3D Printing Invades Washington DC For Hearing

RAPID

Share this Article

As the 3D printing market grows, there are major concerns, I’m sure, in Washington DC about where the technology is headed, as well as a wave of optimism about where this technology can take the country from a cpan-feat-1manufacturing perspective. Yesterday, the House Small Business Committee had a hearing titled, “The Rise of 3D Printing: Opportunities of Entrepreneurs.”

The main purpose of the hearing was to discuss ways in which government can help the industry grow, as well as make sure that they do not get in the way of that growth. On hand were several executives within the industry, which included, Patrick O’Neill, CEO, Olloclip LLC, Jonathon Cobb, executive vice president, Public Affairs, Stratasys Inc., Peter Weijmarshausen, CEO, Shapeaways, and Jan Baum, executive director, 3D Maryland, Maryland Center for Entrepreneurship.

Jonathan Cobb, discussed with the committee how Stratasys has helped dozens of companies save millions of dollars in the last few years, by turning them onto the latest cspan-1additive manufacturing machines. Cobb testified,

“We take pride in stories like this. To us, they demonstrate that we are not just in the business of producing 3D machines, we are also helping empower entrepreneurs by bringing manufacturing into their homes and workplaces.”

Shapeways CEO, Peter Weijmarshausen, discussed with the committee, ways in which they assure that the 100,000+ new designs they receive onto their site each month are free of copyright concerns, as well as ways in which copyrights can be protected as the industry grows.  He also suggested having some sort of method to work with the DMCA to avoid patent issues on Shapeways.com as well as other design marketplaces.

In order for government to avoid stifling growth of a very important industry, which will likely expand America’s manufacturing capabilities over the next decade, they need to pay attention to those within the industry. This is exactly what this hearing has achieved. You can watch the entire hearing via CSPAN below.  Also feel free to discuss this hearing at 3dPrintBoard.

Share this Article


Recent News

3D Printing News Briefs, May 11, 2024: 3D Printed Stent, Tower, Sculptures, & More

3D Printing Unpeeled: Wind Turbines, Probiotics and Lenses



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

Featured

Industrial Giant Ingersoll Rand Leads $19M Round Backing Inkbit’s AI-Driven 3D Printing

Inkbit, the Massachusetts-based original equipment manufacturer (OEM) of multi-material, AI-integrated 3D printers, has closed a $19 million financing round. Ingersoll Rand, a US giant in the industrial equipment sector, led...

3D Printing Unpeeled: Digital FDM Filament for Functional Gradients

Just published in Nature, a paper by a Seoul National University team looks at “3D printing with a 3D printed digital material filament for programming functional gradients.” Sang-Joon Ahn, Howon...

3D Printing Unpeeled: $5000 Cold Spray 3D Printer, Roland DGA & Living Materials

The AeroForge is a $5000 cold spray metal printer for copper made by a student team at Rice University. In a paper for ACS Central Science a team from Nanjing...

3D Printing News Briefs, April 27, 2024: Research, Digital Dentistry, Cycling, & More

We’re starting today’s 3D Printing News Briefs with some research into 3D printed luminescent quantum-dot polymer architectures and free-form laser beam shaping, and then on to an open source 4-axis...