Yaaaaaay I used to do research on biomaterials before switching to machine learning (I still teach a class on it for high schoolers) and I'm always happy to see people teaching about biomaterials!
As a recent biomedical engineering grad, I’m surprised nitinol wasn’t mentioned! It’s becoming increasingly used in industry because it has temperature dependent shape memory!
Likewise here. That was a fantastic documentary. I feel like a lot of aspiring biomedical engineers need to understand the threat posed by innovating too quickly.
Hi. I am going to use a spring in a device that will be in direct connection to inside of the eye. Please tell me what material is biocompatible to use in this spring manufacturing?
I think you’re underestimating how complex the human body is. We still haven’t learned how even a fraction of it works in any great detail, let alone making synthetic copies of living tissue.
Human testing is ok in my book if the person volunteers and told the risks (im thinking terminally ill people). If something happens then it is certainly sad but may be needed. We cant let ethics stand in the way of bevelopment
While it is tempting to stare at the camera or teleprompter, it can be disconcerting for the viewer. Looking away momentarily at your hands, shoes, or a physical object in the room can make your delivery seem much more organic and conversational.
On the flip side of this, they'd probably get a lot of people complaining about how it looks unprofessional or is a bad take if she DID do that. If you don't like the sustained eye contact, YOU can look away. She needs to keep looking at the teleprompter, because she needs to keep reading off of it. Nitpick - it's not staring, it's reading, and there is a difference. Staring has negative connotations, and implies that there's no other/productive point to her looking at it.
Great video, but your pronunciation of titanium grabs my attention away from the content every time you say it. The first syllable rhymes with bit, not byte! Especially since you’re English!
Yaaaaaay I used to do research on biomaterials before switching to machine learning (I still teach a class on it for high schoolers) and I'm always happy to see people teaching about biomaterials!
everydAI you’re so young ( or at least look it) I love seeing young people doing great things like this. 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
do biomaterials works in open field for Raw Material quality etc like something related with Agriculture or water resources type of work ?
Watching this while procrastinating working on an assignment for my biomaterials paper 😂
As a recent biomedical engineering grad, I’m surprised nitinol wasn’t mentioned! It’s becoming increasingly used in industry because it has temperature dependent shape memory!
Just finished my senior design on nitinol today actually very interesting material
You can work and research biomaterials following the career of Chemical or Mechanical Engineering.
2:45 tekashi 6ix9ine
Wow they your meme play is on the top :D
very well presented! thank you!
I’m going to engineer teeth that grow into a person within an hour so I can put them under people’s pillow
AMAZING
I recommend the bleeding edge on netflix for anyone interested
Likewise here. That was a fantastic documentary. I feel like a lot of aspiring biomedical engineers need to understand the threat posed by innovating too quickly.
BioFoam like in seen in halo odst, to fill up a deep wound until to get proper treatment
Just waiting for my automail, y'all. Where's my Winry Rockbell, prosthetic engineers?
so helpful, thanks😏😎
Hi. I am going to use a spring in a device that will be in direct connection to inside of the eye. Please tell me what material is biocompatible to use in this spring manufacturing?
can we have glues for bones? I hate casts!
do biomaterials works in open field for Raw Material quality etc
Explain the laboratory safety processes applied during synthesis of biomaterials.
Hi
Soon we will be able to engineer a real human from scratch.
I'm not sure if you noticed, but pregnant women "engineer real humans from scratch" all the time.
Isn't that just pregnancy?
I think you’re underestimating how complex the human body is. We still haven’t learned how even a fraction of it works in any great detail, let alone making synthetic copies of living tissue.
@@KingsleyIII im fairly certain he was making a joke
Slowly slowly...
could you have subtitles. plz
69 cameo
came to stare at shini, but i actually learned something so good stuff!
ITS FVKING TR3WAY!
Second
Could you possibly do some English Literature and Language revision on Paris Anthology, Carol Ann Duffy poetry and Othello please
6ix9ine reference?
Tarion Marsden He is using a mouthpiece made out of alloy.
Human testing is ok in my book if the person volunteers and told the risks (im thinking terminally ill people). If something happens then it is certainly sad but may be needed. We cant let ethics stand in the way of bevelopment
I agree with the terminal illness thing but completely disregarding ethics can lead to some pretty disastrous consequences
Titanic vr advert?
While it is tempting to stare at the camera or teleprompter, it can be disconcerting for the viewer. Looking away momentarily at your hands, shoes, or a physical object in the room can make your delivery seem much more organic and conversational.
On the flip side of this, they'd probably get a lot of people complaining about how it looks unprofessional or is a bad take if she DID do that. If you don't like the sustained eye contact, YOU can look away. She needs to keep looking at the teleprompter, because she needs to keep reading off of it. Nitpick - it's not staring, it's reading, and there is a difference. Staring has negative connotations, and implies that there's no other/productive point to her looking at it.
Great video, but your pronunciation of titanium grabs my attention away from the content every time you say it. The first syllable rhymes with bit, not byte! Especially since you’re English!
Third