Betting that printing a boat specifically is just a gimmick that they could use to say thinks like it taking months to build conventionally. The printer itself is more likely to be sold to major manufacturers for large scale prototyping of designs for things like cars or other similarly sized objects. But it could also serve as a fast way to create the framework for fiberglass/carbon fiber applications to build a seaworthy hull or any other application with similar production processes
@@Mastermindyoung14 capable metal printers start at somewhere around 250k or so, and you can make a thing that can shoot with hand tools worth 15$, and if you're really in a pinch, could probably get something off the street ready to go for not much more, so - yes, that gun printing thing was/is a scam
yesterday company had to print for me item, with 21.025 mm size corners. But they just rounded numbers to 20mm Result: if i put all items in one object, it wobles and leaks.. So very possible same issues can be with boat.
Pretty cool process still in it’s infancy, imagine the possibilities moving forward! This type of manufacturing will only get better and offer many types of design changes that will lead to exciting new ideas and products!
Patrick’s B-Rollz When they can layer diagonally with 2 needles at the same bit (almost like knitting needles)it will be structurally better. Plus they could get some of these nano materials in play with it too, if that 2 things happen then it has no boundaries
this technology should be easily applied to larger objects. I think that 3d-printed plastic/composited boats and civil houses should be main civil accomodating objects in water and land !
This could literally change the market in the creation of boats for the public. Being able to build a small boat for private use quickly would make things cheaper and the cost drop significantly. Large boat companies takes the idea and snuff's out the rest by still making the boat far to expensive and discourages the tech till they need it and snuffs out the competition that tries to create affordable boats for the public. So nothing changes. Welcome to reality.
If you jump over dozen of pacific waves with that one, it will sink like a stone. You do need a good reinforcement with fiberglass or carbon fiber. It's a good starting frame for a boat. It can be used on lakes , but not for stormy sea or ocean weather...
@@tigranohanyan3321 just add some more fiberglass lamination to the outside or just print it with printed in connectors for added inside support. Having an allready finished, load bearing shell speeds up manufacturing significantly
So exciting! This technology holds enormous potential for manufacturing things that are almost impossible to make now, and for manufacturing things much cheaper than we can now. In the future buildings, cars, planes and all manner of things will be made at a fraction of the current cost using it.
With that thickness of the wall If you jump over dozen of pacific waves, it will crush and sink like a stone. You do need a good reinforcement with fiberglass or carbon fiber. It's a good starting frame for a boat. It can be used on lakes , but not for stormy sea or ocean weather...
There are plenty of rotational moulded boats that are super heavy duty. You could fill the hull with special foam to provide extra structural stiffness and provide buyancy in case of hull breach. Or you could just print with more heavy duty walls and more stiffeners. The future of 3d printing may also give the option to print with fibres to make composites. This is just the first and an example. Not a production model. This seems to required none of the moulds or supports required for fibreglass. Fibreglass and mouldwork give some design limitations that we have become used to.
Too many people care about the boat details. The boat was a product demonstrator, it could have been a 25 foot long ducky, it was just to show how large this 3D printer can make a complicated form in a single pass.
Leonard Ross Jr They have them they are 1st trying to make duck liver as it’s super expensive and will show best return for their money originally. It’s like ha biological Petri dish and is fed with sugar and basically make live organs. Kind of need to redefine foods, and also would a vegetarian eat it (if the reason they are vegetarian is cause of cruelty to animal)?
The technology itself is already known, it is simply a large scale 3D printer. The real challenge is whether the product is equal in quality to a boat created with conventional methods.
exactly how sea worthy is a polymer boat made by simply layering the material in the manner they chose. i know a thing or two about structual strength for a boat. i layed enough fiberglas on my stepdads boat.
Curious about the amount of post-processing. I dunno if I would trust one of my prints to be water tight enough. They probably know what they're doing though
Your prints should easily be water tight at that scale, with our common small scale printers just use 3+ perimeter walls and there is basically no way that it wont be water tight.
Woooooow.😲 Now THAT is cool. Wish I’d heard about this sooner. Would’ve loved to have been at that unveiling. And I thought the metal 3-D printed bridge that’s been put in Amsterdam was impressive. 3-D Printers sure are on their way now. Next up, 3-D printed base on Mars.
Imagine in 20 years, 3d printed homes, cars and spaceships, this technology is changing the world as cars, flying machines and computers did in the 20th century. 21st century will be known as the future is now. Elon Musk will definitely use this technology in 10 years for Tesla and BFR 3.0
@@peterzingler6221 Try me, I know the cost of printer plastic. What I was pointing out was the design and production stage. A typical boat will take around 6 months to a year to design and produce. This one was printed in a weekend.
@@Yewtewba Yeah, the S curve. Everything is always too expensive when it first comes out and then the price drops dramatically after it becomes mainstream. I was kidding about actually buying one though. I don't really like boats all that much and I have a fear of the ocean.
Building a boat at that size by a conventional method might take months but it's not gonna have the same life in it. This new era of speeding up the manufacturing to sell more has proven to be garbage, less QC and more money and time in marketing strategies..
@Agent 69 True, they can also change the material Filament at the blink of an eye for different radar absorbing, strength or temperature resistance properties depending on the deployment of the force.
My question is, why as they were printing the boat, that they didn't subdivide the hull into small sections so if part of the hull was penetrated it would only fill a small part of the boat and it wouldn't sink?
Maybe just so they can make it / print it faster. But yes! With this technology, you could probably make some incredible light weight and durable hull designs, with many sections. I totally see there being fiberglass layer on top of it, as well. Or perhaps custom boat layouts that you could plan for yourself, for big boats. Like custom boat designer. Will be really cool!
Not if smart people refuse to buy machine made ai garbage like I do. Give me something that's been man made, checked over, certified and will last for decades.
@@jamesaustralian9829 well thats a very tiny population of the world the big part of the world want to save time and money so they will go for cheap as long as it looks presentable and can fulfill the purpose its intended for
@@heramann6916 I agree man, though I wonder if it might depend on the polymers being used. I wouldn't be surprised if some PET variants have less degradation from open ocean elements then traditional gel-coated fiberglass boats. But we already got a serious plastic problems in the oceans, I'd need a lot of concrete data to convince me that plastic boats won't effect the already high micro plastic to water ratio.
@@Frindleeguy : The "plastic" boats that you refer to are actually Fiberglass Reinforced Plastic, aka "FRP". That fiberglass is critically important for the strength of the boat. And is not present in the boat shown here. Thus all the concern about the material that is used in this boat shown here.
There's a new way to print (slice actually) coming soon that will mostly eliminate that stepped effect, and work with most existing printers. th-cam.com/video/km1lvuva5mI/w-d-xo.html
The term for that is "creep" One of the challenges with working with plastics. To avoid it, higher end products made of injection molded plastic use fillers such as glass fiber.
Let’s be clear this is automation, for anyone believing we are not losing jobs to automation pay attention. Houses are already being printed and soon they will actually be nice houses.
Yea, that's not happening. Kinda like when we lost telephone operators to automation. They found different jobs. The engineers, designers,technicians required to build the parts that are needed to also replace and more man power needed to feed the machines.... 30+ years in automation, 20+ companies I have never seen jobs go away from a new piece of equipment. They always need more staff to feed the machine and take product off of it. They need trained technicians to do PM's and keep parts on supply and repairs. It always takes more effort but you get higher efficiency in return Lets be real clear... Have you ever used a 3d printer? Do you know how hard it is to get a good benchy to print ? Now multiply that times the size of this thing and you understand the challenges
b t I work in artificial intelligence, you somehow don’t see the big picture, our computer can do everything better than a human in cognitive processes. When in the last 30 years have you seen anything close to google duplex, self driving cars and trucks, in store robots, self serve kiosks, etc. to date we have built tools to assist, minus the real robotics in manufacturing that replaced millions of jobs, but let so many in tact. I work with a company that is replacing mortgage agents and brokers, this is happening no matter what. Fees for stock trading has recently essentially disappeared which is hundreds of millions of dollars of revenues gone. 3d printing homes is 10 years before it begins to be mainstream which will not replace humans but reduce the need by 30% at least. Reduction and replacement are both happening at such an accelerated rate you should be concerned and keep an eye on it. I’ll give you a hint, look at the financials of Uber and Lyft and how they have clarified they can fix it. They will be replacing people with automation, 2 million people, if they do not do this within 2 years they will both BK or perhaps they will be allowed to keep burning cash from investors, in either case they will not be profitable until they make the conversion to auto taxi. I hope this helps.
@@idealbrandmarketing whos going to keep them computers running ? Whos going to code and upgrade the software and hardware. Who is going to engineer and manufacture the semiconductors and circuit boards? Who will replace them WHEN they fail? Do you know the most complex manufacturing known to man is the manufacture of microprocessors?? Computers may make it. Man keeps it running. Go back to coding your AI thinking you're going to solve the world's problems... THen go ahead and implement it and an army of people like me will make it happen and keep it working on a daily basis. Your code isn't going to replace bad gearbox's or sensors. Your code wont keep the machine fed and clear. people do
b t almost all your statements make my point, all of the semi conductors and circuit boards are being automated in fact I’ve seen 3d printed circuit boards. AWS has shut down thousands of server hubs and consolidated down to a much smaller staff. I’m not saying we are going to 0 I’m saying even if 10% of American don’t have jobs our country will have critical fail, so if you don’t believe that then I guess we will just have to wait and see.
@@idealbrandmarketing when the machines make machines then we have a problem. We can then check off all the Sara Connors in the phone book. ..This is my entire point that you completely missed. All you see is code. All I see are fucked up robots that need repair and parts...parts don't make themselves and equipment needs people to run them. Even 3D printers need operators and parts..the jobs always get offset. You're just going to need to develop the skills to be relevant...in 30 years when I retire..who knows
Should have printed a benchy
When I first heard of this, I was expecting it to be one. 😂
It is their Benchy, just a different boat.
Lmao!
lmao
I was gonna say that
This is so exciting. I look forward to seeing the advancement of this technology in the consumer boat market.
Questions:
What was the cost of materials?
Does the resin hold up to heat?
Does the resin hold up to UV rays?
@@tonycstech printing a gun isn't a marketing scam. Metal printers exist.
Betting that printing a boat specifically is just a gimmick that they could use to say thinks like it taking months to build conventionally. The printer itself is more likely to be sold to major manufacturers for large scale prototyping of designs for things like cars or other similarly sized objects. But it could also serve as a fast way to create the framework for fiberglass/carbon fiber applications to build a seaworthy hull or any other application with similar production processes
@@Mastermindyoung14 capable metal printers start at somewhere around 250k or so, and you can make a thing that can shoot with hand tools worth 15$, and if you're really in a pinch, could probably get something off the street ready to go for not much more, so - yes, that gun printing thing was/is a scam
yesterday company had to print for me item, with 21.025 mm size corners.
But they just rounded numbers to 20mm
Result: if i put all items in one object, it wobles and leaks.. So very possible same issues can be with boat.
@@Techburn997 look at the boats that were landing craft in WW2. Built in a day using $100 worth of plywood, timber and fixings.
No mention of the material. Or the suitability of the material for a boat hull. Fascinating. But more info needed.
The material is polymer.
@@thefuture1978 that's like saying the material is made of atoms. Doesn't mean much.
the material is a carbon abs developed by the university
Weird. It's like you've never used Google before...
@@Clintonbutnotbill LOL
Pretty cool process still in it’s infancy, imagine the possibilities moving forward! This type of manufacturing will only get better and offer many types of design changes that will lead to exciting new ideas and products!
Patrick’s B-Rollz
When they can layer diagonally with 2 needles at the same bit (almost like knitting needles)it will be structurally better. Plus they could get some of these nano materials in play with it too, if that 2 things happen then it has no boundaries
I think we're gonna need a bigger boat!
Won't be long till we see 3D printed air craft frames and wings made of carbon nanotube fibres and resin. Super strong and light.
U already have one, some F-35 parts are being printed by a 3d printer called Dragonfly which comes from a company called Nano dimmension. Cool stuff
@@hananagronov2249 F 35 is a lemon
this technology should be easily applied to larger objects. I think that 3d-printed plastic/composited boats and civil houses should be main civil accomodating objects in water and land !
And this is the future of manufacturing. Young people, take note.
NEXT UP: world’s first 3D Printed Boat becomes world’s first 3D Printed Single Use Submarine.
This could literally change the market in the creation of boats for the public. Being able to build a small boat for private use quickly would make things cheaper and the cost drop significantly. Large boat companies takes the idea and snuff's out the rest by still making the boat far to expensive and discourages the tech till they need it and snuffs out the competition that tries to create affordable boats for the public. So nothing changes. Welcome to reality.
If you jump over dozen of pacific waves with that one, it will sink like a stone. You do need a good reinforcement with fiberglass or carbon fiber. It's a good starting frame for a boat. It can be used on lakes , but not for stormy sea or ocean weather...
@@tigranohanyan3321 just add some more fiberglass lamination to the outside or just print it with printed in connectors for added inside support.
Having an allready finished, load bearing shell speeds up manufacturing significantly
Please just STFU. Do you print tinfoil hats all day?
Can we start recycling the millions of tons of plastic in the world into usable 3d printer material to create large useful project such as this?
I'll buy this printer and print a yacht but by pieces.
So exciting! This technology holds enormous potential for manufacturing things that are almost impossible to make now, and for manufacturing things much cheaper than we can now. In the future buildings, cars, planes and all manner of things will be made at a fraction of the current cost using it.
Wow , technology is amazing. I can't imagine what's next.
With that thickness of the wall If you jump over dozen of pacific waves, it will crush and sink like a stone. You do need a good reinforcement with fiberglass or carbon fiber. It's a good starting frame for a boat. It can be used on lakes , but not for stormy sea or ocean weather...
There are plenty of rotational moulded boats that are super heavy duty. You could fill the hull with special foam to provide extra structural stiffness and provide buyancy in case of hull breach.
Or you could just print with more heavy duty walls and more stiffeners. The future of 3d printing may also give the option to print with fibres to make composites.
This is just the first and an example. Not a production model.
This seems to required none of the moulds or supports required for fibreglass. Fibreglass and mouldwork give some design limitations that we have become used to.
Too many people care about the boat details. The boat was a product demonstrator, it could have been a 25 foot long ducky, it was just to show how large this 3D printer can make a complicated form in a single pass.
Just fantastic, hope it is strong enough to survive in water.
That layer height :0
I'm waiting for the food replicator :-))
Leonard Ross Jr
They have them they are 1st trying to make duck liver as it’s super expensive and will show best return for their money originally. It’s like ha biological Petri dish and is fed with sugar and basically make live organs.
Kind of need to redefine foods, and also would a vegetarian eat it (if the reason they are vegetarian is cause of cruelty to animal)?
If we put it on a boat then we have a boat that makes boats
lmao ur right
The technology itself is already known, it is simply a large scale 3D printer. The real challenge is whether the product is equal in quality to a boat created with conventional methods.
5000 pounds is absolutely massive for a 25 foot boat.
Hell yeah where's the application for operators. Y'all just made me fall in love with my lifetime!
That was amazing😮
This will significantly bring down the cost of personal boats in the decades to come.
Decades ,try days ahead my friend. A.I. won't just demolish a workforce but an industry as well. Your countdown has begun........................
The materials cost alone was over USD$40k
What Andrew Yang said, automation... btw this is cool af...
A Chinese factory will starting doing this in a week, break that record in two weeks.
The awkward moment when the video showed Guiness Book of World Records...
They should start making hundreds of these for Tsunamis and hurricane victims along the shores and at rescue facilities asap!!
Cant wait to have my first printed boat parked in the printed harbor close to my printed house. Cant wait to take my printed kids and my robot wife!
structural strength?
Strap a big Mercury outboard on the back and watch the cracks appear.
Largest solid item is definitely wrong. There are dozens of prototype houses printed by now. Cmon Guinness, do your research
How strong is it? Might crack between the melting.
the filament is carbon abs, so it's pretty strong
HI IM PHIL SWIFT AND...
boat: Sweating
You could print anything,,,a destroyer ,a plane,cars, , houses ....upscale to huge sizes . Its gonna be a huge disruptor
Plastik isn't cheap
@@peterzingler6221 plastic isnt the only material you can print, they have concrete printers to ....pretty amazing
exactly how sea worthy is a polymer boat made by simply layering the material in the manner they chose. i know a thing or two about structual strength for a boat. i layed enough fiberglas on my stepdads boat.
The future of spacecraft Construction!
I agree! Imagine 3d printing and assembling spacecrafts from asteroids in the future
@@icarus387 I'm thinking in your garage/work shop.
Please print “3D girlfriend”.
With no voice
All ready exist they are called “sex dolls”
What’s the material used. Hope it’s strong enough to stand up in heavy seas
It's a boat not a ship lol it's meant for a river or lake
Things are getting interesting...
What did u just say? Ikr
Curious about the amount of post-processing. I dunno if I would trust one of my prints to be water tight enough.
They probably know what they're doing though
Your prints should easily be water tight at that scale, with our common small scale printers just use 3+ perimeter walls and there is basically no way that it wont be water tight.
Me:Maybe cheap homes next
Real estate: yea you wish
Eddy Alvarez It’s already been done. Seriously, I saw a video on it before.
Search for *contour crafting* : printing concrete structures has been a thing for several years now.
Yes but I bet it isn't cheap
The world is just so amazing.
I loved this technology
Dope Mcgoats!
they couldnt make it in california because plastic is illegal
Woooooow.😲 Now THAT is cool. Wish I’d heard about this sooner. Would’ve loved to have been at that unveiling. And I thought the metal 3-D printed bridge that’s been put in Amsterdam was impressive. 3-D Printers sure are on their way now. Next up, 3-D printed base on Mars.
Imagine in 20 years, 3d printed homes, cars and spaceships, this technology is changing the world as cars, flying machines and computers did in the 20th century.
21st century will be known as the future is now.
Elon Musk will definitely use this technology in 10 years for Tesla and BFR 3.0
Can i get stl file for my ender 😂
jajaja.
Regards.
I think you might need a slightly bigger nozzle and make sure to adjust your layer heights - just look at 1:03!
@@confuded damn, frickin 3cm layer height
Future: Hello massive unemployment ;)
Automation is inevitable.
@@putogonzalez9592 it is cause we have been told / teached it is...
Yang2020.com
How much heavier than a traditional GRP build? Somebody run the numbers, I can't be bothered to research!
Have to make a durability test.
Don't download music, you wouldn't download a car would you?
No but I'd download a freaking boat!!
Now let’s see it in action
i think i should buy a 3d printing right now!!!
Is it made out of paper
yeah great - it's obviously environmentally friendly isn't it. Let's print some aircraft carrier
This should significantly lower the costs of boats in production.
What? You don't have any idea what that amount of plastic is costing lol
@@peterzingler6221 Try me, I know the cost of printer plastic. What I was pointing out was the design and production stage. A typical boat will take around 6 months to a year to design and produce. This one was printed in a weekend.
@@peterzingler6221 what kind of mental gymnastic are you employing to convince yourself that plastic is more expensive than metal?
Does it float ?
they missed an opportunity here to print a 3DBenchy
Months? no, probably would take couple of weeks.
They were talking about prototype boats.
@@portlandcarlover Still only weeks, if not less.
Next project : 3D printed a 3d printer so u have 2 big 3d printer
there is 3d printers that can make apprtment complexes.
Lets take all the plastic from the ocean and print a plastic city for the homeless 🙃
@@johnlockesghost5592 putting the cart before the horse
Maybe just print a bunch of boats and send the homeless off into the middle of the ocean?
@@Mastermindyoung14 : The cart before the horse might work if it is a 3D printed cart.
looks like steem and chainlink and hive logos all over that
It’s a big 3D novelty shelf item or can you take that on the water🚤🌊
Yeah, but how seaworthy is it? I want to see how it handles tsunami waves and Great White shark attacks before I buy one. lol
I recommend you buy after the price drops below several million dollars
@@Yewtewba Yeah, the S curve. Everything is always too expensive when it first comes out and then the price drops dramatically after it becomes mainstream. I was kidding about actually buying one though. I don't really like boats all that much and I have a fear of the ocean.
And I thought my 3d printer was the best lol
Is it aluminum ?
I'm just waiting for 3d printed houses
Dexter Sullen 'TRUTH' what country are you in?
But can It 3D print me a cheeseburger eh!? Lol
Building a boat at that size by a conventional method might take months but it's not gonna have the same life in it. This new era of speeding up the manufacturing to sell more has proven to be garbage, less QC and more money and time in marketing strategies..
This has to be an absolute bonus for the Military, Mass produced cheap attack craft that can just be dumped after use.
@Agent 69 True, they can also change the material Filament at the blink of an eye for different radar absorbing, strength or temperature resistance properties depending on the deployment of the force.
Does it print without support ?
My question is, why as they were printing the boat, that they didn't subdivide the hull into small sections so if part of the hull was penetrated it would only fill a small part of the boat and it wouldn't sink?
Maybe just so they can make it / print it faster. But yes! With this technology, you could probably make some incredible light weight and durable hull designs, with many sections. I totally see there being fiberglass layer on top of it, as well. Or perhaps custom boat layouts that you could plan for yourself, for big boats. Like custom boat designer. Will be really cool!
oh yea. the next business. printing boats, cars, scooters 😂 fk next Titanic.
Now make one 3D printer with 3D printer
Already doable, look on Thingverse
Next project houses and buildings.
Did they launch the boat.
This is definitely game changer alot of people will loose jobs
Not if smart people refuse to buy machine made ai garbage like I do. Give me something that's been man made, checked over, certified and will last for decades.
@@jamesaustralian9829 well thats a very tiny population of the world the big part of the world want to save time and money so they will go for cheap as long as it looks presentable and can fulfill the purpose its intended for
How can a hollow plastic ship weigh 5,000 pounds?
Who allowed a very deceptive popup add to be associated with this link??
I want to see how this plastic boat will the stress of the open seas.
"Plastic" boats from well over 50 years ago are still bought and sold today, some for millions still.
@@heramann6916 I agree man, though I wonder if it might depend on the polymers being used. I wouldn't be surprised if some PET variants have less degradation from open ocean elements then traditional gel-coated fiberglass boats. But we already got a serious plastic problems in the oceans, I'd need a lot of concrete data to convince me that plastic boats won't effect the already high micro plastic to water ratio.
@@heramann6916 do you know the exact chemical formula of the composite they used?
@@heramann6916 Haha, you're so cute. Still in 2003.
@@Frindleeguy : The "plastic" boats that you refer to are actually Fiberglass Reinforced Plastic, aka "FRP". That fiberglass is critically important for the strength of the boat. And is not present in the boat shown here. Thus all the concern about the material that is used in this boat shown here.
Aahhh, my next printer xD
I'm guessing the hull needs some work before it's actually streamlined. Now it has to have rough edges, and those will hurt proper speeds on water.
There's a new way to print (slice actually) coming soon that will mostly eliminate that stepped effect, and work with most existing printers.
th-cam.com/video/km1lvuva5mI/w-d-xo.html
Nice well done
Should have printed some waifu anime girls that tall.
I was gonna say, print me a girlfriend, but you beat me to it lol
BRAVO....
China will copy this ASAP
Sweet as, bro!
I wonder how it’s gonna hold up during hot temperatures. I had a few things 3D printed and left it in my car and it started to flex
js arne yeah that’s common with PLA plastic, you can use other materials to print though
The term for that is "creep"
One of the challenges with working with plastics. To avoid it, higher end products made of injection molded plastic use fillers such as glass fiber.
The challenge now is make it with some kind of metals.
Hola, que material es?
Let’s be clear this is automation, for anyone believing we are not losing jobs to automation pay attention. Houses are already being printed and soon they will actually be nice houses.
Yea, that's not happening. Kinda like when we lost telephone operators to automation. They found different jobs. The engineers, designers,technicians required to build the parts that are needed to also replace and more man power needed to feed the machines.... 30+ years in automation, 20+ companies I have never seen jobs go away from a new piece of equipment. They always need more staff to feed the machine and take product off of it. They need trained technicians to do PM's and keep parts on supply and repairs. It always takes more effort but you get higher efficiency in return
Lets be real clear... Have you ever used a 3d printer? Do you know how hard it is to get a good benchy to print ? Now multiply that times the size of this thing and you understand the challenges
b t I work in artificial intelligence, you somehow don’t see the big picture, our computer can do everything better than a human in cognitive processes. When in the last 30 years have you seen anything close to google duplex, self driving cars and trucks, in store robots, self serve kiosks, etc. to date we have built tools to assist, minus the real robotics in manufacturing that replaced millions of jobs, but let so many in tact. I work with a company that is replacing mortgage agents and brokers, this is happening no matter what. Fees for stock trading has recently essentially disappeared which is hundreds of millions of dollars of revenues gone. 3d printing homes is 10 years before it begins to be mainstream which will not replace humans but reduce the need by 30% at least. Reduction and replacement are both happening at such an accelerated rate you should be concerned and keep an eye on it.
I’ll give you a hint, look at the financials of Uber and Lyft and how they have clarified they can fix it. They will be replacing people with automation, 2 million people, if they do not do this within 2 years they will both BK or perhaps they will be allowed to keep burning cash from investors, in either case they will not be profitable until they make the conversion to auto taxi.
I hope this helps.
@@idealbrandmarketing whos going to keep them computers running ? Whos going to code and upgrade the software and hardware. Who is going to engineer and manufacture the semiconductors and circuit boards? Who will replace them WHEN they fail? Do you know the most complex manufacturing known to man is the manufacture of microprocessors?? Computers may make it. Man keeps it running.
Go back to coding your AI thinking you're going to solve the world's problems...
THen go ahead and implement it and an army of people like me will make it happen and keep it working on a daily basis. Your code isn't going to replace bad gearbox's or sensors. Your code wont keep the machine fed and clear. people do
b t almost all your statements make my point, all of the semi conductors and circuit boards are being automated in fact I’ve seen 3d printed circuit boards. AWS has shut down thousands of server hubs and consolidated down to a much smaller staff. I’m not saying we are going to 0 I’m saying even if 10% of American don’t have jobs our country will have critical fail, so if you don’t believe that then I guess we will just have to wait and see.
@@idealbrandmarketing when the machines make machines then we have a problem. We can then check off all the Sara Connors in the phone book. ..This is my entire point that you completely missed. All you see is code. All I see are fucked up robots that need repair and parts...parts don't make themselves and equipment needs people to run them. Even 3D printers need operators and parts..the jobs always get offset. You're just going to need to develop the skills to be relevant...in 30 years when I retire..who knows
Can it sail? What material it was constructed from?
You bet it will be able to sail and it's made of polymer buddy.
Where is the testing? Does it even work?
Looks like a boat...didn’t see it in the water.
next 3D printed plane!
That's how ets make their crafts 🤘 But with no seams!