User:Mrockar

From RepRap
Revision as of 13:46, 17 February 2013 by Mrockar (talk | contribs) (Blogs)
Jump to: navigation, search

About Me

Name

Matt Rockar

Major

Computer Science

Contact Me

Email: [email protected]

Blogs

Week Five

Part A

Settlers of Catan Border

I do not think this is copyrightable, but it may be patentable. There aren’t any creative or artistic elements to it that make it a work of art. It does have the utilitarian purpose of holding the Settlers of Catan board together.

8D Cubic Lattice

This is not copyrightable or patentable. It has not utilitarian purpose and it is in about the same boat as the Penrose triangle. It is a sculpture, but it isn’t original. It is a design for a mathematical structure that has been around for a long time in theory.

Rocky Rocket

This is not patentable because it has no utilitarian purpose. It may be able to be copyrighted because it is a creative sculpture, although I feel like someone else may already have a copyright on a 50’s-looking rocketship already.

Battleshots

This isn’t patentable because it has no utilitarian purpose. It may be copyrightable because it is a creative creation. I think the bigger issue with this is that it may be infringing on the Battleship trademark held by Hasbro.

Temporary Tooth Implant

This isn’t copyrightable because teeth aren’t an original creation, but it may be patentable. It serves the utilitarian purpose of providing a cheap tooth implant for dental patients.

Part B

The Caddyrack would be copyrighted since it contains the Cadillac logo. Mumble the Abominable Snow Monster would be copyrighted since it was created for a movie. Same thing goes for this Minion from the movie Despicable Me. This Camaro Nervoso would probably be protected under copyright for the design of the body of the car. This Stormtrooper valve cap would also be copyrighted.

Part C

I would be interested in the licensing of non-copyrightable files because attaching something like a Creative Commons license to your work would be a way of showing the community that you are OK with your design being shared and modified. While it may serve no actual purpose, you are giving the OK for people to do what they want without fear of getting a take-down notice or a call from some lawyers. It is also useful to help protect your design from future laws restricting it. It’s a way of preventing future legal-stupidity from quashing the life of your design.

Week Four

I was extremely happy to see that such a project existed and even happier to see that 3D printing was able to help the project evolve even faster. How they were able to each have a printer and collaboratively design and improve the hand from across the world is amazing and really highlights the benefits of the technology. It also allows for the prosthetic to be made more cheaply and the components to be easily modified to work for other individuals.

This technology compared to a closed-source version is more clunky and needs improvement. The benefit of open-source is that anyone can help out and add their own improvements to the design. While closed-source may have access to more engineers, better equipment, and possibly a higher quality design, this all comes at the cost of the end product being much more expensive than the open-source production. Open-source would allow this technology to reach those that truly need it and at a fraction of the cost. Hopefully, over time, the design will reach a point where it will rival closed-source versions.

The open source project from the article is located here. We would be able to participate by improving the design. We could work on improving the strength of the components and maybe even turn the design into a parametric one so that anyone with this condition would be able to print a prosthetic that would fit perfectly to them. A parametric design would also allow children like Liam to print out a new hand whenever they outgrew their old one.

Week Three

Civil Engineering

The printed building idea seems like a great use of the technology. Buildings could be constructed with almost no human interaction much faster and more efficiently than before. Homes and businesses could easily be custom designed for different aesthetics and purposes without much trouble. The cost of building would be greatly reduced and allow for cheap, yet high quality, buildings to be easily built. This could provide cheap housing for the millions without it. If the technology is adopted, I’m sure it would be revolutionary.

Biotech

Printing organic tissue and possibly organs would be amazing. Instead of waiting for a transplant, a new organ could be created using a person’s own cells, which would reduce the chances that it would be rejected. Aside from that, 3D printed tissues and organs could be used for medicine development, which would reduce the cost greatly and allow for more human-specific testing to be easily done. Lab animals everywhere will be so happy.

Food Science

3D printing would be a great tool for food science if it becomes more affordable. Being able to print a steak with the perfect marbling would be something I hope to see in my lifetime. It would also improve the efficiency of producing meat. Instead of big barns full of cows, processing plants, and butchers, a machine provided with a biomaterial could print different cuts of meat or even types of meat for you. The whole process would be much greener and possibly allow more people access to a bigger and better variety of food products.

Fashion

I’m not a fashion expert, but I can appreciate the creative applications of 3D printing in the fashion world. It would allow for more creative and interesting design to be created. Since it’s a completely different method of producing an object, it allows for things that were not possible before to be created.

I found a few examples of 3D printing affecting other areas of human endeavor. One is the Urbee, a hybrid car whose frame was 3D printed. 3D printing also allows for customizable prosthetics like the leg we saw and even a printed jaw replacement.

Week Two

I do recognize the features we use on every computer today. The mouse and cursor were impressive for the first one seen in public. I imagined the first one to be much clunkier. It also seemed like instead of keyboard shortcuts for copying, pasting, etc. Douglas Engelbart was using a second keypad that had buttons for each function. How the data was structured was interesting too. The idea of a file being made up of statements and statements being made up of words seems like an intuitive way to store information. I think it’s nice for human-readable files, but not great for storing all forms of data. I am impressed, but I think it’s because I can understand how much work went into making this demonstration. If I didn’t know as much about computers as I do, I feel like I would be unmoved. People take for granted the research and work that went into creating the modern computer. I think I would have even recognized the importance of this at the time because it is revolutionary. This is a time when personal computers weren’t an everyday thing. Data was written down and manually processed. To perform the simple edits that Douglas did, you would have to get a new sheet of paper and retype your document with the edits. The ability to delete words, edit words, copy and paste, and even preview statements would speed up anyone’s workflow. I would say that I had a similar experience going from an old cell phone to a smartphone. Little things became easier for me and I was able to work faster and more efficiently. The things that Douglas demonstrated seem trivial to us today, but we just don’t realize how much they have helped us.

Professor Richard Doyle says that the initial perception of the mother of all demos was a hoax. People couldn’t believe that a computer could be doing what they were seeing. They thought that it was people moving boxes. We should and do share our information because it allows for more input and faster innovation. It allows for individuals to use our knowledge to create what we have created and even improve upon it using individual creativity. We share in order to speed up advancement in the technology. We could better share our knowledge by creating and expanding documentation on the wiki for the OpenHybridMendel. We could also create videos for YouTube on both the construction and operation of an OpenHybridMendel. A visual aspect may help people better understand and it being freely available online would mean that anyone could learn about the project.

Week One

Part A

Useful

Settlers of Catan Border I play Settlers of Catan every so often and my border pieces are starting to not hold the board together well during a game. This seems like a great replacement for the cardboard border.

Artistic

8D Cubic Lattice The math sculptures on Thingiverse are all amazing. It was hard to choose, but this one looked interesting to me. I think being able to print such complicated structures that would be difficult, if not impossible, to create using other methods is awesome.

Useless/Pointless

Rocky Rocket It kinda looks like an old school sci fi rocket, but not really.

Funny

Battleshots The idea that someone turned the board game into a printable drinking game is hilarious. I don’t think I would ever be able to finish a game though.

Strange

Temporary Tooth Implant This is a temporary tooth implant as the title suggests. I find it strange because I don’t think I would want to stick something I printed into my jaw.

Part B

I feel that I am a tinkerer. When I was younger, I would take things apart and try to put them back together. Around thirteen or so, I became interested in computers and robotics. That was when I started building robots from kits and eventually put together my own computer. I really enjoy figuring out how things work and making them better or repairing them if they break down. I think my dad is also a tinkerer. He always has a project going on and loves finding new things to try to create.

The argument about the influence of corporate culture on tinkering is pretty spot on. Corporations don’t want people poking around in their proprietary designs or figuring out cheap ways to keep gadgets running instead of buying the latest, more expensive one when your old gadget breaks. I feel that tinkerers are necessary and the article is right about preserving their habitat being essential to getting the nation back on track. Tinkering is essential to innovation and since manufacturing has been moved out of the country, we need to focus on creating new products and improving the design.

The primary design principles that I took away from the interview are to use an iterative process, watch how users use your product, and keep it simple. I thought it was great to see that he and his daughter were building a 3D printer. I think he will be able to really utilize the rapid prototyping process very well. I think his principles would apply to our work and are mostly already in place. The RepRap project is an iterative design process and the users are directly involved in improving the design and fixing issues that they find.