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With Obama, the Smithsonian creates the first 3D image of a sitting president

by:Tuowei     2019-09-10
Can anyone give some students to the president?
The Smithsonian used a 3D printer to make the president\'s bust image in plastic resin.
This is a very cool 21 st century, perfect for the time when the president announced that we will do things like mapping the human brain.
The old way is this: The president has to find time for someone to cast a plaster on his face, which means he has to wait for the plaster to dry motionless.
This is an interesting image: the leader of the free world breathe through a straw in his nose.
But this is how George Washington and Abraham Lincoln were eliminated.
This new method is much faster and does not require a nasal Straw: A group of researchers at the University of Southern California use a type called \"light-
Then record him with a 3D camera and more scanners.
The whole process took five minutes.
Then they take the data out of the scan and so on!
Forty hours later, a statue was completed and no one even purchased any marble from Italy.
Cute, yes, but with these techniques, can we give the president some eyelids so that he doesn\'t give us a weird blank stare like half an eye
Is Mrs. Doza\'s project completed?
There is an explanation: scanning and resolution technology is actually a more advanced printing technology.
\"You can see the wrinkles and pores on his face,\" 3D imaging expert Vince Rossi told The Associated Press.
It seems a bit strange to render the president with plastic instead of marble;
His bankruptcy will have more in common with one of those large plantation owners you can buy at Home Depot, which may not be imagined by anyone, but it is a story of progress.
The bankruptcy was initially disclosed at the first White House manufacturer rally last week.
In any case, the president\'s plastic Bust image should be an interesting stop point for the National Portrait Gallery, where it is expected to live.
Whether the Smithsonian Institution will let you lift it up to see how light it is questionable, but once you are full, you can visit the First Lady\'s inaugural dress at the American Museum of History.
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