Author Topic: 3D-printed candy  (Read 1480 times)

So this company called The Sugar Lab 3D prints candy.



I wonder how 3D printing food will affect cooking in the future.
I wonder if jobs as cook or even as fastfood employee will get replaced by machines in the future.

might as well steamroll the industry with robots and leave humans in the dust

later they'll just rebel and we can film cool live action robot invasion movies

"candy" I've never seen cube candies besides caramel.


Are they edible?
Yeah they're sugar coated and all. It's literally 3D printed food.

only takes 2 hours to print one

"candy" I've never seen cube candies besides caramel.
contrary to popular belief, candy does not need to have one of few preselected shapes to qualify as candy.

might as well steamroll the industry with robots and leave humans in the dust

later they'll just rebel and we can film cool live action robot invasion movies
Just make bullets with a depleted uranium tip with steel core that has been made into a permanent magnet. This should forget them all up good.

wtf why make a website if i can't funnel all of my money from my offshore accounts to them for candy from it

the little rainbow shapes make me happy, i want a thousand of em

wonder if those printers ever run out of ink

j want a candy carrot printer

You know technically we have already bee doing this. The materials used to make the candy are heated and turned into liquid or into a gooey state and then injected into molds to cool off.

Same old candy with the same old taste turned into cool shapes. Kind of like dipping dots:

Basically ice cream turned into small pellets.