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The company says the fish is the first of its kind in the world, and they’re aiming to commercialize the 3D bioprinter used to create it. Steakholder Foods didn’t produce the fish cells it used to ...
An Israeli firm has created the first ever 3D bio-printed grouper — which is ready to cook upon “printing.” Steakholder Foods has created a non-traditional fish for eating, and it will not ...
3D bioprinting is relatively common for many cultivated meat and fish companies, but Steakholder Foods’ can print at an industrial scale, using conveyor belts and multiple print heads, which ...
Forget your hook, line and sinker. An Israeli foodtech company says it has 3D printed the first ever ready-to-cook fish fillet using animal cells cultivated and grown in a laboratory.
A professor at UW wants to catch 'em all, but he isn't content with just 700 Pokemon. His ambitions are a little loftier, aiming to collect and scan all 25,000 known species of fish, to create 3D ...
So far there are somewhere north of 500 species of fish scanned, which you can browse here at the Open Science Framework. All the files are the full resolution and free to download.
With the heads and tails of the micro-fish configured for propulsion, the bodies can be used to deliver other substances. 3D Printed Micro-Fish Robots May Soon Be Used To Fight Disease.
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