Instructional Video10:49
TED Talks

The value of your humanity in an automated future | Kevin Roose

12th - Higher Ed
To futureproof your job against robots and AI, you should learn how to code, brush up on your math skills and crack open an engineering textbook, right? Wrong. In this surprisingly comforting talk, tech journalist Kevin Roose makes the...
Instructional Video2:57
SciShow

How Do I Grow a Beard?

12th - Higher Ed
People ask Google everything under the sun. One of the most commonly searched questions in the world is “How do I grow a beard?”? Let SciShow explain.
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

Quick, Draw!: Doodling for Science

12th - Higher Ed
Google's fun new time-waster is actually a pretty advanced piece of Artificial Intelligence. And there's some (about 43%) good news about cement's carbon footprint this week!
Instructional Video3:52
SciShow

How Are Search Engines So Fast?

12th - Higher Ed
Google can find something for you on the other side of the world in less than a second. Why does your personal computer take so much longer?
Instructional Video6:26
SciShow

Quantum Supremacy: When Will Quantum Computers Be a Thing?

12th - Higher Ed
In 2019, Google announced that they had achieved quantum supremacy - but what does that mean? And does it even matter?
Instructional Video9:28
TED Talks

TED: Governments don't understand cyber warfare. We need hackers | Rodrigo Bijou

12th - Higher Ed
The Internet has transformed the front lines of war, and it's leaving governments behind. As security analyst Rodrigo Bijou shows, modern conflict is being waged online between non-state groups, activists and private corporations, and...
Instructional Video4:34
Crash Course

Crash Course Navigating Digital Information Preview

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green previews the new Crash Course on Navigating Digital Information! We've partnered with MediaWise, The Poynter Institute, and The Stanford History Education Group to teach a course in hands-on skills to evaluate the...
Instructional Video3:29
SciShow

SPACE MINING

12th - Higher Ed
Hank summarizes the exciting news about Planetary Resources, a company with plans to mine near-earth asteroids for precious metals and water, and what these plans might mean for humanity's future in space.
Instructional Video5:09
SciShow

This AI Doesn’t Need Any Help from Humans

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have developed a new AI that can teach itself how to be the master of an ancient board game.
Instructional Video3:21
SciShow

Facebook's Secret Psychological Experiment

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow News explains the science behind a psychological experiment performed on about seven hundred thousand Facebook users, although none of them knew that they were participating.
Instructional Video10:40
Crash Course

Liberals, Conservatives, and Pride and Prejudice, Part 2: Crash Course Literature 412

12th - Higher Ed
This is it! The final episode of CC Literature season 4 is a deeper look at Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. Today we'll explore the novel's take on materialism, and we'll talk about whether the novel has a liberal or conservative...
Instructional Video11:58
SciShow

Innovating Technology & The Veiled Chameleon - Talk Show #21

12th - Higher Ed
Hank talks with University of Montana Professor Rick Hughes about innovating technology and training the SciShow staff. Special guest appearance with Jessi and Veiled Chameleon 'Twirly'.
Instructional Video7:50
TED Talks

4 lessons the pandemic taught us about work, life and balance | Patty McCord

12th - Higher Ed
The COVID-19 pandemic changed the way we work for good. Can it also change it for the better? Consultant Patty McCord reviews four key insights employers and employees alike gleaned from their shift to working from home -- and shares how...
Instructional Video15:50
Crash Course

Social Media: Crash Course Navigating Digital Information #10

12th - Higher Ed
Today, in our series finale, we're going to talk about the great white whale of navigating online information: your social media feed. Social media shapes both our online and offline behaviors from how we engage in communities and...
Instructional Video18:15
TED Talks

Noreena Hertz: How to use experts -- and when not to

12th - Higher Ed
We make important decisions every day -- and we often rely on experts to help us decide. But, says economist Noreena Hertz, relying too much on experts can be limiting and even dangerous. She calls for us to start democratizing expertise...
Instructional Video10:26
TED Talks

Mary Lou Jepsen: Could future devices read images from our brains?

12th - Higher Ed
As an expert on cutting-edge digital displays, Mary Lou Jepsen studies how to show our most creative ideas on screens. And as a brain surgery patient herself, she is driven to know more about the neural activity that underlies invention,...
Instructional Video19:45
TED Talks

Jeremy Howard: The wonderful and terrifying implications of computers that can learn

12th - Higher Ed
What happens when we teach a computer how to learn? Technologist Jeremy Howard shares some surprising new developments in the fast-moving field of deep learning, a technique that can give computers the ability to learn Chinese, or to...
Instructional Video9:19
TED Talks

TED: The moral bias behind your search results | Andreas ekstrom

12th - Higher Ed
Search engines have become our most trusted sources of information and arbiters of truth. But can we ever get an unbiased search result? Swedish author and journalist Andreas ekstrom argues that such a thing is a philosophical...
Instructional Video10:15
SciShow

5 Devastating Security Flaws You've Never Heard Of

12th - Higher Ed
Devastating vulnerabilities are hiding in the technology in programs, protocols, and hardware all around us. Most of the time, you can find ways to protect yourself.
Instructional Video17:52
TED Talks

Yochai Benkler: The new open-source economics

12th - Higher Ed
Yochai Benkler explains how collaborative projects like Wikipedia and Linux represent the next stage of human organization.
Instructional Video18:53
TED Talks

Hans Rosling: New insights on poverty

12th - Higher Ed
Researcher Hans Rosling uses his cool data tools to show how countries are pulling themselves out of poverty. He demos Dollar Street, comparing households of varying income levels worldwide. Then he does something really amazing.
Instructional Video4:34
SciShow

We're Getting Closer to Real-Life Tricorders

12th - Higher Ed
Many of us have longed for cool sci-fi inventions like a holodeck or replicators, but there's one tool we're actually getting pretty darn close to creating: the medical tricorder.
Instructional Video3:36
SciShow

AI vs. Human: The Greatest Go Tournament Ever

12th - Higher Ed
Google's 'AlphaGo' and the world's top ranked Go player go head-to-head in a battle to decide whether or not an AI can be programmed to win a game as complicated as Go.
Instructional Video19:46
TED Talks

Hans Rosling: The best stats you've ever seen

12th - Higher Ed
You've never seen data presented like this. With the drama and urgency of a sportscaster, statistics guru Hans Rosling debunks myths about the so-called "developing world."