Printable Clothing

Printable Clothing

Top of Mind with Julie Rose

Comfort Women, Printable Clothes, Challenger Whistleblower

Episode: Comfort Women, Printable Clothes, Challenger Whistleblower

  • Jan 7, 2016 10:00 pm
  • 11:56 mins

Guest: Danit Peleg, Recent Graduate from Shenkar College in Isreal, Creator of the first 3D-printed fashion collection using home printers, Adviser for designers and fashion houses on new technologies  How cool would it be if you could design an outfit on your home computer, click a button, and have it pop right out on a 3D printer – perfectly tailored to your measurements?  It’s not as futuristic as it sounds.

Other Segments

Electrical Stimulation on Bacterial Infections

14m

Guests: Haluk Beyenal, PhD, Professor in WSU’s Gene and Linda Voiland School of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering; Doug Call, PhD, Professor of Molecular Epidemiology in the Paul G. Allen School for Global Animal Health at Washington State  According to the CDC, at least two million infections and 23,000 deaths are the result of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Hospitals now see “superbugs” that are resistant to so many drugs they’re nearly invincible and lead to almost certain death if they make it to a patient’s blood stream.  The race is on to create new antibiotics, yes. But also to come up with treatments that don’t involve drugs the bacteria can develop a resistance to. How about electricity?

Guests: Haluk Beyenal, PhD, Professor in WSU’s Gene and Linda Voiland School of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering; Doug Call, PhD, Professor of Molecular Epidemiology in the Paul G. Allen School for Global Animal Health at Washington State  According to the CDC, at least two million infections and 23,000 deaths are the result of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Hospitals now see “superbugs” that are resistant to so many drugs they’re nearly invincible and lead to almost certain death if they make it to a patient’s blood stream.  The race is on to create new antibiotics, yes. But also to come up with treatments that don’t involve drugs the bacteria can develop a resistance to. How about electricity?