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Why a 175-Year-Old Glassmaker Is Suddenly an AI Superstar

https://www.wsj.com/tech/corning-fiber-optics-ai-e045ba3b
1•Brajeshwar•34s ago•0 comments

Micro-Front Ends in 2026: Architecture Win or Enterprise Tax?

https://iocombats.com/blogs/micro-frontends-in-2026
1•ghazikhan205•2m ago•0 comments

Japanese rice is the most expensive in the world

https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/07/travel/this-is-the-worlds-most-expensive-rice-but-what-does-it-tas...
1•mooreds•3m ago•0 comments

These White-Collar Workers Actually Made the Switch to a Trade

https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/careers/white-collar-mid-career-trades-caca4b5f
1•impish9208•3m ago•1 comments

The Wonder Drug That's Plaguing Sports

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/02/us/ostarine-olympics-doping.html
1•mooreds•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Which chef knife steels are good? Data from 540 Reddit tread

https://new.knife.day/blog/reddit-steel-sentiment-analysis
1•p-s-v•3m ago•0 comments

Federated Credential Management (FedCM)

https://ciamweekly.substack.com/p/federated-credential-management-fedcm
1•mooreds•4m ago•0 comments

Token-to-Credit Conversion: Avoiding Floating-Point Errors in AI Billing Systems

https://app.writtte.com/read/kZ8Kj6R
1•lasgawe•4m ago•1 comments

The Story of Heroku (2022)

https://leerob.com/heroku
1•tosh•4m ago•0 comments

Obey the Testing Goat

https://www.obeythetestinggoat.com/
1•mkl95•5m ago•0 comments

Claude Opus 4.6 extends LLM pareto frontier

https://michaelshi.me/pareto/
1•mikeshi42•6m ago•0 comments

Brute Force Colors (2022)

https://arnaud-carre.github.io/2022-12-30-amiga-ham/
1•erickhill•8m ago•0 comments

Google Translate apparently vulnerable to prompt injection

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/tAh2keDNEEHMXvLvz/prompt-injection-in-google-translate-reveals-ba...
1•julkali•9m ago•0 comments

(Bsky thread) "This turns the maintainer into an unwitting vibe coder"

https://bsky.app/profile/fullmoon.id/post/3meadfaulhk2s
1•todsacerdoti•9m ago•0 comments

Software development is undergoing a Renaissance in front of our eyes

https://twitter.com/gdb/status/2019566641491963946
1•tosh•10m ago•0 comments

Can you beat ensloppification? I made a quiz for Wikipedia's Signs of AI Writing

https://tryward.app/aiquiz
1•bennydog224•11m ago•1 comments

Spec-Driven Design with Kiro: Lessons from Seddle

https://medium.com/@dustin_44710/spec-driven-design-with-kiro-lessons-from-seddle-9320ef18a61f
1•nslog•11m ago•0 comments

Agents need good developer experience too

https://modal.com/blog/agents-devex
1•birdculture•12m ago•0 comments

The Dark Factory

https://twitter.com/i/status/2020161285376082326
1•Ozzie_osman•12m ago•0 comments

Free data transfer out to internet when moving out of AWS (2024)

https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/free-data-transfer-out-to-internet-when-moving-out-of-aws/
1•tosh•14m ago•0 comments

Interop 2025: A Year of Convergence

https://webkit.org/blog/17808/interop-2025-review/
1•alwillis•15m ago•0 comments

Prejudice Against Leprosy

https://text.npr.org/g-s1-108321
1•hi41•16m ago•0 comments

Slint: Cross Platform UI Library

https://slint.dev/
1•Palmik•20m ago•0 comments

AI and Education: Generative AI and the Future of Critical Thinking

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7PvscqGD24
1•nyc111•20m ago•0 comments

Maple Mono: Smooth your coding flow

https://font.subf.dev/en/
1•signa11•21m ago•0 comments

Moltbook isn't real but it can still hurt you

https://12gramsofcarbon.com/p/tech-things-moltbook-isnt-real-but
1•theahura•24m ago•0 comments

Take Back the Em Dash–and Your Voice

https://spin.atomicobject.com/take-back-em-dash/
1•ingve•25m ago•0 comments

Show HN: 289x speedup over MLP using Spectral Graphs

https://zenodo.org/login/?next=%2Fme%2Fuploads%3Fq%3D%26f%3Dshared_with_me%25253Afalse%26l%3Dlist...
1•andrespi•26m ago•0 comments

Teaching Mathematics

https://www.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~spurny/doc/articles/arnold.htm
2•samuel246•28m ago•0 comments

3D Printed Microfluidic Multiplexing [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZ2ZcOzLnGg
2•downboots•29m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Robot metabolism: Toward machines that can grow by consuming other machines

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adu6897
58•XzetaU8•6mo ago

Comments

littlestymaar•6mo ago
Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.
neom•6mo ago
Powerful self assembling machines controlled by artificial intelligence more capable than the average human, not your flavor of the month then I guess?

More seriously, are there public examples where inventors/technologists have ever actually said "we could do this but we won't"?

aeve890•6mo ago
Common excuse for this kind of behavior is "evil people will do it regardless, so the only option for us is do it too to be prepared for when evil people use it for evil purposes".
h2zizzle•6mo ago
It's weird that no one thinks to build an Iron Dome until well after the nuclear arms race has been chugging along for a while. The goal should be to checkmate potentially ruinous branches of a tech tree, not to be in perpetual check with them as they grow ever longer and spikier.
littlestymaar•6mo ago
In practice, it's always the evil guy saying that though.
jolmg•6mo ago
Or if you flip cause and effect, power corrupts.
littlestymaar•6mo ago
That's a common saying, but honestly I don't really buy it anymore: I feel like it's just a selection bias: in average one does not climb up to the top unless they are a psycho.
Nasrudith•6mo ago
That has basiscally been the cringeworthy stunt of Sam Altmann playing chuunibyou claiming his AI is oh so dangerous.
akomtu•6mo ago
Demonic scientists are thinking hard how to feed our planet to machines.
MrFoof•6mo ago
Possible outcome: Gray goo scenario (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gray_goo)

A recent "popular culture" reference to the scenario mentioned in the article is the video game, "Horizon: Zero Dawn."

gavinray•6mo ago
"Mortal Engines" begins...

(One of my favorite Sci-Fi Young Adult series I read growing up)

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortal_Engines

tl;dr = Post apocalypse, cities are giant mobile machines that eat and integrate smaller cities to survive

gmuslera•6mo ago
Crabs on the Island, by Anatoly Dneprov, fits better in the idea.
poulpy123•6mo ago
More about grey goo (don't remember the source of the idea)
datameta•6mo ago
As long as there are enough paperclips to consume at the lowest trophic level we should be okay, right? Right?
chmod775•6mo ago
If these things were truly possible on Earth, chances are life-forms based on it would have evolved.

For mostly-self-sufficient organisms in earth's environment, the versatility of carbon appears to outperform silicon on every metric that counts.

The molecular complexity of a single human lung cell still absolutely dwarfs that of even the most modern CPUs we are able to manufacture (apple to oranges, but true).

Out_of_Characte•6mo ago
The evolution of our species was based on the carbon lifecycle. Yet the machines we produce are not evolving in a similar manner at all, just the ability to redraw everything from scratch is a luxury that evolution cannot make use of.

To reiterate, The belief that evolving machines have to match the kind of evolution we're subjected to is illogical. Machines wouldn't be there without us and we wouldn't have what we have now without evolving our machines.

nickpinkston•6mo ago
It may be that life forms would have evolved it, but it could be us evolving to be able to create it, like spiders "inventing" their high-tension silk.

We're just way more capable of high complexity.

poulpy123•6mo ago
They are not talking about developing a life based on silicon but about robots that can repair or improve themselves.

But also don't forget that evolution is not determinist : although you are probably right that silicon based life cannot exist, it's not because it doesn't exist that it is impossible

ben_w•6mo ago
> The molecular complexity of a single human lung cell still absolutely dwarfs that of even the most modern CPUs we are able to manufacture (apple to oranges, but true).

What are you even measuring with complexity there? We don't go out of our way to make CPUs more complex, either chemically or in terms of circuits, their complexity is just what results from what we want them to do. What we want them to do isn't (yet) "reproduce" or "eat", unless you count the entire larger industrial ecosystem of which they are vital element as well as being a byproduct, as even this paper is in the hypothetical.

Looking at the abstract and skimming the rest, it is suggesting something involving a much bigger system than a silicon chip, but it's still more akin to how a virus hijacks the molecular processes of the actual factory (i.e. the cell it infects), or primates using bones as tools if you prefer a macro-scale analogy.

targetx•6mo ago
These scientists should play Horizon Zero Dawn and seriously reconsider. This feels like a bad idea (however technologically impressive it is).
rightbyte•6mo ago
In general it might be a bad idea to prospect dystopian sci-fi novels for VC pitching decks. Like, are there no adults in the room anymore.
vinceguidry•6mo ago
Pitch them to Elon Musk instead. That's all he seems to care about.
neom•6mo ago
Just thinking aloud: I've been in this industry for what will be going on 20 years now (startup/tech/venture funded stuff) - my observation is that things have become incredibly abstract over the past 15 years - people are very abstracted away from what they are really doing...in that, the capital is increasingly abstracted far far away from capital providers, capital allocators are increasingly abstracted away from the outcomes of the capital they allocate, and capital deployers are increasingly abstracted away from society at large. I do occasionally still run into people who I think "this is a fully formed sensible thoughtful responsible human" - but it's incredibly few and far between - I think the reason is primarily how decoupled everything in the system has become from it's upstream and downstream effects. The other consequence of this is that the competitive nature of market dynamics shift, things become hyper competitive because the unknowns become deeper. The inevitable geometry of large, scaled systems.
poulpy123•6mo ago
« Sci-Fi Author: In my book I invented the Torment Nexus as a cautionary tale

Tech Company: At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus from classic sci-fi novel Don't Create The Torment Nexus »

omneity•6mo ago
Is it actually growing, or is it swarm-like assembly, such as a coral colony?
LegionMammal978•6mo ago
As far as I can tell, neither is the case. The modules are all controlled wirelessly from an outside system, so the individual moving parts have no separate identity.
poulpy123•6mo ago
> First, robot metabolism cannot rely on active physical support from any external system to accomplish its growth; the robot must grow using only its own abilities.

Not only this is extremely restrictive, but it is in contradiction with the second point

> Second, the only external provision to robot metabolism is energy and material in the form of robots or robot parts.