58 posts are related to your search. Page 1 of 6

It’s unlikely that Apple will use Liquidmetal for the new MacBooks that are expected any day now, but it sure would be sweet. Check out how svelte the machines would be if Apple used the extra-stiff material.Mockup by designer Dario Crisafulli.Via SagiaMente.Who wants one?
2 weeks ago, Cult of Mac reported:Apple has been granted its first patent related to Liquidmetal, a space-age metal alloy. But the patent isn't for a new iPad enclosure or iPhone antenna, as experts have predicted. Instead Apple's Liquidmetal patent is for an internal component of a fuel cell.App...

Cult of Mac has an interesting post up that shows some of the truly spectacular LiquidMetal injection moulding and manufacturing processes that will let Apple make stronger, better, faster unibodies, antennas, and pretty much everything else. Here are some choice quotes:Apple will soon start expe...

More and more is being revealed regarding a story we brought you last week concerning Apple’s new purchase of Liquidmetal Technologies. Ars Technica reports that the futuristic sounding material isn’t so bizarre after all. Remember those hand SIMejector tools that came with the iPhone...

Apple has a new toy. It's a materials company called Liquidmetal, and everybody's talking! Problem is, nobody seems too sure what they're talking about. So, Liquidmetal: What is this stuff? And what does Apple want with it?More »

That’s right ladies and gentlemen, the above image is a SIM ejector tool that was first included with the iPhone 3G and later with the iPhone 3GS and according to Cult of Mac it is indeed made out of Liquidmetal. Yes, this is the exact same Liquidmetal that Apple recently licensed the intel...

When we shared with you Apple's acquisition of Liquid Technologies' supermaterial, we noted that liquid metal is already in use across a variety of industries, from sports to aerospace. Or, you might find it on the wristwatch you have now.More »

The Baltimore Sun has found an SEC filing that shows Apple has broadly licensed the intellectual property of California amorphous alloy maker Liquidmetal, perhaps for use in future iPhone and iPad devices. What’s liquid metal? It’s a mimetic poly-alloy that can create bladed weapons&...

Last year, Apple signed an exclusive agreement to use Liquidmetal - a high-strength metal that is light and can be processed like plastic - in their future products. An ex Liquidmetal exec thought Apple would make iPhones out of it. A source speaking to MacTrast, though, says that Apple’s ...
Last August, it was announced that Apple had signed an exclusive partnership With Liquidmetal Technologies for the use of the Liquidmetal in the field of electronics. That alloy has exceptional proprieties because it is amorphous once it has cooled down, while other metals keep a crystalline stru...