Nobody likes the cute castle... or tower... or castle... towered tower? It's not photoshop btw.
In other news. REPRAP
http://reprap.org/bin/view/Main/WebHome
The REPRAP project concerns the construction of a 3D printer. Now if you don't know what a 3D printer you will probably find that as a factoid pretty impressive alone, they (also rapid prototyping machines) are printers which print layer layer (usually with plastic drops) 3d objects.
What is particular with the REPRAP project, is that it's objective is to create an "open source" 3D printer/cutter hybrid capable of ultimately working with glass and steel etc as well, and ultimately able to replicate itself, for a tiny cost.
This means that you'd get to buy one, and then only for the cost of the raw materials you could print your friends one and so on.
This is kind of nice, if you have the imagination to fully evolve this concept. Basically just imagine. Some time ago I was talking about the flexibility of Digitization where not only have all my CD/DVDs/Cassettes and soon, books have been replaced by digital "files", but can also by copied, pasted, merged, mixed, stretched, e-mailed, ctrl-z'ed, deleted, edited.
But when I go to a supermarket to buy a set of glasses, our world is still analog. I do not have the ability to get exactly the pair of wineglasses I want, eg, I might want one design but with a neck "2 cm" taller.
Well imagine most products being represented by digital parametric files then, to be send into a machine that only cares about the raw resources.
Files for glasses, files for clocks and gears, files for basic electronics (chips are not something that can be really printed because they go below the accuracy of a 3D printer, however most electronics is based on already in existance bulk components and already "parametric" in a way circuits). Imagine if you care share and edit all those files, reducing all idea and every design to the cost of it's raw materials.
Phillip Stark doing those overvalued alien citrus juicers for example? Screw him. You'd just download the file, buy the raw material alone and send it to the printer. Imagine a community, a neighborhood building a large scale one, a factory for every corner.
Two words:
Ferrari + Torrent
P.S. Yes, I realize that Trekkies might be a bit dissentisized to the idea because of the whole replicator thing, but there is a small difference between "wouldn't be nice if" and real, tangible, visible technology that can become reality within, say, 10 years. This belongs to the second.