
3D printing - fabrication or fabbing - is a funny thing. You start with a digital file and a make-anything 3D printer machine. The printer chugs away and makes whatever you've given it, from
shot glasses to
Second Life characters, through to the Danté-esque
Fall of the Damned on the right, lamp depicting writhing, interwtined bodies.
The lamp is a limited run of forty pieces at a super-premium $45,000 price. But there's absolutely no reason for that. Digital file, makey-machine. This is only limited because someone has chosen it to be limited.
Fabbing has the potential to be a truly disruptive technology: think of the Feed in Neal Stephenson's
The Diamond Age - a consumer-level technology that lets the average person work a consumer-level interface to get shoes or a burrito. Closer to reality is the
RepRap project, home 3D-printing open-source enthusiasts who are trying to make printers which can print their own parts. Now that truly would be a
disruptive technology.
So, if anyone wants to upload
Fall of the Damned to BitTorrent, let's get the revolution started.