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Ask HN: Will GPU and RAM prices ever go down?

1•alentred•36s ago•0 comments

From hunger to luxury: The story behind the most expensive rice (2025)

https://www.cnn.com/travel/japan-expensive-rice-kinmemai-premium-intl-hnk-dst
1•mooreds•1m ago•0 comments

Substack makes money from hosting Nazi newsletters

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/feb/07/revealed-how-substack-makes-money-from-hosting-nazi...
3•mindracer•2m ago•0 comments

A New Crypto Winter Is Here and Even the Biggest Bulls Aren't Certain Why

https://www.wsj.com/finance/currencies/a-new-crypto-winter-is-here-and-even-the-biggest-bulls-are...
1•thm•2m ago•0 comments

Moltbook was peak AI theater

https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/02/06/1132448/moltbook-was-peak-ai-theater/
1•Brajeshwar•3m ago•0 comments

Why Claude Cowork is a math problem Indian IT can't solve

https://restofworld.org/2026/indian-it-ai-stock-crash-claude-cowork/
1•Brajeshwar•3m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Built an space travel calculator with vanilla JavaScript v2

https://www.cosmicodometer.space/
1•captainnemo729•3m ago•0 comments

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

https://www.wsj.com/tech/corning-fiber-optics-ai-e045ba3b
1•Brajeshwar•3m ago•0 comments

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

https://iocombats.com/blogs/micro-frontends-in-2026
1•ghazikhan205•6m 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•6m ago•1 comments

The Wonder Drug That's Plaguing Sports

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/02/us/ostarine-olympics-doping.html
1•mooreds•6m 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•6m ago•0 comments

Federated Credential Management (FedCM)

https://ciamweekly.substack.com/p/federated-credential-management-fedcm
1•mooreds•7m ago•0 comments

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

https://app.writtte.com/read/kZ8Kj6R
1•lasgawe•7m ago•1 comments

The Story of Heroku (2022)

https://leerob.com/heroku
1•tosh•7m ago•0 comments

Obey the Testing Goat

https://www.obeythetestinggoat.com/
1•mkl95•8m ago•0 comments

Claude Opus 4.6 extends LLM pareto frontier

https://michaelshi.me/pareto/
1•mikeshi42•9m ago•0 comments

Brute Force Colors (2022)

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

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

https://bsky.app/profile/fullmoon.id/post/3meadfaulhk2s
1•todsacerdoti•13m ago•0 comments

Software development is undergoing a Renaissance in front of our eyes

https://twitter.com/gdb/status/2019566641491963946
1•tosh•13m ago•0 comments

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

https://tryward.app/aiquiz
1•bennydog224•14m 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•14m ago•0 comments

Agents need good developer experience too

https://modal.com/blog/agents-devex
1•birdculture•16m ago•0 comments

The Dark Factory

https://twitter.com/i/status/2020161285376082326
1•Ozzie_osman•16m 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•17m ago•0 comments

Interop 2025: A Year of Convergence

https://webkit.org/blog/17808/interop-2025-review/
1•alwillis•18m ago•0 comments

Prejudice Against Leprosy

https://text.npr.org/g-s1-108321
1•hi41•19m ago•0 comments

Slint: Cross Platform UI Library

https://slint.dev/
1•Palmik•23m ago•0 comments

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

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7PvscqGD24
1•nyc111•23m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Artificial Womb Technology: Survey of 750 Researchers

3•biostark•2mo ago
Hey HN, thought some of you might want to AMA, here's the context:

I wanted to know if artificial wombs would happen in my lifetime. I couldn't find a straight answer, so I started emailing researchers.

I’ve seen photos of lambs floating in plastic bags crop up constantly in these discussions. They're from Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, it’s not an artificial womb. CHOP's device keeps the lamb submerged in fluid so its fragile lungs aren't exposed to air, and gives oxygen to its blood using the same machines we use for adults with lung failure. This works for a 22-week fetus, which mostly just needs blood and nutrients, but it doesn't give an embryo somewhere to implant and develop from scratch.

I looked into what it would take to support an embryo earlier than that, and it turns out the mother does a lot we don't know how to replicate in a lab. I emailed someone at CHOP and they confirmed as much, a few of their colleagues called it a 'pipe dream' in a 2023 paper. I figured I'd just keep emailing researchers.

I went looking for real forecasts on getting this to work end-to-end. Metaculus predicts ~2044, but the comments cite similar articles about embryo research. The most credible-looking was a 2021 NYT piece about mouse embryos developing for ten days, so I emailed Dr. Hanna's lab. What they're doing is growing embryos in a nutrient bath: the nutrients soak in from the outside, but only so deep, so the cells inside eventually starve. I asked whether we’d need an artificial placenta to solve this problem, but they said they're sticking with the nutrient bath method since it's good for making embryos to study.

Matt Krisiloff mentioned on Twitter that at least four startups were working on this, so I kept emailing around. Haven't heard of anything interesting yet, but a researcher at CHOP told me some of them are literally repackaging incubator tech and presenting it as the real thing.

I’m running a fact-finding mission now, since information on this topic is weirdly hard to find. I mapped out some of the problems we’d need to solve for artificial wombs to work and recovered contact details from people working on research that’s relevant. I ended up with around 750 contacts including embryologists, cultivated meat people who work on keeping tissue alive outside of the body, bioprinting researchers, that sort of thing.

I’ve had a few of my own questions answered in this way, so I figured I'd open it up to you. If there's something you've always wondered about, even if it feels basic, I'm happy to look into it.

What would you want to ask?

Comments

haebom•2mo ago
I'm not sure, but I hope they make it quickly. Personally, I think this is more revolutionary than going to space.
medinot•2mo ago
What approaches could you use to engineer a synthetic placenta?

From what I understand of current research, the bottleneck right now is finding a way to supply an embryo with oxygen and nutrients, and remove waste products, that doesn't rely on the the use of a 'nutrient bath'. This method relies on diffusion. Diffusion is not sufficient to supply and remove the relevant substances as it grows. The embryo literally starts dying from the inside out as it's too far from the nutrient bath.

You need to involve the circulatory system - this is the literal problem it solves. How you do that however I do not know.