Instructional Video7:16
SciShow

The Grandfather of the Computer was the Loom

12th - Higher Ed
In the early 19th century, a French weaver named Joseph-Marie Jacquard was searching for a better way to make fabric. And in so doing, he managed to invent a loom that inspired the first proper computer. Hosted by: Savannah Geary...
Instructional Video8:33
TED Talks

Can AI help with the chaos of family life? | Avni Patel Thompson

12th - Higher Ed
Tech innovator Avni Patel Thompson designed an app to shield busy parents from the chaos of scheduling school pickups, coordinating playdates, planning birthday parties and more — but as the product developed, something felt off. What...
Instructional Video14:53
TED Talks

The catastrophic risks of AI — and a safer path | Yoshua Bengio

12th - Higher Ed
Yoshua Bengio — the world's most-cited computer scientist and a "godfather" of artificial intelligence — is deadly concerned about the current trajectory of the technology. As AI models race toward full-blown agency, Bengio warns that...
News Clip5:54
PBS

Why typewriters are having a renaissance in the digital age

12th - Higher Ed
In a world dominated by digital technology, a growing number of people are embracing a decidedly analog device: the typewriter. John Yang reports.
Instructional Video1:58
MinutePhysics

Why is the Sun Yellow and the Sky Blue

12th - Higher Ed
Why is the Sun Yellow and the Sky Blue
Instructional Video3:22
MinutePhysics

Open Letter to the President - Physics Education

12th - Higher Ed
Open Letter to the President - Physics Education
Instructional Video2:13
MinutePhysics

How To Go To Space (with XKCD!)

12th - Higher Ed
How To Go To Space (with XKCD!)
Instructional Video2:39
MinutePhysics

Gravitational Waves Explained Using Stick Figures

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about gravitational waves in the weak field limit as discovered by the LIGO collaboration, explained by parallels to electromagnetic radiation, sound waves, water waves, etc. I want to see Cat LIGO ASAP!
Instructional Video3:34
MinutePhysics

Computer Color is Broken

12th - Higher Ed
Computer Color is Broken
Instructional Video1:43
MinutePhysics

Can We Predict Everything

12th - Higher Ed
Einstein didn't like quantum mechanics because it wasn't able to make perfect predictions... but science is not about what you like, it's about what's true!
Instructional Video13:05
TED Talks

TED: Welcome to the world of audio computers | Jason Rugolo

12th - Higher Ed
In an exclusive preview of unreleased technology, designer and inventor Jason Rugolo unveils an entirely new kind of computer you can talk to like a friend. This "audio computer" — which can augment the sounds around you, translate...
Instructional Video10:01
SciShow

Why We'll Never Build a Perfect Clock

12th - Higher Ed
We can make clocks that keep accurate time for millions of years. We can also make clocks with such high resolution they tick one billion billion times per second. So why can't we make a clock that does both?
Instructional Video9:11
SciShow

Can You Make A Computer Out Of Food?

12th - Higher Ed
Could an edible computer be in your future? Researchers are currently working on several of the components you find in them, from batteries to circuit boards to logic gates.
Instructional Video3:07
SciShow

Ada Lovelace: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Ada Lovelace, Daughter of Lord Byron, was somehow the first author of a computer program...even though she lived more than a century before the first modern computer.
Instructional Video8:20
SciShow

The Best Keyboard, According to Science

12th - Higher Ed
People have strong opinions about which kind of keyboard is best, but science has settled the debate.
Instructional Video4:48
SciShow

Why Can't I Use My Laptop Outside?

12th - Higher Ed
Why can't laptop screens be viewed outside like e-readers can? It turns out, they use very different technology. But engineers are working on closing the gap.
Instructional Video13:57
SciShow

Why Does Physics Love Donuts? | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
Unfortunately, the universe isn't made of sugarcoated fried dough. However, here are a few ways donuts are still managing to find their way into the physical world.
Instructional Video10:43
SciShow

How Math Can Help Decode Art

12th - Higher Ed
Even though math and art feel like polar opposites, it turns out computer algorithms and calculations can help us see masterpieces in a new light. From using wavelet decomposition to study Van Gogh to using convolutional filters in...
Instructional Video10:53
SciShow

Why Is ChatGPT Bad At Math?

12th - Higher Ed
Sometimes, you ask ChatGPT to do a math problem that an arithmetically-inclined grade schooler can do with ease. And sometimes, ChatGPT can confidently state the wrong answer. It's all due to its nature as a large language model, and the...
Instructional Video6:38
SciShow

This Problem Could Break Cryptography

12th - Higher Ed
What if, no matter how strong your password was, a hacker could crack it just as easily as you can type it? In fact, what if all sorts of puzzles we thought were hard turned out to be easy? Mathematicians call this problem P vs. NP, it...
Instructional Video1:24
SciShow

How Did a Magnet Just Break My Monitor?

12th - Higher Ed
If you’ve managed to break your boxy old computer monitor by sticking a magnet on it, you have a lot to learn about the 20th century technology of cathode ray tubes.
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

Could a Shirt Hear Your Heartbeat? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Microphones keep getting smaller and smaller, but have you ever asked what it would be like to have a bigger one in the form of a shirt? And though we tend to incorrectly think that we’re having two-way conversations with our pets, we...
Instructional Video11:13
SciShow

5 Groundbreaking Women in Engineering

12th - Higher Ed
After many years of quietly changing the world, women are finally receiving recognition for contributions in STEM. Let’s celebrate these 5 groundbreaking women, and their contributions to the field of engineering.
Instructional Video3:57
SciShow

DeepDream: Inside Google's 'Daydreaming' Computers

12th - Higher Ed
It may produce creepy images with way too many dogs and eyeballs, but Google’s DeepDream program is actually a valuable window into artificial intelligence.