These Substances 'Defy the Laws' of Physics

2024 ж. 10 Мам.
2 085 937 Рет қаралды

In our macro world, everything has shape, occupies space, and behaves predictably. We're used to the expected: thin materials tear, ice chills, flames burn, and water flows downwards. Yet when the opposite happens, it leaves us amazed.
Magicians have thrived on these phenomena for centuries. David Copperfield, in 1983, made the Statue of Liberty disappear, astonishing the audience. Though it wasn't real, the act challenged reality.
But there are genuine wonders in our world, without tricks. Prepare to witness: Liquid flowing upwards, A boat in an aquarium without water, Dry water, Hot ice, And more, all defying the laws of Physics!
Substances that defy the laws of Physics!
RYV Team:
Voice Over: Kent Bleazard
#reyouniverse

Пікірлер
  • Watch in awe as this person casually holds their palm against a wall made of this composite. This person is Veritasium, that did an awesome video about it.

    @Luserke@Luserke6 ай бұрын
    • they stole videos from a lot of channels and gave credit to none of them. all of that while also saying that they are "quality content"

      @jokercardmaster@jokercardmaster2 ай бұрын
    • *_stole the footage from @actionlabs Mousso black room. It wasn't even Vanta black._*

      @phourtwenteephorlife@phourtwenteephorlife2 ай бұрын
    • good to know, not watching this past the 5 second mark in that case

      @JanitorJoe@JanitorJoe2 ай бұрын
    • @@JanitorJoe this falls under creative commons I believe, where you can use a reference to what you are reporting or educating people on. I am more concerned if its AI generated script etc, for eg i realized many Ai channels are repetitive on phrases and don't bring any new opinions or fresh approaches to thinking and just babble on what's already out there.

      @markclancy5714@markclancy5714Ай бұрын
    • No doubt Boing wasn't ready for side affects..As usual mankind will create as much hram or more than ever before...That said, I do understand the temptation.. Or perhaps that's why our binary solar system is here and about to throw us back into the stone age..

      @marcgottlieb9579@marcgottlieb957926 күн бұрын
  • How Copperfield made the Statue of Liberty disappear (spoilers) ---- The statue was shown through a frame, ostensibly so it could be hidden while Copperfield made it vanish. While it was hidden, the stage on which the live audience (and cameras) was seated rotated very slowly about five degrees clockwise, so that when the curtain was pulled back, the frame now showed the empty ground a bit east of the statue. The position was cleverly chosen to appear as close to the statue's actual site as possible, with helicopters used to augment the illusion by shifting their positions to match the newly rotated stage. The backdrop of the ocean likewise helped, making it difficult to see any change in the background due to the rotation of the stage. It might sound simple, but the precision required to pull it off without anyone in the audience noticing is astounding: one of the best illusions in recent memory, due to its scale.

    @eunomiac@eunomiac3 ай бұрын
    • 1 111111

      @Ryan-rs5rq@Ryan-rs5rq24 күн бұрын
    • EXACTLY! Everyone knows how he did it! Plus ONLY the few people in the special bleachers at the site saw the illusion. Anyone looking from outside could see exactly what was happening!

      @robjohnston1433@robjohnston143318 күн бұрын
  • The subject of this video is what my son has his education in. He has a PhD in the philosophy of mechanical engineering. He has a hand in developing some of what you see here. He works for one of the companies mentioned. And you would never suspect that he was the ultimate science nerd! He just a great guy! So i just thought it seems so strange they mention David Copperfield at the start of this video. I knew Davied very well before he became famous. When my son was about 7, i wrote to David asking if he could write to my son. I thought it would give him a thrill because my son loved magic. I never heard a word back from Dave. No doubt his publicists threw my letter in the circular file. And things came full circle, indeed. David Copperfield deals in illusion. My son deals in reality that truly is magic.

    @mamaboocee@mamaboocee18 күн бұрын
    • So…I always wonder why people post comments like this. Looks like you’re just bragging to people you don’t know, why?

      @rangerjones5531@rangerjones55316 күн бұрын
    • @rangerjones5531 so, I always wonder why people post comments like this. Looks like you're lacking in experiencing other people's joys you don't know. Why?

      @mamaboocee@mamaboocee6 күн бұрын
    • If he really is in mechanical engineering I wouldn't let him catch you describing it as the _philosophy_ of mechanical engineering lol. Philosophy isn't a science.

      @Sophocles13@Sophocles134 күн бұрын
  • I have one or I had one of those Staples put into my leg. It was really cool having the doctor explained what he was doing and what new technology he was putting into my bone. Even gave me a small example of what it would look like once it went into my skin or in my bone holes and then it would tighten up and pull my bones back together. I will admit they worked like a charm and it was pretty cool.

    @td4190@td41907 ай бұрын
    • Wow. You were technically a cyborg.

      @mbrackeva@mbrackeva6 ай бұрын
    • Cuz they stapled his nut to his leg, really??

      @MF-kr4hf@MF-kr4hf3 ай бұрын
  • Nothing defies the laws of physics. One can only advance our understanding of said laws.

    @SliceofLife7777@SliceofLife77778 ай бұрын
    • Correct. It's like the word "unnatural". If we, humans, being products of nature, do a thing, no matter how strange, the origin of our nature does not change, and if the origin of our nature is of nature, how can we do anything that can truly be considered "unnatural"? Bizarre? Yes. Wrong? Maybe. Unnatural? Impossible.

      @Guts240@Guts2408 ай бұрын
    • In this context saying "defies the laws of physics", is shorthand for: "does not conform to our immediate expectation or understanding of the intuitive physics of a system based on our preliminary direct layman's observations", which is quite a mouthful really.

      @captainTubes@captainTubes8 ай бұрын
    • You're right but it was written in quotes and thus not meant seriously.

      @jensphiliphohmann1876@jensphiliphohmann18768 ай бұрын
    • Spot on, Holmes LoL

      @MissJiggy2U@MissJiggy2U8 ай бұрын
    • Indeed!

      @bonesaw6601@bonesaw66018 ай бұрын
  • You may call it Helium 2 but you can’t stop me from calling it Hehelium

    @ImAnEmergency@ImAnEmergency8 ай бұрын
    • Haa!

      @krystal2157@krystal21578 ай бұрын
    • NiCe!

      @erics8509@erics85098 ай бұрын
    • Squared Helium will be my name of choice for now on.

      @Paul__FC@Paul__FCАй бұрын
  • I literally don't even watch movies anymore. I just watch videos like this and it's been nice. 🎉

    @culturebreath369@culturebreath3698 ай бұрын
    • david fagfeild moved a stage to the right so the field of view from the few people siting on stage couldn't see the statue ..... how amazing lol .....gaaaayyyyyy

      @user-fc1zs1wh9g@user-fc1zs1wh9g2 ай бұрын
    • @@user-fc1zs1wh9g now you know God exists

      @cryptowhale1615@cryptowhale16152 ай бұрын
    • @culturebreath369 Link to any good ones?

      @tacticalty9693@tacticalty96932 ай бұрын
    • Errr... You 'like' uninformed disinformation?.....

      @forandonbehalfof4753@forandonbehalfof47532 ай бұрын
    • Hi, I hope this message finds you well, healthy, and most importantly ... Happy!!! I've been on that same tack for well over a decade now, and some days it feels like ... I'm a completely different species. Overall, it's GREAT, and will most likely be the future of education. It does however, often seem lonely, even though I "speak" to more people more often. I guess "communicate" more often would be more accurate. I'm now, and always have been, at least since I remember remembering, a bit of a misanthrope. Not by choice, just as fact. it may be more noticable over time for the status quo, or possibly much less so. I'm not one to speak to what is, or isn't normal, if even such a thing still exists in reality today. I thought I'd share my humble observations, as I felt for some odd reason, you'd dig it, I reckon ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Plus, I already knew the Vantablack and PDMS stuff, so I thought I'd make use of the time. Dunno if it was good use or not, that'll be fated in your thoughts. Hope it did "something" for ya. Much love!!! ✌ ϻя.ƹ "Without ART, the eARTh would just be 'eh'!" ოΓ. ǝ _____ / \ (____/\ ) |___ §(____ _\L. | \ / /"""\ /.-.-' | ( / _/u | | \ | \\ / /\ | \\ / / | | ) _/ / ) _\__/.-' / ___( _/ __________/ \ / / /( ) ( \__|_\ \_____ / \ (___\ |_____) \ |\ \ \ / \ | \__ ) )__/ 𝓮\ \ )/ / _( ___ | /_// ___| \ _/ ( / OUuuu \ `----' (__________ϻя.ƹ)

      @mr.e695@mr.e6952 ай бұрын
  • Magic is physics, chemistry, or science that's unknown by an observer...

    @davidariamirroarkyoung@davidariamirroarkyoung6 ай бұрын
    • Yes. And when God works his miracles like walking on water and raising the dead

      @danfield6030@danfield60302 ай бұрын
  • Also, when we give machines the ability to become more than us (as in self repair) and the intelligence to go beyond us we’re all fooked

    @gregorleishman@gregorleishman7 ай бұрын
  • Sulfur Hexafluoride is used in high tension switch gear at power substation to control damaging arcing at switch contacts. Also used as a fire suppression agent in server centers as an alternative to Halon gas.

    @ph11p3540@ph11p35402 ай бұрын
  • 2:20 A room of total darkness. 4:49 Object number two will be great for cat owners. 6:50 Imagin wearing a suit of cloth so light that it feels like you aren't wearing anything at all! 8:55 Would you like to build a suit if indestructible armor? It isn't available yet, however this might help. 10:25 A super insulation? 14:25 ??? 17:00 Paperclip 19:02 3M dry water??? 20:41 A super liquid 27:18 Lghts 30:50 Hot ice? 31:29 One way bullet proof glass? 33:08 A deeper voice and a boat that floats without water. 34:40 A spinning stone 36:09 another interesting stone.

    @matthewwriter9539@matthewwriter95397 ай бұрын
    • Nothin' at all!

      @renakunisaki@renakunisakiАй бұрын
  • We do know how David Copperfield made the Statue of Liberty disappear.. the audience was seated on a platform looking toward the statue, which had two large pillars positioned on each side and located in between the audience and the statue.. when the statue was temporarily hidden behind the sheet spanning the pillars, the audience platform was slowly rotated to the right, which changed the audience viewing angle and so when the sheet was lowered the statue was now being hidden behind the left pillar. The other aspects like the radar were purely for show to enhance the illusion.

    @LiveFreeOrDie2A@LiveFreeOrDie2A7 ай бұрын
    • really really old news

      @nucleareggplants@nucleareggplants4 ай бұрын
    • wasn'ty explained ine the video like he also had no idea either@@nucleareggplants

      @White_Night_Demon@White_Night_DemonАй бұрын
  • None of those substances are defying the laws of physics, law of physics, or better said law of nature can't be broken or something to defy it. Those are simply materials with interesting properties.

    @ozymandiasultor9480@ozymandiasultor94808 ай бұрын
    • They need viewers so clickBait!

      @Dr.Akakia@Dr.Akakia8 ай бұрын
    • I came here just to say this

      @blueberries254@blueberries2548 ай бұрын
    • 🤔🤔🤐@@Dr.Akakia

      @ABestEver@ABestEver8 ай бұрын
    • Its called clickbait

      @pedronchoxgrc19@pedronchoxgrc198 ай бұрын
    • The robot voice is pretty good though

      @ClifftopTragedy@ClifftopTragedy6 ай бұрын
  • So, the alien technologies in sci fi movies are totally possible with more advances in technology and understanding of physics. When younger, I thought all materials are already discovered, what could be created based on what already was there. Turns put plenty of new materials, and more yet to come…

    @Milen983@Milen9837 ай бұрын
    • So does this mean aliens are real Or the crashed craft? ..

      @stuartd9741@stuartd97417 ай бұрын
    • .maybe 0n

      @caelanclaus2356@caelanclaus23567 ай бұрын
    • A study has estimated that we only have discovered and do know the existence of approximately 2% of chemical combinations. And this seems to be quite a big estimation as well. So basically we are a baby that just started crying.

      @valkyrie_592@valkyrie_5925 ай бұрын
    • Nitinol was created after trying to imitate some of the Roswell crash materials recovered

      @mariocinquemani3134@mariocinquemani3134Ай бұрын
  • Anyways, now we know that Silver Surfer's surf board was made from pyrolytic graphite coated with graphene.

    @GHOST-cy7rc@GHOST-cy7rc7 ай бұрын
  • In my opinion, this is a top-level, video-doc about special materials, in a general sense. A 10! All the grumbling! Sheesh! Don't any of you try to build your spacecraft out of this, but learn what not to use. Oh! I've watched this before! IT'S PRETTY GOOD! [Graphene-aerogel (VACUUM construct: Japan.) A one centimeter cube weighs just 0.16 ! THE AIR WE BREATH WEIGHS EIGHT TIMES MORE THAN GREAPHENE-AEROGEL! (UNSTABLE.) ]

    @user-im9bt1wy8j@user-im9bt1wy8j3 ай бұрын
    • stolen content, uncited sources so you cannot even find the original creators (who often have much better source material). e.g. 11:52 is Veritasium's "aerogel vs. flamethrower" and several of the other clips are from the same creators minidoc on aerogel itself. Reuse of content on YT should be encourage *with citation* back to the original creator. Use without citation should get a channel shut down for being a shameless content farm.

      @lucusloc@lucusloc2 ай бұрын
    • *_stole the footage from @actionlabs Mousso black room. It wasn't even Vanta black._*

      @phourtwenteephorlife@phourtwenteephorlife2 ай бұрын
  • I’ve been watching Foundation on Apple TV+. In the far future, they use small devices that instead of having a screen, they have floating nano particles that each act as a 3D pixel or form a screen in the air showing video. That’s interesting and I believe that is the future

    @CRASS2047@CRASS20478 ай бұрын
    • Like that scene with he who remains in Loki

      @user-tb6hi5wy7u@user-tb6hi5wy7u7 ай бұрын
    • this might be what holographic imaging actually might be in our world

      @valkyrie_592@valkyrie_5925 ай бұрын
    • @@valkyrie_592 yes. Whatever the substrate is that our holographic reality is projected onto, is what we would need to understand and manipulate in order to create that technology.

      @CRASS2047@CRASS20475 ай бұрын
  • How do you dispose of these materials? It's all very interesting but it's dangerous to just keep creating indestructible waste

    @Noura-xk3wh@Noura-xk3wh8 ай бұрын
    • I think by the time all these ''weird'' materials come at play for us, there will be a way to rearrange atoms on a very big scale just like a paper shredder

      @valkyrie_592@valkyrie_5925 ай бұрын
  • Our homes and shelters need to be covered in this

    @Wildraiinbow@Wildraiinbow8 ай бұрын
  • Great content,I’ll keep looking for a lot more entreguege videos that make my mind expand and soak up some of sum…wisdom they all have to keep us all watching and wanting to know more. God bless keep up the Great work.

    @kylefrench9730@kylefrench97302 күн бұрын
  • Does Pyrolytic Graphite create its own magnetic field, or does it reflect and reverse the magnetic field of the regular magnet? Yes, this is an actual question that I'm hoping for an intelligent answer to from anyone smarter than I (which isn't difficult to find. LOL). EDIT. I've seen Hydrophobic coatings work against graffiti. Just wash the graffiti paint and you "clean" the graffiti paint away with very little to no effort. No scrubbing the surface for long periods of time!!! These are all cool material things, whether they were discovered years ago or more recently!

    @chefscorner7063@chefscorner70638 ай бұрын
    • Edit: After reaching this part of the video I thought I'd give a little more detail. Magnetic fields are generated by moving electric charges. Electrons are moving electric charges so they can be thought of as tiny magnets. Electrons in most materials, tend to cancel out each other's magnetic field, but a strong enough magnet can distort the magnetic fields in most materials so that the net field is repulsive. A magnet induces a magnetic field in the pyrolytic graphite that's in opposition to the magnet. This is called diamagnetism and all normal matter is at least a tiny bit diamagnetic.

      @nahometesfay1112@nahometesfay11127 ай бұрын
    • See also a magnet in a copper tube. Does something similar...

      @stuartd9741@stuartd97417 ай бұрын
    • You know what else is hydrophobic? Anything hosting the rabies virus. That may seem irrelevant but I assure you, it is not.

      @ginalangston9428@ginalangston94285 ай бұрын
  • Can you imagine what we will have in a hundred years.😯 The same as the human body has so much in common with the universe.

    @wkelly4963@wkelly49638 ай бұрын
    • really men.🧐

      @ABestEver@ABestEver8 ай бұрын
    • nothing we'll all be dead

      @chucku.farley3927@chucku.farley39277 ай бұрын
    • Everyone lives in small pods, cars flights banned, people just cycle everywhere.. Digital currency no cash - can't buy anything deemed illegal or not on the government "Approved" purchase list, .. Very little crime as everything is monitored via ccvt - including cameras inside you pod....

      @stuartd9741@stuartd97417 ай бұрын
    • @@chucku.farley3927 yep, sheeples l3ed to our own slaughter...

      @rebeccaheim8278@rebeccaheim82787 ай бұрын
  • The physical world is comforting and spectacularly interesting - I’ve been too absorbed with news of the depths of human nature lately - yet human nature controls the discovery and use of these substances.

    @earthn1447@earthn14476 ай бұрын
    • But they might go on when we're gone. Strangely, I sometimes find that comforting, sometimes disturbing.

      @ulalaFrugilega@ulalaFrugilega6 ай бұрын
    • It is available just not to the SHEEPLE only the POWERS that want to be

      @callumratcliffe7402@callumratcliffe74024 ай бұрын
    • It's not like all of these materials have everyday practical use.😅😅😅 aerogel is 23000 a pound. Graphene is anywhere from 100 to 250k per pound depending on quality. So how much is a graphene aerogel brick gonna cost? Do I need Starlite coated oven mitts? Am I using dry water for laundry? Though dry water should do great for ev battery fires...

      @darkhands4448@darkhands44484 ай бұрын
  • "I went and got some powdered water.. ...But I didn't know what to add." -Steven Wright

    @FurtiveSkeptical@FurtiveSkeptical8 ай бұрын
  • @5:00 you can really tell when someone is reading a script but not really paying attention to the words: Wounded, as in someone was wounded scraping their knee, should not sound like wound up, like someone wound up your antique clock or wristwatch; a wound shouldn't sound like you wound your watch, but that's one of the weird things about the english language, duplications occur but it's okay, they sound different. 😅

    @VGAstudent@VGAstudent6 ай бұрын
    • It's because it's narrated by AI. It sounds realistic until it trips over one of these obvious mistakes. Others have noted that a lot of the sequences and images are taken from other yt videos without attribution, so who knows how much human involvement went into this presentation.

      @000EC@000EC14 күн бұрын
  • If any of these high rgidity, lighter than air materials escape, I guess we can look for them at the top of the atmosphere, where it interfaces with space. Could this be a future pollution problem, reducing the sunlight that reaches us, that we will have to, somehow, clean up - a bit like the current attempts to clean up ocean pollution? We think the atmosphere is limitless - but we once thought the ocean was limitless too.

    @DownhillAllTheWay@DownhillAllTheWay8 ай бұрын
    • What to hear a FACT?? Humans are the cáncer of this planet 😢 It's so very sad but true!! Blessings to you and your family always from Puerto Rico with lot's of love 🙏👍

      @raymondtorres-gy8uj@raymondtorres-gy8uj7 ай бұрын
    • That is a good question!

      @tiffany_spence@tiffany_spence7 ай бұрын
    • Very well said - its nice to hear from a person with true logic.

      @simonmaverick9201@simonmaverick92017 ай бұрын
    • My guess would be they never get there due to condensation on the surface making them heavier than air.

      @SpaghettiToaster@SpaghettiToaster7 ай бұрын
    • Now if only the trivial amount of climate change were something to be actually worried about,,,

      @paulbriggs3072@paulbriggs30726 ай бұрын
  • 'They obey the laws of physics in ways that defy your expectation'

    @au5music@au5music7 ай бұрын
  • Could be used in space crafts Just like grafene Atoms unified crystal polimer That can self heal if cracked just put glue in between membrane Reflect light radiation heat and can self heal Also vibration frequency could repell object like a sort of force field As crystal redirect ions Plus would be water ice resistance and more airo dinamic As the atom's would be unified and so close Not much could damage Crystal can definitely be used in paint camflage and much more with a little munupulation of the compound

    @Kurt-ee6fo@Kurt-ee6fo8 ай бұрын
    • Yeah if we ever get there

      @callumratcliffe7402@callumratcliffe74024 ай бұрын
  • These things don’t defy the laws of physics, they defy the limits of our understanding (in some examples), most are relatively to find out with a lil bit of work and thought.

    @Philfluffer@Philfluffer8 ай бұрын
    • "Technology advanced enough can be perceived as magic". A.C.C.Clarke

      @marekstanek112@marekstanek1124 сағат бұрын
  • Thank you for your videos. I enjoy seeing & trying to understand the things seemingly unfathomable. So, again, Thank you for work on these videos. ✌❤🎼♾

    @jeffmakeasound1518@jeffmakeasound15187 ай бұрын
  • 12:11 I love how casually he called derek from veritassium "This person". He isn't a celebrity but give him some credit for taking his clip man.

    @painlesskun3959@painlesskun39595 ай бұрын
    • I have a few choice words for the fraudster Veritassium and "This person" it not one of them. He would not know science if it sat on his face spun around and whistled Dixie.

      @DivergentDroid@DivergentDroid2 ай бұрын
  • Also that heavier-than-air gas would be a really nasty weapon of war. It doesn't need to be toxic if it pools in low lying places and pushes regular oxygenated air out by simple weight. Soldiers in trenches, civilians hiding in basements - it has a lot of very unpleasant possible applications in a war-torn world.

    @mamasimmerplays4702@mamasimmerplays47023 ай бұрын
    • Simple carbon dioxide could already be used that way. That even occurs naturally in volcanic areas.

      @jayfredrickson8632@jayfredrickson8632Ай бұрын
  • I was spraying lineX 15 years ago 😂 it's a great product when applied in a very dry environment. Not exactly new/amazing technology though..

    @stuart207@stuart2078 ай бұрын
    • Which makes me wonder, why in the heck hasn't it been used more widely in manufacturing?

      @chefscorner7063@chefscorner70638 ай бұрын
    • @@chefscorner7063 If cars/vans etc are coated then there will be no more sales on selling new, it's all about profit

      @nigelman9506@nigelman95068 ай бұрын
    • @@chefscorner7063 Because lion eggs are rare.

      @mbrackeva@mbrackeva6 ай бұрын
    • is it any good under water - eg steel boat hulls?

      @elgorrion52@elgorrion526 ай бұрын
    • Can it be made clear? Seems great for phones, TVs, and windows.

      @renakunisaki@renakunisakiАй бұрын
  • man 14 mins in and his voice make me feel like we will conquer galaxy tomorrow!

    @HASHHASSIN@HASHHASSIN6 ай бұрын
    • His voice made me feel I should put locks on my children's bedroom doors. Brrrr. I think it's the hissing sound on the "s" sounds, the slightly slower pace, and the way it sounds slightly hoarse.

      @dionlindsay2@dionlindsay23 ай бұрын
    • @@dionlindsay2 😆

      @HASHHASSIN@HASHHASSIN3 ай бұрын
  • Ive said this for years and its coming true...Wings will always follow propellers !

    @MrSmegfish@MrSmegfish26 күн бұрын
  • What are the environmental effects of some if not all of these amazing materials?

    @resetXform@resetXform7 ай бұрын
  • Sometimes I feel like this is educational, and sometimes I feel like it's AI written when it asks me to watch a voice.

    @blackkittycat15@blackkittycat156 ай бұрын
    • Agreed. It's appallingly badly written!

      @zoejaneflamingo7571@zoejaneflamingo75716 ай бұрын
    • AI written and AI speaked.

      @roughneckwolf@roughneckwolf5 ай бұрын
    • The mispronunciation of "wound" made me wonder.

      @renakunisaki@renakunisakiАй бұрын
  • I would like some comment about unintended consequences, like when your trendy car made from some of these materials is sent to the junk yard. Some of these materials look like they may be a problem after the intended product lifetime. Asbestos and a lot of plastics are chemically inert but that doesn't mean they aren't a serious health or environmental problem, it makes problems worse.

    @vholes2803@vholes28035 ай бұрын
  • If I saw my phone start repairing itself, I'd drop it from a much greater height to make sure it is dead 😂

    @denverstewart8301@denverstewart83016 ай бұрын
  • @4:55 Yup, we're doomed. A.I. plus PDMS-SS-IP-BNB = Doomed! It's literally just like the scene in the Terminator movie where it shows the entity self heal.

    @LSD209@LSD2098 ай бұрын
    • Capitalism won't let that happen. If they use this, they can't destroy it (unless they are researching that while creating the stuff?) and no one will be in need of new furniture, a new vehicle or whatever they want to use it on. No need for new stuff = no need to spend money on it. They want us to keep spending, else there is less reason to work. I mean, don't they want to grow food in laboratories as well?

      @Dao_Tui@Dao_Tui8 ай бұрын
    • A.I. creating a robot in human form is just like your hands moving things around. A robot or even the mainframe being able to repair itself is scary a fuk

      @majorkramer@majorkramer8 ай бұрын
    • @@majorkramer I am more scared of what they would program the robots for than the fact they would be able to self repair... The one creating it is responsable for the moral values it has. We can only create in our own image. I think that might be what scares me most. I do believe in technology being a helpful tool to assist us and for some people, help them live. But I don't agree with it taking over our entire lives as it does today. Too many people stuck with their faces glued to their phone instead of doing their job, paying attention to traffic and even... neglecting their family and friends because of it. We are detaching ourselves from the world around us. We are detaching ourselves from other people. I am an introvert, but even I see the danger in this. No one seems to care about others anymore. Mix AI into that.. I only see more issues. Then again, I might be wrong. (I hope so)

      @Dao_Tui@Dao_Tui8 ай бұрын
    • You shouldn't be afraid of AI rising up against us. You should be afraid of the people who designed it to do that. The militaries using it as a weapon.

      @renakunisaki@renakunisakiАй бұрын
  • The thumbnail got me here. To tell you that it can really trigger some ppl's trypophobia. Cheers!

    @alistairfletcher6187@alistairfletcher61878 ай бұрын
    • Me as well..the horror..😅but sooo worth now I’m here. Great info for imagining the future applications.

      @mariavictor4324@mariavictor43248 ай бұрын
    • phobia is the word for the feeling of fear.. what's the word for feeling gross?

      @Ritziey@Ritziey8 ай бұрын
    • it's pretty disguting, yes.

      @MedusaMrigesh@MedusaMrigesh7 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂 same reason I came here. Showed up in my recommendation and I couldn't stand it. It triggered me so hard 😢

      @DLXWillington@DLXWillington6 ай бұрын
    • The video doesn't show the substance in the thumb nail, do you know what the thumb nail material is? I wanted to send this link toy sister who has trypophobia 😂mean! I know, but thats what brothers are for, right?! 😂

      @crm.carpentry@crm.carpentry3 ай бұрын
  • That StarLite guy is like somebody finding a real cure for cancer, only uses it for himself, then dies of old age.

    @officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408@officermeowmeowfuzzyface440811 күн бұрын
  • The Vanta Black is just too cool! I want a 5 gallon bucket.

    @ShiftysRevenge@ShiftysRevenge2 ай бұрын
    • Someone made a better one that absorbs even more light! Wild. Best part is they made it free to use if I recall! Some dude copy righted Vanta Black. He charges exorbitant prices for it, so screw him and it. It is why you don't see it.

      @dianapennepacker6854@dianapennepacker6854Ай бұрын
  • Lots of people have replicated Starlite, like Nighthawkinlight, whose video you used. It's corn starch, baking soda, and glue. Or at least those ingredients make something with the same properties Starlite was supposed to have. That's why Maurice was so obsessive about keeping it a secret. Once it got out, anyone could make it easily. It's no big mystery. Since we know Maurice possessed a kitchen and apparently didn't have a degree in chemistry, seems pretty likely that's what he did.

    @greenaum@greenaum8 ай бұрын
    • Ah…but what kind of glue?

      @kathybradbury@kathybradbury8 ай бұрын
    • Elmer's school glue

      @RodRussell@RodRussell7 ай бұрын
    • You should post a video I will subscribe 😂😂😂 for real just for that video

      @iampumanormal@iampumanormal7 ай бұрын
    • PVA@@kathybradbury

      @simonmaverick9201@simonmaverick92017 ай бұрын
    • What a DOUCHEBAG maurice was, I understand not selling to Military, but to keep it HIDDEN from Mankind forever... is straight stupidity ... how could someone be so hateful of man, to not give mankind a resolution to so many problems? How sociopathic, must one be? That disgusts me.

      @JoeBoxerNo1@JoeBoxerNo17 ай бұрын
  • Finally a video worth watching. Excellent. Thank you.😊

    @Libra67jtc@Libra67jtc8 ай бұрын
    • Nope this video is trash

      @Apple_Beshy@Apple_BeshyАй бұрын
  • I remember that some place used to sell pieces of nitinol wire that spelled out your name. You could bend it out of shape or pull on it to straighten it out, and when you applied heat to it, it was like an invisible hand writing out your name. There was a liquid that looked like water you could start pouring from a pitcher into a glass, and when you set the pitcher down on the table the liquid kept flowing up, through the air into the glass. When you wanted it to stop, you cut the stream with a pair of scissors and each half of it went into its container. I wish I could remember what it was called, but it was several years ago when I saw it. I think it was some kind of polymer mixed with water.

    @BigHarryBalzac@BigHarryBalzac2 ай бұрын
  • This all explains a lot, thank you. A LOT.

    @V.squared@V.squared4 ай бұрын
  • I can’t help but think of the pollution caused by the production of these materials, or these carcinogenic properties.

    @laa6549@laa65498 ай бұрын
    • You're possibly correct in some instances. Maybe think of the pros they can also bring to the world.

      @JonsTunes@JonsTunes7 ай бұрын
    • Life is fatal. No matter how you live or what you do or what you eat. You will die. Worrying about cancer is fine but understand whether you get cancer or not, you still have a finite life. At best, all you can possibly do is push that time as late as possible. You can never defeat it. Living and being free from carcinogens your entire life won't change it.

      @LatitudeSky@LatitudeSky22 күн бұрын
  • I'm actually not impressed by graphine's structural properties, but i would be impressed by the process of producing cohesive sheets as opposed to pieces of dust.

    @DJRonnieG@DJRonnieG7 ай бұрын
    • Oh, you’re not impressed by graphine? Mmm.👌🫵🤡‼️ Btw it’s graphene you muppet

      @LiveFreeOrDie2A@LiveFreeOrDie2A7 ай бұрын
    • Maybe..an atomic level printer could produce it?

      @SliceofLife7777@SliceofLife77776 ай бұрын
    • @@SliceofLife7777 Your print will be ready in seven years

      @MelindaGreen@MelindaGreen6 ай бұрын
    • microwave graphite on silicon sheets

      @livelongwell@livelongwell5 ай бұрын
    • If I remember, they've already done that by vapour deposition, but it's proving too costly to be viable. I'm sure they'll find a way, sooner or later.

      @martynridley3671@martynridley36714 ай бұрын
  • As someone that loves microbiology and technology this content is amazing!! Thank you!

    @D.K8637@D.K863723 күн бұрын
  • Never thought I’d learn physics from the Geico lizard.

    @ashercorbett8089@ashercorbett8089Ай бұрын
  • Genius video, the process of evolution via video. The information was vast, if school's taught in this manner, learning would be new word in our current educational system. Thanks for the stimulation, brain candy🤗

    @rogergarcia3021@rogergarcia30218 ай бұрын
    • Word!

      @RemyDuBois-hx6wi@RemyDuBois-hx6wi2 ай бұрын
    • You clearly don't know what evolution means, then. This video was also very light on the educational side, and stimulation mostly in the visual sense :Ü™ Edit: Don't get me wrong, I enjoyed it. But I enjoyed it for what it is: a spectacle piece :Ü™

      @Darker7@Darker72 ай бұрын
    • @@Darker7 Enlighten us, belittling is a poor teacher, even when followed by an edit. Don't get me wrong, I'd like to know what we all seem to not understand.

      @RemyDuBois-hx6wi@RemyDuBois-hx6wi2 ай бұрын
    • @@RemyDuBois-hx6wi The term "evolution" in its broader/conceptual meaning (as opposed to the biological meaning) describes a process of *gradual* and *incremental* change. The antonym is "revolution" which describes a rapid and large change. There is an argument to be made that *a* video can be revolutionary and that *several* videos can be evolutionary. Heck, if a video is long enough we could say our opinion/knowledge/whatever evolved over the course of the video, but this video is a simple listicle. There is no *change* in it, just a list of independent items :Ü™

      @Darker7@Darker72 ай бұрын
    • @@Darker7 Now .. See, that's the shit that makes the world heal my friend. I had a feelin' about you, that's why I took a beat with ya. Come out with THAT off the bat so we get to know the Cool MuthaFucker that you are instead of just another blah blah blah chump. It felt better the second time right? I know it did, we ALL have something to learn still. I'm smart enough to know I'll never be smart enough and wise enough to know I'll never know everything, so instead of waiting to talk, I listen. You'll never teach anyone anything if they're in the corner from the jump. Pretty good on the definition, breaking it down for just about everyone, nice work. Maybe this can be a revolution that kicks your evolution up a gear or two. If one of us gets better, we all do! One day we'll all get back to that understanding, I try to commit random acts of kindness as often as possible, and it always seems to come back, now almost immediately. These of course, are just my personal observations and humble opinions, but every proof starts as a hypothesis, and that's pretty much scientific opinion at that point ... I'm working on the theory still 😊 Very Nice! Kisses, ʍ$. я€ʍ¥ đ. 💋💋💋

      @RemyDuBois-hx6wi@RemyDuBois-hx6wi2 ай бұрын
  • Any technology advanced enough will appear as magic to us.

    @anthonykeller5120@anthonykeller51208 ай бұрын
    • Arthur C Clarke..

      @stuartd9741@stuartd97417 ай бұрын
    • Magic is just science we don't understand yet.

      @renakunisaki@renakunisakiАй бұрын
  • Only Scotty can defy the laws of physics for Cpt Kirk.

    @maltedmilk6888@maltedmilk68882 ай бұрын
  • Cool video, i learned a lot. Though the Gömböc statement at the end about requiring precision within a tenth of a millimeter (0.1mm) cracked me up xD Then again im a machinist and i routinely need to hit measurements within a thousandth or two of a millimeter (0.000mm to 0.002mm).

    @FATxAZZxGONExCRAZZZY@FATxAZZxGONExCRAZZZY21 күн бұрын
  • With coatings such as grarfine and others mentioned in this video that can handle the tremendous amounts of heat that they do, shouldn’t there be improvements coming much faster in clean energy such as fusion. I’ve never heard of this in energy discussion’s yet but it would seem that some of these inventions should at least have it further along.

    @henlewis7788@henlewis77888 ай бұрын
    • The problem with clean energy is that certain people are blocking with all the power that they possess. The problem isn't with ability or the technology. The hold up is paper. Of the green variety. The oil companies will lose trillions of dollars and they aren't going to give that money up without a fight. They donate money to politicians who then block any effort to replace oil with newer, cleaner technology.

      @yvettebowles9011@yvettebowles90117 ай бұрын
    • The problem with fusion power plants is that we are finding it difficult to sustain it while maintaining control of it. In nature, fusion occurs inside of a star. The result of the amount of mass a star has causes it to collapse, until fusion of that mass occurs. If the said mass is hydrogen or helium, the resultant fusion reaction causes expansion of the collapsing mass. The star inflates against it's own gravity, reducing density. to the point that the fusion process doesn't blow the star apart. Less density, less pressure, less fusion. In a helium star like Betelges (may have spelled that wrong) the star may pulsate. With our mostly hydrogen Sun, at it's mass the balance is more stable. We can't create that level of gravity here on earth, so we attempt magnetic containment, and we can't produce the level of physical pressure on hydrogen, so scientist use high powered lasers to excite hydrogen nuclei within magnetic containment to generate hydrogen fusion. Such powerful magnetic fields, generated by electrical flow requires an impressive amount of energy. This year, for the first time, an American team got more energy out of the experiment than they put into it. As the H-bomb demonstrates, no material can exist as anything but plasma at that level of heat. So a secret material probably isn't the answer. Or isn't it? I've heard that our brightest have engineered room temperature superconductors, this could advance the efficiency of the proccess by removing electrical resistance from the power system, and electromagnetic coils. Why couldn't superconducting coils be used to contain the proccess? Sorry if this long winded attempt to answer your question didn't help. Probably won't. But it did get me 🤔 thinking. So, thanks.

      @SliceofLife7777@SliceofLife77776 ай бұрын
  • Awesome video, thanks for sharing this. Science Science Rules

    @lennydetloff1031@lennydetloff10317 ай бұрын
    • Sci does rule !!!

      @michaelpessin7233@michaelpessin72332 ай бұрын
  • Mercury is an amazing substance... I hope you included it. Red is spectacular.

    @arsnotorious@arsnotorious8 ай бұрын
  • Always love that ‘30’s mid-atlantic accent.

    @billchessell8213@billchessell82132 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely amazing video. One note, the word Celtic with the soft C only refers to Sports Teams (Boston Celtics, Celtic Football Club). All other pronunciations use the K sound for Celtic, as far as I can tell, anyways. The people were definitely the K Celtic.

    @michaelrae9599@michaelrae95998 ай бұрын
    • YES... you are correct ! Even the teams, if name taken from the Celtic peoples, should be hard K

      @BPantherPink@BPantherPink8 ай бұрын
    • Kell-tick

      @BeatlesFan1975@BeatlesFan19758 ай бұрын
    • I don’t understand why the narrator kept saying seltic for the stone, until he said kelts when referring to the people. Weird.

      @MekazaBitrusty@MekazaBitrusty8 ай бұрын
    • That's how I've always known it too!

      @jaredharris1940@jaredharris19408 ай бұрын
    • I'm reasonably sure the narrator is a bot, there are several pronunciation errors that nobody with a true British accent would make.

      @Fizzloid@Fizzloid8 ай бұрын
  • WOW! These are some extremely fascinating substances having amazing meta-properties that bring us into the science fiction world into reality!

    @LarryCoppotelli@LarryCoppotelli8 ай бұрын
    • Could your comment be any more childish and predictable??

      @simonmaverick9201@simonmaverick92017 ай бұрын
    • @@simonmaverick9201 thank you I do try!

      @LarryCoppotelli@LarryCoppotelli7 ай бұрын
    • God bless you.@@LarryCoppotelli

      @simonmaverick9201@simonmaverick92017 ай бұрын
  • "This video is 98 times better than the closest poly-multi'plex nano-mix"😂🎉 Thanks for the info about the materials the inventors and so much more guys !!! MP

    @michaelpessin7233@michaelpessin72332 ай бұрын
  • you forgot the most marvelous things in the world, One of the greatest wonders ever invented! GUINNESS! it's bubbles go down, not up! It's as black as the blackest black, and best of all, it can be drunk, and bestows the wondrous feeling happiness and embodies the essence of the Irish soul, It causes spontaneous singing, dancing, and smiles. It also can be a meal in itself!

    @davenee8799@davenee87998 ай бұрын
    • You must have been to Creatons Bar, Loughglynn, Co. Roscommon. I spent 44 years at sea and drunk Guinness in half the countries in the world. Creatons serve the finest Guinness I've ever had, and I DO mean that.

      @stephennelmes4557@stephennelmes45572 ай бұрын
  • Super reporting as usual... Kudos to your team 👋👋👋

    @BPantherPink@BPantherPink8 ай бұрын
    • Amazing Substances.

      @ABestEver@ABestEver8 ай бұрын
    • They have 400k likes on a video released yesterday and only 50k views…how?

      @richardbryson@richardbryson8 ай бұрын
    • @@richardbryson Maybe if they are patreons then they get to see the vdo much earlier... i think.

      @BPantherPink@BPantherPink8 ай бұрын
    • @@richardbryson maybe is because they got into the video they have no autoplay active, leave a like and do not watch the video for some reason 😅

      @giostechnologygiovannyv.ri489@giostechnologygiovannyv.ri4898 ай бұрын
  • I had lineX applied to my truck bed I can attest to its robustness. Lava rock not a scratch.

    @rronay2732@rronay27327 ай бұрын
  • Seems like a smart idea to paint hydrophobic paint on the bottom boats or on and in houses and homes and cars.

    @josephmoodie4970@josephmoodie49702 ай бұрын
  • Beautiful video, thank you. TIL.

    @aryaman05@aryaman058 ай бұрын
  • This video was fun to watch! Thanks!

    @timberwolf5631@timberwolf56318 ай бұрын
    • yup buddy.

      @ABestEver@ABestEver8 ай бұрын
    • Nope it's bad

      @Apple_Beshy@Apple_BeshyАй бұрын
  • big ups starlight inventor, its refreshing to hear corps didnt get their way

    @cloudy5504@cloudy55042 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, all they could see are dollar signs.😂

      @Hydroverse@HydroverseАй бұрын
  • How teflon was considered miracle material and now we are all poisoned with it

    @simulatednatas@simulatednatas2 ай бұрын
    • Is it toxic to the touch? I have a roll of Teflon

      @mariocinquemani3134@mariocinquemani3134Ай бұрын
  • That spray on coating that protected the car from damage. Would also make a good permanent roof coating for buildings. Can you imagine having your roof coated once in your lifetime and having never to replace the roof again.

    @AMLS1922@AMLS1922Ай бұрын
  • If aerogel doesn't burn, then WTF aren't our walls lined with it? It could have saved those in Maui. A 1930's dicovery yet no one fucking uses it? Amazing.

    @rremnar@rremnar8 ай бұрын
    • It's exceptionally brittle, while also being very expensive. Like graphene, it isn't practical.

      @Hydroverse@HydroverseАй бұрын
  • Amazing 🎉🎉🎉

    @SabinUche@SabinUche8 ай бұрын
  • Lava and starlite is a good tool for molding and shaping a liquid of glass or lava to create a higher Quality structure that resists melting in a lava lineup of a different kind of material that can cause the Crystals to be in a magnetic resonance recorders or in a valance of a single placement

    @danielash1704@danielash17043 ай бұрын
  • "Watch in awe how this person casually holds their palm against a wall made of this composite"... and we see Derek, the Veritasium KZhead channel host and creator 😂

    @ovidiumihalcea7721@ovidiumihalcea77216 ай бұрын
  • He definately gave up that secret before the men in black erased him

    @iamwhatiam2348@iamwhatiam23487 ай бұрын
  • Not a single one of these substances defies the laws of physics. They all very strictly obey the laws of physics. What they do defy is people's understanding of how our world works. This is the result of most people not taking a physics class before they have graduated high school.

    @michaelfrench3396@michaelfrench33968 ай бұрын
    • @@johankruger304 I didn't say it wasn't interesting. I just said it was silly

      @michaelfrench3396@michaelfrench33968 ай бұрын
  • Beehive hexagon is based off soundwave form. Modern Architects are destroying past buildings with designs of sound waves in their creation.

    @YouTubePurgetheblackplague@YouTubePurgetheblackplague8 ай бұрын
  • Before I even start watching the video. Helium 1 is very strange and when Helium is in it liquid form, it acts crazy.

    @jasonwebb1882@jasonwebb18828 ай бұрын
  • They don't defy the laws of physics, it is European physics that is limited.

    @eastafrika728@eastafrika7288 ай бұрын
    • 😂 they define the laws of psychics

      @dontoni8041@dontoni804118 күн бұрын
  • Why on Earth would that fella bother inventing an incredibly innovative and useful material and then refuse to share it with anybody, taking the manufacturing process to the grave? "Guys, check this stuff out! It could revolutionize hundreds of industries! But I'm not gonna share it with anybody and I'm gonna make sure I die with the secret recipe. Too bad, so sad." Talk about a catastrophic dick move.

    @Strype13@Strype138 ай бұрын
    • @Strype13 Greed He wanted people to pay him to make it and he alone and at a price that was exceedingly expensive. He refused an offer of 5.4 Billion dollars in the 1995 USD. He refused to sell.

      @bearup1612@bearup16128 ай бұрын
    • @Strype13 That was small snippets of one side of the story, so you're not getting the whole picture. There's missing context. He wanted a deal where he maintained ownership of the material, yet NASA and corporations considered him a nobody and wanted him to sell all rights to it. We *know* they tried to reverse engineer the material, but failed to do so. I think this vid did a poor job of explaining it as I've read a very different sounding account elsewhere.

      @XpaceTrue@XpaceTrue8 ай бұрын
    • ​@@bearup1612 Haven't you ever heard the saying, "There's two sides to every story"? Yes, he did not want to sell all rights to it. Why does that automatically make him greedy or a villain? The version of it that I read painted NASA and the corporations as the greedy ones who underestimated him. Personally, I don't have much faith in governments or major corporations to always act in an honorable manner as there are far too many stories of corruption. So I'm not so sure I would have done differently in his shoes.

      @XpaceTrue@XpaceTrue8 ай бұрын
    • @@XpaceTrue Yeah and considering he wanted to be the sole manufacture distributor and paid royalties for the product. and paid an indecent amount of money. yeah he was GREEDY

      @bearup1612@bearup16128 ай бұрын
  • Ekse you killed the intro, I was sold.

    @spaceman7125@spaceman71258 ай бұрын
  • All I can say is WOW!

    @John-ps2is@John-ps2is8 ай бұрын
  • Exquisite voice and presention

    @thomuzmphela@thomuzmphela8 ай бұрын
    • It's a stupid AI voice and has made some outrageous pronunciation errors that literally change the meaning of certain words.🙄 So irritating!😬

      @LloydsofRochester@LloydsofRochester2 ай бұрын
  • This video was excellent! I'm such a science nerd, I love all things science. Thank you so much for teaching me a few things! If we are just now learning about these materials I can only imagine what the military has! 🤔 They're probably 50years more advanced than we know, technologically. Who knows, but it makes you wonder.

    @doncarleone973@doncarleone9738 ай бұрын
    • He’s not very scientific if he thinks 2023 is two decades away from 2013.

      @ericjsmoczynski4374@ericjsmoczynski43748 ай бұрын
    • The military has plasma vehicles. That's how far we've progressed . Plasma beings have been observed as intelligent. Don't believe me. Look into it 🙏

      @chrisclark4112@chrisclark41128 ай бұрын
    • @@ericjsmoczynski4374 well I've heard that some genuises cant count their own pocket change either... so?

      @rebeccaheim8278@rebeccaheim82787 ай бұрын
    • 24:00 gallium.... that is Perpetual Motion right there... that is literally, Free Energy... am I wrong? Is that not the solution to our Energy problems of the future?

      @JoeBoxerNo1@JoeBoxerNo17 ай бұрын
    • Invisible floating tanks

      @colinmiller6301@colinmiller63016 ай бұрын
  • Defies the laws of physics: Camera man in every video

    @fletch989@fletch98924 күн бұрын
  • I seem to see this effect at some times during what I call "light absorbing" rain and fog, which makes it almost impossible to see my headlight beams unless I get out and look back toward the actual lights. I keep my lights, windows, and windshield super clean. (I'm probably silly, but I'm attached to seeing, with my biological eyes, especially while driving.) 😏 Since learning about illegal goldmining techniques going on in the Congo basin that are releasing uncounted tons of mercury directly into the ocean, I have given up worrying about the surface of the Earth. When humanitarians tried to teach the miners about the illnesses they (and their families) were suffering as a result of mercury exposure they were told they were wrong. The illnesses were really caused by a witch in a neighboring village being hired by those miners, who were jealous, to put a curse on them. How can reason reach humans in less than the thousands of years it has taken for some to embrace the scientific method, even partially. Then there is Bangalore... those people do science so well it will become uninhabitable within my now brief lifetime. I'm 73.

    @shelleymarquis2887@shelleymarquis288722 күн бұрын
  • This video is fascinating!!!

    @caroljo420@caroljo4208 ай бұрын
  • If possibly you can change thumbnail this was very disturbing for me because of my Trypophobia

    @KapiteniAL@KapiteniAL8 ай бұрын
    • Excellent observation. Luckily for me, my eyes don't focus in so well so I didn't see the detail.

      @michaelrae9599@michaelrae95998 ай бұрын
    • Trypophobia is a false phobia. There is no such phobia.

      @ozymandiasultor9480@ozymandiasultor94808 ай бұрын
    • I hate it

      @xK1TT3HK4Tx@xK1TT3HK4Tx8 ай бұрын
    • Crazy how i was willing to unsubscribe over it, then i realised the channel creates content I actually enjoyed, wish they would not use trigger warning thumbnail tho

      @acap220c@acap220c8 ай бұрын
    • 🤔🤔

      @ABestEver@ABestEver8 ай бұрын
  • Have to get Dr James Tour in on this ...

    @Saviour3@Saviour324 күн бұрын
  • Come on man trypophobia inducing thumbnail. WHAT THE HELL DUDE. Why you gotta do me like this in my subscription feed

    @anon-san2830@anon-san28308 ай бұрын
  • Clickbait procrastination.

    @daviddrift7663@daviddrift76635 ай бұрын
  • All those materials are beat, but has anyone even thought about how to dispose of them?

    @marekstanek112@marekstanek1124 сағат бұрын
  • Physics doesn’t follow rules; rules are a description of what physics does. When physics doesn’t follow the rule it means the rule is imperfect and needs to be tweaked.

    @fuzexi@fuzexi8 ай бұрын
  • Line-X needs to be used to undercoat the frames of trucks and cars to prevent rusting. 🤔

    @FirstLast-hv6wt@FirstLast-hv6wt6 күн бұрын
  • I honestly can’t work out if the voiceover is real or an AI trained partly on Joe Cornish and partly Joe Cornish doing a David Bowie impression

    @DawnDupponmi@DawnDupponmi4 күн бұрын
  • If dry water was used for fire prevention, and then drained into the sewers and then went through water processing and back into our drinking water what would the affects be?

    @gjwhizz77@gjwhizz7717 күн бұрын
  • Defense: "your honor, the vehichle was deliberatly painted to not be seen on the road" Judge: "case dismissed" 😆

    @lazertroll702@lazertroll7022 ай бұрын
  • Shapeshifting Nitinol sounds a lot like the material used for the PAL Key in Metal Gear Solid, which would change its shape according to temperature.

    @Animebryan2@Animebryan22 ай бұрын
  • I completely agree with you about #1.

    @Rusty-METAL-J@Rusty-METAL-J2 ай бұрын
KZhead