Tony Stark Delivers Real 3D-Printed Bionic Arm To 7-Year Old Iron Man Fan
MojoKid writes "Here's your feel-good story for Thursday afternoon. Albert Manero, who has a degree in Aerospace engineering from the University of Central Florida and is currently pursuing a doctorate in Mechanical Engineering, has made it a point to serve others. He helped found Limbitless Solutions, a volunteer foundation that uses 3D printer technology to build bionic arms for children that have either lost a limb, or were born with partially developed limbs. Seven-year-old Alex fits into the latter category and Manero, with the help of the Microsoft OneNote Collective Project, has been hard at work to develop a new 3D-printed bionic arm for him. And once the project was finished, Microsoft and Manero were able to find the most "qualified" person on the planet to deliver the arm to Alex: Tony Stark AKA Iron Man Robert Downey Jr. Awesomeness ensues, of course.
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IRON MAN !!
Robert Downey Jr. is far less of a jerk than he plays on screen. Way to go, to make this kid's dream come true.
Albert Manero; kudos for a good job.
Robert Downey Jr. : SuperHero is just a job. Being way cool is the real deal.
Or Luddite arm with Luddite motors and PCBs and Luddite batteries with 3D printed cowling?
Only Americans will tell you how much work for charity they are doing anonymously.
Great story, great guys, but what about that glitch?
The super-hero's robotic arm was faulty.
That's... irony, I guess.
Someone has beef with 3D printers I see.
Albert Manero at his team at UCF are doing a great job. One bit I want to add: the community that he's working in is e-NABLE ( http://www.enablingthefuture.o... ). The "one note" stuff is just a Microsoft sponsorship deal, done after-the-fact, and while their financial and marketing sponsorship of Albert's work is awesome (his work takes time and money, even if he gives the results away for free), it would be better to credit the actual community that contributed to the design, not the made up community that MS created for marketing spin. In particular, the hand used in the Limitless design is Flexy Hand (http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:242639) by Gyrobot, who's a very cool guy who deserves some credit for his work.
Enable 3D printed prosthetics!
I'm not missing any limbs, and I am thankful for that, however, when I saw this post, the first thing I thought of was how cool it would be if.
I love reading the comments on stories like this. Like the "this is the American exceptionalism that really works." one.
Because other countries have functioning healthcare systems where personal charity and number of facebook likes does not determine whether or not you get a prosthetic limb.
Said it all. I"m 49 years old, and if RDJ had stopped by to reprise his role as Tony Stark to bring ME a prosthetic limb, I doubt I coulda stayed still. :) Giving a little kid with a birth defect a working arm like that... well you accumulate karma points pretty damn fast doing stuff like that.
If I sound stupid, it's not me talking....
Innit
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