originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Printed Wine?A sci-fi twist on wine in a box. Ventner has written about printing dna as a means to replicate cells locally, but the idea of printing out a glass of Cros Parantoux for an evening's tipple would, I can't help but feel, drain the experience of romance.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
The star trek replicator machine even sooner than we thought. It will change the meaning of wine speaking of a place.
originally posted by Kay Bixler:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
The star trek replicator machine even sooner than we thought. It will change the meaning of wine speaking of a place.
My first thought as well. But Piccard always found the replicated wine inferior to the real wine he drank on earth.
originally posted by MLipton:
3-D printing is indeed a fascinating technology, but wholly inapt for the duplication of wine (good thing, too, else we'd have aspiring Rudys in every college dorm). What 3-D printing gives you is a high degree of spatial control in manufacturing. With the proper choice of materials , you probably could print a pizza or enchiladas. For a homogeneous mixture like wine, though, the magic is in the trace ingredients, all of which the printer would have to include. Far more scary to me is a Clark Smirh type analyzing a '78 Cros Parantoux and devising a formula by which it can be replicated.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
You, Mark, are just a big old wet blanket.
originally posted by MLipton:
Sleep deprivation has obviously messed with my sense of humor this morning.
Mark Lipton (yawn)