TechFinancials on MSN
What is LiDAR technology & its use cases
LiDAR technology addresses limitations, such as slow capture times, limited range, and indoor-only constraints, of older methods, thanks to LiDAR’s automation, efficiency, and the ability to capture a ...
Association of paleopalynological data from the Nanxiong Basin, south China, and late Paleocene niche expansion in endemic Asian fossil mammals.
Kiri Engine’s free Mesh Wrap add-on for Blender automates wrapping and scattering of 3D-scanned terrains onto base meshes for faster environment builds.
Tangible data visualizations are physical objects that represent data. Think of a sculpture made from LEGOs showing how busy a project is, or a knitted pattern representing work hours. You can touch ...
With built-in computing, all you need is a web browser to access the controls of this portable 3D scanner, and I love the ease of use ...
Digital Camera World on MSN
Revopoint Range 2 review: I didn't want to scan anything big before, but this makes me want to scan everything!
Aimed at larger-scale scanning, the Range 2 from Revopoint is the ideal solution for automotive, VFX, and archival projects ...
As 3D scanning moves from labs to real-world production and inspection sites, application scenarios have become more diverse and demanding. Users increasingly need lighter, more flexible devices that ...
Earlier this month, we checked the specifications and did an unboxing of the Sermoon S1 high-end 3D scanner with support for blue laser and infrared scanning. I had some concerns about my host ...
If you find 3D printers to be just a little too coldly futuristic, this contraption might be more to your liking. Scientists from Cornell University have created a machine that knits solid 3D objects ...
Decades of research has viewed DNA as a sequence-based instruction manual; yet every cell in the body shares the same genes – so where is the language that writes the memory of cell identities?
Can you drill a hole in a cube that an identical cube could fall through? Prince Rupert of the Rhine first asked this question in the 17th century, and he soon found out the answer is yes. One can ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results