Adrian Bowyer

Adrian Bowyer

Adrian Bowyer invented RepRap in February 2004.  He did not invent self-replicating machines (which go back at least as far as Erewhon by Samuel Butler), but he was the first person to realise that it was possible to separate the self-copying and self-assembling aspects of artificial self-replication, and that replication was the more important of the two.  He was also the first to realise that 3D printing machines were the best bet for making a practical, useful, self-replicating machine.

In the early 1970s Adrian read for a first degree in mechanical engineering at Imperial College, and then researched his PhD in tribology there.  He is now in the Mechanical Engineering Department at Bath University, where he is a senior lecturer.  In between he has pretended to be a mathematician, a computer scientist, a writer, a chemist, and a biologist. In each field he only asked really simple questions, but thinks he got away with it.  His current main area of research is the RepRap project, but he also works on geometric computing (he is one of the authors of the Bowyer-Watson algorithm for Voronoi diagrams), the application of computers to manufacturing, biomimetics, and bioengineering applications of chemical ligand binding.

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Adrian Bowyer's Lectures

Track 1 11:50 RepRap - the open-source self-copying 3D printer

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