SmarterEveryDay
SmarterEveryDay
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  • @cdoublejj
    @cdoublejj 11 분 전

    Good work Destin!

  • @TheGreatPOD
    @TheGreatPOD 시간 전

    Great video, all's I can say is, I am incredibly incredibly jealous, that was awesome, thanks for sharing

  • @scottydude456
    @scottydude456 2 시간 전

    I know the coast guard gets a lot of jokes, if you think about it they are the only branch of the military _actively_ defending US soil

  • @chriskellas2902
    @chriskellas2902 2 시간 전

    When I'm trimming weeds I don't care how clean the cut is, what matters to me is how quickly can I move through them and how long my line will last between refills

  • @Manthankahane
    @Manthankahane 2 시간 전

    The drop blasts because of shattered bulets small parts hits the tail after impact otherwise it wont broke see the video in .25 x

  • @IndependentLiberty
    @IndependentLiberty 4 시간 전

    Oddly enough, this didn't seem all that long. Thanks for making it enjoyable.

  • @Diego-cx9pw
    @Diego-cx9pw 4 시간 전

    Si eso sería Uranio el final sería diferente 🔥

  • @scotthulslander3409
    @scotthulslander3409 5 시간 전

    I worked as a bicycle mechanic for almost a decade and the guy I first trained under was honestly the best within a 200 mile radius of our shop. He still had me test ride and give feedback on every bike he worked on after he deemed the repair complete. If I thought something was off he would address it and explain to me either how/why he had failed to catch what was causing the particular issue or explain why what I had noticed was within acceptable parameters for that particular work order. There was never any negative emotions associated with feedback. We would always check each other's work and took pride in collectively doing the best job we could possibly do. That experience taught me so much on what I wanted my working relationships to look like. It doesn't matter how good you are as an individual, you will always be best as a collective with a unified goal. That only works, though, if you're humble enough to say "Hey, new guy. Tell me what you think about this"

  • @bigdogben
    @bigdogben 5 시간 전

    next video gonna be with tory bruno about vulcan? hopefully spaceX will let you come talk with them too. if they have the guts to do it

  • @tillyshimmelstone4332

    That was crazy. The last shot was literally one in a million

  • @andrewlutes2048
    @andrewlutes2048 5 시간 전

    I don’t know how anyone can trust Spacex.

  • @JimStarkey-jl9sb
    @JimStarkey-jl9sb 5 시간 전

    It is because there is iron in the dirt and it gets absorbed into its body

  • @user-dr6vs7ot3q
    @user-dr6vs7ot3q 5 시간 전

    So it takes illegal immigrants to assemble a irrigation system..

  • @V8VRUte
    @V8VRUte 5 시간 전

    The way Jessica places her leg out after kneeling, finding the extra stability. Watch Apollo 13, where Hanks is imagining himself walking on the moon as they're in radio blackout, it's exactly the same thing that he does there. It's quite clearly something that being in a back heavy, restrictive EVA suit naturally lends itself to.

  • @orvjudd1383
    @orvjudd1383 6 시간 전

    I would like to say that I like the way you think.

  • @grn1
    @grn1 6 시간 전

    Great talk. A few points I've noticed from reading through the comments: 1.) A fair number of folks have pointed out that part of the reason for the complexity of the project is because our next goal is Mars and some of the complexity is due to economic constraints (which can get complicated in a hurry). A VERY BIG REASON that I've hardly seen mentioned is that part of the goal is to get a large crew and supplies to the moon to start a moon base. That's something the Apollo program could never do with their rockets (they had 3 people and minimum cargo). I presume Destin was aware of this when talking about how many rockets we need, his point was that us not knowing is a big (communication) problem. 2.) A lot of people talk about risk taking. There were a lot of risk taken during the Apollo days but those Astronauts were War Veterans that were willing to take risk for the sake of their country (within reason). Early on there were a lot of unnecessary risk and during the shuttle days there were also some unnecessary risk both due to political pressures. It looks like that may still be an issue today (many decisions about the program are clearly political and not engineering focused). We talk a lot about making the new program safer but I think many of us are concerned that it won't be. That said there's also a lot of people attacking Space X because of how many Starship prototypes have exploded and that's just BS. SpaceX's approach is iterative real world testing with unmanned ships and systems until they have a product that's reliable enough for shipping then eventually for carrying humans. I have my fair share of complaints about Musk and his way of doing things but SpaceX blowing up Starship prototypes is not a big concern for the safety of the mission, that's just their way of working out the bugs and it obviously works quite well hence their big successes like reusable rockets, that cost a fraction of their competition to launch, and the sheer number of successful launches they've had with very few real failures (not counting unmanned test platforms). 3.) There's the people denying we ever got to the moon. To those people I say, go somewhere else if you want to spew s**t out your mouth. I'd think the taste would shut you up but you seem to love it. Seriously go do some real research, there were huge risk taken during the Apollo days and they got extremely lucky on many occasions (the first mission to actually land on the moon and come back barely missed a solar storm that would taken out the whole ship). On a similar vein there's the classic line about the radiation belt, well it's called a belt for a reason. We can actually go around the belt to avoid most of the radiation and the remaining radiation can be blocked with lead, water, or various ceramics. We actually have a very good understanding of radiation and how to work with it, defend against it, and even generate it which of course helps with testing. It's only rocket science. 4.) I saw a couple comments from people saying they don't want their tax payer dollars going to this. I guess you don't want GPS Satellites, Weather Satellites, and Internet/Communication Satellites being deployed for less money than ever before (those things have to be replaced and/or upgraded occasionally which cost money, lower cost for those launches means lower cost for the end products and/or taxpayer depending on who's footing the bill). That's not even touching the other benefits investments into space programs can have like the development of better computer technologies (the micro-computer boom started with the Shuttle Program giving money to engineers to develop better computers which they also built and sold to the consumer). Also the good ol' ball point pen was an invention of the old Space Program (traditional pens won't work and graphite from pencils could fly around in micro-gravity and bridge connections in electrical circuits (short circuit critical equipment)). Another one that comes to mind is Tempur Pedic, memory foam technology came about because they needed a better, thinner bed for astronauts (traditional beds created weird pressure points in micro-gravity that injured astronauts). There's also a ton of other material improvements and motor improvements that come about because of Space Programs that then go on to improve everyday products that we rely on (like safer but lighter cars with more efficient engines).

    • @clearmomentum
      @clearmomentum 4 시간 전

      The country that landed on the moon 55 years later.... "Odysseus landed on the Moon at Malapert A crater near the south pole on February 22, at 23:23:53 UT. It landed in a 1 km diameter crater on a slope of about 12 degrees, at 80.13 degrees S, 1.44 degrees E, roughly 1.5 km from the planned landing position. Some of the landing gear broke upon impact, and Odysseus tipped over and is resting at a 30 degree angle to the horizontal, but is still operational. Data have been received from the science payloads. It was losing sunlight and powered down on February 28. No communications were received the next lunar day, and the mission was ended."

    • @grn1
      @grn1 3 시간 전

      @@clearmomentum If you're referring to a recent mission then it's important to understand that modern missions are 1.) Aiming to land at areas that couldn't be reached in the original missions and test new technologies 2.) Trying to use fully autonomous landing, this is in part because of blind spots and communication issues that previously made these targets impossible to hit (at least with remote controlled vessels) and in part because an automated system could be safer once we work out the bugs and 3.) Working with much smaller budgets (adjusted for inflation of course). Also most of the Apollo missions were failures or canceled but we did manage (with a great deal of luck, huge risk, and raw determination) to land some folks on the moon. We have bigger goals now (larger crews, more cargo, and actually building a base on the moon) and we're trying to be safer about things (most modern astronauts aren't war vets willing to die to prove their countries political system is superior (Cold War) which was why NASA had so much more funding in the 60's and early 70's).

  • @darklegionnaire8304
    @darklegionnaire8304 6 시간 전

    thats panel beating

  • @frankshandyman5224
    @frankshandyman5224 6 시간 전

    What no Canadian navy? I guess their row boats were caught in the waves and got there late LoL

  • @bruceaurand32
    @bruceaurand32 7 시간 전

    You could use this technology to make a magnetically powered gun. The initial push of the projectile wouldn't take very much effort but by the time the projectile reached the end of the barrel it could be traveling at outrageous speeds.

  • @batmanjones655
    @batmanjones655 7 시간 전

    Vare-nare fon Brown is not only the correct pronunciation of Werner von Braun. It's the only pronunciation. German, unlike English, has very rigid phonic structure. So there is zero question as to the pronunciation of his name. And zero room for Anglicized bastardization

  • @user-fl2wn5zr5z
    @user-fl2wn5zr5z 8 시간 전

    baby mushroom cloud

  • @masterofthegame8764
    @masterofthegame8764 8 시간 전

    BD(D)=(D/2) is the formula for 20:30 :)

  • @user-fl2wn5zr5z
    @user-fl2wn5zr5z 8 시간 전

    I like this one

  • @user-rd9mk2vl8l
    @user-rd9mk2vl8l 9 시간 전

    15:10 That impact of the two bullets where so good to hear.

  • @EVMacD
    @EVMacD 9 시간 전

    I have watched/listened to this twice and the second time was even more impactful, surprisingly because the first time was so memorable. Good job, engineers save more lives than anybody else, they just need to talk to each other

  • @mdiz4564
    @mdiz4564 9 시간 전

    Amazing!

  • @johnno4127
    @johnno4127 10 시간 전

    I'm so glad I looked past the long play time, thank you, Destin!

  • @Marcos_I._T.
    @Marcos_I._T. 10 시간 전

    imagine what the wild animals out in the forest are thinking when they hear that "PHSSSSHHHHEEEEEEEEÆAAAAAAAAAOOOOOOOOOO" sound coming from some place that sounds like it came from a dinosaur

  • @BH195829
    @BH195829 10 시간 전

    Fantastically video. 👍👍😊

  • @donaldfuller5058
    @donaldfuller5058 10 시간 전

    With two people and a winch with steel cable I would pop the hood so if the cable was to break the hood will catch it and not the windshield or someone’s face . But I would also replace the cable with rope

  • @DutchStar
    @DutchStar 12 시간 전

    Do a video on who filmed them lifting off the moon

  • @IcyMan143
    @IcyMan143 12 시간 전

    18:35 Sounds like the DISLIKE BUTTON COUNT!!!

  • @IcyMan143
    @IcyMan143 12 시간 전

    18:40 Sounds like the DISLIKE BUTTON COUNT!!!

  • @frznembo
    @frznembo 12 시간 전

    Great man. Take care. ❤

  • @user-yn8ic4je2x
    @user-yn8ic4je2x 13 시간 전

    It’s awesome that somebody is finally explaining what the coast guard does because nobody ever sees them doing anything

  • @alishatruman
    @alishatruman 14 시간 전

    The sleep 8 paid add was the best I can ever remember watching on any channel. So cool they cut that thing in half.

  • @calendariok
    @calendariok 14 시간 전

    Thank God that this kind of dad exist. To all dads arround the world: never abandon your Kids!

  • @lesliehilesgardener6959

    Someone has to do it hahaha 🤣 keep rolling hahaha

  • @lesliehilesgardener6959

    I saw them put tarps down to cllect them into shoots. Easy gathering beautiful memory ...

  • @iVETAnsolini
    @iVETAnsolini 15 시간 전

    Loved it! Opened my eyes to Artemis and the whole situation. You’re not wrong, and we need more people like you. When I was in the army they used to use K.I.S.S. Acronym. Keep it simple stupid

  • @lesliehilesgardener6959

    Something to see las cruses nm ....orchard there

  • @missdee212
    @missdee212 15 시간 전

    That is the nicest old book i've ever seen. Almost looks brand new. This was amazing. Your dad said no I didn't see it, I was looking for fire 😂😂. You gotta have one person thinking about safety.

  • @rollvideo
    @rollvideo 15 시간 전

    Hmm, maybe you should also have a friendly conversation with NASA about Mars Sample Return.

  • @michaelnieves9688
    @michaelnieves9688 16 시간 전

    with this program, I'm getting Smarter Every Day!

  • @jacksobe
    @jacksobe 16 시간 전

    Wow, super interesting! Was that Neil Armstrong, around 25 minutes in? I didn't recognize him. He passed away in 2012, didn't he? Or is that a conspiracy-theory cover-up, and he is living on the moon in peace right now?

  • @Deeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeez

    A CEO that actually knows?!! I love the company already

  • @PzMcQunn
    @PzMcQunn 18 시간 전

    Linus listening everything technical about the Saturn Rocket: pretty cool. Linus sees an old picture of Luke Talley: Nooooooo...that's NUTS

  • @loose_unit
    @loose_unit 20 시간 전

    Took me a while to get to it, but what a great episode!

  • @ktrain6724
    @ktrain6724 20 시간 전

    Now you know it's a controlled explosion.the more air/gas mixture the stronger the explosion which equals faster running motor.(Advances spark).

  • @zynera
    @zynera 22 시간 전

    I could see this being super cool for restoring damaged metals too like the hood of a car for example. Idk if it would work or maybe it would be too trivial for something this advanced or maybe the paint would be damaged and not worth it Roboforming it.