It’s the break from a university lecture and you are sitting with a nice coffee just outside your classroom. Among the vending machines you see one with a tablet on and a blue light that catches your attention. But it doesn’t sell drinks, chocolate bars or crisps. It’s a 3D printer that is tirelessly working on a plastic prototype. You already know that this is not science fiction, it really does exist: it’s called Dreambox, and you can find it in the corridors of the University of California at Berkeley.
The idea came from three students that met for the first time in 2011 during a course of mobile application development at UC Berkeley. The three founders of Dreambox – David Pastewka, Richard Berwick and Will Drevno – wanted to set up an innovative start-up that would thrive at university. Their passion for 3D printing added to the long waiting lists to access digital manufacturing laboratories, led the young inventors to come up with a revolutionary solution.
Dreambox is a vending machine for ABS plastic objects printed in 3D with a MakerBot 1. The user can select the object to be printed from an internal catalogue or upload his/her own personalised template from a USB memory stick. Currently, the cost for each printed item ranges from USD 2 to 15. Once you upload the file to print, the MakerBot adds it to the print queue.
In the meantime you can go for a walk or go back to your lecture: once finished printing, the machine pushes the object into a drawer that is electronically locked. Then, Dreambox sends you a text message with a code. You just need to type the code on the control tablet and within a few seconds your drawer is unlocked and you can collect your 3D printed object.
Staff at Make Magazine could not resist the temptation and went to have a look at Dreambox. Have a look at this video for some more detail. The three creators are now part of Skydeck Berkeley, an incubator-accelerator programme from autumn 2012. If these guys fulfil their plans, 3D printing will become as easy as drinking a glass of water.



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