久久国产精品无码一级毛片-亚洲乱妇-人人综合-91老师片黄在线观看-91欧美日韩-香蕉视频网页版-日韩乱码视频-日韩性爰视频-亚洲日本色-大奶子在线观看-97视频在线看-国产欧美网站-久久久五月-国产真人毛片-精品美女在线-九九九视频在线观看-4438x全国最大成人-日本偷拍一区-大吊一区二区三区-国产精品成人电影在线观看-五月婷香-美女成人在线-亚洲免费人成-人妻无码久久中文字幕-强行挺进白丝老师里呻吟

Home About us News center Products Innovation Careers
industry news
company news
industry news
media focus
video
Now you can pick up hammer, nails and a 3-D printer at Home Depot
 
 

Adrianne Pasquarelli 
CRAIN'S NEW YORK BUSINESS
Published: July 14, 2014 4:46 pm ET
Updated: July 14, 2014 4:57 pm ET


Image By: MakerBot
The 12 Home Depot stores selected for a pilot program selling MakerBot 3-D printers will have specially-trained staff on hand to show how they work.


3-D printing company MakerBot is coming to a hardware store near you.

The Brooklyn-based firm will begin selling its printers at 12 Home Depot stores around the country — six in California, four in Illinois and two in New York — on Monday. The pilot program will offer the microwave-sized MakerBot Replicator printers, priced at $2,899, for sale, as well as the smaller Replicator Minis, which list for $1,375.

"This will open up the whole world of 3-D printing to people who wouldn't otherwise know about it — like moms and dads, electricians, contractors and DIY-home-improvement folks," said MakerBot chief executive Bre Pettis. "It's a good match."

MakerBot printers have been available on Home Depot's website for about a month, and sales have exceeded expectations, Pettis said.  said. The stores will put up specially-designed kiosks where shoppers can see the machines in 3-D action. Trained MakerBot retail staff will also be on-site for the indefinite future in order to put the machines through their paces.

"MakerBot 3-D printers are yet another great technology that can serve particular needs of specific customers," said Todd Furneaux, senior merchant of Atlanta-based Home Depot, in a statement. The 2,264-unit chain reported sales for the first quarter of 2014 of $19.7 billion, a 2.9 percent increase over the year-earlier period, and earnings of $1.4 billion.

MakerBot, which was acquired in a $403 million deal two years ago by Minnesota-based Stratasys, already sells at Microsoft stores across the country as well as at Micro Center and B&H, not to mention at its own store in New York. Mr. Pettis is optimistic about the possibility of expanding merchandise to Home Depots nationwide as 3-D printing goes mainstream.

 
About us
company profile
company culture
version and strategy
company history
certification
patents
contact
News center
company news
industry news
media focus
video
Products
products catalog
technical support
Innovation
create value
production line
QA&QC
new technique info
Copyright:King-Tech China Co.,Ltd