When it comes to 3D printing, the sky is the limit. As 3D printing technology continues to advance, applications can be as far reaching as airplane and automobile parts to medical devices and even anatomically correct, biocompatible models. Although 3D printing technology is developing at a rapid pace, the technology itself is not new. It emerged in the 1980s as a means of creating rapid prototypes. In recent years the applications for 3D printed models have evolved with the available hardware, software, and printable materials. Evolving technology, paired with the creative and innovative minds of scientists, engineers, and physicians, has been the launching pad for developments within 3D printing technology specific to healthcare. One way 3D printing technology is poised to create better patient outcomes is in creating an anatomically and patient-specific models to aid in surgery and medical procedures. With the capability to 3D ...

A Danish brewery just released 60,000 bottles of a beer they're calling "Pisner" produced from recycled human urine. While the beer doesn't actually contain any human waste, the Norrebro Bryghus microbrewery used 50,000 liters of urine collected at the Roskilde Music Festival in 2015 to fertilize fields of malting barley to produce it.
"When the news that we had started brewing the Pisner came out, a lot of people thought we were filtering the urine to put it directly in the beer and we had a good laugh about that," Henrik Vang, Chief Executive of brewer Norrebro Bryghus, told Reuters.
"If it had tasted even a bit like urine, I would put it down, but you don't even notice," Anders Sjögren, who attended Roskilde Music Festival in 2015, told Reuters.
While Denmark's Agriculture and Food Council is calling the idea "beercycling," we're still on the fence about how we feel about this. What do you think? Are you adventurous enough to drink a Pisner?
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