Austin-based firm Icon Technologies, which has a $57 million NASA contract, laid off more than 100 of its 400 employees.
Learn how JIB and Sculpteo overcame the challenges of developing a device that integrates eye-tracking technology with ...
A medical technology company and a 3D printing provider partner up to empower individuals with severe disabilities to ...
Clinicians have successfully used custom-made 3D printed bone scaffolds, printed on-site at The University of Queensland, to ...
Prosthetics for children can be expensive because they need to adjust to their growth. Now 3-D printing is making them more affordable and flexible. Central Florida Public Media health reporter Joe ...
D printing rocket engines? It seems like these days you can 3D print just about anything. We’ve talked about 3D printed next-gen perovskite solar panels, houses, and the development of advanced ...
A battery that needs feeding instead of charging? This is exactly what Empa researchers have achieved with their 3D-printed, ...
Icon, an Austin startup focused on 3D-printing technology, is laying off more than 100 employees, according to a WARN notice ...
The company had 400 employees at last count, according to the Austin Business Journal's list of tech employers in the area — ...
The metamaterials method adopted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem engineers could provide a scalable, sustainable ...
Discover the Printess bioprinter: a low-cost, open-source solution for versatile 3D bioprinting in tissue engineering and ...