Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have developed a specialized 3D printer that utilizes food waste as a raw material. Called the FOODres.AI Printer, it can turn everyday ...
Researchers in Brazil and the UK found a way to turn recycled coffee pods into 3D-printed conductive materials that can be used to create caffeine detectors. With that, they demonstrated one of the ...
Researchers behind the device want to limit food waste and encourage “hyper-local circular economies.” A new type of 3D printer could help households do their part to reduce food waste while also ...
The printer incorporates AI technology to suggest printable objects that can be made based on the type of food waste you have ...
Coffee can solve a lot of problems. It can speed up a slow day at work, make up for lack of sleep and provide a boost of energy. Now, coffee can even help reduce waste. Michael Rivera, assistant ...
Two MIT graduates have developed FOODres.AI, a 3D printer that turns household food waste into coasters, containers, and more!
GaeaStar, a San Francisco and Germany-based startup, plans to introduce its 3D-printed disposable clay cups to coffee shops in the United States following a successful trial period in Berlin, CNET ...
Researchers from the University of Washington developed a method to convert nutrient-rich coffee grounds into a paste for 3D printing. The paste is inoculated with Ganoderma lucidum (Reishi) mushroom ...
There’s a new pour from Starbucks: It’s the first 3D printed store in the U.S. The Seattle-based coffee giant with more than 17,000 locations nationwide has never had a store quite like the one ...
What if you could create a fully-formed, intricately detailed 3D object in the time it takes to brew a cup of coffee? It sounds like science fiction, but with volumetric 3D printing, this is now a ...
The big picture: For years, companies have touted 3D printing as the future of construction, and now one of the strongest signs of the technology moving into the mainstream has arrived. Starbucks has ...
3D printers might have originally been used to create prototypes and product models, but the industry is expanding to produce larger-scale products—and even medical devices. Although 3D printing tends ...