A new machine called a fabber lets you print out computer graphics in 3-D, make plastic copies of solid objects, and even fax them.
Ever since Gutenberg first got the presses running back in 1453, people have been spreading their ideas far and wide through printing. Now there is a new type of machine that makes it possible to print solid objects as well. The machine is formally known as a stereolithographer (which means three-dimensional printer), but to its friends it is a fabber (which is short for fabricator). Fabbers are already in use as stand-alone printers and as the nucleus of three-dimensional copying machines. Three-dimensional faxes are just over the horizon.
A fabber converts a digital computer file into a three- dimensional object by printing the object one two-dimensional layer at a time. Its raw material is a liquid polymer that hardens when a laser shines on it. The ...