Future Now
The IFTF Blog
The long-awaited future of manufacturing essay
My essay on rapid prototyping, personal fabrication, and the future of manufacturing has appeared in the latest issue of Samsung DigitAll Magazine.
Here's the opening:
The transformation of the factory from a vast machine into a creative, knowledge-intensive space is a development few could have seen. Are you ready for the next industrial revolution?
For many people, the word “factory" conjures up images of William Blake's “dark Satanic mills," or Charlie Chaplin's "Modern Times." They imagine landscapes of machinery, consuming men and raw materials, blackening skies and destroying lives. Whatever they produce, factories are inhuman and unnatural. Certainly such factories still exist; but companies that aren't trying to win the race to the bottom are taking different paths. The outsourcing movement, and more recent attention to product design, have eclipsed a quiet transformation of the factory from a vast machine into a more knowledge-intensive, even creative, space. In surprising ways, the factory is now following a path blazed by the design studio and modern office: it's becoming more knowledge-intensive and flexible, even as it grows more tightly connected to markets and suppliers.