3D Printing Designs: Octopus Pencil Holder By the end of the book, you will have gained enough practical hands-on experience to be able to create a 3D printable object of your choice, which in this case is a 3D print-ready octopus pencil holde
| Title | : | 3D Printing Designs: Octopus Pencil Holder |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.91 (446 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 1785885170 |
| Format Type | : | Paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 74 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2016-02-29 |
| Genre | : |
Editorial : About the AuthorJoe Larson
Joe Larson is one part artist, one part mathematician, one part teacher, and one part technologist. It all started in his youth when he worked on a Commodore 64, doing BASIC programming and low-resolution digital art. As technology progressed, so did Joe's dabbling, eventually taking him to 3D modeling while in high school and college, and he temporarily pursued a degree in computer animation. He abandoned this field for the much more sensible goal of becoming a math teacher, which he accomplished when he taught 7th grade math in Colorado. He now works as an application programmer. When Joe first heard about 3D printing, it took root to his mind, and he went back to dust off his 3D modeling skills. In 2012, he won a Makerbot Replicator 3D printer in the Tinkercad/Makerbot Chess challenge with a chess set that assembles into a robot. Since then, his designs on Thingiverse have been featured on Thingiverse, Gizmodo, Shapeways, Makezine, and othe
Key Features
- Learn how to make complex shapes by editing basic ones
- Make printable objects from multiple shapes and parts
- Learn how to design from scratch, without a reference to physical objects
- Get to know t
I hope it will have many readers, but especially economists!. This manifesto will make you think about how to adapt to technology that affects the current and future operations, and the organizational culture of your company. Just enough words to hold the little one's interest, but not too many for him/her to become restless and bored.. Nevertheless, Davies has fun with the concepts.
Davies also gives a good overview of the various theories of how time travel might be accomplished, and the book is very useful in showing the layperson that time is, indeed, relative.
My only complaint with the book is that it is somewhat derivative of his earlier work, About Time. If you like Bendis and/or Maleev then you should check this and the first volume out.. The future of robots is exciting, but the author shares that it may also be a little bit scaryyet, fun!. In the summer of 1999 I stood in the Soissons battlefield with my 4 children as they lay in the same road in about the same pla
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