N_Lens 4 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 9 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 7 hours ago

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

analog8374 13 minutes ago

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

Barathkanna 8 hours ago

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

bitwize 9 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.

  • usrnm 7 hours ago

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

  • tetris11 7 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 9 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 3 hours ago

      Can't push a rope.

      • arthurcolle an hour ago

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