N_Lens 11 hours ago

The article fails to explain how the fibers solidify instantly. Reading the actual research paper reveals the critical technical innovation: dopamine accelerates the transition by pulling water away from the silk, and a coaxial needle setup shoots the silk solution surrounded by acetone. The acetone triggers solidification, then evaporates in mid-air. This is the actual breakthrough.

delichon 16 hours ago

It's a shame that the paper doesn't reference Steve Ditko or Stan Lee or Peter Parker. It's only fair to acknowledge prior art.

  • _joel 15 hours ago

    Let's not forget the spider that bit him too, he wouldn't be the man he is without the spider.

metalman 3 hours ago

"scientist" needs some sort of dimunitive expression or grading system, corporate, government......entertainment

ie: grade 2 entertainment scientist

bitwize 16 hours ago

> Spiders don’t actually shoot their silk into the air. They make contact with a surface first, attach a strand, then pull and arrange their webs with careful choreography.

Spiders don't shoot their silk into the air when spinning a web. Some spiders, however, migrate by ballooning: they stand upside down, rear ends (and spinnerets) in the air, and send a thread of silk skyward, where it catches the wind or heat currents and lifts the spider toward parts unknown.

  • vee-kay 6 hours ago

    This beautiful BBC video about Darwin's Bark Spider (a species that spits the longest silk threads and makes the largest spider webs), narrated by Sir David Attenborough is phenomenal:

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gSwvH6YhqIM

    Spiders and Nature are incredible!

  • 1659447091 7 hours ago

    > they stand upside down, rear ends (and spinnerets) in the air, and send a thread of silk skyward, where it catches the wind or heat currents and lifts the spider toward parts unknown.

    That was such a great sad-happy scene in Charlotte’s Web.

  • usrnm 14 hours ago

    I want to see a film about the adventures of Peter Parker bitten by that kind of spider

  • tetris11 15 hours ago

    Anecdote: I feel I've seen a spider drop from the thread I'm holding it from, and hang from a completely new one as it falls

  • vlovich123 16 hours ago

    Do they send it or do they unspool it as the wind begins to tug at the little bit hanging out of them?

    • butvacuum 11 hours ago

      Can't push a rope.

      • arthurcolle 9 hours ago

        You can feed a rope out of something (see: 3D printer extruders)

Barathkanna 15 hours ago

With AI taking jobs and scientists giving us web shooters, I guess we’re all becoming freelancer Spider-Men now.

  • falcor84 3 hours ago

    You know, I'm something of a Spider-Man myself

analog8374 8 hours ago

Hey I've got a shootable sticky protein solution too.