Showing posts with label 3D-Printer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3D-Printer. Show all posts

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Suba Tech Trading LLC`16

#SubaTechTrading.
#RoboticMachine.
Robotic Machine Cnc Router.  
Students, researchers and staff of the University of Sydney will showcase the potential of robotics in architecture and design applications at a new exhibition for Sydney Design 2015.
Hosted by the Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning, University of Sydney, the four-dayexhibition, Fabricating Futures: Robots. Research. Design. will explore the latest trends in robotics and digital technology that are driving innovation.
Robots and digital fabrication are increasingly being used in exciting new ways in the fields of architecture and design, presenting great prospects for the future of these creative industries.
The University’s fabrication facilities in the Design, Modelling and Fabrication Lab (DMaF Lab), one of the most advanced labs of any architecture and design school in Australia, will be a focal point of the four-day event. Fabricating Futures will be exhibited throughout the DMaF Lab, alongside working laser cutters, CNC routers and 3D printers that are used to fabricate models, prototypes and full-scale projects.
Marjo Niemelä, Fabricating Futures curator and Manager of the DMaF Lab at the University of Sydney explained that their facilities will be opened during the exhibition to allow visitors to see up close the creative-making process in action, which is still very much at the heart of architecture and design teaching.
The exhibition features the work of more than one hundred postgraduate students from the Master of Architecture and Master of Interaction Design and Electronic Arts programs, as well as researchers in architecture, architectural science and interaction design that are experimenting with new ideas and using pioneering technology.
Hundreds of complex architectural models, digitally-developed interactive prototypes, lighting and object designs, robotic ideas and innovative research will be on show, providing a glimpse of current ideas and industry potential.
A Sydney Ideas discussion panel facilitated by television and radio presenter Fenella Kernebone on Saturday 12 September, will hear four leading robotic experts – Dr Dagmar Reinhardt (University of Sydney), Marjo Niemelä (University of Sydney), Dr Matthias Haeusler (University of NSW) and Associate Professor Jon McCormack (Monash University) – discuss the current challenges of integrating robotics into architecture and design, the latest advances and industry outlook.
Fabricating Futures is a precursor event to the international ROB|Arch 2016 conference that will be hosted by the University of Sydney in March next year.
Fabricating Futures: Robots. Research. Design. will be held 10-13 September at the Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning, Wilkinson Building, 148 City Road, University of Sydney.
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Website: www.subauae.com
Post by: Irfan Khan

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Suba Tech Trading LLC

Campaign Educating Youth About Manufacturing.

Education Experience 
officials and manufacturers are working together to educate students about high-demand careers in skilled labor.
This week, a local council of manufacturers teamed with the Campaign County Family YMCA to hold the first Inventors Camp, which teaches children more about skilled trades. The camp culminated at the Campaign County Fair Friday as young students toured the Ohio Hi-Point Career Center Fab Lab and showed off their inventions to manufacturers.
Hi-Point’s Fab Lab shows students different industrial tools such as a CNC router and a 3-D printer. The council also has a showcase table in the Mercantile Building, allowing companies to present their work to residents, said Marcia Bailey, economic development director for the Campaign Economic Partnership.
Campaign County saw a roughly 23 percent increase in manufacturing jobs between 2011 and 2013, but a lack of skilled workers has made it tough to fill those positions, officials say. Nationally, more than 3.5 million manufacturing jobs will be needed over the next 10 years, but as many as 2 million may go unfilled due to the ongoing skills gap, according to a recent study from Deloitte and the Manufacturing Institute.
Hi-Point and Triad High School recently formed a partnership to create a manufacturing program, which will teach courses such as basic manufacturing principles, welding and robotics. The program already has about 80 students enrolled, Bailey said.
The YMCA program is reaching an even younger group of students, ages 6 through 13, Bailey said. The key is teaching children and their families about the technology involved, she added.
“These careers exist in your own backyard, plus you can get further training, go further into the companies,” Bailey said.
The effort is needed for the future, said Jill O’Neal, Human Resource and Safety Manager at Urbana-based Weidmann Electrical Technology, Inc., which produces insulation materials for electrical transformers. The company has had trouble recently filling skilled labor positions, O’Neal said.
“It’s definitely a challenge,” she said. “It gets harder and harder every day.”
Students typically want to pursue four-year degrees rather than a skilled trade, O’Neal said. But statistics show that within 10 years over 50 percent of the Campaign County workforce will be unqualified to fill the skilled trade gap.
“We’re trying to get ahead of that now and get students aware of opportunities at junior high and high school,” she said. “Hopefully, they’ll be available within four to six years.”
Students’ participation in activities like the YMCA Inventors Camp will only improve that effort, O’Neal said. Honda has had success with a similar model in Union County, she added.

“There’s some proof behind it already (at Honda),” O’Neal said. “We’d like to jump on it an be a part of it.”
Page Source: http://goo.gl/lGGCkX
post by: Irfan khan