Printers
-
Sensors that identify infectious disease and food contaminants may soon be printed on paper using ordinary office inkjet printers, with possible applications in quickly diagnosing certain types of cancer and monitoring water toxin levels in swimming pools.
-
If a 3D printer puts the power of a CNC mill and a few other machines into the hands of even amateur makers, then BotFactory's Squink could essentially put the power of an entire factory into one small corner of a home office.
-
A portable robotic printer that works by traveling across the surface of a piece of paper is well on its way to reaching its US$400,000 Kickstarter target. Designed by Israel's Zuta Labs, the device is intended to provide users with a means of printing on the go.
-
Imagine if conditions that presently cause blindness could be treated by simply by fabricating new retinal tissue. We may not be at that point yet, but we've definitely taken a step closer – scientists have successfully used an inkjet printer to "print" rats' retinal cells onto a substrate.
-
Tag on That is a device that prints custom text or images on almost any surface.
-
Scientists have reported success in using lasers to remove toner-printed text from paper, allowing that the paper to be re-used.
-
The HP Inkjet Web Press can churn out four-color (CMYK), 1,200 x 600 dots per inch (dpi) production prints at the rate of 400 feet (122m) per minute.
-
Xerox has set its sights on the office market with its solid ink ColorQube 9200 Series multifunction printer, which boasts new print head technology with nozzles half the width of a human hair.