[rp-ml] Rapid Prototyping Mailing List, you are acknowledged for your contribution to this archive.

Jonathan Chertok chertok22 at gmail.com
Mon Jun 8 21:21:37 EEST 2020


personally i found it so impressive i thought it was above my pay grade to comment. very impressive and exciting. CONGRATULATIONS.

by the way that suitcase is legit. don’t let anyone tell you any different.

;  )

- jonathan 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jun 8, 2020, at 12:44 PM, Marshall Burns <ListMail2 at fabbers.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> Hi folks, I’m wondering if the e-mail below was received here because I haven’t seen any comment on it, even from people telling me how much you hate the word “fabbers,” or that the briefcase in the picture is ugly, or something?
>  
>  
>  
> From: Marshall Burns <ListMail2 at fabbers.com> 
> Sent: Saturday, June 6, 2020 15:50
> To: Rapid Prototyping Mailing List <rp-ml at rp-ml.org>
> Subject: [rp-ml] Rapid Prototyping Mailing List, you are acknowledged for your contribution to this archive.
>  
> Hi RP-ML,
> 
> Thank you to the many friends here who shared with me the greatest adventure of the 1990s. The acknowledgements of the archive announced below cite the Rapid Prototyping Mailing List in the category, "Industry colleagues," as well as, of course, many individuals from here in that and other categories. It is an honor to have been able to preserve this record of our work together.
> 
> News Release
> Ennex 3D Printing Archive Acquired by Penn State
> 
> Announcing:
> Fabbers: The Ennex Archive
> of 3D Printing Resources and Artifacts
> at the Eberly Family Special Collections Library
> Pennsylvania State University
> Ennex is pleased to announce that its archive of artifacts and resources from the earliest days of digital fabrication has been acquired by Pennsylvania State University. The archive was acquired in early 2018, and after two years at work curating its more than 20,000 items, Penn State has now published its finding aid for use by students, faculty, researchers, and the general public.
> 
> <~WRD3038.jpg>
> Briefcase used to show capabilities of digital fabrication in client meetings, 1994. (Enlarge)
> Athena Jackson, head of Special Collections for the university at the time of the acquisition, said “This is an exciting collection that fits the mission of our new 3D printing lab. Our faculty are excited that a collection like this exists. It answers the ‘why’ question – helping to explain where the technology comes from.”
> 
> Part of what attracted Penn State’s interest is the archive’s diverse contents, from fabricated artifacts to print resources to experimental materials from Ennex’s development laboratory. Matt Francis, former associate head of Special Collections, described the archive as “a cohesive ecosystem of the history of the technology.”
> 
> Ennex was represented in the acquisition by Arthur Fournier, a New York-based rare archives dealer with a special focus on transformative cultural movements and disruptive technologies. Fournier explained that he took on the project because the archive “provides a unique overview of the historical circumstances surrounding the advent of 3D printing, a technology with explosive market growth and tremendous potential for transforming the means of production in modern society.”
> 
> The archive includes 90 objects fabricated as far back as 1991 on the earliest 3D printers made by 20 companies or university laboratories in four countries using eight different processes, over 300 books and periodicals amounting to over 23,000 pages, including all the books and conference proceedings published on this technology in the 1990s, as well as every print issue of the original industry newsletter, the Rapid Prototyping Report, plus dozens of video tapes and over 500 photographic slides. Permission was obtained from a number of Ennex’s consulting clients to include the previously confidential reports produced for them. In return, Ennex has also released into the archive its own previously confidential documents, including business plans, machine designs, and customer presentations, in both paper and over 12,000 digital files.
> 
> This e-mail is an excerpt of the full news release. For more information, see:
> 
> The Fabbers Archive: The main page about the Archive on Ennex.com, with links to more resources about it.
> Ennex 3D Printing Archive Acquired by Penn State: News release announcing the availability of the archive at Pennsylvania State University.
> Introduction to the Fabbers Archive: Excerpt from offering catalog by Arthur Fournier.
> Highlights of the Archive: An illustrated guide to a selection of more than a hundred examples of some of the most interesting items in the archive.
> Guide to Ennex Corporation records, 1991-2005: Official finding aid for the archive at Pennsylvania State University.
> Acknowledgments: Ennex thanks many of the most important people who contributed to our work throughout the 1990s.
> Copyright © 2016..20, Ennex Research Corporation. All rights reserved.
> <~WRD3038.jpg>
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