User Generated Product

We are moving from a world of User Generated Content to one filled with User Generated Product.  With the the introduction of (relatively) inexpensive 3d printers like Thing-O-Matic by MakerBot Industries and web-based tools to create 3D models and renderings, we now can design, create and print our own products; not digital content, but physical objects and products.  Prototyping and manufacturing can now be done in your office, with technology that is no different than what is used to lay out a newsletter or webpage.  Don’t know how to model or use 3D software? Thing-O-Matic has spawned its own online open source community, Thingiverse, filled with libraries, files, tutorials and software tweaks.

The current cost of a 3D printer may not be in everyone’s budget. But over time, prices will become more affordable and 3D printers be will in every home, much like an ink jet printer. Only with this printer you can print out and replace that broken part on the coffee maker, prototype a widget or your kid can design and print their own collectible action figures.

This paradigm shift will change not only how we design and create, but how we deploy our ideas. Our children will be the greatest beneficiaries from this new paradigm.

Kids will adapt and fully utilize technologies. See previous post – Kids and Robots

Kids and Robots

I am still amazed by the ease with which kids (namely my six year old son) can pick up technologies and figure out UI interactions. Over the past few months, Ruslan has been watching me design robots on My Robot Nation, a web-based service that allows you to configure, design and 3D print your robot. He asked if he could create his own robot for his birthday and so I sat him down in front of the computer. In the time I went to the kitchen to make him something to eat, he had already configured and designed his first robot. Like all things digital, the robot’s existence was ephemeral: Ruslan deleted his creation, wanting to create something better the next time.

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This led to his prototyping and designing on paper several different robots before he sat down again in front of the computer.  The movement between digital and traditional analog tools as means of expression and creation comes naturally to kids. Their movement is seamless and effortless; we’ve lost this skill as adults.

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This prototyping process repeated itself several times before Ruslan finally prototyped and created M.A.X.

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Not to be outdone, his younger sibling also prototyped a robot with his help.

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