- an overview of personal 3D printers, 3D scanners and the Maker Movement.
6: Bioprinting -- how research teams are working to 3D print replacement human body parts.
7. 3D Printing in Context -- how 3D printing, synthetic biology and nanotech will converge to enable local digital manufacturing.
8: Brave New World? -- separating probable fact from science fiction to predict the real 3D printing future.
Glossary -- 133 key terms and technologies precisely defined.
3D Printing Directory -- a comprehensive listing of industrial and personal 3D printer manufacturers, software packages, bureau services and online object repositories.
Further Reading
Index