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  • Documentary History Mini-series Travel

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2019
2019x1
The Fishermen That Hold Their Breath For 10 Minutes
Episode overview
07, 2019
The Bajau people of Borneo can hold their breath longer than almost anyone else on the planet. How? Why? And how can the rest of us learn to hold our breath for longer? Rohin from Medlife Crisis explains.
2019x2
How Knot To Hang A Painting
Episode overview
14, 2019
You've got a painting and two nails. Can you use both nails to hang the painting so that if either nail is removed, the painting falls? That's the puzzle: in this week's guest video, Jade's going to solve it with maths.
2019x3
This Is Your Brain On Stale Air
Episode overview
21, 2019
Inside his homemade, hermetically-sealed, airtight biodome, Kurtis Baute is already out of breath and surrounded by more carbon dioxide than he should be. And that's going to affect a lot of things -- including how smart he is.
2019x4
I Got To See And Hold My Brain
Episode overview
28, 2019
We're all used to seeing MRI scans of brains. But how do they work? Can you really "see" brain activity, or read someone's mind? Alie and Micah from Neuro Transmissions went to get scanned -- and ended up having some fun with 3D printing, too.
2019x5
How to slow down a stock exchange
Episode overview
04, 2019
High-frequency traders have a few tactics on stock exchanges: but simply put, they gather price information faster than anyone else, sometimes even faster than the markets themselves, .. show full overview
2019x6
How Auto-Tune Works
Episode overview
11, 2019
Pitch correction: it can make terrible singers sound decent, brilliant singer sound mediocre, or Cher sound like a robot. But how does it work? And is it possible to explain that without actually trying to understand Fourier transforms?
2019x7
Why Denmark used to be .04 seconds behind the world
Episode overview
18, 2019
Measuring time is a complicated thing. Computers, banks, and stock markets in Denmark all use UTC, the international standard: but according to the law, they shouldn't. UPDATE, March .. show full overview
2019x8
A Questionable Experiment in Motion Sickness
Episode overview
25, 2019
We built a car that you drive with real-life video game lag, and used it for an ill-advised, mostly-unscientific experiment about motion sickness. In case it wasn't obvious: we did .. show full overview
2019x9
Weight For It (with Evan Edinger and Luke Cutforth)
Episode overview
28, 2019
Welcome to the Game Garage! A series of three new, experimental quizzes and games. Thanks today to Evan Edinger - / naveregnide - and Luke Cutforth - / lukecutforth - .. show full overview
2019x10
The broken building that must not be destroyed
Episode overview
04, 2019
St Peter's Seminary sits in woodland about an hour west of Glasgow, near a village called Cardross. If you like Brutalist architecture, then it's a beautiful ruin: if not, then perhaps .. show full overview
2019x11
Above Average (with too many people to fit in this title)
Episode overview
07, 2019
Today in the Game Garage, it's not about what you know: it's about what you can do. Pull down the description for the full cast and links to everyone's channels!
2019x12
The Last Play-For-Cash Fascination Parlor
Episode overview
11, 2019
UPDATE: In 2019, the Fascination Parlor was hit by storms, and the building didn't survive. The games have been stored, and hopefully it'll reopen somewhere at some point! • On Nantasket .. show full overview
2019x13
Keep It or Dump It (with Matthew, who is lovely but not internet famous)
Episode overview
14, 2019
The final episode in this run of the Game Garage gives us a Proper Quiz: complete with all-or-nothing questions and a prize of FIVE THOUSAND PENCE. That's pence. It's £50. We didn't have that big a budget.
2019x14
The library of rare colors
Episode overview
18, 2019
The Forbes Pigment Collection at the Harvard Art Museums is a collection of pigments, binders, and other art materials for researchers to use as standards: so they can tell originals .. show full overview
2019x15
Blindfold balancing in the spinning space chair
Episode overview
25, 2019
The Multi-Axes Rotation and Tilt Device (MART) is used for spatial orientation experiments: it's a chair balanced on a metaphorical knife-edge, powered by precise and fast motors. And my job was to not fall over.
2019x16
The artificial gravity lab
Episode overview
02, 2019
In the Ashton Graybiel Spatial Orientation Laboratory at Brandeis University, there's the Artificial Gravity Facility: otherwise known as the rotating room. No-one's invented futuristic .. show full overview
2019x17
I Drove My Childhood Favorite Racing Game In Real Life
Episode overview
08, 2019
When I was a kid, I played the demo version of Need for Speed II a lot. Just the demo: it came free on a CD with a monthly computer magazine. Every detail of that one demo track was .. show full overview
2019x18
Where two oceans meet, debunked
Episode overview
15, 2019
Cape Reinga, at the very northern tip of New Zealand, is known for being where the Tasman Sea meets the Pacific Ocean, where two oceans collide. The truth, though, is a little more complicated than that.
2019x19
The sculpture that looks like a real-life cartoon
Episode overview
22, 2019
Gibbs Farm, in New Zealand, is an enormous private sculpture collection. Its most famous piece is Horizons, by Neil Dawson - and it looks like a cartoon tissue somehow painted onto the .. show full overview
2019x20
The Hundred-Tonne Robots That Help Keep New Zealand Running
Episode overview
29, 2019
The Ports of Auckland are automating their straddle carriers, which might not seem like much: until you phrase it as "hundred-tonne autonomous robots guided by nanosecond-precision tracking".
2019x21
The brain-eating amoebas of Kerosene Creek
Episode overview
06, 2019
Kerosene Creek is a natural hot spring near Rotorua, on the North Island of New Zealand. And there have been official warnings for years: don't put your head under water. It turns out .. show full overview
2019x22
The first 3D color X-rays
Episode overview
13, 2019
At the University of Canterbury, in Christchurch, New Zealand, the team at Mars Bioimaging are using detector equipment originally developed for the Large Hadron Collider, and putting it .. show full overview
2019x23
The circle visible from space
Episode overview
20, 2019
Mount Taranaki, on the North Island of New Zealand, is a large-scale circle that's visible from space: a stratovolcano with six miles of forest around it. But that didn't happen .. show full overview
2019x24
Testing a zip line that goes round corners
Episode overview
27, 2019
If you invent a new theme park or amusement ride, how do you test it to make sure it's safe? There's no Federal Bureau of Zip Lines. I visited one of the companies that does just that sort of testing - and, now, inventing.
2019x25
What counts as the world's steepest street?
Episode overview
03, 2019
Baldwin Street in Dunedin, New Zealand, has the Guinness World Record for "steepest paved road over a continuous distance of more than ten metres". Which is enough to bring in quite a .. show full overview
2019x26
The one-lane bridge shared by cars and trains
Episode overview
10, 2019
Near Hindon, on the South Island of New Zealand, there's one of only two remaining one-lane road-rail bridges in the country. No barriers, no lights, no sirens: if you're driving across this, you need to make sure to listen out for the train horn.
2019x27
Mr Olds' remarkable elevator
Episode overview
17, 2019
Olds Engineering, a traditional workshop and foundry, sits in Maryborough, Australia. It's not the sort of place you'd expect to find a new industrial invention in the 21st century: and yet the Olds Elevator, patented by Peter Olds, is just that.
2019x28
The world's first solar powered train
Episode overview
24, 2019
The Byron Bay Railroad Company runs the world's first 100% solar-powered train. It wouldn't work everywhere - but in the bright sunshine of Australia, it might just be the right tool for the job.
2019x29
Why You Can't Trust Me
Episode overview
01, 2019
I went to a place called Coober Pedy to tell a story about water.
2019x30
These tunnels stop part of Tokyo flooding
Episode overview
08, 2019
If you believe the hype, then the Metropolitan Area Underground Discharge Channel stops Tokyo flooding. It doesn't. But it is one colossal part of a huge network of flood defences that protect a city that would otherwise be... well, very wet.
2019x31
How To Build An App: Everything You Didn't Know You Needed To Know
Episode overview
09, 2019
This isn't going to be a click-a-button and follow-along series that gives you the same result as everything else. We're not even going to talk about code. This is everything you didn't know you needed to know about building an app.
2019x32
why typing like this is sometimes okay.
Episode overview
15, 2019
Language changes over time, and that's fine. Time for a dose of descriptivism, as the Language Files return. Pull down the description for the references!
2019x33
How to stop a colossal bridge corroding
Episode overview
22, 2019
A decade ago, engineers found the Humber Bridge had the same problem as many of the world's suspension bridges: unexpectedly fast corrosion. Here's how they fixed it, and how they're .. show full overview
2019x34
The Fetch-Execute Cycle: What's Your Computer Actually Doing?
Episode overview
29, 2019
The fetch-execute cycle is the basis of everything your computer or phone does. This is literally The Basics.
2019x35
Why “No Problem” Can Seem Rude: Phatic Expressions
Episode overview
05, 2019
"Hello!" "Thank you!" "You're welcome!" These are all phatic expressions, and people can argue about them.
2019x36
The Two Generals’ Problem
Episode overview
12, 2019
Time to tell a story about idempotency, computer science, and the Night of the Multiple Orders.
2019x37
Flying a plane with fireworks on the wings
Episode overview
19, 2019
Aerosparx are a British aerobatics team that perform displays with fireworks attached to their wings. This is how they do it.
2019x38
Personal Best (with dodie, Sammy Paul, Daniel J Layton and Reb Day)
Episode overview
22, 2019
We're back! New games, same garage.
2019x39
I'm Not A Robot ✅
Episode overview
26, 2019
What those boxes are for, and why you might not have to click them soon.
2019x40
Checkpoint (with Ashens and the Polybius Heist crew)
Episode overview
29, 2019
This game turned out a lot more stressful than we thought it would.
2019x41
The Language Sounds That Could Exist, But Don't
Episode overview
02, 2019
The International Phonetic Alphabet: one sound for each symbol, and one symbol for each sound. Except for the sounds we can't make.
2019x42
Cash and Grab (with Bird Keeper Toby and Inés from Draw Curiosity)
Episode overview
05, 2019
I'll say this about this week's Game Garage: we definitely had fun.
2019x43
The only bit of Louisiana's coast that isn't sinking
Episode overview
09, 2019
On a coastline that's steadily sinking under the waves, the Wax Lake Delta is rising: which is a wonderful thing for researchers.Historically, every time humans try and mess with the .. show full overview
2019x44
The toxic pit with a $3 admission fee
Episode overview
16, 2019
The Berkeley Pit, in Butte, Montana, was once the richest hill on Earth: the Anaconda Copper Mine. Now: it's not all that rich, and it's not much of a hill. Instead, it's a toxic pit filled with sulfuric acid.
2019x45
What counts as the world's shortest river?
Episode overview
23, 2019
If you've been a subscriber for a while, you probably know where this one is going. Although you may still be surprised about where I ended up going... Montana's Giant Springs State .. show full overview
2019x46
These tunnels are designed for 100,000 years
Episode overview
30, 2019
Onkalo, on the Finnish island of Olkiluoto, is planned to be the first geologic storage facility for high-level nuclear waste: eventually sealed for 100,000 years. I got to see inside.
2019x47
The Self-Driving Race Car
Episode overview
07, 2019
I got an email asking if I wanted to be driven around the most famous racetrack in Britain by an autonomous racing car. I wasn't going to refuse that offer.
2019x48
Why Helsinki's library robots aren't important
Episode overview
14, 2019
Oodi, the new Helsinki Library, has robots to help reshelve books. They get a lot of press attention. But they're not the important part of the library: here's why.
2019x49
The giant art that keeps planes quiet
Episode overview
21, 2019
Next to Amsterdam Schiphol Airport is the Buitenschot Land Art Park, a giant set of ridges and furrows cut into the landscape. Yes, it's art: but it also stops some local residents from being exposed to jet noise.
2019x50
This Video Is Sponsored By ███ VPN
Episode overview
28, 2019
I tried to write a more honest VPN commercial. The sponsor wasn't happy about it. • Get ██ days of ███ VPN free at ██████.com/honest
2019x51
How the Netherlands simulated the sea
Episode overview
04, 2019
"Build some models" seems obvious: but this is a story of ingenuity, of using natural resources well, and of a country that humans dragged from the sea.
2019x52
The world's only wingsuit tunnel
Episode overview
11, 2019
In Stockholm, there's a diagonal wind tunnel, used for one very specific purpose: learning to fly a wingsuit. I tried. I almost managed it.
2019x53
The elevator shaft was invented before the elevator
Episode overview
18, 2019
It sounds ridiculous, but it's true. At the Cooper Union Foundation Building in New York, there's the world's first elevator shaft: constructed four years before the safety elevator was .. show full overview
2019x54
I visited the US National Helium Reserve
Episode overview
25, 2019
At the National Helium Reserve in Amarillo, Texas, the US government once stored 32 billion cubic feet of helium. There have been breathless news articles recently saying the world's .. show full overview
2019x55
Can The Words You Read Change Your Behavior?
Episode overview
02, 2019
"Priming" is the idea that the words you read can change the way you act. And yes, there are papers that show an effect: but we also need to talk about the Replication Crisis.
2019x56
Why Electronic Voting Is Still A Bad Idea
Episode overview
09, 2019
We still shouldn't be using electronic voting. Here's why.
2019x57
The world's littlest skyscraper was a massive scam
Episode overview
16, 2019
In Wichita Falls, Texas, the Newby-McMahon Building stands 480 inches tall. Not 480 feet: 480 inches. There's a story of a smooth-talking scammer that sounds almost too good to be true. But is it?
2019x58
Why Do We Move Our Hands When We Talk?
Episode overview
23, 2019
Gestures are a really important part of language. But how do we use them, and why?
2019x59
Why 2020 Started On December 30th
Episode overview
30, 2019
Weird calendar edge-cases and computer bugs. It's an old-school video. • The Fasthosts Techie Test competition is now closed!