A MOSQUITO'S FEEDING TUBE JUST BECAME THE WORLD'S MOST PRECISE 3D PRINTER NOZZLE.
Pause at 0:16. That's where lines finer than a grain of sand start appearing on screen โ printed through a hollow tube pulled straight from an insect.
The tube alone was too fragile to use. Coated in resin for strength. Fused to a needle tip. Built into a custom printer nobody sells off the shelf.
Structures no commercial nozzle could ever produce. Borrowed from an insect's own anatomy.
This is the extreme edge of what 3D printing can do.
The extreme middle is where the money actually is.
A $399 Bambu P1S will never print anything close to this precision. It doesn't need to. It prints a $45 coaster with a $2.50 material cost and a 90% margin, all day, every day.
Nobody's getting rich engineering nozzles out of mosquitoes. People are getting rich printing what a customer will actually pay for.
@investwithsheng Do yourself a favor. Use grok and prompt the following:
"Re: $BULL Tell me about the percentage and amount of locked up spac shares that were just released. Also tell me how many shares does $BULL have on a shelf offering."
@sovereignsense Insiders from the SPAC have been restricted from selling 445 million shares until now (roughly but let's just say a f-ton). Plus $BULL has 1 billion shares on a shelf. They can sell those as well. The chips will break in this kind of dip.