At that price, it’s not a home device for the masses.
It’s good for a small garment designer to quickly prototype ideas, get feedback, and decide whether to mass-produce for market.
It really is quite amazing all of the applications they have found to use the 3D printers for. I’m still waiting for the food application though. Not sure many people will like it, especially at first.
bkmrk
It’s time for computer analysis to replace 90% of Doctors... that’s when the revolution wins... Knit a better society ...
Calling knitting with yarn 3D printing is quite a stretch. I’m very familiar with the industry. What they have is an apparently more sophisticated version of the old desktop knitting machines driven by a custom CAD program on the front end, which is good but trying to ride the 3D printing wave with this is misleading. $5,000 a pop isn’t going to create many home businesses, either, but I assume the price will come down if they successfully sell more of these.