MIT Puts Minecraft Creations in the Palm of Your Hand
With just a simple programming script and a 3D printer, Minecraft creations can become physical objects.
How awesome would it be if you could build something in Minecraft, and later hold a model of it in the palm of your hand? Thanks to two students at the MIT Media Lab, now you can.
Cody Sumter and Jason Boggess have put together a project called Minecraft.Print() [http://minecraftprint.com/] that allows you to plop down a house or a car or a duck in Minecraft and save it as a file that can be read by a 3D printer. Once you get that file, technically anything Minecraft can become a real world model.
It works in a fairly simple manner. Players cordon off a 3D area in Minecraft that they wish to print with a specific combination of blocks. This combination doesn't naturally occur in Minecraft, so you won't end up printing the entire world. Once the area is set, a Python [http://www.python.org/] script generates a file that's standard for 3D printers.
Sumter and Boggess demonstrate their project by creating a Starship Enterprise [http://www.amazon.com/Portal-2-Pc/dp/B002I0JIQW/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1310226897&sr=8-3] from Star Trek.
I'm sure everyone is thinking of the wonders they'd make with Minecraft.Print(), but I just want a stable of Minecraft pigs myself. Sumter and Boggess's website for the project can be found here [http://minecraftprint.com/]
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With just a simple programming script and a 3D printer, Minecraft creations can become physical objects.
How awesome would it be if you could build something in Minecraft, and later hold a model of it in the palm of your hand? Thanks to two students at the MIT Media Lab, now you can.
Cody Sumter and Jason Boggess have put together a project called Minecraft.Print() [http://minecraftprint.com/] that allows you to plop down a house or a car or a duck in Minecraft and save it as a file that can be read by a 3D printer. Once you get that file, technically anything Minecraft can become a real world model.
It works in a fairly simple manner. Players cordon off a 3D area in Minecraft that they wish to print with a specific combination of blocks. This combination doesn't naturally occur in Minecraft, so you won't end up printing the entire world. Once the area is set, a Python [http://www.python.org/] script generates a file that's standard for 3D printers.
Sumter and Boggess demonstrate their project by creating a Starship Enterprise [http://www.amazon.com/Portal-2-Pc/dp/B002I0JIQW/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1310226897&sr=8-3] from Star Trek.
I'm sure everyone is thinking of the wonders they'd make with Minecraft.Print(), but I just want a stable of Minecraft pigs myself. Sumter and Boggess's website for the project can be found here [http://minecraftprint.com/]
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