DIGITAL FABRICATOR
(Redirected from Fabber)
A 'digital fabricator' (commonly shortened to 'fabber') is a small, self-contained factory that can make objects described by digital data. Fabbers make three-dimensional, solid objects that can be used as models, as prototypes, or as delivered products. They are widely used by manufacturers for these purposes. Fabbers use a wide range of techniques to make products from a wide range of materials. The quality of these materials and the precision of fabrication can be a major constraint on functional applications.[1]
Proposed nanofactories would be fabbers that employ arrays of nanoscale machines to assemble macroscopic products from molecular feedstocks. This level of control would enable production of high-performance materials that form structures of nearly perfect precision.
The term "fabber" is also used to refer to hypothetical devices that would be capable of Universal Fabrication. Given a sufficiently detailed set of plans, power and the correct raw feedstocks, a universal fabber could produce any manufacturable item, including a copy of itself. No proposed machine would be universal in the common sense of the word, since not all physical structures can be manufactured.
★ Fab lab
★ Clanking replicator
★ Desktop manufacturing
★ Solid freeform fabrication
★ RepRap Project - self replicating fabber
★ 3D printing
★ Fab@Home Personal Desktop Fabber Kit
★ Intro to fabbers
★ worldchanging
★ Discussion at Make magazine's site
★ New Scientist: Desktop Fabricator May Kickstart Home Revolution
★ economist story
★ Fabbing · Impresión en 3D
A 'digital fabricator' (commonly shortened to 'fabber') is a small, self-contained factory that can make objects described by digital data. Fabbers make three-dimensional, solid objects that can be used as models, as prototypes, or as delivered products. They are widely used by manufacturers for these purposes. Fabbers use a wide range of techniques to make products from a wide range of materials. The quality of these materials and the precision of fabrication can be a major constraint on functional applications.[1]
Proposed nanofactories would be fabbers that employ arrays of nanoscale machines to assemble macroscopic products from molecular feedstocks. This level of control would enable production of high-performance materials that form structures of nearly perfect precision.
The term "fabber" is also used to refer to hypothetical devices that would be capable of Universal Fabrication. Given a sufficiently detailed set of plans, power and the correct raw feedstocks, a universal fabber could produce any manufacturable item, including a copy of itself. No proposed machine would be universal in the common sense of the word, since not all physical structures can be manufactured.
| Contents |
| See also |
| External links |
See also
★ Fab lab
★ Clanking replicator
★ Desktop manufacturing
★ Solid freeform fabrication
★ RepRap Project - self replicating fabber
★ 3D printing
External links
★ Fab@Home Personal Desktop Fabber Kit
★ Intro to fabbers
★ worldchanging
★ Discussion at Make magazine's site
★ New Scientist: Desktop Fabricator May Kickstart Home Revolution
★ economist story
★ Fabbing · Impresión en 3D
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