Finally, someone has come up with a productive use of 3D printers. The plastic somethings that they have been creating from these machines are not really giving that much justice to 3D printing and its promises of being of great use to us.
This will definitely be a great developments for those who have an inexplicable love for sweets.
British taxpayers will no doubt be tickled to know that the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, the UK government’s leading funding agency for research and training in engineering and the physical sciences, has produced this video about chocolate printing.
As the scientists explain, consumers who download a piece of software will easily be able to sketch the kind of chocolate they’d like to make. Then they can send the 3D CAD file to a machine in a local shop and pick up their chocolate 10 minutes later.
Now, getting your own daily dose of chocolate can simply be downloaded and printed, sparing you the big feat of going to the store to get it in the exact kind that you want.
Of course, as most of us probably know, printing will always not go as smoothly as it is advertised. Sometimes, it will have to experience jams. And in the case of making chocolate, it can get pretty messy.


In order for the joints to move smoothly,