KidzTube
Welcome
Login / Register

Search Results: "aspect mexican culture soccer"

All   Most Recent   Most Viewed  


  • 18:14 Brad and Priya Make Yogurt | It's Alive | Bon Appétit

    Brad and Priya Make Yogurt | It's Alive | Bon Appétit

    503 views / 0 likes - added

    Bon Appétit’s Brad Leone is back for episode 49 of “It’s Alive,” and this time he’s joined by Priya Krishna, who teaches him how to make yogurt. Join Brad and Priya as they experiment with her father’s three decade old starter culture, skim his lengthy in

  • 02:28 This Rare Cheese Is Infested With Live Maggots

    This Rare Cheese Is Infested With Live Maggots

    671 views / 0 likes - added

    “Casu marzu” literally means “rotten cheese,” but in Sardinia, it’s a glory to behold. What starts off as a regular wheel of pecorino is then visited by cheese flies that lay their eggs inside, giving the formaggio its signature zing. But, with a nickname

  • 02:51 How to make a macro lens | Do Try This At Home | We The Curious

    How to make a macro lens | Do Try This At Home | We The Curious

    156 views / 0 likes - added

    Macro-photography allows you to take your camera and zoom-in to see what the world looks like up close. In this video, Ross shows you a few cheap options to make use of lenses you may already have and how to hack a laser-pointer and the camera on your pho

  • 01:33 Popular Aly Raisman Explains The Science Of Olympic Gymnastics | WIRED

    Aly Raisman Explains The Science Of Olympic Gymnastics | WIRED

    1,779 views / 9 likes - added

    Charlotte Drury, Maggie Nichols, and Aly Raisman talk to WIRED about the skill, precision, and control they employ when performing various Gymnastic moves and when training for the Olympics. Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wr

    Featured
  • 09:47 1970: VICTORIAN TEENAGERS reminisce | Yesterday's Witness | Voice of the People | BBC Archive

    1970: VICTORIAN TEENAGERS reminisce | Yesterday's Witness | Voice of the People | BBC Archive

    162 views / 0 likes - added

    What was it like to be a teenager in the Victorian era? Two women, now in their 90's, talk about their younger days in the 1890s. Frances 'Effy' Jones - one of the first women to be trained to use a typewriter, and to take up cycling as a hobby - recalls

  • 04:26 Here’s Where the Marble for Classic Sculptures Comes From

    Here’s Where the Marble for Classic Sculptures Comes From

    501 views / 0 likes - added

    Off the coast of Tuscany sits a picturesque town where white mountains cascade over the landscape. Composed of the highest quality marble, these behemoths have attracted artists to Italy’s Pietrasanta for years. In fact, many of Michelangelo’s masterpiece

  • 06:39 Inside the Plan to Release Life-Saving Mosquitoes | WIRED

    Inside the Plan to Release Life-Saving Mosquitoes | WIRED

    148 views / 1 likes - added

    The Florida Keys Mosquito Control District is turning towards a novel tool to combat harmful insecticide-resistant mosquitoes like the Aedes aegypti. What are they doing exactly? They're releasing millions of genetically modified male mosquitoes engineere

  • 18:03 Inside the Deepest Underground Lab in the U.S. | WIRED

    Inside the Deepest Underground Lab in the U.S. | WIRED

    134 views / 0 likes - added

    This is the Sanford Underground Research Facility, the deepest underground laboratory in the United States. This facility houses 10 different labs, conducting experiments that can only be done well beneath the Earth's surface. WIRED takes a tour of three

  • 01:34 This Is What It’s Like To Race A Drone At Full-Throttle

    This Is What It’s Like To Race A Drone At Full-Throttle

    584 views / 0 likes - added

    If you’re not crashing, you’re not flying. At least that’s the idea behind the Drone Racing League—a relatively new organization where drone pilots compete by racing high-performance aircrafts through tight and intricate courses. Find out what it’s like t

  • 00:54 Extracting drinkable water from the air

    Extracting drinkable water from the air

    258 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers at MIT and elsewhere have developed a solar-powered device that can extract drinkable water directly from the air even in dry regions. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2020/solar-extracts-drinkable-water-1014) Watch more videos from MIT: http

  • 00:41 A paper-thin loudspeaker plays "We Are the Champions" by Queen

    A paper-thin loudspeaker plays "We Are the Champions" by Queen

    126 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have developed a paper-thin loudspeaker that turn any surface into an audio source. This thin-film loudspeaker produces sound with minimal distortion while using a fraction of the energy required by a traditional loudspeaker. Watch more vide

  • 18:38 Bill Nye Answers Science Questions From Twitter - Part 4 | Tech Support | WIRED

    Bill Nye Answers Science Questions From Twitter - Part 4 | Tech Support | WIRED

    193 views / 0 likes - added

    Bill Nye uses the power of Twitter to once again answer common questions about science. Is evolution just an unproven theory? What do brains actually feel like? Will humanity ever leave the solar system? Are humans advanced AI? Bill answers all these ques

  • 04:02 Popular Meet the HyperAdapt, Nike's Awesome New Power-Lacing Sneaker | WIRED

    Meet the HyperAdapt, Nike's Awesome New Power-Lacing Sneaker | WIRED

    1,077 views / 2 likes - added

    Nike's Tinker Hatfield and Tiffany Beers explain the new power-lacing HyperAdapt 1.0 and demonstrate how to charge the sneakers, and tighten and loosen the laces with the touch of a button. Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wrd.cm/15

    Featured
  • 03:49 Why Youll Fail the Milk Crate Challenge | WIRED

    Why Youll Fail the Milk Crate Challenge | WIRED

    206 views / 0 likes - added

    The goal of the "Milk Crate Challenge" is to make it from one side of the pyramid to the other. As you can see, well, it isn't so easy to pull off. We spoke with Dr. Nehemiah Mabry, an engineer, about why these milk crate structures are so unstable, and w

  • 02:35 Popular How to make the sound of a Star Wars blaster | Do Try This At Home | We The Curious

    How to make the sound of a Star Wars blaster | Do Try This At Home | We The Curious

    729 views / 0 likes - added

    "Ancient weapons are no match for a good blaster at your side, kid"Lisa & Tom show you how to create your own Star Wars sound effects using only a slinky and a plastic cup.How to make a light saber: https://youtu.be/0OczYKJPNps This video was presented by

    Featured
  • 09:19 When will Robots Kill Us All? | Earth Lab

    When will Robots Kill Us All? | Earth Lab

    510 views / 0 likes - added

    From HAL and Skynet to the Roko's Basilisk thought experiment, artificial intelligence has been depicted as terrifying in popular culture. Greg Foot looks at whether new technology is moving fast enough for us to be scared. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/Subscr

  • 02:06 How to get conductive gels to stick when wet

    How to get conductive gels to stick when wet

    308 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of engineers at MIT has developed a new way of making polymers adhere to surfaces even with the introduction of moisture, that may enable better biomedical sensors and implants. (Read more: http://news.mit.edu/2020/conductive-gels-stick-wet-0320)Wa

  • 02:26 Korea’s B-Boy Brothers

    Korea’s B-Boy Brothers

    644 views / 0 likes - added

    If you’re looking for the best breakdancers, head to South Korea. The dancers there aren’t just popular, they’re influencing the country’s culture as well. Heon-Joon Kim (aka B-Boy Skim) and Heon-Woo Kim (aka B-Boy Wing) are brothers in life and in dance.

  • 04:00 World's Best Chef | My Go-To

    World's Best Chef | My Go-To

    258 views / 0 likes - added

    Chris Shepherd has a passion for creating dishes that are just as diverse as Houston. The famed restauranteur was named World's Best Chef last year by the Robb Report and won a James Beard Award in 2014 for Best Chef: Southwest. Shepherd runs three Housto

  • 10:36 3 Ways VFX Artists Use A.I. In Hollywood | WIRED

    3 Ways VFX Artists Use A.I. In Hollywood | WIRED

    220 views / 0 likes - added

    Behind some of the coolest premium effects in Hollywood is the invisible aid of artificial intelligence. Machine learning is helping create previously unimaginable moments in media today, like in shows and movies like 'Wandavision' and 'Avengers: Endgame.

  • 06:13 Popular How Mario Got His Mustache (and His Name!)

    How Mario Got His Mustache (and His Name!)

    890 views / 2 likes - added

    For more cool stories about the history of video games, check us out on Watchable: http://www.watchable.com/playlists/zyznMwaE4VnN-8-bit-legacy Gamer or not, you know Mario. Nintendo’s high-pitched, turtle-squashing Italian plumber has become a beloved st

  • 02:44 Explosives Legend - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Explosives Legend - Periodic Table Of Videos

    523 views / 0 likes - added

    The Professor oversees the installation of a "blue plaque" for the late great Colonel BD Shaw. See out-takes from this video (and why Brady gets angry at truck drivers) at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LN7BLUWBuBI More chemistry at http://www.periodicvi

  • 20:40 Conductor Breaks Down Orchestra Scenes From Movies & TV | WIRED

    Conductor Breaks Down Orchestra Scenes From Movies & TV | WIRED

    577 views / 0 likes - added

    Conductor Marin Alsop examines some band and orchestra scenes from popular movies and television shows and determines how accurate they really are. Does the conductor from the movie "Whiplash" have an effective teaching style? How historically accurate is

  • 03:40 This French Town Might be the Best Smelling Place in the World

    This French Town Might be the Best Smelling Place in the World

    434 views / 0 likes - added

    The city of Grasse, on the French Riviera, is a smell above the rest. The town is known as the perfume capital of the world—and with good reason. Grasse is responsible for producing iconic scents for everyone from Chanel to Louis Vuitton. The town is curr

  • 11:45 Popular Ideal Gas Problems: Crash Course Chemistry #13

    Ideal Gas Problems: Crash Course Chemistry #13

    935 views / 0 likes - added

    We don't live in a perfect world, and neither do gases - it would be great if their particles always fulfilled the assumptions of the ideal gas law, and we could use PV=nRT to get the right answer every time. Unfortunately, the ideal gas law (like our cul

  • 02:34 How to find Orion | Night Sky Guide | We The Curious

    How to find Orion | Night Sky Guide | We The Curious

    481 views / 0 likes - added

    Where is Orion in the night sky? Ross Exton of the Live Science Team shows you how to find the constellation, along with Betelgeuse, Sirius, the Orion Nebula, and much more!This video was presented, produced and edited by: Ross Exton, Live Science Video P

  • 03:41 How to listen to a record with your teeth | Do Try This at Home | At-Bristol Science Centre

    How to listen to a record with your teeth | Do Try This at Home | At-Bristol Science Centre

    335 views / 0 likes - added

    A gramophone - or phonograph - turns the vibrations of a needle moving along a record into sound. But is it possible to listen to the grooves in an old vinyl record using your teeth? In this video, Ross investigates and shows you how to make your own pape

  • 03:09 What colour is a mirror? | We The Curious

    What colour is a mirror? | We The Curious

    260 views / 0 likes - added

    How does a mirror work? Ross of the Live Science Team investigates the properties of light, mirrors and fibre optic cables to answer the question: what colour is a mirror?This video was presented by: Ross Exton, Live Science Video Producer.Produced by: Ro

  • 02:13 Sliding through a syringe

    Sliding through a syringe

    252 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT researchers have developed a simple, low-cost technology to administer powerful drug formulations that are too viscous to be injected using conventional medical syringes. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2020/syringe-concentrated-biologic-drugs-0824)

  • 03:03 Popular Jurassic World: Using Motion-Capture To Create Realistic Dinosaurs | Design FX

    Jurassic World: Using Motion-Capture To Create Realistic Dinosaurs | Design FX

    1,698 views / 4 likes - added

    “Jurassic World” debuted with a record-shattering opening weekend, netting nearly half a billion dollars. See how Industrial Light & Magic used motion capture to help design the complex dinosaurs, including the genetically modified Indominus rex. SUBSCRIB

  • 06:02 What If Ice Did Not Float? - Periodic Table Of Videos

    What If Ice Did Not Float? - Periodic Table Of Videos

    490 views / 0 likes - added

    The Professor muses on a world in which ice sinks to the bottom!? See also what if the universe is just a computer simulation: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YOxDb_BbXzU Made to coincide with YouTube's Geek Week. More chemistry at http://www.periodicvideo

  • 19:35 Computer Scientist Explains One Concept in 5 Levels of Difficulty | WIRED

    Computer Scientist Explains One Concept in 5 Levels of Difficulty | WIRED

    180 views / 0 likes - added

    Moravec's paradox is the observation that many things that are difficult to do for robots to do come easily to humans, and vice versa. Stanford University professor Chelsea Finn has been tasked to explain this concept to 5 different people; a child, a tee

  • 01:31 Popular What’s Inside A Flu Shot? | What’s Inside

    What’s Inside A Flu Shot? | What’s Inside

    702 views / 0 likes - added

    Each year the World Health Organization determines which of the thousands of influenza variants are most likely to circulate. Flu vaccines then use these variants at the starting point when developing the annual flu shot. Find out what’s inside the influe

    Featured
  • 02:17 A light rain can spread soil bacteria far and wide

    A light rain can spread soil bacteria far and wide

    542 views / 1 likes - added

    Using high-resolution imaging, researchers from MIT's Department of Mechanical Engineering observed the effect of raindrops falling on dry soil laden with bacteria. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2017/light-rain-spread-soil-bacteria-0307) Watch more vid

  • 05:01 Why the Victorian mansion is a horror icon

    Why the Victorian mansion is a horror icon

    392 views / 0 likes - added

    The Gilded Age left a legacy of decay on the American landscape. Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjO Haunted houses are often depicted with similar features: decaying woodwork, steep angles, and Gothic-looking towers and turrets. The model for

  • 03:52 We Just Discovered How the Milky Ways Twin Was Destroyed

    We Just Discovered How the Milky Ways Twin Was Destroyed

    482 views / 0 likes - added

    The Milky Way doesn't just have one twin, it has multiple, and each one of them can tell us more about how our galaxy has lived and how it might be destroyed. How Scientists Found the Universes First Type of Molecule - https://youtu.be/lxepnATltvURead Mor

  • 08:02 Popular How to Fold the 'Tube' Paper Airplane | WIRED

    How to Fold the 'Tube' Paper Airplane | WIRED

    796 views / 1 likes - added

    Watch John go in-depth on this airplane and much more: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KqjRPV9_PYJohn Collins, also known as 'The Paper Airplane Guy,' teaches us how to fold and fly our very own "Tube" paper airplane. The Tube doesn't look like much, but

  • 06:12 Why It's Almost Impossible to Run a Two-Hour Marathon | WIRED

    Why It's Almost Impossible to Run a Two-Hour Marathon | WIRED

    669 views / 0 likes - added

    One of the world's finest distance runners came so close to achieving the greatest feats of athleticism in history: a sub two-hour marathon. To do it, the Eliud Kipchoge should have maintained an average pace of at least 13.1 miles per hour. So, we timed

  • 05:28 Why Vegan Cheese Doesn't Melt | WIRED

    Why Vegan Cheese Doesn't Melt | WIRED

    183 views / 0 likes - added

    The debut of vegan cheese didn't inspire confidence, but in recent years vegan cheese had become a grocery store staple. But there's still one problem; vegan cheese won't melt, stretch, brown or bubble. So, what's the science behind why vegan cheese doesn

  • 03:09 Popular Robots Parking Cars: The Garage of the Future | WIRED

    Robots Parking Cars: The Garage of the Future | WIRED

    771 views / 0 likes - added

    Taking inspiration from similar systems in other parts of the world, this car park in West Hollywood, California could be the future of multi-story car garages around the world. Subscribe to WIRED►► http://po.st/SubscribeWired WIRED takes a look behind th

    Featured
  • 12:13 From Street Racing to Flying Pizza to Old-School Neon, This Is Cuba

    From Street Racing to Flying Pizza to Old-School Neon, This Is Cuba

    339 views / 0 likes - added

    Were celebrating Cuban culture, food and art in this reel that begins in Cuba and ends in New York City. In Cuba, we race cars from the 1930s with the countrys famously fast and furious family; order heavenly pizza that floats down from above in a basket;

  • 03:14 Popular There Is No American Cuisine, But There Could Be

    There Is No American Cuisine, But There Could Be

    755 views / 0 likes - added

    Dan Barber explains how national cuisines tend to be defined by historical precedent influenced by agricultural limitations. As the United States is a young country with rich soil, its own quintessential cuisine never developed. Barber's latest book is "T

  • 04:26 Scientists’ Crazy Plan to Power Solar Panels with E. Coli

    Scientists’ Crazy Plan to Power Solar Panels with E. Coli

    453 views / 0 likes - added

    New biogenic solar cells could be cheaper and more efficient than current solar technology. Here’s how they work. Your Gut Microbes Are Controlling Your Mind, Here’s What You’ll Do For Them - https://youtu.be/0raVj1BA7iU Read More: This bacteria could boo

  • 04:25 Why Scientists Are Exploring Earths Dangerous Twin

    Why Scientists Are Exploring Earths Dangerous Twin

    334 views / 0 likes - added

    NASA and the ISRO are planning on venturing to Venus for the first time in years because knowing this "Evil Twin" could be the key to understanding our planet's future. Sunshields & Nukes: What We Need to Terraform Venus and Marshttps://youtu.be/XvNbliFXm

  • 07:41 Popular How Close Are We to Fusion Energy?

    How Close Are We to Fusion Energy?

    1,468 views / 0 likes - added

    Fusion energy might be the safe, efficient, reliable and clean energy source that could save our planet. But, how close are we to a world where fusion energy is powering our homes? How Close Are We? Season 1 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8GDx7uM9Vdw&l

  • 02:50 Popular littleBits Star Wars™ Droid Inventor Kit with WIRED and John Lewis | WIRED

    littleBits Star Wars™ Droid Inventor Kit with WIRED and John Lewis | WIRED

    776 views / 2 likes - added

    WIRED unboxes, builds and does battle with the John Lewis Star Wars™ toy range – this time with the littleBits Star Wars™ Droid Inventor Kit. Part one in a four part series. Subscribe to WIRED►► http://po.st/SubscribeWired CONNECT WITH WIRED Web: http://p

  • 02:03 Popular Did You Know The Eiffel Tower Was Inspired By Your Femur?

    Did You Know The Eiffel Tower Was Inspired By Your Femur?

    873 views / 1 likes - added

    Find out how human bones inspired the Eiffel Tower through the design principle of structural hierarchy. Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wrd.cm/15fP7B7 CONNECT WITH WIRED Web: http://wired.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/WIRED Fac

  • 05:31 In The Footsteps Of Tizard - Periodic Table Of Videos

    In The Footsteps Of Tizard - Periodic Table Of Videos

    562 views / 0 likes - added

    Prof T-shirts: http://dftba.com/product/14y/The-Professor-Shirt The Professor discusses the life and work of war-time chemist Henry Tizard - who went to the same school as him! The duo went to Westminster School. More chemistry at http://www.periodicvideo

  • 14:52 Financial Advisor Answers Money Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED

    Financial Advisor Answers Money Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED

    200 views / 0 likes - added

    Kevin L. Matthews II, author and financial educator, answers questions from twitter about money and spending. Are we going into a recession? How is a credit score calculated? How soon do you need to start saving for retirement? Is our tax system rigged fo

  • 01:15 Popular CES 2016 - Fridges For The Future

    CES 2016 - Fridges For The Future

    725 views / 1 likes - added

    LG's Signature Fridge and Samsung's Family Hub Refrigerator concepts are a glimpse of the future of connected, touchscreen and app-controlled refrigerators that might even order their own groceries. Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://

  • 03:11 Is It Easier to Recognize People Who Look Like You?

    Is It Easier to Recognize People Who Look Like You?

    557 views / 0 likes - added

    Sometimes it's hard to remember new names and faces, but some of that forgetfulness might be due to a psychological phenomenon called the "cross-race effect." Your Face Could Be Recreated From Your DNA: Should You Worry? - https://youtu.be/IvZ_HfWR87Q Rea

  • 02:24 New system can sterilize medical tools using solar heat

    New system can sterilize medical tools using solar heat

    312 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers from MIT and the Indian Institute of Technology has developed a device that could provide pressurized steam to run autoclaves without the need for electricity in off-grid areas such as the developing world. (Learn more: https://news.

  • 09:53 Popular Radon - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Radon - Periodic Table Of Videos

    737 views / 0 likes - added

    Here is a new video from us about Radon, including a look at a historic letter and a German cloud chamber! With thanks to the Royal Society and GSI. For those with annotations, the caption at the end for Radon should clearly be Rn, not Ra - sorry! More ch

  • 15:56 21 Levels of Dunking: Easy to Complex | WIRED

    21 Levels of Dunking: Easy to Complex | WIRED

    297 views / 0 likes - added

    Professional dunker C.J. Champion explains dunking in 21 levels of difficulty. From from standard, basic dunk on an 8 foot hoop to jumping over whole other people, watch as C.J. breaks down all there is to know about the art of dunking a basketball.Still

  • 16:53 Biologist Explains One Concept in 5 Levels of Difficulty - CRISPR | WIRED

    Biologist Explains One Concept in 5 Levels of Difficulty - CRISPR | WIRED

    648 views / 1 likes - added

    CRISPR is a new area of biomedical science that enables gene editing and could be the key to eventually curing diseases like autism or cancer. WIRED has challenged biologist Neville Sanjana to explain this concept to 5 different people; a 7 year-old, a 14

  • 07:11 How to Make Stone Tools in a Survival Situation | Basic Instincts | WIRED

    How to Make Stone Tools in a Survival Situation | Basic Instincts | WIRED

    392 views / 1 likes - added

    If you're in the wilderness and have nothing, perhaps the most important thing you need is a sharp, durable edge. Humans are among the weakest species on the planet and tools are what help us compensate for that lack of strength. Dr. Bill Schindler, a pro

  • 19:05 The power of introverts | Susan Cain

    The power of introverts | Susan Cain

    594 views / 0 likes - added

    http://www.ted.com In a culture where being social and outgoing are prized above all else, it can be difficult, even shameful, to be an introvert. But, as Susan Cain argues in this passionate talk, introverts bring extraordinary talents and abilities to t

  • Insect-like robots

    Insect-like robots

    184 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers has developed a new generation of tiny, agile drones that look, act and maneuver like actual insects allowing them to operate in cramped spaces and withstand collisions. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2021/researchers-introduce-new

  • 03:23 Popular Why Does Spicy Food Taste Hot?

    Why Does Spicy Food Taste Hot?

    734 views / 0 likes - added

    You might know that spicy food can make your mouth feel like it's on fire, but how does it do that? Hi there! We at SciShow want to learn more about you and your opinions! If you have time, please take a moment to fill out this survey: https://www.surveym

    Featured
  • 11:48 How This Woman Makes Epic Gingerbread Houses | Obsessed | WIRED

    How This Woman Makes Epic Gingerbread Houses | Obsessed | WIRED

    176 views / 0 likes - added

    Emily Garland loves building gingerbread houses. As a gingerbread house builder, she's made stunning replicas of some of the most famous buildings in the world. Emily takes WIRED through her entire process, and shows us how one of her houses goes from a p

  • 07:52 Popular Why Nike Air Jordans Are So Expensive | So Expensive

    Why Nike Air Jordans Are So Expensive | So Expensive

    7,971 views / 3 likes - added

    Air Jordans retail and resell at higher prices than the average basketball sneaker. The high prices come from how the company makes and markets its iconic sneakers. The brand has a rich history, and its Air Jordan 1 is widely credited as the catalyst for

  • 01:08 You Can Control This Robot by Flexing Your Muscles

    You Can Control This Robot by Flexing Your Muscles

    413 views / 0 likes - added

    In a new paper published today, MIT CSAIL researchers Joseph DelPreto and Daniela Rus used electromyography sensors to make communication between a robot and a human a lot more intuitive without the need for verbal cues. Their system, dubbed RoboRaise, is

  • 09:26 Popular How Black Panther's Visual Effects Were Made | WIRED

    How Black Panther's Visual Effects Were Made | WIRED

    893 views / 2 likes - added

    Daryl Sawchuk, Visual Effects Supervisor for Method Studios and Animation Supervisor for Black Panther, gives WIRED an exclusive look at breakdowns of the digital Black Panther and Kilmonger suits, and the final fight scene of Marvel's mega-blockbuster. B

  • 36:32 Popular Astrophysicist Explains Gravity in 5 Levels of Difficulty | WIRED

    Astrophysicist Explains Gravity in 5 Levels of Difficulty | WIRED

    940 views / 0 likes - added

    Astrophysicist Janna Levin, PhD, is asked to explain the concept of gravity to 5 different people; a child, a teen, a college student, a grad student, and an expert. Levin is the Claire Tow Professor of Physics & Astronomy at Barnard College of Columbia U

  • 08:09 Chemistry Dubstep (behind The Scenes)

    Chemistry Dubstep (behind The Scenes)

    598 views / 0 likes - added

    How Dave and Adam created out chemistry dusbtep video - see the main video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TcvZL6fx-lU Visit Dave and Adam's channel at: http://bit.ly/boyinaband More chemistry at http://www.periodicvideos.com/ Follow us on Facebook at h

  • 09:29 The Multiverse is real. Just not in the way you think it is. | Sean Carroll

    The Multiverse is real. Just not in the way you think it is. | Sean Carroll

    108 views / 0 likes - added

    What do physicists actually mean when they talk about the Multiverse? Sean Carroll explains.Subscribe to Big Think on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvQECJukTDE2i6aCoMnS-Vg?sub_confirmation=1Up next, Michio Kaku: The Multiverse Has 11 Dimensions

  • 09:28 How NASA Engineered a Helicopter for Mars | WIRED

    How NASA Engineered a Helicopter for Mars | WIRED

    281 views / 0 likes - added

    It's not easy designing a new helicopter, especially if that new helicopter has to survive a ride on a rocket into space. NASA's Ingenuity helicopter is the first machine aerial vehicle to fly on a planet outside Earth. Ingenuity was designed specifically

  • 03:18 Scientists Just Broke a Quantum Record; What Happens Next?

    Scientists Just Broke a Quantum Record; What Happens Next?

    620 views / 0 likes - added

    Scientists managed to quantum entangle trillions of atoms – here's how. Quantum Teleportation Is Real, Here's How It Works - https://youtu.be/yb38jozeDOs Read more: Stabilized entanglement of massive mechanical oscillators https://www.nature.com/articles/

  • 10:45 Inside the 40 Year-Long Dungeons & Dragons Game | Obsessed | WIRED

    Inside the 40 Year-Long Dungeons & Dragons Game | Obsessed | WIRED

    644 views / 0 likes - added

    Remember that game of Dungeons & Dragons you started when you were 11? What if it never stopped? Robert Wardhaugh has been the Dungeon Master for a D&D campaign that's been going on for over 40 years. In his game, once you start playing...you keep playing

  • 02:49 Incredible Zulu click language - The ultimate tongue twister.

    Incredible Zulu click language - The ultimate tongue twister.

    304 views / 0 likes - added

    Sakhile has a new channel!! If you like his stuff, please consider subscribing to his channel here: https://youtube.com/channel/UCM2YGltZ7uMB6OzNKLy_V6A I know it would mean the world to him... Many of the languages spoken by the Nguni people of southern

  • 05:46 Why the US celebrates Columbus Day

    Why the US celebrates Columbus Day

    588 views / 2 likes - added

    Should Columbus Day be Indigenous Peoples’ Day? Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjO In past decades, Christopher Columbus has gone from unquestioned US hero to problematic figure. For centuries, the destruction and disease he ushered into the A

    Featured
  • 01:04 Robot takes contact-free measurements of patients' vital signs

    Robot takes contact-free measurements of patients' vital signs

    324 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers from MIT and Brigham and Women's Hospital have developed a system that allows a robot to take contact-free measurements of patients' vital signs. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2020/spot-robot-vital-signs-0831)Watch more videos fro

  • 08:39 Bug Expert Explains Why Cicadas Are So Loud | WIRED

    Bug Expert Explains Why Cicadas Are So Loud | WIRED

    263 views / 0 likes - added

    Why are cicadas so freakin' loud? Entomologist Samuel Ramsey has the answers. Dr. Sammy explains why it's so important for cicadas to gather in large groups and make lots of noise.Check out Sammy on Twitter: https://twitter.com/drsammytweets?lang=enor Ins

  • 03:44 Popular Where Does Chocolate Come From?

    Where Does Chocolate Come From?

    997 views / 2 likes - added

    It's Halloween night and Jessi and Squeaks just got home with loads of candy! Before they dive in, though, they want to learn a little more about how one of their favorite types of candy is made! ---------- Hi there! We at SciShow want to learn more about

    Featured
  • 01:47 Smart Rings To Rule Them All

    Smart Rings To Rule Them All

    643 views / 0 likes - added

    Until truly great natural-recognition gesture tech catches on and we get RFID chips embedded in our forearms, smart rings could be the closest thing to truly seamless wearable technology. Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wrd.cm/15fP

  • 02:39 Make way for Little HERMES, the lightweight bipedal robot

    Make way for Little HERMES, the lightweight bipedal robot

    365 views / 0 likes - added

    Engineers at MIT have designed a new lightweight bipedal robot, that can lean from side to side, walk in place, and jump while keeping its balance. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2019/two-legged-robot-mimics-human-balance-while-running-jumping-1030)Watc

  • 07:25 How This Guy Balances Impossible Rock Structures | Obsessed | WIRED

    How This Guy Balances Impossible Rock Structures | Obsessed | WIRED

    536 views / 3 likes - added

    Michael Grab's mind-bending rock formations aren't held together by glue or steel rods. Shockingly, his rock piles are stacked using only the laws of gravity. Michael's rock formations have taken the internet by storm, and brought an even greater attentio

  • 03:46 Popular How MIT Builds Cities Using Lego and Augmented Reality | Science of Teams | WIRED

    How MIT Builds Cities Using Lego and Augmented Reality | Science of Teams | WIRED

    779 views / 0 likes - added

    The MIT Media Lab is using innovation to boil efficient teamwork down to a science. With an enhanced ability to communicate across teams, MIT is creating a workplace that shares ideas in unprecedented ways. The Changing Places group at MIT tackles large c

  • 22:59 Popular How to Build a Cardboard Robot Helmet | WIRED

    How to Build a Cardboard Robot Helmet | WIRED

    1,092 views / 1 likes - added

    Warren King is a former engineer turned artist, and he's a wizard when it comes to cardboard. Most of his mesmerizing sculptures are made with just cardboard, glue, and a knife. Warren shows us how to build our very own robot helmet, using the techniques

  • 01:40 CES 2016 - WIRED's Top Gadget Trends From CES

    CES 2016 - WIRED's Top Gadget Trends From CES

    698 views / 0 likes - added

    Drones, throwback gadgets and the ever growing world of connected Internet of Things gear topped WIRED's CES 2016 trends. Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wrd.cm/15fP7B7 CONNECT WITH WIRED Web: http://wired.com Twitter: https://twit

  • 08:52 Why Britain Drinks 99,000 Megawatts of Tea Every Day | We The Curious

    Why Britain Drinks 99,000 Megawatts of Tea Every Day | We The Curious

    110 views / 0 likes - added

    The British love tea. But what happens when millions of people simultaneously decide to make a cuppa? Tom goes behind the scenes at the National Grid Control Centre to find out...Why It's Impossible To Engineer Earthquake-Proof Buildings: https://youtu.be

  • 04:38 The MIT Intelligence Quest

    The MIT Intelligence Quest

    423 views / 0 likes - added

    The MIT Intelligence Quest seeks to discover the foundations of human and machine intelligence and drive the development of technological tools that can positively influence society. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2018/mit-launches-intelligence-quest-02

  • 02:58 Why do you spin a rugby ball? | The Physics of Rugby | We The Curious

    Why do you spin a rugby ball? | The Physics of Rugby | We The Curious

    449 views / 0 likes - added

    To celebrate the nation's favourite sport, Ross and Bonnie investigate the science of the spin pass and chat to Jen Palmer from England's touch rugby squad to get some top passing tips!Bristol Fijians Touch Rubgy: http://www.bristolfijians.co.uk/England T

  • 03:40 Your Gut Microbes Are Controlling Your Mind, Here’s What You’ll Do For Them

    Your Gut Microbes Are Controlling Your Mind, Here’s What You’ll Do For Them

    431 views / 0 likes - added

    Microbes in your body can control how you feel and what you want to eat, here's how. Super Bacteria Has a New Enemy: The CRISPR Pill - https://youtu.be/zWzQf2xzJek Read More: Is Your Gut Making You Depressed or Anxious? https://www.scientificamerican.com/

  • 05:52 NASAs 4-Year Twin Experiment Takes Us Closer To Mars Than Ever Before

    NASAs 4-Year Twin Experiment Takes Us Closer To Mars Than Ever Before

    442 views / 0 likes - added

    Twin astronauts Scott and Mark Kelly participated in a groundbreaking NASA study to uncover the long-term effects of space on the human body. Over nearly a year, the twins took the same medical tests one while aboard the International Space Station and th

  • 02:35 How to mass produce cell-sized robots

    How to mass produce cell-sized robots

    409 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of engineers at MIT have developed a novel method to mass-produce tiny robots, no bigger than a cell, quickly, easily and accurately with little to no external stimulus. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2018/how-mass-produce-cell-sized-robots-1023)

  • 01:57 New method removes micropollutants from water

    New method removes micropollutants from water

    466 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of MIT researchers has developed a new way to clear pollutants from water, even when present in extremely low concentrations. (Learn more about their novel method: http://news.mit.edu/2017/electrochemical-clear-pollutants-water-0510) Watch more vid

  • 05:08 Scientists Just Got One Step Closer to Solving an Antarctic Mystery

    Scientists Just Got One Step Closer to Solving an Antarctic Mystery

    463 views / 0 likes - added

    Giant holes in the Antarctic, called polynyas, have baffled scientists for years. But now with the help of seals and robots, they might have the answers to these mysterious phenomena. A Dead Satellite Is Unlocking the Secrets Lurking Beneath Antarcticahtt

  • 07:47 Researcher Explains Why Cats May Like Their Owners as Much as Dogs | WIRED

    Researcher Explains Why Cats May Like Their Owners as Much as Dogs | WIRED

    587 views / 1 likes - added

    Cats are famously temperamental and are generally considered to be less loyal and social than dogs. But recent research suggests that cats actually have similar levels of attachment to their human caregivers as dogs and infants. WIRED's Arielle Pardes spo

  • 11:08 How This Guy Builds Amazing Lego Models | WIRED

    How This Guy Builds Amazing Lego Models | WIRED

    242 views / 0 likes - added

    PJ Catalano is a Master Model Builder at Legoland California Resort. He's been working at Legoland for 8 years and has built some truly incredible things. PJ talks about everything that goes into building Lego, from all the math he has to do to the variou

  • 05:20 Is Russia Allowed To Make Their Own Internet? Sort Of

    Is Russia Allowed To Make Their Own Internet? Sort Of

    388 views / 0 likes - added

    We use the internet every day, but who's in charge of owning all of it, and what happens when a country leaves the world wide web? Why Twisted Light Holds the Key to Radically Faster Internet - https://youtu.be/CvtsJuO3eTk Read More: What Happens if Russi

  • 03:02 Particle robots

    Particle robots

    416 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers from MIT, Columbia University, and elsewhere have developed computationally simple robots that connect in large groups to move around, transport objects, and complete other tasks. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2019/particle-robot-cluster-s

  • 05:28 Popular Meet the Robot Portrait Artists in this 'Robot Classroom' | WIRED

    Meet the Robot Portrait Artists in this 'Robot Classroom' | WIRED

    748 views / 1 likes - added

    WIRED gets an exclusive look at artist Patrick Tresset's new exhibition. His "robot classroom" features 20 robots that chat in Morse code and learn to draw in scribbles, while three other robots sketch portraits of human sitters. WIRED's senior editor Vic

  • 07:32 Astronomer Explains How NASA Detects Asteroids | WIRED

    Astronomer Explains How NASA Detects Asteroids | WIRED

    178 views / 0 likes - added

    It's the end of the world in "Don't Look Up," and it's all thanks to a comet heading straight towards Earth. Dr. Amy Mainzer, a science consultant on "Don't Look Up," breaks down a few scenes from the film and explores the science behind near-Earth object

  • 01:25 Popular Massive Black Holes Whip Dark Matter Into A Frenzy | WIRED Science

    Massive Black Holes Whip Dark Matter Into A Frenzy | WIRED Science

    890 views / 0 likes - added

    Inside a simulation of the universe's particle accelerator with WIRED Science writer Nick Stockton. Animations courtesy NASA Visualization Studio and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wrd.cm/15fP7B7 C

  • 30:21 Spring Stargazing from your window 1: Where do I start? | We The Curious

    Spring Stargazing from your window 1: Where do I start? | We The Curious

    291 views / 0 likes - added

    One of our Planetarium presenters, Paul brings the Planetarium directly to you. This is the first in a series of guides to stargazing from your window. It was live streamed on Facebook at 11:00 am on Tuesday, April 21st. Paul uses the free Planetarium sof

  • 02:15 The Actual Impact Of The Placebo Effect On Science

    The Actual Impact Of The Placebo Effect On Science

    616 views / 0 likes - added

    We know the placebo effect works, but researchers are starting to figure out exactly why and how doctors could use it to treat patients. Does The Placebo Effect Work On You? - https://youtu.be/qXrXUwyhuEg Sign Up For The Seeker Newsletter Here - http://bi

  • 15:11 Why Do Clocks Run Clockwise? | Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains...

    Why Do Clocks Run Clockwise? | Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains...

    193 views / 0 likes - added

    Why do clocks go clockwise? Neil deGrasse Tyson and comedian Chuck Nice ponder about the way we tell our time and more. We think about time geometrically and the history of timekeeping with sundials. What if timekeeping had been invented in the southern h

  • 08:19 How Stop-Motion Movies Are Animated at Aardman | WIRED

    How Stop-Motion Movies Are Animated at Aardman | WIRED

    228 views / 0 likes - added

    The new Netflix film, "Robin Robin," pushes the envelope of what's possible with stop-motion animation. The film's directors, Dan Ojari and Mikey Please, sit down with WIRED to go over the some of the techniques that went into the making of "Robin Robin."

  • 03:22 What Is It Like To Be Deaf?

    What Is It Like To Be Deaf?

    615 views / 1 likes - added

    Deafness is not a one size fits all, but what are some things Deaf people might experience? Watch more: Rikki's Channel ►► https://www.youtube.com/user/rikkipoynter Subscribe: https://bit.ly/SubLifeNoggin | Get your exclusive Life Noggin merch: http://kee

  • 03:47 Popular What Is the Shape of the Universe?

    What Is the Shape of the Universe?

    707 views / 0 likes - added

    Unlike the Earth, the universe might actually be flat! But how do scientists know that, if we can’t observe it? Get 20% off http://www.domain.com domain names and web hosting when you use coupon code SEEKER at checkout! Read More: What is the Shape of the

  • 01:45 Backflipping MIT Mini Cheetah

    Backflipping MIT Mini Cheetah

    563 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT'S new mini cheetah robot is the first four-legged robot to do a backflip. At only 20 pounds the limber quadruped can bend and swing its legs wide, enabling it to walk either right side up or upside down. The robot can also trot over uneven terrain abo

  • 13:00 Why Your Brain Thinks These Strawberries Are Red | Science Of Illusions | WIRED

    Why Your Brain Thinks These Strawberries Are Red | Science Of Illusions | WIRED

    453 views / 0 likes - added

    What is color constancy and how does it trick our brain into seeing colors that aren't really there? WIRED's Robbie Gonzalez and neuroscientist David Eagleman use ambiguous photographs and giant props to explain light, color and the science of illusions.W

  • 03:44 World’s Most Expensive Watches Are Made Here

    World’s Most Expensive Watches Are Made Here

    462 views / 0 likes - added

    Among the Jura Mountains in Western Switzerland, just a few miles off the border of France, is a city where time begins. Sitting at the center of an area known as “Watch Valley,” La Chaux-de-Fonds is the beating heart of the Swiss watchmaking industry. So

  • 02:30 Giving bug-like, flying robots a boost

    Giving bug-like, flying robots a boost

    159 views / 0 likes - added

    A new fabrication technique, developed by a team of electrical engineers and computer scientists, produces low-voltage, power-dense artificial muscles that improve the performance of flying microrobots. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2021/micro-robots-

  • 23:27 Every Dog Breed Explained (Part 1) | WIRED

    Every Dog Breed Explained (Part 1) | WIRED

    325 views / 0 likes - added

    Gail Miller Bisher, best known as the voice of the Westminster Kennel Club, sits down with WIRED to talk about every single dog breed recognized by the American Kennel Club. Gail goes over the seven major groups of dogs (hound, toy, sporting, non-sporting

  • 04:10 How Scientists Are Making 'Sonic' Black Holes in a Lab

    How Scientists Are Making 'Sonic' Black Holes in a Lab

    459 views / 0 likes - added

    In order to test Hawking radiation, scientists created their own artificial black hole using sound. But how?Can Hawkings Black Hole Paradox Be Solved With Fuzzballs?https://youtu.be/esPa1tVSjewRead More: What Sonic Black Holes Say About Real Oneshttps://w

  • 08:11 How viruses are slowly turning Greenland black | We The Curious

    How viruses are slowly turning Greenland black | We The Curious

    401 views / 0 likes - added

    What is a virus? How can some of the smallest structures in the world influence the climate of our entire planet?Find out more about biogeochemistry, microbiology in arctic environments & the Black and Bloom project here: https://blackandbloom.org/ FInd o

  • 04:03 Why Did Microsoft Put a Data Center Underwater?

    Why Did Microsoft Put a Data Center Underwater?

    416 views / 0 likes - added

    Computer company, Microsoft, is taking servers where they've never been before: under the sea. If this innovative approach to data storage is successful, this might just be the future of "cloud computing." Heres How We Could Store Data on a Single Atomhtt

  • 07:09 Popular How Close Are We to Downloading the Human Brain?

    How Close Are We to Downloading the Human Brain?

    1,051 views / 0 likes - added

    Downloading your brain may seem like science fiction, but some neuroscientists think it's not only possible, but that we’ve already started down a path to one day make it a reality. So, how close are we to downloading a human brain? How Close Are We to Fu

    Featured
  • 02:46 Revolutionizing Agriculture with Low Emissions, Resilient Crops

    Revolutionizing Agriculture with Low Emissions, Resilient Crops

    126 views / 0 likes - added

    This project is working to revolutionize the agricultural sector with climate-resilient crops and fertilizers that have the ability to dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions from food production. Learn more about this project: https://climategrandch

  • 14:43 Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains The International Date Line

    Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains The International Date Line

    96 views / 0 likes - added

    What is the International Date Line? Neil deGrasse Tyson and comedian Chuck Nice break down the history and purpose of the IDL. How do we know we needed a date line? Find out how the need for an international date line was discovered and why it was an acc

  • 03:17 Popular Freestyle Football Tricks in London feat. Guinness World Record Holder Dan Magness

    Freestyle Football Tricks in London feat. Guinness World Record Holder Dan Magness

    871 views / 1 likes - added

    Freestyle football Guinness worlds record holder, Dan Magness, shows us some of his amazing freestyle football skills. Dan holds five Guinness world records. One for keeping the football on his head for 26 hours and another for walking 210 miles from Wemb

  • 17:40 Bar Owner Builds an Alarm That Stops You From Forgetting Your Credit Card | Hack Job | WIRED

    Bar Owner Builds an Alarm That Stops You From Forgetting Your Credit Card | Hack Job | WIRED

    330 views / 0 likes - added

    Do you know what the most frustrating part about owning a bar is? When customers leave, but forget their credit card at the bar! What if we could stop that from ever happening? Mark Kleeb, bar owner and creative technologist based in Brooklyn, has been ch

  • 04:17 Dancing on Ice: How do ice skaters spin? With Suzanne Shaw and Matt Evers | We The Curious

    Dancing on Ice: How do ice skaters spin? With Suzanne Shaw and Matt Evers | We The Curious

    196 views / 0 likes - added

    How does an ice skater spin so fast? Join Ross Exton of the Live Science Team as he speaks to Suzanne Shaw and Matt Evers, two of the stars of ITV's Dancing on Ice 2014, and investigates the forces and physics at work.This video was presented by: Ross Ext

  • 40:17 Every Years Most Popular Toy Since 1969 Explained | Each and Every | WIRED

    Every Years Most Popular Toy Since 1969 Explained | Each and Every | WIRED

    394 views / 0 likes - added

    Chris Bensch, chief curator at the Strong Museum of Play, delves into the backstories of each and every ber-popular toy released over the last 50 years. In 1977 Star Wars action figures hit the market and revolutionized the toy industry. 1979's Atari 2600

  • 10:33 How This Guy Uses A.I. to Create Art | Obsessed | WIRED

    How This Guy Uses A.I. to Create Art | Obsessed | WIRED

    503 views / 2 likes - added

    Artist Refik Anadol doesn't work with paintbrushes or clay. Instead, he uses large collections of data and machine learning algorithms to create mesmerizing and dynamic installations. Machine Hallucination at Artechouse NYC: https://www.artechouse.com/nyc

  • 03:13 Watch SpaceX Launch And Land The World's Most Powerful Rocket

    Watch SpaceX Launch And Land The World's Most Powerful Rocket

    530 views / 2 likes - added

    SpaceX has launched its Falcon Heavy rocket for the second time. It's the first commercial launch for the rocket and just the first of many to come according to the rocket's $500-$750 million manifest.MORE SPACE CONTENT:How Astronomers Took The First Ever

  • 14:03 Popular Capitalism and Socialism: Crash Course World History #33

    Capitalism and Socialism: Crash Course World History #33

    1,012 views / 0 likes - added

    Crash Course World History is now available on DVD! Visit http://dft.ba/-CCWHDVD to buy a set for your home or classroom. In which John Green teaches you about capitalism and socialism in a way that is sure to please commenters from both sides of the deba

  • 04:06 The ‘Ham Sandwich Theorem’ Will Change How You See the Universe… Seriously

    The ‘Ham Sandwich Theorem’ Will Change How You See the Universe… Seriously

    586 views / 1 likes - added

    Ham sandwiches are delicious, but they’re also pretty useful when it comes to understanding the universe. Is Anything Truly Random? - https://youtu.be/tClZGWlRLoE Read More: The Ham Sandwich Theorem Is a Delicious and Puzzling Mathematical Principle https

  • 16:47 The Dark Past of Sea Monkeys

    The Dark Past of Sea Monkeys

    677 views / 0 likes - added

    This is the story of how a tiny, magical creature was transformed into a cultural phenomenon by inventor, marketing genius and complicated eccentric Harold von Braunhut. Full of fun facts (both charming and disturbing), Just Add Water is a colorful short

  • 25:42 11 Levels of Self-Portraiture: Easy to Complex | WIRED

    11 Levels of Self-Portraiture: Easy to Complex | WIRED

    313 views / 2 likes - added

    Artist TM Davy explains how to draw a self-portrait in 11 levels of increasing complexity. Starting off with the ubiquitous "solar head" and moving on to portraits that implement light, shadow and color, TM Davy deftly describes how a drawing evolves thro

  • 04:04 How Foldable Screens Work

    How Foldable Screens Work

    540 views / 0 likes - added

    The development of flexible screens has been in the works for the past six years. Phones now have curved edges, but they're able to actually be folded. We're seeing flexible display technology emerging from Samsung and Huawei. Watch the video above to lea

  • 04:59 How to make butter | Do Try This At Home! | We The Curious

    How to make butter | Do Try This At Home! | We The Curious

    131 views / 0 likes - added

    Bonnie Buckley of the Live Science Team shows you a messy experiment you can whip up in your kitchen! For this simple experiment, all you need is a whisk & some cream! Why not try your own kitchen chemistry experiments using different whisks or creams & s

  • 02:34 A new way to mix oil and water

    A new way to mix oil and water

    588 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers in the Varanasi Lab at MIT has developed a way to create nanoscale emulsions, of oil and water, stable enough to last indefinitely, and with no mixing required. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2017/new-way-mix-oil-and-water-1108) Wa

  • 02:32 Jell-O-like, expanding pill

    Jell-O-like, expanding pill

    447 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have designed an ingestible, Jell-O-like pill that, upon reaching the stomach, quickly swells to the size of a soft, squishy ping-pong ball big enough to stay in the stomach for an extended period of time. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/20

  • 00:34 Popular Greek And Roman Statues Were Once Colorfully Painted | National Geographic

    Greek And Roman Statues Were Once Colorfully Painted | National Geographic

    878 views / 1 likes - added

    Greek and Roman statues haven't always had that glazed look in their eyes—many were once painted. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe About National Geographic: National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and ad

    Featured
  • 03:32 Helping Others Feel The Wind in Their Hair

    Helping Others Feel The Wind in Their Hair

    454 views / 0 likes - added

    Cycling Without Age is a project founded on the ideals of Danish cycling culture - that no one, no matter what age, should be restricted from riding a bike. Teaming up with the region’s retirement homes, volunteers take the elderly out on daily bike rides

  • 02:19 Plug-and-play diagnostics

    Plug-and-play diagnostics

    387 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers at MIT’s Little Devices Lab have developed a set of modular blocks that can be put together in different ways to produce diagnostic devices. These “plug-and-play” devices, which require little expertise to assemble, can test blood glucose leve

  • 02:07 Popular AR, VR, MR: Making Sense Of Magic Leap And The Future Of Reality

    AR, VR, MR: Making Sense Of Magic Leap And The Future Of Reality

    813 views / 1 likes - added

    The age of virtual realty is here but augmented reality and its cousin mixed reality are making strides. WIRED senior editor Peter Rubin breaks down the new platforms. Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wrd.cm/15fP7B7 CONNECT WITH WIR

  • 03:56 Electro Musician Robert DeLong Shows Off His Tricked-Out Rig

    Electro Musician Robert DeLong Shows Off His Tricked-Out Rig

    646 views / 0 likes - added

    It's equal parts D.I.Y. and high-tech; electronic musician Robert DeLong shows us his awesome rig, which includes a mix of video game controllers, a cutlery tray from Ikea, two Mac minis, and more. See how it all comes together as he performs “Don’t Wait

  • 10:45 Why It's Almost Impossible to Do a Quintuple Cork in Tricking | WIRED

    Why It's Almost Impossible to Do a Quintuple Cork in Tricking | WIRED

    408 views / 1 likes - added

    Tricking is a sport with roots in martial arts and elements of tumbling and breakdancing mixed in. The quadruple cork is tricking's ultimate feat: an off-axis backflip combined with four rotations in the air on a separate axis. WIRED's Robbie Gonzalez spo

  • 05:02 From plants to prosthetics: the science of 3D-printing | We The Curious

    From plants to prosthetics: the science of 3D-printing | We The Curious

    382 views / 0 likes - added

    How does 3D-printing work? From making tools onboard the International Space Station to building bionic hands, the first stage of this revolutionary manufacturing process might surprise you...What's inside a furby? https://youtu.be/GtbCFjSibc4 Bionic hand

  • 03:58 What is the biggest number? | Your Questions | We The Curious

    What is the biggest number? | Your Questions | We The Curious

    593 views / 0 likes - added

    What is the biggest number in the world? Do dreams have a purpose? Nerys and Sarah are back with some of the answers to your questions. Got a question you want answered? Leave it in the comments below!What do you dream about? Do you think it means anythin

  • 03:53 Whistling In The Wind: Preserving A Language Without Words

    Whistling In The Wind: Preserving A Language Without Words

    556 views / 0 likes - added

    On La Gomera, a small island in Spain’s Canary Islands, the last speakers of a language without words reside. "El Silbo," a whistled communication used in rural and isolated areas, is dying out as islanders embrace digital communication and move to cities

  • 02:20 One giant leap for the mini cheetah

    One giant leap for the mini cheetah

    152 views / 0 likes - added

    A new control system, designed by researchers in MIT's Improbable AI Lab and demonstrated using MITs robotic mini cheetah, enables four-legged robots to traverse across uneven terrain in real-time. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2021/one-giant-leap-mini

  • 02:20 Lab on a LEGO

    Lab on a LEGO

    531 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of MIT engineers turned to LEGO bricks as the basis of their new microfluidic design because of their precision and consistency. No matter where in the world they are found, LEGO bricks are guaranteed to line up, and snap seamlessly and securely in

  • 02:37 Making South Korea’s Secret Sauce

    Making South Korea’s Secret Sauce

    606 views / 0 likes - added

    In Korea, the secret sauce has long been gochujang. From kimchi to bibimbap to Korean BBQ, gochujang is a favorite among chefs everywhere, and is poised to soon become as big as Sriracha. In Korea, no one makes it better than Seo Youngsoon. She’s been sti

  • 01:27 'Kitchen robot' that will cook meals from scratch unveiled

    'Kitchen robot' that will cook meals from scratch unveiled

    155 views / 0 likes - added

    A London-based robotics company has unveiled a "kitchen robot" which it promises "cooks from scratch and even cleans up afterwards without complaint". The robot costs £248,000, about the same as the average house in Britain, a price tag the inventor

  • 02:30 CES 2016 - Four Gadgets That Could Make Life More Convenient

    CES 2016 - Four Gadgets That Could Make Life More Convenient

    672 views / 0 likes - added

    WIRED executive editor Joe Brown checks out a temperature regulating coffee cup, a connected flowerpot, a remote pet food dispenser and a very loud speaker that doubles as a beverage cooler. Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wrd.cm/1

  • 10:58 Why Its Almost Impossible to Make a 7-10 Split in Bowling | WIRED

    Why Its Almost Impossible to Make a 7-10 Split in Bowling | WIRED

    516 views / 0 likes - added

    The dreaded 7-10 split is by many accounts the toughest shot in bowling. WIRED's Robbie Gonzalez went to the U.S. Bowling Congress to meet a pro bowler, an engineer, and a robot named Earl, to find out why it's actually Almost Impossible. Read more of Rob

  • 03:22 How Do Cochlear Implants Work?

    How Do Cochlear Implants Work?

    480 views / 0 likes - added

    When hearing aids aren't enough, some turn to cochlear implants to help with hearing loss – here's how they work. AHHHHHHH!! How Blood-Curdling Screams Affect Your Brain - https://youtu.be/Zy9Xt4HN2o0 Read More Cochlear Implants https://www.nidcd.nih.gov/

  • 05:21 How do robots balance? | We The Curious

    How do robots balance? | We The Curious

    248 views / 0 likes - added

    Last year, we explored the science of humans balancing on ice. This year, Nerys and Ross get their skates back on and take to the ice once more to investigate how robots can balance; using tools such as gyroscopes, accelerometers, gimbals, and adaptive co

  • 04:12 Bees’ Tiny Brains Could Change How We Engineer Computers

    Bees’ Tiny Brains Could Change How We Engineer Computers

    571 views / 0 likes - added

    Bees are insanely smart, and now scientists have shown they understand the concept of zero. How could this lead to more efficient computers? After a Decade of Colony Collapse, Bees Are Bouncing Back! (Sort Of) - https://youtu.be/n9NQ9o7UWT4 Get 20% off ht

  • 05:05 Can Hawking’s Black Hole Paradox Be Solved With Fuzzballs?

    Can Hawking’s Black Hole Paradox Be Solved With Fuzzballs?

    513 views / 1 likes - added

    Our current ideas about black holes present some interesting paradoxes. Could this unusual black hole model solve them? Why Don’t We Have a Photo of a Black Hole Yet? - https://youtu.be/7fFL9oLNJOI Read More: The Fuzzball Fix for a Black Hole Paradox http

  • 04:11 Popular How to spot a planet | Do Try This At Home | We The Curious

    How to spot a planet | Do Try This At Home | We The Curious

    727 views / 0 likes - added

    Rose, Florence and Lee are here to give you some top tips on how to spot planets in the night sky, and how you can help discover other worlds outside of our solar system.How to photograph the night sky: https://youtu.be/cPy79aWKOQQ Find your local planeta

    Featured
  • 03:31 Saving Languages From Extinction

    Saving Languages From Extinction

    437 views / 0 likes - added

    Tunica, Osing, Sorani Kurdish and Dutch sign language—these are among about 500 languages considered critically endangered. With only a handful of speakers, and no active movement to revive the language, they could be lost to time. Thankfully, Danie

  • 08:12 Are We Living In The Matrix? | WIRED

    Are We Living In The Matrix? | WIRED

    215 views / 0 likes - added

    20 years ago, futurist Nick Bostrom published the first draft of his groundbreaking simulation argument, which asks, "Are you living in a computer simulation?" Public figures like Elon Musk and Neil deGrass Tyson have also broached this line of questionin

  • 09:03 Seaborgium - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Seaborgium - Periodic Table Of Videos

    577 views / 0 likes - added

    We're at Berkeley for filming of a new video about Seaborgium - a synthetic element named after the legendary Glenn Seaborg. With thanks to Darleane Hoffman and Alexander Pines at the University of California, Berkeley, and to the Lawrence Berkeley Nation

  • 01:54 Popular The Science Of Track & Field Ft. Allyson Felix & Ashton Eaton | WIRED

    The Science Of Track & Field Ft. Allyson Felix & Ashton Eaton | WIRED

    751 views / 1 likes - added

    What does it take to be an Olympic sprinter? Power and aggression. WIRED talks to Allyson Felix, Lashawn Merritt, Ashton Eaton, Jarryd Wallace, and Dawn Harper about the science behind the sport, and the mechanics behind propelling their bodies from the b

  • 01:43 Kenyan Company Is Turning Human Poo Into Replacement Charcoal

    Kenyan Company Is Turning Human Poo Into Replacement Charcoal

    634 views / 0 likes - added

    A company is manufacturing charcoal from human poo and sawdust collected around Nakuru, Kenya. Locals have embraced its use and are using the briquettes for cooking and other purposes. The project aims to help protect the environment and improve sanitatio

  • 01:42 Popular How Moth Eyes Inspired The Camera Lens | Think Like A Tree

    How Moth Eyes Inspired The Camera Lens | Think Like A Tree

    959 views / 1 likes - added

    Find out how camera lenses take after moths by mimicking the way they absorb and hold in light. SUBSCRIBE for more videos: http://wrd.cm/15fP7B7 Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wrd.cm/15fP7B7 CONNECT WITH WIRED Web: http://wired.co

    Featured
  • 03:09 Forest search-and-rescue

    Forest search-and-rescue

    410 views / 0 likes - added

    A group of researchers from MIT and the NASA Langley Research Center has developed an autonomous system for a fleet of quadrotor drones that enables them to search collaboratively under dense forest canopies using only on-board computation and wireless co

  • 16:38 13 Levels of Beatboxing: Easy to Complex | WIRED

    13 Levels of Beatboxing: Easy to Complex | WIRED

    456 views / 0 likes - added

    2005 Female World Beatbox Champion Butterscotch explains the art of beatboxing in 13 levels of difficulty. Starting with just the bass drum, Butterscotch layers more and more vocal drums and instruments on top of each other until she starts adding real, l

  • 02:35 Lining the GI tract

    Lining the GI tract

    259 views / 0 likes - added

    By making use of enzymes found in the digestive tract, MIT engineers have devised a way to apply a temporary synthetic coating to the lining of the small intestine. This coating could be adapted to deliver drugs, aid in digestion, or prevent nutrients suc

  • 05:52 Could Everything We Know About String Theory Be Wrong?

    Could Everything We Know About String Theory Be Wrong?

    567 views / 0 likes - added

    It’s been 50 years since string theory was first proposed, but now some new research could call it all into question. WTF is Quantum Retrocausality? (ft. Physics Girl) - https://youtu.be/5hYBeFNSv2o Read More: String Theory May Create Far Fewer Universes

  • 07:34 How to make a hot air balloon | Do Try This At Home | We The Curious

    How to make a hot air balloon | Do Try This At Home | We The Curious

    139 views / 0 likes - added

    How big is a hot air balloon? What's it made from? Join Ross of the Live Science Team as he shows you how to make a small hot air balloon at home & discovers the engineering that goes into making a big one.This video was presented by: Ross Exton, Live Sci

  • 03:31 How Method Keeps Its Soap Factory Eco-Friendly

    How Method Keeps Its Soap Factory Eco-Friendly

    540 views / 0 likes - added

    Methods Soapbox is the first LEED platinum certified factory in the industry. The factory creates less waste, uses less energy, and provides better working conditions for its employees than other factories. When youre bottling 250,000 units of soap every

  • 02:05 How to make a hoverboard | Do Try This At Home | We The Curious

    How to make a hoverboard | Do Try This At Home | We The Curious

    397 views / 1 likes - added

    Great Scott! Hoverboards are no longer a thing of science fiction! Andy and Kerina show you how to make a mini-hoverboard and hack a leaf blower to travel back to the future. Heavy.Download the free CD-Hoverboard template: http://bit.ly/HoverPDFThe Hendo

  • 06:14 How a 5-Person Team Made Blockbuster-Level Movie Effects | WIRED

    How a 5-Person Team Made Blockbuster-Level Movie Effects | WIRED

    180 views / 0 likes - added

    'Everything Everywhere All at Once' directors Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert (also known as DANIELS) sit down with visual effects artist Zak Stoltz to talk about the special and visual effects used in their astonishing new movie. The Michelle Yeoh sci-f

  • 07:09 Iridium - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Iridium - Periodic Table Of Videos

    509 views / 0 likes - added

    Up close with some big samples of real Iridium. Our thanks to Johnson Matthey. See all the elements at http://bit.ly/118elements Naming Iridium: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fe6SjQRzxZQ Gold Vault: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CTtf5s2HFkA More chemist

  • 08:59 Inside the Largest Bitcoin Mine in The U.S. | WIRED

    Inside the Largest Bitcoin Mine in The U.S. | WIRED

    200 views / 0 likes - added

    Bitcoin hit 1 trillion market cap this year. This has inspired some bitcoin operations to expand. The ban on mining in China has caused a mass exodus, and some mining operations are moving their facilities to the United States. We go to Rockland, Texas to

  • 04:28 Popular Inside the incredible LEGO House with architect Bjarke Ingels | WIRED

    Inside the incredible LEGO House with architect Bjarke Ingels | WIRED

    769 views / 3 likes - added

    WIRED takes a tour of the new LEGO House in Billund, Denmark. The "home of the brick" was designed by Bjarke Ingels Group and completely inspired by LEGO. The building uses the same dimensions as LEGO bricks, so you could technically build it out of LEGO.

  • 02:43 Popular Science Of Swimming Ft. Ryan Lochte & Conor Dwyer | WIRED

    Science Of Swimming Ft. Ryan Lochte & Conor Dwyer | WIRED

    820 views / 0 likes - added

    What does it take to be an Olympic gold medalist? WIRED takes in-depth look at the mechanics behind the athletes featuring Conor Dwyer, Elizabeth Biesel, Matt Grevers, Nathan Adrian, Rayler Clary, and Ryan Lochte. Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouT

  • 05:03 These Strange Metals Could Make Electronics Perfectly Efficient

    These Strange Metals Could Make Electronics Perfectly Efficient

    419 views / 0 likes - added

    Scientists are hunting for the high-temperature superconductor that could revolutionize electronics, and new research takes us one step closer. How Supercapacitors Could Make Batteries a Thing of the Past - https://youtu.be/GeSvErqdmIM Read More: Physicis

  • 01:52 Origami-inspired medical patch for sealing internal injuries

    Origami-inspired medical patch for sealing internal injuries

    156 views / 0 likes - added

    Taking inspiration from origami, MIT engineers have designed a medical patch that can be folded around minimally invasive surgical tools and delivered through airways, intestines, and other narrow spaces, to patch up internal injuries. (Learn more: https:

  • 24:00 Nanotechnology Expert Explains One Concept in 5 Levels of Difficulty | WIRED

    Nanotechnology Expert Explains One Concept in 5 Levels of Difficulty | WIRED

    406 views / 0 likes - added

    Nanotechnology researcher Dr. George S. Tulevski is asked to explain the concept of nanotechnology to 5 different people; a child, a teen, a college student, a grad student, and an expert. Nanotechnology is the study of objects at the nanoscale (between 1

  • 03:35 How to turn stuff from your yard into stunning insect sculptures

    How to turn stuff from your yard into stunning insect sculptures

    578 views / 0 likes - added

    Raku Inoue has gotten famous on Instagram by making these fantastical insectile creatures. »Subscribe to CBC Arts to watch more videos: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsSubscribe Raku Inoue is taking you through the steps you need to know to try to create your

  • 01:52 Blood testing via sound waves

    Blood testing via sound waves

    680 views / 0 likes - added

    A multi-disciplinary team of researchers from MIT, Duke University, Magee-Women's Research Institute, and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore has developed a novel way to analyze blood, for signatures of cancer and other diseases, using sound wa

  • 15:04 How PlayStation 5 Was Built (feat. Mark Cerny) | WIRED

    How PlayStation 5 Was Built (feat. Mark Cerny) | WIRED

    227 views / 0 likes - added

    Mark Cerny, Lead System Architect of the PlayStation 5, breaks down all the went into the creation of Sony's latest video game console. Mark talks about the steps Sony takes when developing a video game console, from early brainstorming sessions to pickin

  • 05:46 Neptunium - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Neptunium - Periodic Table Of Videos

    560 views / 0 likes - added

    We get a close-up look at Neptunium during a visit to the National Nuclear Laboratory at Sellafield. This video features Mark Sarsfield from NNL - and periodicvideos regulars Steve Liddle and Martyn Poliakoff from the University of Nottingham. With thanks

  • 10:04 How This Craftsman Weaves Huge Wooden Sculptures | Obsessed | WIRED

    How This Craftsman Weaves Huge Wooden Sculptures | Obsessed | WIRED

    185 views / 0 likes - added

    Charlie Baker is an artist and builder who weaves materials found in nature to make astonishing and beautiful wooden structures. Charlie's creations are made so they look like they could've grown that way, and this ethos permeates the majority of his work

  • 10:09 Popular How Close Are We to a Complete Map of the Human Brain?

    How Close Are We to a Complete Map of the Human Brain?

    886 views / 0 likes - added

    If we could fully map the inner workings of our brain, we could understand disease, consciousness, and what it is that makes us human. Only catch? There are more connections in the human brain than there are stars in the Milky Way. So, how close are we to

  • 19:45 Engineer Explains Every Roller Coaster | A World of Difference | WIRED

    Engineer Explains Every Roller Coaster | A World of Difference | WIRED

    380 views / 2 likes - added

    In this edition of "A World of Difference," Korey Kiepert, owner and engineer with The Gravity Group, goes through the 8 main types of roller coasters and breaks down how they work as well as the decisions behind why they get built in the first place. Kor

  • 02:49 Vision-free MIT Cheetah

    Vision-free MIT Cheetah

    657 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT's Cheetah 3 robot can now leap and gallop across rough terrain, climb a staircase littered with debris, and quickly recover its balance when suddenly yanked or shoved, all while essentially blind. Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2018/blind-cheetah-rob

  • 02:08 Popular Glowing plants provide light to read

    Glowing plants provide light to read

    704 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have been able to induce plants to give off a dim light for nearly four hours. And they believe that, with further optimization, such plants will one day be bright enough to illuminate an entire workspace. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/20

    Featured
  • 01:52 Plant-to-human communication

    Plant-to-human communication

    620 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have transformed spinach plants into sensors that can detect explosives and wirelessly relay that information to a handheld device similar to a smartphone. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2016/nanobionic-spinach-plants-detect-explosives-103

  • 04:54 This Superfluid Is Alive, And It Could Power Machines of the Future

    This Superfluid Is Alive, And It Could Power Machines of the Future

    406 views / 0 likes - added

    Fluids with zero viscosity seemingly defy the laws of physics and they have endless applications. But they’ve been hard to make, until now. The secret? Bacteria! Scientists’ Crazy Plan to Power Solar Panels With E. Coli - https://youtu.be/_XZGrZ3DeLg Get

  • 09:52 Popular Boiling Water - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Boiling Water - Periodic Table Of Videos

    1,085 views / 0 likes - added

    Original Everest video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTL4dj3Gx1o This video features Martyn Poliakoff, Samantha Tang and Neil Barnes. Thanks to Buddhi Rai and Chandra Rai for all theri help with the Everest boiling. More chemistry at http://www.periodic

  • 03:40 Why Are NASA Spacesuits White?

    Why Are NASA Spacesuits White?

    545 views / 0 likes - added

    Why do NASA astronauts where white spacesuits? Short answer: It saves their lives. Longer answer: It has to do with how white reflects radiation compared to other colors. But not all spacesuits are white, and theres a good reason why.MORE SPACE CONTENT:Wh

  • 10:12 Birds In A Truck Riddle

    Birds In A Truck Riddle

    479 views / 1 likes - added

    Watch my newest video, "The Game You Win By Losing (Parrondo's Paradox)": https://youtu.be/PpvboBJEozMDownload Angry Birds 2 from your app store today! https://c.singular.net/api/v1/ad?st=59571402224&pcn=Vsauce2&psn=Vsauce2&h=133970888f55d20b2a1077b676434

  • 03:03 Meet The 24-Year-Old Whose Prosthetic Limbs Are Changing Lives

    Meet The 24-Year-Old Whose Prosthetic Limbs Are Changing Lives

    549 views / 0 likes - added

    Guillermo Martinez 3D prints prosthetic arms for people in need. He has touched more lives than most do in a lifetime and he hasnt turned 30 yet.For more, visit:https://www.facebook.com/ayudame3D/https://twitter.com/Ayudame3DMORE TECH CONTENT:22 Invention

  • 05:54 Popular Harry Potter and the translator's nightmare

    Harry Potter and the translator's nightmare

    1,078 views / 1 likes - added

    Accio Harry Potter translations! Translating the Harry Potter books written by J.K. Rowling, in over 60 languages around the world, was not for the faint of heart or vocabulary. Translators didn't have advanced copies of the books to get a headstart and t

  • 10:04 Bill Nye Explains the Science Behind Solar Sailing | WIRED

    Bill Nye Explains the Science Behind Solar Sailing | WIRED

    358 views / 0 likes - added

    On June 25, the Planetary Society's LightSail 2 hitched a ride into orbit on board SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket. The solar sail is propelled only by sunlight, and its technology holds promise for early detection of major events in space, as well as travel

  • 15:52 Paleontologist Answers Dinosaur Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED

    Paleontologist Answers Dinosaur Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED

    177 views / 1 likes - added

    Paleontologist Dr. Hans Sues answers the internet's burning questions about dinosaurs. Why did T-Rex have such tiny arms? What colors were dinosaurs? How do dinos get their names? What did Jurassic Park get wrong? Why do fossils exist? Dr. Sues answers al

  • 02:24 Magnetic shape-shifters

    Magnetic shape-shifters

    451 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have created soft, magnetic 3-D-printed structures that can transform their shape almost instantaneously by the wave of a magnet. The structures are flexible, yet strong and could be used to develop remotely controlled biomedical devices. (L

  • 02:21 Robo-picker grasps and packs

    Robo-picker grasps and packs

    417 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of engineers from MIT and Princeton University has developed a robotic system that can successfully localize and pick up any item, amid clutter, and move it to another location. This technology earned them a first place spot at the 2017 Amazon Robo

  • 13:33 Popular Japan in the Heian Period and Cultural History: Crash Course World History 227

    Japan in the Heian Period and Cultural History: Crash Course World History 227

    1,327 views / 7 likes - added

    In which John Green teaches you about what westerners call the middle ages and the lives of the aristocracy...in Japan. The Heian period in Japan lasted from 794CE to 1185CE, and it was an interesting time in Japan. Rather than being known for a thriving

  • 06:57 Accent Expert Breaks Down 4 Amazing Things About Languages | WIRED

    Accent Expert Breaks Down 4 Amazing Things About Languages | WIRED

    533 views / 0 likes - added

    Ever wonder why we pronounce words differently than we did 100 years ago? Dialect coach Erik Singer breaks down four of the most mind-blowing facts we know about human language. CORRECTION: The scan shown at 4:44 is an ultrasound image, not an MRI. We reg

  • Robotic fibers can make breath-monitoring garments

    Robotic fibers can make breath-monitoring garments

    147 views / 0 likes - added

    A new kind of fiber developed by researchers at MIT and in Sweden can be made into cloth that senses how much it is being stretched or compressed, and then provides immediate tactile feedback in the form of pressure or vibration. Such fabrics, the team su

  • 11:29 Stress Testing Real-Life Robot Legs | WIRED

    Stress Testing Real-Life Robot Legs | WIRED

    262 views / 0 likes - added

    Robotic exoskeletons have captivated us for years. They are major tropes in sci-fi movies and video games, and in real-life engineers have been working on them since the 1900s. San Francisco's Roam Robotics has entered into this space, and Brent Rose trie

  • 02:00 Slime Oobleck - The science of cornstarch and water

    Slime Oobleck - The science of cornstarch and water

    463 views / 0 likes - added

    When you mix cornstarch and water, weird things happen. Sometimes it acts like a liquid and sometimes it acts like a solid. Now, a team of MIT engineers have developed a mathematical model that can accurately predict this material's behavior under various

  • 03:01 Golf's Data Revolution: Virtual Caddies, Smart Clubs & Radar Tracking with Microsoft Cloud | WIRED

    Golf's Data Revolution: Virtual Caddies, Smart Clubs & Radar Tracking with Microsoft Cloud | WIRED

    569 views / 0 likes - added

    WIRED explores golf’s data revolution, using Microsoft Cloud-enabled sensors to improve the swing, putt and grip of amateurs and pros alike. Read the article: http://www.wired.co.uk/article/microsoft-data-driven-golf A WIRED / Microsoft Cloud promotion. S

  • How a Master Chef Makes Every Style of French Fries  Plateworthy

    How a Master Chef Makes Every Style of French Fries Plateworthy

    166 views / 0 likes - added

    On this episode of Plateworthy, chef Nyesha Arrington demonstrates her methods for making 10 different types of crispy, crunchy French fries, including shoestring, curly, waffle and more. Credits: Host/Producer: Nyesha Arrington Director/Producer: McGraw

  • 04:25 The Untold Story Of Magic Leap, The World's Most Secretive Startup

    The Untold Story Of Magic Leap, The World's Most Secretive Startup

    644 views / 0 likes - added

    The world's hottest startup isn't located in Silicon Valley–it's in suburban Florida. WIRED explores what Magic Leap's mind-bending technology tells us about the future of virtual reality. Still haven’t subscribed to WIRED on YouTube? ►► http://wrd.cm/15f

  • 04:39 Famous Science Spectacles - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Famous Science Spectacles - Periodic Table Of Videos

    527 views / 0 likes - added

    Joseph Priestley made a famous discovery - but it seems his eyesight wasn't too good? Royal Society (Romantic Chemistry Exhibition until June 14): http://royalsociety.org/events/2012/romantic-chemistry/ Professor Martyn Poliakoff is Foreign Secretary of t

  • 25:31 How to Start a Fire in the Wilderness | Basic Instincts | WIRED

    How to Start a Fire in the Wilderness | Basic Instincts | WIRED

    334 views / 1 likes - added

    Dr. Bill Schindler, a professor of archeology and anthropology at Washington College, demonstrates a couple of the most effective methods for starting a fire in the wilderness with limited resources. "Even though you may never find yourself in a survival

  • 04:43 Science in America - Neil deGrasse Tyson

    Science in America - Neil deGrasse Tyson

    421 views / 0 likes - added

    We offer this 4min video on “Science in America”, containing what may be the most important words Neil deGrasse Tyson has ever spoken. ------------- Redglass Pictures is an award-winning production studio co-founded by Sarah Klein and Tom Maso

  • 10:29 Popular INDIAN FOOD Touched by GOD! How to Cook for 10,000 People in Delhi's Biggest Sikh Temple!

    INDIAN FOOD Touched by GOD! How to Cook for 10,000 People in Delhi's Biggest Sikh Temple!

    751 views / 0 likes - added

    Exotic Mumbai Street Food! → https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zH5btDbjLkc Learn more about ONETRIP Tours → https://www.christinas.vn/onetrip/ INFO: Gurdwara Bangla Sahib is one of the most prominent Sikh Gurdwara located in C.P. New Delhi on Baba

  • 04:19 Popular Some Sharks Live for 500 Years, What Can We Learn From Them?

    Some Sharks Live for 500 Years, What Can We Learn From Them?

    1,284 views / 12 likes - added

    Sharks aren’t just here for one week, some have been swimming in our oceans for centuries! Here’s how scientists discovered their crazy long life spans. How Seeker Will Collect The Most Extensive Data Set of the Pacific Ocean | The Swim - https://youtu.be

    Featured
  • 03:49 Testing wastewater to help detect Covid-19

    Testing wastewater to help detect Covid-19

    328 views / 0 likes - added

    In a project that will run through the fall semester, wastewater from seven buildings on campus will be tested each day for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19. The project is designed to determine if wastewater testing can be an effective early wa

  • 17:35 Popular Bell's Theorem: The Quantum Venn Diagram Paradox

    Bell's Theorem: The Quantum Venn Diagram Paradox

    880 views / 0 likes - added

    Featuring 3Blue1Brown Watch the 2nd video on 3Blue1Brown here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MzRCDLre1b4 Support MinutePhysics on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/minutephysics Link to Patreon Supporters: http://www.minutephysics.com/supporters/ This vid

  • 07:08 How Disney Designed a Robotic Spider-Man | WIRED

    How Disney Designed a Robotic Spider-Man | WIRED

    338 views / 0 likes - added

    The stunts we love to watch in movies like 'Spider-Man: Homecoming' usually rely on a combination of green screen, stunt performers, and computer-generated models. Stunts like these can be dangerous, especially when performed live...over and over. At the

  • 02:39 The Historic Origins of the Dap

    The Historic Origins of the Dap

    593 views / 0 likes - added

    The dap is more than just a handshake, it’s a symbol of solidarity, one with a long and proud history behind it. The origins of this greeting trace back to young Black American soldiers stationed abroad during the Vietnam War. With racism prevalent in the


>> View aspect mexican culture soccer web videos


RSS