Desktop Metal Inc., the company founded in 2015 with no plan to produce a production-level printer, is now promoting 3D printing for high-volume serial production under its AM (additive manufacturing) 2.0 initiative.
Q&A with Eric Barnes, RAPID + TCT event advisor.
The next frontier includes 3D-printed materials and antennas.
Looking back on a long career of learning, sharing, and always trying to do your best.
Zach Simkin seeks a higher level of optimization for additive manufacturing processes.
Siemens and Desktop Metal, Inc. announced today a partnership aimed at accelerating the adoption of additive manufacturing (AM) for production applications with a focus on the world’s largest manufacturers.
Additive veteran Andrew Graves boldly goes where no materials expert has gone before.
Making 3D printing sustainable requires more than recyclable materials and energy-efficient equipment; it requires that we rethink the status quo.
The dramatic growth in the number of universities with sustained AM research programs and associated curricula also means that many of these graduating students have even played a direct role in advancing the technology.
The program is equipped to solve wide range of unique grinding and finishing challenges through its Robotic Automation Cell Anchors Program