5 comments

  • tim333 38 minutes ago

    Solar and batteries are cracking along. It's much reported but will change things for the better.

  • nextos 2 hours ago

    I would say that lots of interesting things are happening in biotech, and these things are slowly building critical mass, similar to what happened in computer hardware during the period 1970-2000.

    Genomic platforms are now able to capture multiple measurements (e.g. RNA and chromatin openness) from single cells in large tissue slices/massive perturbation experiments.

    Once time gets baked into the equation, we will be able to build better models of systems biology. However, human trials will still be a major bottleneck.

  • progforlyfe 2 hours ago

    I would say quantum computing. It's one area you can't just tell an LLM to solve for you (yet, until the material and solutions are out there of course).

  • PJHkorea 3 hours ago

    I am developing a real-time software acceleration engine that enables high-end equipment-level brainwave processing, signal detection, and noise removal on general-purpose chips. My goal is to overcome hardware limitations through software, enabling highly efficient biosignal processing.

  • digitaltinfoil 2 hours ago

    NFT development is still going strong! They've almost found a real use for them /s

    jk jk they're still nonsense, aren't you glad HN isn't flooded with NFT and blockchain noise anymore?