Tea, Earl Grey, hot?
As long as you don't mind it being entirely made of plastic.
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Tea, Earl Grey, hot?
As long as you don't mind it being entirely made of plastic.
As long as you don't mind it being entirely made of plastic.
Plus it might not be as hot as you like.
I have a machine that makes Earl Grey already. I call it a "kettle".
Did you know that the latest version of Microsoft's IIS server can detect an infinite loop and handle it gracefully?
On the downside, this makes detecting that you have an infinite loop more difficult.
Some blog (I think it's Make Magazine) has had a series of posts about a 3-D printer that's available as a kit.
Yup, that's the current issue of Make.
As long as you don't mind it being entirely made of plastic.
Yeah, that's what they're doing today....
I have a machine that makes Earl Grey already. I call it a "kettle".
My kettle only makes hot water.
Fair point.
No, it's fine that they're plastic. Not a flimsy hollow plastic, but sturdy solid plastic, at least it is if I understand correctly how the printer works. You can sculpt something, and then you can mass-market it yourself without having to send it somewhere for someone to make replicas.
Wonder how it handles things that aren't solid? Like, items with a hole in the middle? Topologically, a donut.
Wonder how it handles things that aren't solid? Like, items with a hole in the middle? Topologically, a donut.
It can do them just fine. In fact, it can make things that would be impossible to "assemble", like two interlocking rings. This is useful for creating various already-assembled mechanisms.