Hope on the horizon: Digital FabricationMIT faculty and researchers offer their thoughts on potentially life-altering technologies that lie just around the corner. Neil GershenfeldDirector, Center for Bits and Atoms The most significant coming technology is the digitization of fabrication, the impact of which will be analogous to the digitization of communication and computation. Like those earlier revolutions, the consequence will be personalization, in this case, allowing anyone to make almost anything, anywhere. Coupled with digital video and digital libraries, this means that the formerly scarce resources (facilities, books, people) of advanced technical institutions (such as MIT) can become much more widely accessible. A version of this article appeared in MIT Tech Talk on May 21, 2008 (download PDF). |
TOOLSRELATEDHope on the horizon - As the economy appears to falter and as more Americans fear that the country is on the wrong track, the MIT News Office asked a collection of MIT researchers for their thoughts on the potentially life-altering technologies that lie just around the corner. 5/21/2008 More: Faculty More: Media Lab / media arts and sciences More: Technology and society |