News
Printers have come a long way since the printing press was first invented by Johannes Gutenberg in 1436 in . 3D printers - printers which can build solid, three-dimensional objects out of a variety of materials - are today providing solutions to many problems. Sam and Neil look at the role 3D printers are playing in medicine, and they teach you some related vocabulary as well.
What was the oldest known text to be printed using hand-carved wooden blocks pressed into ink? Was it:a) a religious teaching?b) a cooking recipe? or,c) a love letter?Listen to the programme to find out the answer.
mucking about with (something)(informal) spending time playing with something carelessly, not for a serious purposeprototypemodel of a product that can be tested, improved, and used to develop a better productHold on a minute!phrase used to express surprise or disbeliefprostheticsman-made artificial body part such as an arm, leg, foot or eye, used to replace a missing natural partcustom-made / bespokespecially made to meet the requirements of a particular persontime-consumingtaking a lot of time to do
TRANSCRIPT
Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript.
SamHello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I’m Sam.
NeilAnd I’m Neil. In 1436 in , Johannes Gutenberg, invented the printing press - a machine capable of making many copies of the same page of text. Ever since, printing has been used around the world to produce books, newspapers and magazines.
SamPrinting technology has come a long way since Gutenberg’s time, but even today’s most advanced laser printers have only printed flat, two-dimensional objects… until now.
NeilIn this programme, we’re discussing 3D printers – printers which can build solid, three-dimensional objects out of a variety of materials including plastic, concrete and metal.
SamNow, Neil, when you say a printer that can make solid objects, I guess you’re not talking about a normal printer…
NeilThat’s right, Sam. These large and complex 3D printers work in a completely different way. Unlike a sculptor who chips away at a block of stone to reveal a shape underneath, 3D printers work in the opposite way, building up physical objects by adding material layer on layer. And the ability to print objects in this way is providing solutions to many problems, as we’ll be finding out…
SamBut first I have a question for you, Neil. Before Johannes Gutenberg invented his printing press, copies of texts were made by block printing, using hand-carved wooden blocks pressed into ink. So - what was the oldest known text to be printed this way? Was it:
a) a religious teaching?b) a cooking recipe? or,c) a love letter?
NeilI think it might have been a recipe.
SamOK, Neil. I’ll reveal the answer later in the programme. The idea of printing solid objects is not new, but it was only after the millennium that tech companies began to realise how it could be done. Here’s Professor Mark Miodownik, a material scientist at University College, London, explaining more to BBC World Service programme, People Fixing The World:
Professor Mark MiodownikAs the millennium turned, patents expired and that meant people started making very cheap 3D printers. And people started mucking about with them and going, ‘Hold on a minute! - it’s not just an industrial tool…. You can put them in schools, you can put them in universities…Ohh, it's actually really great for prototyping’. And then people got excited about it and it became the answer to everything. Everything was going to be 3D-printed!
NeilAfter the year 2000, 3D printers suddenly got much cheaper and tech companies started mucking about with them – spending time playing with them in a fun way. They realised that 3D printers had many uses - for example, they discovered that 3D printers were great at making prototypes – models of a product that can be tested, improved and used to develop better products.
SamProfessor Miodownik thinks these tech companies were surprised at how useful 3D printing was. He uses the phrase Hold on a minute! to express this surprise or disbelief.
NeilIn fact, in turned out that 3D printers were excellent at making bespoke things – objects which are made specially for a particular person. One area which 3D printing dramatically improved was medical prosthetics - artificial body parts made specially for someone who has lost an arm, a leg or a foot, for example.
SamIn 2021, Stephen Verze, who lost an eye in a childhood accident, became the first person to be fitted with a 3D-printed prosthetic eye. It’s prosthetic, so the new eye doesn't restore Stephen’s sight, but it has boosted his confidence. Surgeon, Mandeep Sagoo, led the team at Moorsfield Hospital that operated on Stephen’s eye. Here he is explaining more to BBC World Service’s, People Fixing The World:
Professor Mandeep SagooIn many countries, particularly the developed world, there are facilities for custom-making a prosthetic eye to match the other eye, and that's an artisan process which is very time-consuming and requires real artistry on the part of the ocularist – the ocularist is the person who fits the prosthetic eye – and so what we have been developing is a technique to automate the whole process.
NeilEven before 3D printers, prosthetic eyes were custom-made, a word similar to ‘bespoke’ which means specially made according to a particular person’s requirements. But the traditional way of making artificial eyes by hand is very time-consuming – it takes a lot of time to do. Nowadays, 3D printing can complete the whole process in just thirty minutes.
SamIt’s great to see technology helping people, and amazing how far new inventions like 3D printers have come since the days of Johannes Gutenberg… speaking of which, Neil, it’s time to reveal the answer to my question.
NeilRight. You asked me about the earliest known text to have been printed using wooden blocks, and I guesses it was a cooking recipe… So, was I right?
SamYou were… wrong, I’m afraid, Neil! The oldest known wooden block print was actually a religious text – the Buddha’s Diamond Sutra. OK, let’s recap the vocabulary from this programme, starting with mucking about, an informal way to say playing with something carelessly, not for a serious reason.
NeilA prototype is a model of a product that can be tested, improved and used to develop a better product.
SamThe phrase Hold on a minute! can be used to express surprise or disbelief.
NeilProsthetics refer to artificial body parts such as arms, legs, feet or eyes, which are used to replace a missing natural part.
SamThe words bespoke, and custom-made describe something specially made for a particular person.
NeilAnd finally, if something is time-consuming, it takes a lot of time to do. Goodbye for now!
SamGoodbye!
According to the UN, one third of the food we grow ends up in the rubbish bin - how can we stop this?
How are 3D printers providing solutions to some of our medical problems?
What can opinion polls really tell us?
Learn about an idea to deal with climate change that could affect marine ecosystems.
Is music really a cure for a broken heart?
We discuss whether the art of conversation is being lost in the era of social media
Hear about the workers who built the World Cup stadiums
How people are trying to manipulate the weather
We talk about the people who make flavours
We discuss whether Halloween costumes are now too scary to be fun.
We discuss how extreme weather events are affecting our mental health.
How to adapt dishes from other countries
We talk about Mozart, Jimi Hendrix and teach you vocabulary.
Learn vocabulary to talk about inflation
We discuss the language used for online dating
We discuss the advantages of the design of the human body
Hear the inspiring story of people who are doing it
Are emojis turning us into lazy writers?
Hear about women who are using social media to change attitudes to beauty
Hear about the career-killing tasks that are holding women back in the workplace
How can you connect the unconnected?
We talk about previous periods in which deadly diseases went global
Having a Groundhog Day? Keen to break the internet? Learn some modern idioms.
How sharks have become an endangered species.
Can today's animals evolve quickly enough to survive a changing climate?
Missing your mother's cooking? We talk about traditional dishes.
Astronomer Neil deGrasse Tyson's quest to highlight the difference between opinion and fact
In this episode, we discuss the events leading to the creation of the first atomic bomb.
What is life really like in the Pacific islands?
What is the relationship between translation, technology and the human brain?
We talk about a very British tradition
Living with synaesthesia
Is there north and south in space?
Hear how tech is helping people change their behaviour for the better
How do you mark your personal territory?
Deep convictions and a sense of humour - we talk about a man who helped end apartheid in South Africa.
We talk about an extreme environment which is stranger than fiction
We talk about an art that started with ancient Greek philosophers
It's not all about tea. Britons love coffee too!
Listen to a conversation about optimists and pessimists
Hear a chat about the queen of murder mystery, who had her books translated into over 100 languages
Is there life on Mars?
Shouldn't we take laughter more seriously?
Listen to what scientists are saying about the benefits of giving others a helping hand
Would you eat a cricket? How about a portion of nice crunchy ants?
Why not put your idle brain to good use?
We wonder what all that licking is really all about
Life in a place where people work, study longer hours and get less sleep than anywhere else
Artificial snow, coronavirus and controversy surround the Beijing Games starting soon.
Learn how microbes help digest food and have an impact in our bodies.
How do languages get invented?
What will future technology be like?
For a better experience please enable Javascript in your browser