Picture this: your drone’s wings secretly packing enough juice to outlast your ex’s grudges, or your smart glasses running on battery material curled around the frame like it’s cosplaying as a pretzel—all thanks to a former F1 engineer who got tired of boring rectangular batteries cramping his style. Material’s wild 3D-printing tech squirts energy storage into every weird gap, curve, and void, turning wasted space into power sources that could make military backpacks lighter than your gym motivation on a Monday. Forget clunky cubes; the future is batteries that flow like they’re auditioning for a sci-fi liquid-metal role. Drones fly farther, soldiers carry less, and soon your Ray-Bans might outlast your attention span.
Material’s Printed Batteries Put Power in Every Nook and Cranny