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Structure Sensor is a tiny, portable 3D scanner that snaps into your iPad, made by the startup Occipital. At $399—or $499 if you want the super cool photoreal scanning software ...
Occipital is reluctant to call it a 3D scanner, but it’s a 3D sensor that can be used for 3D scanning purposes. The first major app to utilize the Structure Sensor is ItSeez3D, which combines ...
The entire assembly of sensor, bracket, and cable add about 124 grams of weight onto the back of the iPad. Our review kit: one Structure Sensor, one iPad mini-sized mounting bracket. Lee Hutchinson ...
Among them, Occipital's Structure Sensor certainly has potential. The company's looking at a lofty $100,000 goal to bring its mobile scanner to market by year's end.
3D Object Scanning While we quickly proved the merits of Structure Sensor’s object scanning, Reddy did point out that there are generally better options for scanning really small objects ...
The new Structure Sensor from startup company Occipital promises to convert iPads and iPhones into 3D scanners. The device, which launches today on Kickstarter, is designed to create accurate ...
Structure Sensor is a clip on accessory for iPad that's designed to let you 3D scan objects, play augmented reality games and build a digital manipulable model of a room, complete with measurements.
Today, San Francisco startup Occipital is releasing a device that’s a compromise of both money and hardware with the Structure Sensor, a mobile 3D scanner attachment that goes right on your iPad.
These 3D scanner capabilities caught the attention of printing company 3D Systems, which has struck a deal to offer self-branded versions of the Structure Sensor.
The Structure itself is an awfully handsome piece of kit. Small and clad in colored anodized aluminum, it doesn’t look anything like the clunky 3D sensors you may have already been exposed to.
This is the newest version of the "world's first 3D scanning platform for mobile devices." The original version was the Structure Sensor ST01, launched all the way back in the year 2014.
The Structure Sensor isn’t the kind of thing that you see every single day, but in situations where someone needs a 3D scan it’s usually the go-to product. I had my head scanned by one at a 3D ...