3D Printing and Open Design. A Bright Future for Engineering and Design Profe...Peter Troxler
The coming decades will bring revolutionary changes to manufacturing. A large share of production could shift from mass manufacturing to local, small batch manufacturing. The main driver behind this development are the possibilities of 3D printing.
Additionally, companies will probably include open source strategies to manage their portfolio of intellectual assets. Crowd sourced innovation will complement in-house R&D activities. Engineers and designers will be faced with a radically new working environment and new demands on their work. 3D printing brings new freedoms in engineering and design. Open design evokes the image of the designer as an orchestrator of co-design. But brutal pressure on speed and efficiency in engineering and design might be a consequence of small batch production. And there is the democratisation of the means of production: As blogs for journalists and Instagram for professional photographers, easy design tools and 3D printers might turn into a menace for the design profession itself.
Presentation given on 24 Nov 2014 at TU Delft Library as part of the 3D print week.
Innovation Roundtable: The (actual and potential) impacts of 3D printing on b...Tim Minshall
3D printing (also known as Additive Manufacturing) has attracted a huge amount of interest. Some commentators believe that this technology has the potential to underpin a 'manufacturing revolution'. The truth is more complex and nuanced. 3D printing is not a single technology; it’s current application areas are numerous; and the impact it could have in a variety of sectors is hindered by multiple uncertainties. Researchers at the University of Cambridge and the University of Nottingham have been researching the ways in which 3D printing is changing current business models in a variety of sectors, and exploring the way in which these technologies could have a wider impact. This same team has also been gathering evidence to support the development of a UK national strategy for 3D printing / additive manufacturing. This presentation will provide an overview of the results of this research on 3D printing-enabled business model innovation, and highlight some of the current barriers and opportunities.
Blog – What is next for 3D printing – April 2021.
1. How 3D printing is changing the world - https://www.creativebloq.com/features/12-ways-3d-printing-changed-the-world
2. Canada trails other countries with the adoption of 3D printing - https://www.3dnatives.com/en/results-from-3d-printing-sentiment-index-show-global-growth-despite-pandemic/
3. Five myths about 3D printing - https://www.rcgt.com/en/insights/five-myths-about-3d-printing/
4. Canada has issues with productivity - https://tradingeconomics.com/canada/productivity or https://www.imd.org/news/updates/IMD-2020-World-Competitiveness-Ranking-revealed/
5. Canada is falling behind on its competitiveness https://www.businesscouncilab.com/work/canada-is-falling-behind-and-has-no-plan-to-get-ahead/
6. 3D printing of houses - https://www.3dsourced.com/guides/3d-printed-house-2/
7. EMEA a global hub for 3D printing - https://www.epo.org/news-events/news/2020/20200713.html
8. Canada needs to do more to promote innovation through grants and tax policies open to everyone - https://www.visualcapitalist.com/national-innovation-the-most-innovative-countries-by-income/. The goal of any govt is not to pick winners and losers.
9. Canada trails many countries in terms of automation - https://ifr.org/ifr-press-releases/news/robot-race-the-worlds-top-10-automated-countries
10. How 3D printing can help the environment - https://all3dp.com/4/7-ways-3d-printing-helps-you-become-eco-friendly/
When Additive Manufacturing and 3D Printing Makes Sense and When It Doesn’t360mnbsu
This presentation gave an overview of technologies currently available and their use in industry, while highlighting the differences between 3D Printing & Additive Manufacturing.
From the 2013 Taking Shape Summit: Additive Manufacturing: 3D Printing--Beyond Rapid Prototyping.
3D Printing and Open Design. A Bright Future for Engineering and Design Profe...Peter Troxler
The coming decades will bring revolutionary changes to manufacturing. A large share of production could shift from mass manufacturing to local, small batch manufacturing. The main driver behind this development are the possibilities of 3D printing.
Additionally, companies will probably include open source strategies to manage their portfolio of intellectual assets. Crowd sourced innovation will complement in-house R&D activities. Engineers and designers will be faced with a radically new working environment and new demands on their work. 3D printing brings new freedoms in engineering and design. Open design evokes the image of the designer as an orchestrator of co-design. But brutal pressure on speed and efficiency in engineering and design might be a consequence of small batch production. And there is the democratisation of the means of production: As blogs for journalists and Instagram for professional photographers, easy design tools and 3D printers might turn into a menace for the design profession itself.
Presentation given on 24 Nov 2014 at TU Delft Library as part of the 3D print week.
Innovation Roundtable: The (actual and potential) impacts of 3D printing on b...Tim Minshall
3D printing (also known as Additive Manufacturing) has attracted a huge amount of interest. Some commentators believe that this technology has the potential to underpin a 'manufacturing revolution'. The truth is more complex and nuanced. 3D printing is not a single technology; it’s current application areas are numerous; and the impact it could have in a variety of sectors is hindered by multiple uncertainties. Researchers at the University of Cambridge and the University of Nottingham have been researching the ways in which 3D printing is changing current business models in a variety of sectors, and exploring the way in which these technologies could have a wider impact. This same team has also been gathering evidence to support the development of a UK national strategy for 3D printing / additive manufacturing. This presentation will provide an overview of the results of this research on 3D printing-enabled business model innovation, and highlight some of the current barriers and opportunities.
Blog – What is next for 3D printing – April 2021.
1. How 3D printing is changing the world - https://www.creativebloq.com/features/12-ways-3d-printing-changed-the-world
2. Canada trails other countries with the adoption of 3D printing - https://www.3dnatives.com/en/results-from-3d-printing-sentiment-index-show-global-growth-despite-pandemic/
3. Five myths about 3D printing - https://www.rcgt.com/en/insights/five-myths-about-3d-printing/
4. Canada has issues with productivity - https://tradingeconomics.com/canada/productivity or https://www.imd.org/news/updates/IMD-2020-World-Competitiveness-Ranking-revealed/
5. Canada is falling behind on its competitiveness https://www.businesscouncilab.com/work/canada-is-falling-behind-and-has-no-plan-to-get-ahead/
6. 3D printing of houses - https://www.3dsourced.com/guides/3d-printed-house-2/
7. EMEA a global hub for 3D printing - https://www.epo.org/news-events/news/2020/20200713.html
8. Canada needs to do more to promote innovation through grants and tax policies open to everyone - https://www.visualcapitalist.com/national-innovation-the-most-innovative-countries-by-income/. The goal of any govt is not to pick winners and losers.
9. Canada trails many countries in terms of automation - https://ifr.org/ifr-press-releases/news/robot-race-the-worlds-top-10-automated-countries
10. How 3D printing can help the environment - https://all3dp.com/4/7-ways-3d-printing-helps-you-become-eco-friendly/
When Additive Manufacturing and 3D Printing Makes Sense and When It Doesn’t360mnbsu
This presentation gave an overview of technologies currently available and their use in industry, while highlighting the differences between 3D Printing & Additive Manufacturing.
From the 2013 Taking Shape Summit: Additive Manufacturing: 3D Printing--Beyond Rapid Prototyping.
This presentation outlines the outcomes of 3D printing on entrepreneurship.
The evolution of 3D printers, The market opportunity, and the application in industry.
3D Printing is now changing the way we manufacture many objects in amazing ways, from tools, toys, and jewelry, to food, and even body parts! It's a technology revolution happening in new kinds of factories, and even in homes, around the world. But how does it work exactly, and why has the economist, Jeremy Rifkin, called it an important key to the Third Industrial Revolution? This talk explains the basics of 3D printing technology, and what you need to know to begin designing and printing your own creations, with or without your own 3D printer.
Additive manufacturing (AM) or additive layer manufacturing (ALM) is the industrial production name for 3D printing, a computer controlled process that creates three dimensional objects by depositing materials, usually in layers.
AM is a rapidly growing field that is having an impact on multiple industries by simplifying the process to go from a 3D model to a finished product.
In contrast to conventional manufacturing processes, AM fabricates objects by adding materials as required which eliminates the necessity of subtracting materials (by means of machining, milling, carving, etc.) to obtain desired shapes.
AM can advantageously fabricate complex geometries with no part-specific tooling and much less waste material.
In the construction sector, architectural models have been created with AM methods for more than a decade.
Recent years have seen a vast increase in research on printing methods for building components.
AM allows building companies to produce geometrically complex structures, to vary materials within a component according to its functions, and to automate the construction process starting from a digital model.
The technology can bring significant benefits to the construction industry in terms of increased customization, reduced construction time, reduced manpower, and construction cost.
Noah Raford's introduction to the UAE 3D Printing Innovation Alliance in Dubai.
Presented at DesignWeek, at American University of Sharjah, College of Architecture, Art and Design.
Agile London: Industrial Agility, How to respond to the 4th Industrial Revolu...Paolo Sammicheli
Agile London at Photobox/Moonpig, 16 February 2017.
Talk about Wikispeed, Scrum for Hardware and the Fourth Industrial Revolution. What means Industrial Agility and from where to start?
Additive manufacturing 3D Printing technologySTAY CURIOUS
Additive manufacturing 3D Printing
3D printing is the process of building an object one thin layer at a time. It is fundamentally additive rather than subtractive in nature. To many, 3D printing is the singular production of often-ornate objects on a desktop printer.
3D printing or additive manufacturing is a process of making three dimensional solid objects from a digital file. The creation of a 3D printed object is achieved using additive processes. In an additive process an object is created by laying down successive layers of material until the entire object is created. Each of these layers can be seen as a thinly sliced horizontal cross-section of the eventual object.
Industrial Agility, Come rispondere alla quarta Rivoluzione IndustrialePaolo Sammicheli
Presentazione al MINI Italian Agile Day di Vimercate, sede Nokia.
#MiniIAD #Scrum4HW Thanks to the Italian Agile Movement.
http://www.agileday.it/mini/2017/vimercate/
As 3D printers are become more affordable and versatile, they are destined to disrupt multiple industries. Here's what you need to know about this quickly accelerating technology.
Presentation about the largest Dutch News service NU.nl. How do we respond to change and how do we adapt. Best in class user experience, best in class technology. And insights about our open innovation program.
3D printer Technology _ A complete presentationVijay Patil
Please give a feedback if you like my presentation.
google drive download link :
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LSLZ-eU8QvihgzJ5BO_sav1im_e0ck0a/view?usp=sharing
As a professor in “Revolution in the Manufacturing Industry”, Peter examines the impact of new, direct digital manufacturing technologies and methods ( such as Fab Labs and 3D printing) for design and manufacturing.
Urban Economic Development as Making Unfolds Its PotentialPeter Troxler
Presentation given at a seminar by “La Fabrique de la Cité” on the creation of value for the city and in the city in Lille on 16 September 2014.
(cf.https://vimeo.com/107237013)
This presentation outlines the outcomes of 3D printing on entrepreneurship.
The evolution of 3D printers, The market opportunity, and the application in industry.
3D Printing is now changing the way we manufacture many objects in amazing ways, from tools, toys, and jewelry, to food, and even body parts! It's a technology revolution happening in new kinds of factories, and even in homes, around the world. But how does it work exactly, and why has the economist, Jeremy Rifkin, called it an important key to the Third Industrial Revolution? This talk explains the basics of 3D printing technology, and what you need to know to begin designing and printing your own creations, with or without your own 3D printer.
Additive manufacturing (AM) or additive layer manufacturing (ALM) is the industrial production name for 3D printing, a computer controlled process that creates three dimensional objects by depositing materials, usually in layers.
AM is a rapidly growing field that is having an impact on multiple industries by simplifying the process to go from a 3D model to a finished product.
In contrast to conventional manufacturing processes, AM fabricates objects by adding materials as required which eliminates the necessity of subtracting materials (by means of machining, milling, carving, etc.) to obtain desired shapes.
AM can advantageously fabricate complex geometries with no part-specific tooling and much less waste material.
In the construction sector, architectural models have been created with AM methods for more than a decade.
Recent years have seen a vast increase in research on printing methods for building components.
AM allows building companies to produce geometrically complex structures, to vary materials within a component according to its functions, and to automate the construction process starting from a digital model.
The technology can bring significant benefits to the construction industry in terms of increased customization, reduced construction time, reduced manpower, and construction cost.
Noah Raford's introduction to the UAE 3D Printing Innovation Alliance in Dubai.
Presented at DesignWeek, at American University of Sharjah, College of Architecture, Art and Design.
Agile London: Industrial Agility, How to respond to the 4th Industrial Revolu...Paolo Sammicheli
Agile London at Photobox/Moonpig, 16 February 2017.
Talk about Wikispeed, Scrum for Hardware and the Fourth Industrial Revolution. What means Industrial Agility and from where to start?
Additive manufacturing 3D Printing technologySTAY CURIOUS
Additive manufacturing 3D Printing
3D printing is the process of building an object one thin layer at a time. It is fundamentally additive rather than subtractive in nature. To many, 3D printing is the singular production of often-ornate objects on a desktop printer.
3D printing or additive manufacturing is a process of making three dimensional solid objects from a digital file. The creation of a 3D printed object is achieved using additive processes. In an additive process an object is created by laying down successive layers of material until the entire object is created. Each of these layers can be seen as a thinly sliced horizontal cross-section of the eventual object.
Industrial Agility, Come rispondere alla quarta Rivoluzione IndustrialePaolo Sammicheli
Presentazione al MINI Italian Agile Day di Vimercate, sede Nokia.
#MiniIAD #Scrum4HW Thanks to the Italian Agile Movement.
http://www.agileday.it/mini/2017/vimercate/
As 3D printers are become more affordable and versatile, they are destined to disrupt multiple industries. Here's what you need to know about this quickly accelerating technology.
Presentation about the largest Dutch News service NU.nl. How do we respond to change and how do we adapt. Best in class user experience, best in class technology. And insights about our open innovation program.
3D printer Technology _ A complete presentationVijay Patil
Please give a feedback if you like my presentation.
google drive download link :
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LSLZ-eU8QvihgzJ5BO_sav1im_e0ck0a/view?usp=sharing
As a professor in “Revolution in the Manufacturing Industry”, Peter examines the impact of new, direct digital manufacturing technologies and methods ( such as Fab Labs and 3D printing) for design and manufacturing.
Urban Economic Development as Making Unfolds Its PotentialPeter Troxler
Presentation given at a seminar by “La Fabrique de la Cité” on the creation of value for the city and in the city in Lille on 16 September 2014.
(cf.https://vimeo.com/107237013)
Data Citizen Driven City at IoT London Meetup 6Cesar Garcia
At IoT London Meetup 6, Sara Alvarellos (@trecedejunio) and I (@elsatch) introduced the project Data Citizen Driven City, that are currently developing at Medialab Prado. Big Thanks to Marcos Garcia (@marcosgcm) for some of the contents of Medialab-Prado presentation.
Future Internet Assembly Athens, presentations on Future Internet Projects Am...Katalin Gallyas
This presentation was given in Athens, on the Future Internet Assembly, 18 March 2014.
it is focuses on the Future Internet related projects and results that Amsterdam has implemented in the period of 2011-2014.
I grandi cambiamenti avvenuti negli ultimi decenni hanno modificato i sistemi di riferimento e di interpretazione del mondo contemporaneo. Allo stesso tempo, la riflessione sul futuro delle nostre società e civiltà diventa sempre più urgente, perché un mondo globalizzato come il nostro ha bisogno non solo di identificare le tendenze che guidano i suoi cambiamenti, ma anche di intervenire attraverso processi di innovazione avanzati nella configurazione di quell'orizzonte.
Questa lezione è pertanto orientata a offrire una riflessione su cosa significa lavorare all'interno di una logica di sistema e a istituire approcci transdisciplinari alla comprensione delle tendenze per sviluppare capacità di soluzioni alternative.
The slides and text of a talk co-authored with Paul Caton, Ginestra Ferraro, Luis Figueira, Elliott Hall, Neil Jakeman, Pam Mellen, Anna-Maria Sichani, Miguel Vieira, Tim Watts, and Carina Westling 'Mechanizing the Humanities? King’s Digital Lab as Critical Experiment', DH2017, Montreal, August 10th, 2017.
Martin brynskov future internet assembly - smart cities - valenciaMartin Brynskov
Cities are complex organisms, but lived life is much more than coordination and safety. How should the Future Internet support "the other half", which is hardly less complex? Building on research within the Center for Digital Urban Living (www.digitalurbanliving.dk), from journalism and civic communication to media architecture and cultural experiences, Martin Brynskov will outline some core opportunities and challenges we face as city planning becomes increasingly digitised and dynamic.
Presentation delivered in a World Bank workshop on innovation hubs in Gran Concepcion, Chile, on October 6th till 10th 2014. The slideshow outlines Waag Society's approach and consists of four themes: ecosystem, delivering value, developing services & business, and delivering to the real world.
More information on the workshop (mostly in Spanish) can be found here: http://www.innovationhubs.org
Makercosmos is a four-year maker education programme in Arn-
hem, the Netherlands, which comprises the development of series
of maker education lessons and participatory action research about
learning in maker education, among other activities. This study
reports findings from the first pilot of this series, with a particu-
lar focus on how the research part was designed, developed, and
delivered. Practice showed, that in our context asking teachers to
teach and to carry out data collection for research simultaneously
produced only meagre results when using a conventional notebook
approach. Design principles are suggested to remodel the research
approach
Paper at https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3466725.3466741
Revolutionizing School – Fablab@school dk 2016 KeynotePeter Troxler
Maker Education is a new method of learning. It promises that students not only learn to "read" technology but also become able to "write" it—an approach previously not found in the education system. The core of this method is that students themselves take ownership of their learning process by working on challenges they can solve by applying digital manufacturing technology.
An important prerequisite for "writing" technology however remains the ability to "read" it. However, technology today is often read protected—hardware has "no serviceable parts inside", the source code of software is not available to users. The remedy is open hardware and open source software; and education has equally to embrace open design principles.
Open Design in a changing design practicePeter Troxler
Open design is a practice that borrows its way of working from open source software and brings these principles to the discipline of design.
> Open Design (noun) ... relation to http://opendefinition.org
> Open Design (practice) ... co-creating, co-designing
> Open Design business model ... designing, manufacturing, distribution
> example: http://opendesk.cc
(Presentation given at BeyondSocial, Willem de Koning Academie, Rotterdam, 16 October 2014)
I take stock of the state of play of Open Source Hardware (OSH) from a variety of perspectives: What does the current OSH landscape look like? What are the basic legal aspects of OSH (protection vs. “licensing”)? What are the dimensions of OSH practices?
Then I shall highlight the important challenges and opportunities that OSH is confronted with currently and the developments that are needed to turn OSH into a long-term success.
Presentation given at thingscon, Berlin, 3 May 2014 (http://thingscon.com); @thingscon
Keynote at FAD Open Design / Shared Creativity Conference in Barcelona, 5 Jul...Peter Troxler
Open Source—standing on the shoulders of giants—is the preferred mode of production, insight and creativity today, and even more so when the 3rd industrial revolution starts to take effect: distributed and collaborative relationships, and a shift away from hierarchical power and toward lateral power.
The 3rd industrial revolution is bringing affordable digital tools into the sphere of manufacturing and beyond: Affordable tools do not require huge capital investments; they bridge the labour-capital-divide, the owner-maker is re-emerging. Digital tools connect designing and manufacturing, they bridge the white collar-blue collar-divide, the designer-producer is having a comeback. Affordable digital tools also spread outside the industrial world, they bridge the producer-consumer-divide in new and powerful ways.
Open source practice in software is characterized by structures that 'resemble a great babbling bazaar of differing agendas and approaches'. Similar practices have yet to evolve in (open) design. Is it conceivable that a design brand start to release beta products early and often, to delegate designing to the ‘users’, and to involve those ‘users’ as beta testers? How likely are designers to share semi-finished work with colleagues, even from different disciplines or the other side of the world, and to accept that others might take their intermediary results, sketches and models, continue to work on them and turn them into next-step intermediary results that are quite different to what the initial designer conceived them to be?
There is a small micro cosmos out there, the global network of Fab Labs, where some of these questions can be explored. Fab Labs are pretty popular with designers, but larger scale co-operative projects have so far been in the domains of engineering and education. What would be the reason: Is it a lack of interest, a disbelief in the power of the results, a missing skill, an absent opportunity, too early to tell—or are we just not seeing the projects?
(The context for developing a) Common Description LanguagePeter Troxler
Sketching the overall context in which we will discuss and develop the idea of a "common descriptor language" as an interchange format for sharing (Fab Lab) documentation, independent of systems used at individual labs.
Reindustrialisation. How Digital Manufacturing Can Change Cities.
1. Reindustrialisation
!
How Digital Manufacturing
Can Change Cities!
"
Peter Troxler"
p.troxler@hr.nl"
University of Applied
Sciences Rotterdam"
Research Centre"
Creating 010"
5. Maker Movement"
Makerspaces"
MAKE magazine"
MAKER faire"
MAKER shed"
http://makermedia.com (ex O'Reilly)"
"
Techshop Inc."
Bay Area"
The Maker Movement Manifesto:
Rules for Innovation in the new World of
Crafters, Hackers and Tinkerers"
Duplo Brick to Brio Track adapter by Zydac"
18. Government Initiatives"
• Belfast"
– together with Derry"
– European Union
Peace Programme:
GBP 1.35 mio"
– 100 people / week"
– a few companies"
• Barcelona"
– Fab City"
19.
20.
21. Bottom-Up Strategies"
• Rotterdam" • London"
– 2 Fab Labs"
– 4 Hacker/Maker Spaces"
– Institute of Making (UCL)"
• Sheffield"
– Access Space Media
Lab, Refab Space,
Hackers and Makers,
ROCO Creative Coop"
22. Rotterdam"
• Stadslab Rotterdam"
• HET LAB, Alexander"
• RDM Makerspace"
• Made in 4Havens"
• …."
• Rotterdam Maakstad"
• Platform Digital Manufacturing"
• 3D Proeftuin"
• …"
• Fieldlab 3D Printing"
23. SCHIEBLOCK
> P. 50/51
STADSLAB
PROJECT 3D-PRINTING, PRODUCT DESIGN
RIJNHAVEN
> P. 38/39
STADSHAVENS
CITY PORT ROTTERDAM
RDM CAMPUS
> P. 2/3
AQUA DOCK
> P. 26/27
REMISE RET
PROJECT FUTURE MOBILITY
VAN GANSEWINKEL
PROJECT FUTURE MOBILITY
AHOY
SHELL ECO-MARATHON
> P. 66/67
CONCEPT HOUSE VILLAGE
> P. 33/35
FRUIT TERMINAL
> P. 70/71
WEST-KRUISKADE
PROJECT INFRATECTURE
ELEKTRISCH VERVOER CENTRUM
PROJECT FUTURE MOBILITY
01
26. Big Money"
Method"
• Include in substantial
priority of city
development"
• Allocate substantial funds
(>300.000/year, 3+ years)"
• Set clear targets/
performance indicators"
• “Deploy an instrument”"
Consequence"
• Will deliver on target (as
likely as any other similar
operation) "
27. Welcoming"
Method"
• Creating an environment"
• Interest and
understanding"
• Serendipity"
Consequence"
• Emergence of new
models"
• Activism, chaos"
• Micro initiatives"
• Limited impact"
29. Lab Centric Approaches"
Equity"
Fairness"
Diversity"
"
Power and Economic Relations"
Responsible Use of Resources and
Sustainability"
"
Third Places "
Distributed and Collaborative ""
"
Social" Political"
Empowerment"
Technology"
32. Rotterdam"
Private"
• Roffab"
• HET Lab"
• RDM Makerspace"
• Made in 4 Havens"
• Platform Digital
Manufacturing"
Public"
• Stadslab"
• RDM Campus"
• Stadshavens"
• Rotterdam Maakstad"
• Fieldlab 3D Printing"
33. Core Values"
Openness"
'right to produce'"
open source in design & hardware"
"
Ownership"
making city"
responsibility"
"
Experiment"
fail quickly
but cheaply" Thank You"