Interesting Engineering on MSN
US student reinvents 300-year-old cello with 3D printing, lands deal on Shark Tank
Yale engineers have reinvented the cello with 3D printing and carbon fiber, making world-class sound more affordable and ...
String instruments made with traditional woodworking are expensive. There must be a more affordable way to achieve sound quality. The solution is 3D printing.
What if you could hold the past in your hands, only reimagined for the present? The Commodore 64, a symbol of 1980s computing ...
The emergence of 3D printing, otherwise known as additive manufacturing, is having a growing influence on the bike industry, particularly ...
The Space Race on MSN
Why China’s moon missions are moving faster than anyone expected
China’s lunar program isn’t a one-off stunt - it’s a step-by-step campaign that keeps raising the stakes. After mastering ...
The 2025 Greenovate Awards has marked a decade of student-driven sustainability innovation for the built environment. Created in 2015 by Growthpoint Properties (JSE: GRT) in partnership with the Green ...
Musculoskeletal disorders and injuries are a leading cause of disability worldwide, severely affecting quality of life and creating a significant ...
Bizcommunity on MSN
Young talent from university campuses across SA rise to the challenge at the Greenovate Awards
The 2025 Greenovate Awards marked a decade of student-driven sustainability innovation for the built environment. Created in 2015 by Growthpoint Properties (JSE: GRT) in partnership with the Green ...
According to Towards Chemical and Materials Consulting ™, The global 3D printing materials market size was estimated to be ...
The tiny opaque tube that Yonghui Ding holds up to the light in his laboratory looks like a bit of debris from a dismantled ...
ZME Science on MSN
Scientists Turned a Mosquito’s Bloodsucking Mouth Into a Tiny High Resolution 3D Printer
Under a microscope, the mosquito’s proboscis looks like a tiny, precision tool. Thin, flexible, and sharp, it slips through ...
Researchers from Skoltech and Harbin Institute of Technology have devised and tested a new mechanism for joining together the composite parts that make up bridges, the cooling towers of power stations ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results