Instructional Video2:09
SciShow

How Can I Make A Traffic Light Turn Green?

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever been stuck at a red light on a country road, you know it can be annoying. No other cars for miles, but you can't shake the feeling that if you run the light, one will appear out of nowhere and slam into you. Today we have...
Instructional Video9:58
SciShow

A Brief History of Robotics

12th - Higher Ed
Why don’t we have robots taking care of our every need by now? A little history of the field of robotics might help you understand how hard it is to get machines to perform tasks, and how far we’ve come in just a few decades.
Instructional Video5:09
SciShow

Hacking the Brain: The Future of Prosthetics

12th - Higher Ed
We usually think of 'hacking' as a bad thing, but scientists are working on ways to hack the brain that will greatly benefit people with prosthetics, and maybe someday people with paralysis.
Instructional Video9:16
SciShow

Will You be Iron Man?

12th - Higher Ed
We have the technology! We can rebuild...ourselves! Human interface technologies like Google Glass, robotic prosthetics, and bionic eyes have the potential to help people recover lost abilities, but also to grant us new abilities. Will...
Instructional Video13:00
TED Talks

TED: A powerful new neurotech tool for augmenting your mind | Conor Russomanno

12th - Higher Ed
In an astonishing talk and tech demo, neurotechnologist Conor Russomanno shares his work building brain-computer interfaces that could enable us to control the external world with our minds. He discusses the quickly advancing...
News Clip1:43
Curated Video

NASA: fuel gauge problem, launch Sunday at earliest

Higher Ed
HEADLINE: NASA: fuel gauge problem, launch Sunday at earliest CAPTION: NASA delayed the launch of space shuttle Atlantis until Sunday at the earliest as managers debated whether to loosen longtime launch rules to get around fuel gauge...
Instructional Video2:23
SciShow

How Can I Make A Traffic Light Turn Green?

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever been stuck at a red light on a country road, you know it can be annoying. No other cars for miles, but you can't shake the feeling that if you run the light, one will appear out of nowhere and slam into you. Today we have...
Instructional Video9:16
SciShow

Will You be Iron Man?

12th - Higher Ed
We have the technology! We can rebuild...ourselves! Human interface technologies like Google Glass, robotic prosthetics, and bionic eyes have the potential to help people recover lost abilities, but also to grant us new abilities. Will...
Instructional Video16:40
TED Talks

TED: Robots that fly ... and cooperate | Vijay Kumar

12th - Higher Ed
In his lab at Penn, Vijay Kumar and his team build flying quadrotors, small, agile robots that swarm, sense each other, and form ad hoc teams -- for construction, surveying disasters and far more.
Instructional Video16:12
TED Talks

TED: My seven species of robot -- and how we created them | Dennis Hong

12th - Higher Ed
Meet seven all-terrain robots -- like the humanoid, soccer-playing DARwIn and the cliff-gripping CLIMBeR -- built by Dennis Hong's robotics team at RoMeLa, based at Virginia Tech. Watch to the end for the five creative secrets to his...
Instructional Video5:03
TED Talks

Gary Wolf: The quantified self

12th - Higher Ed
At TED@Cannes, Gary Wolf gives a 5-min intro to an intriguing new pastime: using mobile apps and always-on gadgets to track and analyze your body, mood, diet, spending -- just about everything in daily life you can measure -- in...
Instructional Video5:46
TED Talks

Kenneth Shinozuka: My simple invention, designed to keep my grandfather safe

12th - Higher Ed
60% of people with dementia wander off, an issue that can prove hugely stressful for both patients and caregivers. In this charming talk, hear how teen inventor Kenneth Shinozuka came up with a novel solution to help his night-wandering...
Instructional Video4:54
SciShow

The Science of Parkour

12th - Higher Ed
Traceurs, or parkour athletes, seem superhuman in their ability to scale up walls and drop down from rooftops without injury. But it turns out that there’s a fair amount of biomechanics at play behind these powers.
Instructional Video11:10
MinuteEarth

Unintended Consequences | MinuteEarth Explains

12th - Higher Ed
In this collection of classic MinuteEarth videos, we learn that for pretty much every action we humans take, there’s an unintended consequence we didn’t see coming.
Instructional Video2:04
MinuteEarth

What Nuclear Bombs Taught Us About Whales

12th - Higher Ed
A monitoring system developed to listen for secret nuclear tests mostly hears other events happening all around Earth. ___________________________________________ If you want to learn more about this topic, start your googling with these...
Instructional Video16:34
TED Talks

Kent Larson: Brilliant designs to fit more people in every city

12th - Higher Ed
How can we fit more people into cities without overcrowding? Kent Larson shows off folding cars, quick-change apartments and other innovations that could make the city of the future work a lot like a small village of the past.
Instructional Video10:15
Crash Course

Cheese, Catastrophes, & Process Control: Crash Course Engineering #25

12th - Higher Ed
Engineering, like life, could really use a lot more cheese. This week we are looking at a cheese factory in Toronto and what it can teach us about process control systems. We’ll explore feedforward and feedback systems, and see how...
Instructional Video11:11
TED Talks

TED: Your self-driving robotaxi is almost here | Aicha Evans

12th - Higher Ed
We've been hearing about self-driving cars for years, but autonomous vehicle entrepreneur Aicha Evans thinks we need to dream more daringly. In this exciting talk, she introduces us to robotaxis: fully autonomous, eco-friendly shuttles...
Instructional Video4:53
SciShow

Does Mars Need The Cloud?

12th - Higher Ed
Earlier this year, scientists pitched a mission to bring 'the cloud' to Mars. While this proposal may seem expensive and risky, it's a legitimate idea that could fundamentally change how we plan space missions!
Instructional Video6:16
TED Talks

Eythor Bender: Human exoskeletons -- for war and healing

12th - Higher Ed
Eythor Bender of Berkeley Bionics brings onstage two amazing exoskeletons, HULC and eLEGS -- robotic add-ons that could one day allow a human to carry 200 pounds without tiring, or allow a wheelchair user to stand and walk. It's a...
Instructional Video3:48
SciShow

Launching ExoMars!

12th - Higher Ed
ExoMars 2016 is about to launch, and The Arecibo Observatory is picking up some mysterious signals this week on SciShow Space News!
Instructional Video4:54
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Joshua W. Pate: The mysterious science of pain

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1995, the British Medical Journal published a report about a builder who accidentally jumped onto a nail, which pierced straight through his steel-toed boot. He was in such agonizing pain that any movement was unbearable. But when the...
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

Why Are Self-Driving Cars Taking So Long

12th - Higher Ed
Self-driving cars have been “coming soon” for years. What’s so hard about making a machine that drives itself!?
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

Hacking the Brain: The Future of Prosthetics

12th - Higher Ed
We usually think of 'hacking' as a bad thing, but scientists are working on ways to hack the brain that will greatly benefit people with prosthetics, and maybe someday people with paralysis.