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I Am Now 50% Of The Way To Creating A 3D-Printed Version Of Myself

Apr 5, 2014, 02:34 IST

I spent the day at the "Inside 3-D Printing" convention at the Javits Center on the west side of Manhattan.

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My main take away is that the sector has something a middle-ground problem: Either you're a "hobbyist" or "tinkerer," two pseudo-professions that you'd be hard-pressed to grow a market out of.

Or, you're a multi-national aerospace and defense company looking into 3-D manufacturing for a billion-dollar system that you can't even talk about. This is where the real growth will have to come from if the industry wants to take off. Boeing 3D--prints more than 22,000 different components, and GE is saying the process will revolutionize the prototyping process.

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So the industry is definitely expanding, but at what rate remains unclear.

Anyway, the coolest part of the show was this: I am now 50% of the way to printing a 3-D model of myself.

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3-D Systems' "Sense" scanner, which retails for $400, lets the average consumer scan literally anything, including themselves, and send it off to be 3-D printed.

Here's what it looks like when the 3D Systems guy scans you:

And here's me:

Rob Wile/Business Insider

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My ear needed some retouching

Rob Wile/Business Insider

It'll cost me up to $60 to print it out, depending on what size I want. It doesn't look bad though.

Rob Wile/Business Insider

I'll know soon what it looks like, but for a taste, check out the results from Germany-based twinkind, which has been doing this kind of thing for at least a year:

twinkind

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