Wow, I did research in a small branch of MEMS for my master's thesis, and this video still told me a lot that I didn't know. I can't imagine how much work went into this. Spectacular educational video.
Brilliant comment. Someone who is qualified to provide evaluative feedback. Unlike myself as this video is so far above my knowledge level but still very engaging-
Your comment put into perspective the amount of data this guy gathered into one video and presented spectacularly. Really makes me appreciate people like him.
This absolutely is some of the most mind blowing modern science that the vast majority of the world is completely clueless about........... presented perfectly for us dumb people. Amazing presentation!!!!!
When u see this and think its some sort of pinnacle of tech, i hope u only include urself when u call the majority, dumb....majority maybe smarter than u if this impresses u to those levels. Ideally, its a good habit to speak for oneself and not assume the majority share ur opinion.
As an engineer I have high respect for the knowledge and research put into this video 👌 I'm only an RF engineer but I require endless amounts and types of MEMS for radio frequency devices to work the way this modern world needs from micro-microphones to data transfer and tilt sensors on sat dishes. This was a very enjoyable video and I appreciate it 😎
The amount of information, examples and visualizations that you have in each of your videos is amazing. You must do a lot of research on each topic. Great work.
As a master at Microelectronics and Optronics and aerospace engineer I must admit that this is seriously well prepared, entry level presentation for people that might want to sink in a micro world of MEMS/MOEMS.
Hello! Been enjoying your channel a lot over the last few weeks. Very happy to see you've grown rapidly - I think you had under 30k when I was first recommended a vid and watched a few in a row and subscribed, really impressed. Are you aware/in the WCE Slack? A little community for wecreateedu youtubers, you'd be very welcome I'm sure. Drop me a line at docmedlife at gmail if you're interested, I find it a useful resource. Although your channel is already so polished not sure you'd have as much to learn as I did! Best of luck.
I'd love to see more about Microfluidic devices! Physics at that level is completely unintuitive (liquids flow with 0 turbulence!), and I'm vaguely aware of a few applications: separating cancer cells from blood samples, creating micro bubbles to contain chemical reactions, "labs on chips", electrostatic+microfluidics to move chemicals around ad lib and react them in interesting ways... YT is a bit poor in this area, and the world needs more!
I've read about MEMS before but never really understand it then this video happened. Very concise, to-the-point, and easy to understand! Good work man.
Currently doing undergraduate research on silicone nanomembranes :) it took me about a year to get what some of the things described in this video are. Great video keep it up!
Honestly, this is a terrific channel. Your videos are wonderfully done, definitely on the level of quality (or even surpassing that) of most of the sponsored or Patreon based channels. This channel definitely deserves to be sponsored by Brilliant, Curiosity Stream or one of the other scientific oriented commonly-seen sponsors found on Clip-Share. Excellent content and please keep up the wonderful work :)
2:10 the wafer itself is a slice (literally a wafer) of monocrystalline silicon. it is not coated in silicon. you also got your labelling of positive/negative photoresist exactly backwards. upon UV exposure, a positive PR will wash away during development while a negative PR becomes insoluble. the way to remember it is that after exposure and development, a positive PR becomes a copy of the UV mask, while a negative PR becomes the negative copy of the UV mask. in traditional film photography the light exposed parts precipitate silver and become insoluble to developer so the lightest part of the picture is the darkest (that's why developed film is called a negative). also doping is not done through oxide. that is etched off first.
I am thoroughly impressed with mems technology and all of the various applications in use and under development. That being said, 15:30 was a curve-ball I wasn't expecting. Thank you for delivering that near the end.
Absolutely amazing presentation and 3D modeling! I love how far science has evolved past our mechanical means of production. By learning how to manipulate objects at the micrometer scale, we are truly engaging in the chemistry and biology that have always existed in new and FASCINATING ways by bringing them to the digital age of computers. This is technology that should never be taken for granted...
Not only was this a fantastically informative video which kept me gripped for its entirety, I’d forgotten how wonderful it is to NOT have music in the background distracting and confusing what is being said. its absence was a bliss that I was unaware I required 10/10 you have a new subscriber good sir!!
Definately subscribed. This is the first video I've watched on your channel. I'm STUNNED. WOW. First bringing real life examples, than explaining the subject and going into detail. I imagine that this video took weeks to make and the detail is just amazing. Thanks for making Clip-Share better
I'm a Computer Scientist, and i mostly focus on Software Development, but seeing the nano scale machinery and circuitry that is being developed has completely amazed me. This is something that i have never known about before, and it makes me appreciate a lot of Technology on a whole new level. I'm having thoughts of going back to college and getting an Engineering degree, just to learn all of this stuff and understand how it is designed, built, and integrated.
Nice work. I appreciated knowing the manufacturing methods and seeing such a wide range of applications. I think further exploration of the future of this field would be excellent. If you are up for it, even getting in touch with a top academic in the field with 5-10 questions would be a welcome addition. Keep it up mate.
MEMS was emerging when I started my Ph.D. in it, over 25 years ago. Most, if not all, of the pictures shown of the rotating wheels etc. are from that time. It was great fun to work in that field and I’m very happy that I had the opportunity to work in one of the leading groups at the time.
Wow. This mems stuff is pretty interesting. I'd love to see a mems contact lens with display or something like that. Great potential for huge success in this field in the future I would say.
the quality of your research, presentation of it, and that too with animations at its best .... please please please ... for the love of science .. don't ever change your content quality ! PS. i will try my best to support this channel. Thanks for doing it.
Another very common application of MEMS is the filters in the RF frontends inside our phones. A lot of microphones in computers and phones these days are usually MEMS too.
The quality of your videos is just unbelievable, thank you so much! I believe there might be a small imprecision when it comes to the photoresist: a positive photoresist is weakened by light, so the exposed parts are washed away by the developer, while a negative photoresist is strengthened by light, so it is the hidden parts that are washed away by the developer.
I'm studying MEMS at university and even I learned something from this video. Thank you and good job! Have you ever done a live stream on your research process? It sounds like it would be super interesting to watch.
Hey I have one of those things underneath the environmental section at 15:59! It’s a barometric pressure/temperature sensor! Mine is made by Bosch, it’s the BME280!
Your doing such a good job. This could be a 4 hour video and would still contain too much information to comprehend. But don’t water it down. I may have to replay the video 10 times to fully understand them but man it’s worth it!
To my understanding: Nano technologies is strictly limited to atomic, and/or molecular sized machinery/technologies. Other than that, it's a good presentation, broken down nicely, and simple to understand; good job man! (I know of a few such machine; one of them was made up of two molecular rings interlocked, where one served as the anchor, while the other was the wheel/motor, and was powered by a laser.)
I love this video! Very informative, highly educational, I am so glad I decided to watch your presentation. Thank you, I hope I can do justice to this technical tutorial.
I've always wondered about the manufacturing of micro conductors but never knew how it was done thanks for the learning experience. I am now subscribed
Brilliant. This video was so educational since I'm studying mechanical engineering (first year) it was really fun to explore this new production method. Keep up the good work!
I used to work in CD and DVD manufacturing / mastering and use almost the same process. The only difference is we use a laser to cut the cd and dvd pits @4:40 is a "plasma oven" is used to clean microscopic debris. Then we grew a reverse copy from nickel in electroforming tanks. I was just surprised at the similar process and machinery
I think this was perhaps the single most informative thing I've ever seen. Much of this being understood already at a surface level, but seeing this so clearly and so simply conveyed... So many things that were just accepted to "do what those things do", are now understood... The inner how's and why's are known. And that's pretty dang neat! Thanks man... subscribed!
I work with a lot of those Nano-Devices. We even develop own circuits and software to build AI controlled UAV's for industrial inspections. Yet we rarely see how those Nano-Tech actually works. Just crazy. We use technology we can't touch, see or the most of us even understand. I really love this topic :)
You guys are doing such an amazing job making these videos. I'm an engineer n these videos help me keep up with the technology and its advancements in the world.
Great quality and and interesting subject. Keep up the good work! I remember reading fascinating book about MEMS in 2004 while studying mechanical engineering. This subject never stopped to amaze me.
Have watched this video so many times, really love your content great work! Thanks to you and specifically this video, I chose my postgraduate research subject last year in MEMS devices. The information here has been SO useful and very well explained, helped me really understand what the hell is going on xD
This is the first video I’ve ever seen from this channel and I must say I’m very impressed because I wasn’t lost by the expansive amount of info provided due to the reoccurring definitions of the terms used and I greatly appreciate that!
These videos are amazing. Each better than the previous, with comprehensive insight and easy to understand facts. I know how hard it is to make something difficult and present it so that a vast majority will understand. This is just pure talent. Hope you reach the stars with this channel!
For some reason ive always seen ink jet printers as being a little ahead of their time. The ability to control thousand of dots of fluid in milliseconds has always made me wonder that if we have that, why is anything medical having to do with fluid so bulky and laborious. This has proved to me that they might be seeing that part about the red blood cell and the micro test plates.
Truly amazing what's being done with the same processes used to make microchips. Actual machinery that you need a microscope to see that can move and slide and rotate gears. Who knows what applications they will find in the future. Something tells me that the first human like robots will have a lot of this technology build into them. They will have micro mechanical sensors that will mimic what human sensing organs like eyes, noses, and tongues can do. Also, what keeps the cost down is that you don't make them one at a time. You could make thousands of them at a time on a single large silicon wafer disc. The day may come when it will be possible to custom make robots with standard off the shelf components for the cost of a used car today.
Dude your production value is far beyond this channels size. Excellent knowledge and commentary, high quality self-made animations, and the rest of the clips are perfect for what you are explaining. I hope this channel blows up soon
This is one of the most fascinating things I have ever seen! Many thanks to the narrator for explaining these complex issues in a readily accessible manner.
One of the best videos to give a glimpse of the state of the art technology in MEMS. Thank you so much for this magnificent video. Mind-blowing presentation
I can't imagine how cool the world will be when we have something that can produce these machines that will fit on a desktop and is affordable to the hobbyists.
What a pleasure to get recommended a video which describes all the things I study at the moment and want to work with in future. Material Science with focus on semiconductor technology is such a futuritic field.
Imagine if it was possible to use a peltier device to get electrical power from the temperature difference between the body and the ambient air and have it power a tiny led on top of the eye that shoot a light beam at a pair of mems mirrors as shown in the video. In order to display information directly on the eye.
Just discovered your channel and it's awesome. Your videos are so diverse and very educational. It's always what I'm looking for. The narration is also superb. 👍
You are the new Wendover Productions, and as with Wendover, I'm glad I found your channel when you had less than a few thousands subscribers. Keep up with this quality and you will soon reach the same subscribers as real engineering, Wendover and real life lore
I appreciate how you strike a happy medium between Applied Science and real engineering. You assume that your audience is competent, yet you simultaneously know when some concepts need a more in depth explanation.
Just imagine the stuff they’ll have in 50 years. If someone wants you dead a drone will show up at your work and pump a bullet in your head before you could even hear the thing coming 😳
@William Foy Of course I remember. Actually my very first computer (Commodore VC20) didn't even have a floppy drive but the programs were stored on cassette tapes.
@Clarence Green Props, pops... Veneration for your generation. It's amazing what yourself/my parents/et al have been positioned in history to witness, 'techno-culturally', i guess I'll call it. The perspective of each generation is indeed largely unique, and yours was, in this sense, a special generation among ALL of them.
I worked in the fabrication department of qualcomm microchips for about a year operating machines trimming the waivers. It was "only" an ancillary job emplyoed at a temp acency but i quite liked it anyway besides the workshift pattern. It is interesting to know more about the processes that happen within these machines because when i worked there, my supervisors just showed me which buttons to push and when, without a deeper understanding about the manufacturing. Which makes sense, because the company does not have any benefit from me knowing why i do the things i do there, if I dont have to in order to be part of a "flawless" production chain ^^
Like other commenters, I'm so glad I found your channel. It struck me watching this video that one of your biggest strengths to continue to exploit is an excellent degree of conciseness. I was amazed at the amount of material effectively covered when I looked and saw that I'd only been watching for 10 minutes. Great work!
@New Mind As someone often hindered by a certain level of perfectionism, the amount of effort you spend is quite apparent. It's motivating to see people who have found a path to use that gift/curse to good effect and produce an amazing finished product.
Oh wow! Amazing channel to stumble upon. This was super informative and interesting. I find it so fascinating we can make things this small. Tiny tidbit If you are looking for ways to improve: It was also a lot to take in: mind blown by the end, but I would split some of this up into smaller videos to be able to go in detail more while keeping the topic focused. Subbed by the way ;)
Great stuff! My father was on the team at HP that invented the thermal inkjet stuff. Am amazed at the stuff they were able to achieve knowing what technology they had. I wonder if that droplet animation is one of his!?
Wow, I did research in a small branch of MEMS for my master's thesis, and this video still told me a lot that I didn't know. I can't imagine how much work went into this. Spectacular educational video.
Brilliant comment. Someone who is qualified to provide evaluative feedback. Unlike myself as this video is so far above my knowledge level but still very engaging-
Your comment put into perspective the amount of data this guy gathered into one video and presented spectacularly. Really makes me appreciate people like him.
This absolutely is some of the most mind blowing modern science that the vast majority of the world is completely clueless about........... presented perfectly for us dumb people. Amazing presentation!!!!!
And it's been around for decades.
@Dave Froman too many words, not enough pics ;)
When u see this and think its some sort of pinnacle of tech, i hope u only include urself when u call the majority, dumb....majority maybe smarter than u if this impresses u to those levels. Ideally, its a good habit to speak for oneself and not assume the majority share ur opinion.
@liam Anderson en garde*
Sometimes I wipe too hard
As an engineer I have high respect for the knowledge and research put into this video 👌 I'm only an RF engineer but I require endless amounts and types of MEMS for radio frequency devices to work the way this modern world needs from micro-microphones to data transfer and tilt sensors on sat dishes. This was a very enjoyable video and I appreciate it 😎
The amount of information, examples and visualizations that you have in each of your videos is amazing. You must do a lot of research on each topic. Great work.
When I clicked on this video, I expected a futuristic idea.
Turns out it's already happened
@Chaomatic
“It’s already happened”
It has already happened.
Grammar101
Has it? Where are these micro machines then?
You would not be able to comment on this video on your mobile without it. cool, strange and fascinating :D
@Sebastian Gorka lmao takes one to know one. At least i do not use a book i read at 3 as an example to prove my point dumbass
@DD Johnson you are
As a master at Microelectronics and Optronics and aerospace engineer I must admit that this is seriously well prepared, entry level presentation for people that might want to sink in a micro world of MEMS/MOEMS.
Hello! Been enjoying your channel a lot over the last few weeks. Very happy to see you've grown rapidly - I think you had under 30k when I was first recommended a vid and watched a few in a row and subscribed, really impressed. Are you aware/in the WCE Slack? A little community for wecreateedu youtubers, you'd be very welcome I'm sure. Drop me a line at docmedlife at gmail if you're interested, I find it a useful resource. Although your channel is already so polished not sure you'd have as much to learn as I did! Best of luck.
hi medlife!
I love how symmetrical and perfect all the little gears and rods are. Also, how quickly do the moving parts wear down with them being so small?
I'd love to see more about Microfluidic devices! Physics at that level is completely unintuitive (liquids flow with 0 turbulence!), and I'm vaguely aware of a few applications: separating cancer cells from blood samples, creating micro bubbles to contain chemical reactions, "labs on chips", electrostatic+microfluidics to move chemicals around ad lib and react them in interesting ways... YT is a bit poor in this area, and the world needs more!
holy! micro bubbles! you can make logic gates with those! you can make a biological digital computer with that.
I've read about MEMS before but never really understand it then this video happened. Very concise, to-the-point, and easy to understand! Good work man.
Currently doing undergraduate research on silicone nanomembranes :) it took me about a year to get what some of the things described in this video are. Great video keep it up!
are those any good for making mics
great! thanks for the unintended support
practically all of it went over my head
and I thought iyam too dumw to get it
Honestly, this is a terrific channel. Your videos are wonderfully done, definitely on the level of quality (or even surpassing that) of most of the sponsored or Patreon based channels. This channel definitely deserves to be sponsored by Brilliant, Curiosity Stream or one of the other scientific oriented commonly-seen sponsors found on Clip-Share. Excellent content and please keep up the wonderful work :)
2:10 the wafer itself is a slice (literally a wafer) of monocrystalline silicon. it is not coated in silicon. you also got your labelling of positive/negative photoresist exactly backwards. upon UV exposure, a positive PR will wash away during development while a negative PR becomes insoluble. the way to remember it is that after exposure and development, a positive PR becomes a copy of the UV mask, while a negative PR becomes the negative copy of the UV mask. in traditional film photography the light exposed parts precipitate silver and become insoluble to developer so the lightest part of the picture is the darkest (that's why developed film is called a negative). also doping is not done through oxide. that is etched off first.
Every single thing you said is actually unequivocally false.
Follow Media He could have gotten away with that if it weren’t for you.
You’re proof that there is still more talent to discover!
@Nunya Business hahaha so you fall down to baseless personal insults when people call out your bullshit. That's sad.
Maxim Gem dude you have no common sense if you’re still going on about this. i bet you’re a fun person at parties
@Nunya Business I never said I didn't and you didn't answer my question
Maxim Gem you’d have to be a very stupid person to not think this is a great channel.
@Nunya Business and how is he wrong?
I am thoroughly impressed with mems technology and all of the various applications in use and under development. That being said, 15:30 was a curve-ball I wasn't expecting. Thank you for delivering that near the end.
What an excellent video! So much information, well researched and compressed into 16 minutes. Love this channel!
Absolutely amazing presentation and 3D modeling! I love how far science has evolved past our mechanical means of production. By learning how to manipulate objects at the micrometer scale, we are truly engaging in the chemistry and biology that have always existed in new and FASCINATING ways by bringing them to the digital age of computers.
This is technology that should never be taken for granted...
Not only was this a fantastically informative video which kept me gripped for its entirety, I’d forgotten how wonderful it is to NOT have music in the background distracting and confusing what is being said. its absence was a bliss that I was unaware I required 10/10 you have a new subscriber good sir!!
Definately subscribed. This is the first video I've watched on your channel. I'm STUNNED. WOW. First bringing real life examples, than explaining the subject and going into detail. I imagine that this video took weeks to make and the detail is just amazing. Thanks for making Clip-Share better
I'm a Computer Scientist, and i mostly focus on Software Development,
but seeing the nano scale machinery and circuitry that is being developed has completely amazed me. This is something that i have never known about before, and it makes me appreciate a lot of Technology on a whole new level. I'm having thoughts of going back to college and getting an Engineering degree, just to learn all of this stuff and understand how it is designed, built, and integrated.
Nice work.
I appreciated knowing the manufacturing methods and seeing such a wide range of applications. I think further exploration of the future of this field would be excellent. If you are up for it, even getting in touch with a top academic in the field with 5-10 questions would be a welcome addition. Keep it up mate.
MEMS was emerging when I started my Ph.D. in it, over 25 years ago. Most, if not all, of the pictures shown of the rotating wheels etc. are from that time. It was great fun to work in that field and I’m very happy that I had the opportunity to work in one of the leading groups at the time.
honestly shocked how mcuh stress these can take. Same with mocro complient mechanisms. Great video. Great channel keep it up
Wow. This mems stuff is pretty interesting. I'd love to see a mems contact lens with display or something like that. Great potential for huge success in this field in the future I would say.
the quality of your research, presentation of it, and that too with animations at its best .... please please please ... for the love of science .. don't ever change your content quality !
PS. i will try my best to support this channel. Thanks for doing it.
Simply amazing overview/in-depth review of the entire field which I wasn't really aware of, until now!
Thank you so much!
Much love!
Another very common application of MEMS is the filters in the RF frontends inside our phones. A lot of microphones in computers and phones these days are usually MEMS too.
@Eric Maher The conversation ended earlier. That was just the punctuation mark.
@Alkis05 How did that end the conversation? lol
@MrCuddlyable3 ok, boomer...
@BrosBrothersLP Someone must have tried to teach you English so that you would be able to write what you mean.
@MrCuddlyable3 that was a neccesary comment? I think everyone understood what i meant
One of the few times when Clip-Share recommendations lead to gold.
Beans are tasty though
@Daniel MacBride Clip-Share is the best alchemist
Pb to Au? Sounds about right to me 😁😂
wow this is such a well made video. I hope you soon get the kind of audience you deserve for all the work it seems you put in this stuff!!!
The quality of your videos is just unbelievable, thank you so much! I believe there might be a small imprecision when it comes to the photoresist: a positive photoresist is weakened by light, so the exposed parts are washed away by the developer, while a negative photoresist is strengthened by light, so it is the hidden parts that are washed away by the developer.
Wow and this technology is from over 3 years ago. So imagine what how much further they have come
I'm studying MEMS at university and even I learned something from this video.
Thank you and good job!
Have you ever done a live stream on your research process? It sounds like it would be super interesting to watch.
Hey I have one of those things underneath the environmental section at 15:59! It’s a barometric pressure/temperature sensor! Mine is made by Bosch, it’s the BME280!
Your doing such a good job. This could be a 4 hour video and would still contain too much information to comprehend. But don’t water it down. I may have to replay the video 10 times to fully understand them but man it’s worth it!
To my understanding: Nano technologies is strictly limited to atomic, and/or molecular sized machinery/technologies.
Other than that, it's a good presentation, broken down nicely, and simple to understand; good job man!
(I know of a few such machine; one of them was made up of two molecular rings interlocked,
where one served as the anchor, while the other was the wheel/motor, and was powered by a laser.)
Very interesting, inspiring, educative, well-explained, and a pleasure to watch! Thank you!
I love this video! Very informative, highly educational, I am so glad I decided to watch your presentation. Thank you, I hope I can do justice to this technical tutorial.
I've always wondered about the manufacturing of micro conductors but never knew how it was done thanks for the learning experience. I am now subscribed
Brilliant. This video was so educational since I'm studying mechanical engineering (first year) it was really fun to explore this new production method. Keep up the good work!
I am studying this and I still get fascinated pretty frequently by new awesome chips&technologies
i am blown away by how good the explanation was man, amazing work :D
I used to work in CD and DVD manufacturing / mastering and use almost the same process. The only difference is we use a laser to cut the cd and dvd pits @4:40 is a "plasma oven" is used to clean microscopic debris. Then we grew a reverse copy from nickel in electroforming tanks. I was just surprised at the similar process and machinery
I think this was perhaps the single most informative thing I've ever seen. Much of this being understood already at a surface level, but seeing this so clearly and so simply conveyed... So many things that were just accepted to "do what those things do", are now understood... The inner how's and why's are known. And that's pretty dang neat! Thanks man... subscribed!
I work with a lot of those Nano-Devices. We even develop own circuits and software to build AI controlled UAV's for industrial inspections.
Yet we rarely see how those Nano-Tech actually works. Just crazy. We use technology we can't touch, see or the most of us even understand. I really love this topic :)
You guys are doing such an amazing job making these videos. I'm an engineer n these videos help me keep up with the technology and its advancements in the world.
A high potential channel! Great content and very good insight into frontier topics. Very inspiring. Thx.
Great quality and and interesting subject. Keep up the good work!
I remember reading fascinating book about MEMS in 2004 while studying mechanical engineering. This subject never stopped to amaze me.
Have watched this video so many times, really love your content great work!
Thanks to you and specifically this video, I chose my postgraduate research subject last year in MEMS devices. The information here has been SO useful and very well explained, helped me really understand what the hell is going on xD
Love your channel!! So damn informative! Keep up the great work!
This is the first video I’ve ever seen from this channel and I must say I’m very impressed because I wasn’t lost by the expansive amount of info provided due to the reoccurring definitions of the terms used and I greatly appreciate that!
These videos are amazing. Each better than the previous, with comprehensive insight and easy to understand facts. I know how hard it is to make something difficult and present it so that a vast majority will understand. This is just pure talent. Hope you reach the stars with this channel!
One of the BEST science channels! Great job & thank you for your terrific videos!
Amazing. This video brought together several topics that I've heard about over the years, but never thought were related. Keep up the great work !
For some reason ive always seen ink jet printers as being a little ahead of their time. The ability to control thousand of dots of fluid in milliseconds has always made me wonder that if we have that, why is anything medical having to do with fluid so bulky and laborious. This has proved to me that they might be seeing that part about the red blood cell and the micro test plates.
Truly amazing what's being done with the same processes used to make microchips. Actual machinery that you need a microscope to see that can move and slide and rotate gears. Who knows what applications they will find in the future. Something tells me that the first human like robots will have a lot of this technology build into them. They will have micro mechanical sensors that will mimic what human sensing organs like eyes, noses, and tongues can do. Also, what keeps the cost down is that you don't make them one at a time. You could make thousands of them at a time on a single large silicon wafer disc. The day may come when it will be possible to custom make robots with standard off the shelf components for the cost of a used car today.
Dude your production value is far beyond this channels size. Excellent knowledge and commentary, high quality self-made animations, and the rest of the clips are perfect for what you are explaining. I hope this channel blows up soon
This is a fascinating video, well done to the team!
I've watched this several times and it never gets old! Absolutely mind altering.
This channel is so underrated
dav b your comment is underrated....
@Katie Giles - Are you saying, I should report you to Interpol instead of handling you myself?
Well, well, well. 0:01 Toyota, the ISIS-car.
Very suspicious...
I wonder, if this is one of the many channels of the Islamic State.
Yes, is a matter of time. Good work have good results.
That's why it ended up on my recommended
Dude thank you! This was a rollercoaster of shock and awe! More on this, no one's talking about this stuff!
This is one of the most fascinating things I have ever seen!
Many thanks to the narrator for explaining these complex issues in a readily accessible manner.
This has earned a subscribe, this is one of the best videos on the tech I have seen and greatly helps and inspires my hobby projects!
Thank you! - You’re channel makes complicated subjects so understandable - it’s fascinating.
One of the best videos to give a glimpse of the state of the art technology in MEMS. Thank you so much for this magnificent video. Mind-blowing presentation
Beautiful video. It's rare to see such detailed footage of these micro-technologies.
Amazing video! One of my favorites recently. Well done!
I can't imagine how cool the world will be when we have something that can produce these machines that will fit on a desktop and is affordable to the hobbyists.
Micro manufacturing seems to have limitless possibilities...thanks for the excellent video. : )
I've actually looked up how gyro/acel sensors worked in the past and could never get my head around it. This video makes it seem so simple!
What a pleasure to get recommended a video which describes all the things I study at the moment and want to work with in future. Material Science with focus on semiconductor technology is such a futuritic field.
Imagine if it was possible to use a peltier device to get electrical power from the temperature difference between the body and the ambient air and have it power a tiny led on top of the eye that shoot a light beam at a pair of mems mirrors as shown in the video. In order to display information directly on the eye.
I'm just attending the first lecture in Microsystem Technology. This video relates closely and helps me to understand what MEMS is. Thank you!
This video was awesome. I hope you keep making more just as interesting!
I only recently found your channel and must say, your content is extremely informational. Thanks for the videos. I wish I could like twice
I would have never, not even in my wildest dreams, imagined myself watching stuff like this two months ago... to the end!
Enjoyoing it thou
Great content, thanks for your hard work!
Just discovered your channel and it's awesome. Your videos are so diverse and very educational. It's always what I'm looking for. The narration is also superb. 👍
This is utterly fascinating. All of this super advanced technology is developing right in front of us and we don't even realize it!
You are the new Wendover Productions, and as with Wendover, I'm glad I found your channel when you had less than a few thousands subscribers.
Keep up with this quality and you will soon reach the same subscribers as real engineering, Wendover and real life lore
Thank you for such a great video, i was able to understand a lot of the fundamentals of how our tech works and where its heading.
I appreciate how you strike a happy medium between Applied Science and real engineering. You assume that your audience is competent, yet you simultaneously know when some concepts need a more in depth explanation.
It's mindboggling how much technology has evolved since I was a kid and I'm only 43.
Just imagine the stuff they’ll have in 50 years. If someone wants you dead a drone will show up at your work and pump a bullet in your head before you could even hear the thing coming 😳
Based and crimson-capsuled.
@William Foy Of course I remember. Actually my very first computer (Commodore VC20) didn't even have a floppy drive but the programs were stored on cassette tapes.
Do you remember 5.25 inch disk drives with that clip to keep the disk in place? You had to turn the clip through 90 degrees.
@Clarence Green
Props, pops... Veneration for your generation.
It's amazing what yourself/my parents/et al have been positioned in history to witness, 'techno-culturally', i guess I'll call it. The perspective of each generation is indeed largely unique, and yours was, in this sense, a special generation among ALL of them.
Finally, another channel I can binge watch all day, thanks for the awesome content!
I remember seeing a demo of mems to help improve aerodynamics, years ago, this is amazing
Wow! In 30 second you taught me how they make these small little MEMS work. Quite interesting and very turn of the century!
This was beautifully presented and kept my attention fiercely. My eyes kept widening and my mouth even dropped open.
Feels cool to see my future profession explained in a video like this. This technology really powers the world and no one knows about it.
I worked in the fabrication department of qualcomm microchips for about a year operating machines trimming the waivers. It was "only" an ancillary job emplyoed at a temp acency but i quite liked it anyway besides the workshift pattern. It is interesting to know more about the processes that happen within these machines because when i worked there, my supervisors just showed me which buttons to push and when, without a deeper understanding about the manufacturing. Which makes sense, because the company does not have any benefit from me knowing why i do the things i do there, if I dont have to in order to be part of a "flawless" production chain ^^
Good stuff as usual. Thanks for the hard work!
This channel is pure gold!!! Great stuff here
Mind Blown! And not too much jargon for a pop-science minded laymen. Great job!
Excellent video! This is the kind of content I'm always looking for. Subbed!!
Wow, I'd always wondered how silicon accelerometers and gyroscopes worked. Didn't realize how much was going on to make that happen!
You just answered so many questions I had in life...and created many many more questions! Thank you for the video.
Like other commenters, I'm so glad I found your channel. It struck me watching this video that one of your biggest strengths to continue to exploit is an excellent degree of conciseness. I was amazed at the amount of material effectively covered when I looked and saw that I'd only been watching for 10 minutes.
Great work!
@New Mind As someone often hindered by a certain level of perfectionism, the amount of effort you spend is quite apparent. It's motivating to see people who have found a path to use that gift/curse to good effect and produce an amazing finished product.
Thanks. Glad you (and others) appreciate it. I do put a lot of effort into describing / illustrating concepts as efficiently as possible.
Great video! It looks well researched and is well structured!
Oh wow! Amazing channel to stumble upon. This was super informative and interesting. I find it so fascinating we can make things this small.
Tiny tidbit If you are looking for ways to improve: It was also a lot to take in: mind blown by the end, but I would split some of this up into smaller videos to be able to go in detail more while keeping the topic focused.
Subbed by the way ;)
Keep up with your work!! You will get everything you deserve for being so talented!! A huge fan from Argentina!
Great stuff! My father was on the team at HP that invented the thermal inkjet stuff. Am amazed at the stuff they were able to achieve knowing what technology they had. I wonder if that droplet animation is one of his!?
Thanks, haha also I made those animations last Wednesday. Unless you’re referring to the video clip? That’s not from a US institution.
These are just so fascinating! 🔥 Amazing video.