The emergence of "4D printing" - Skylar Tibbits

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  • Опубліковано 1 лип 2024
  • 3D printing has grown in sophistication since the late 1970s; TED Fellow Skylar Tibbits is shaping the next development, which he calls 4D printing, where the fourth dimension is time. This emerging technology will allow us to print objects that then reshape themselves or self-assemble over time. Think: a printed cube that folds before your eyes, or a printed pipe able to sense the need to expand or contract.
    Talk by Skylar Tibbits.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 12

  • @Elfos64
    @Elfos64 5 років тому

    If he can figure out how to scale that up to construct entire buildings, it would certainly help address the shortage of construction workers given that the younger generation isn't keeping that industry populated, and the issues construction causes with traffic congestion months at a time.

  • @infocaris
    @infocaris 10 років тому

    Imagine going to a place like ikea, buying a box and seeing it assemble itself partially or completely.

  • @nurhidayanarazakh
    @nurhidayanarazakh 9 років тому

    Amazing! :)

  • @xiaochicash
    @xiaochicash 8 років тому +1

    7:25 A water pipe with holes does not a good pipe make.

  • @jobjobbington6884
    @jobjobbington6884 8 років тому +4

    This whole thing is incredibly misleading, and not so impressive. They haven't built things that turn into other things. They've built things that can be stretched elastically, or held together magnetically, and presented them to us in their stretched or broken forms. Putting structures into a beaker that have magnets positioned only allowing the structures to fit in a certain way is no better than placing 2 weak magnets in the same beaker and saying "Wow, they break apart, but come back together in the same north to south structure". He says they're programmable, but in the same way as a rubber-band or one of those toys that expand in water. This is not new or innovative technology.
    Then he says "4D printing", but really means, 3D printing of elastics, which either means he doesn't know what 4D is, or is deliberately using the concept to falsely draw attention.
    This was primitive technology presented in con-artist ways.

  • @nathanross2537
    @nathanross2537 11 років тому

    Sounds amazing but I'm having a hard time understanding how these ideas would be applied in everyday life.

    • @Vibranium603
      @Vibranium603 3 роки тому

      Plumbing pipes narrowing and broadening based on water flow rate required. solar panels directing themselves towards sunlight to generate more electricity. Self healing of cracked objects to name a few.

  • @Skylerride313
    @Skylerride313 11 років тому

    We have almost the same name :)

  • @shaysplaylist
    @shaysplaylist 10 років тому +1

    It could be intresting if these can be transplanted in places which human approach is not impossible or dangerous. I don't think it's just a lazyness solution.

  • @LilRedRasta
    @LilRedRasta 10 років тому

    Engineers won't have to use their hands soon. They're basically just going to be computer programmers and designers haha. Rip to everyone working in the construction industry.

  • @jaykparikh37
    @jaykparikh37 11 років тому

    Second

  • @hlatintan9386
    @hlatintan9386 10 років тому

    Google