The cube in the picture is smaller than 1 meter. It looks like it's about 3 or 4 decimeter. For example: A cube of water with a side of 1 meter weights 1000kg.
Strength training is dependant on biology and phsiology. The human body positions and muscle coordination abd exertions might not work at all for a differening biology.
Because the generator the image (meat or silicon) did not have all the details of the story before the image was created. More ofton than not, the illistrations for these stories only have a few limited elements in common with the audio.
In the back of their minds, the aliens are probably thinking "if this human child can do this, what could an adult human do? Maybe we better not find out".
I just wish it wasn't always a superior athlete, almost special forces type athlete and put them in the school situation. I'm sure we all knew someone like this, but surely they wouldn't be the only ones selected to participate
Generally when I hear "resilience" in a place that it isn't really applicable, or which would be better served with a different descriptor, I tend to presume that the story is A.I. generated. Not to say I don't enjoy it regardless. I find then to actually be pretty fun.
@@the.regulargamer Yeah, go ahead and try it with _your_ young daughter. She can lift 250-300lbs, right? 🤣 I've actually picked up a 2.7L 4-cylinder Toyota engine before, with the help of a brother. Both of us were adult males of average strength. The engine was heavy, but that was only part of the problem. The bigger problem was both of us getting a solid grip on the thing. The process was very difficult, strenuous; we managed without injury, but it was definitely a dangerous operation. Just because it can be done with two able-bodied men doesn't mean it regularly is, especially in a properly-equipped auto shop. Substitute in a little girl? ROFL!
I mean... assuming the engine is much smaller and/or lighter due to advanced metallurgy and hyper advanced technology. Maybe 60-100 lbs. It wouldn't be easy. But... I could see it. It also never said she didn't have help lifting the engines. So for all we know there were 4 children lifting a single engine together. We also don't know she wasn't using a device to reduce the impact of the weight; such as a pulley system. A pulley system wouldn't completely remove the weight. But it does make it easier and many people can use the pulley system at the same time; 8, 10, 12, 14 who knows how many. They would then just have to hold it up until an adult pushed the car out of the way and then came over to help them lower it. There's simply a lack of information that makes it hard to discount the possibility.
@@FanfictionEnjoyer Hey man, we could just as easily say the engines the little girl was man-handling weren't anything like what we have in our cars. Maybe the engines of the story were 30lb electric motors utilizing room-temperature super conductor materials. Or maybe they were 10lb micro machines powered by pixie farts. The story doesn't say. And that's a problem because, while the story relies on real-world context to fill in some of the blanks, it doesn't provide modifiers or cues to limit the degree to which the audience applies this context. Who's at fault: the audience, for failing to think outside the box? Or the writer, for failing to tell them they should? A writer's job is to communicate. Good communication requires knowledge of and consideration for the audience. We know a writer has failed to communicate well when a significant portion of the audience misunderstands or misinterprets what was written.
Clearly no more than a couple hundred pounds, MAX. Doesn't make sense that none of the stronger students in the class were willing to try. Doesn't make sense that a proper machine would have difficulty lifting it. Don't know what lesson or knowledge a teacher might be trying to impart by having students attempt to lift a heavy object. Contents of the box weren't even all that impressively heavy either; 1 cubic meter of lead weighs 25000lbs here on earth. If that weighed less than 200lbs on whatever planet this story occurs on, the planet would have less than 1% of Earth's gravity, and the little girl wouldn't be able to walk without magnetic boots or something to keep her feet on the floor, because she'd weigh less than 1lb herself. That's less than the moon's gravity (which is 16.6% of Earth's)! Since the story doesn't mention this, we can assume the exotic materials in the box weighed less than plain old lead.
Strange story. You can build machines that lifts 1000 times more than a human. Why this feeble machine? Moreover. 1mx1mx1m of something of extreme density. Even if it was only gold it should be 20 metric tons. How would a little girl lift that? Even if she got extra strength from will power? OK - maybe the gravity was 1/200 of Earth's Then it would only be 100 kg of gold. But, then would sitting and walking be hard.
What would be the gravity on other planets? If much higher on earth, humans would have an advantage. Also, the musculature, or equivalent, would have a distinct differential. Levitational ability? Well, who knows?
Levitation? Really? Humans have no mechanism for self-levitation beyond flapping our limbs about this way and that - you know, like when treading water. That's not what you're referring to, right? Or maybe blowing really hard, or spitting, if the gravity is near-nil.
All sorts of problems with this AI-generated story. Just like every other AI-generated story. Good thing I use an ad blocker; this tripe isn't worth the fraction of a cent my view of an ad might generate.
I miss when hfy stories had more than "when aliens learn that humans can..."
1m x 1m x 1 m of water is metric ton, 2200 lb 😂 on Earth. However it depends from the planet gravity...
The cube in the picture is smaller than 1 meter. It looks like it's about 3 or 4 decimeter. For example: A cube of water with a side of 1 meter weights 1000kg.
Or 1 ton
Nobody does math anymore.
@@biffgee6797 what is math? 🤪
Strength training is dependant on biology and phsiology. The human body positions and muscle coordination abd exertions might not work at all for a differening biology.
If she was the only human in the class.
Why are all the students in the back of the picture human?
Because the generator the image (meat or silicon) did not have all the details of the story before the image was created. More ofton than not, the illistrations for these stories only have a few limited elements in common with the audio.
Its AI generated. The story, images
I miss when the commentator didn't sound like he was defeated before the story started
In the back of their minds, the aliens are probably thinking "if this human child can do this, what could an adult human do? Maybe we better not find out".
I just wish it wasn't always a superior athlete, almost special forces type athlete and put them in the school situation. I'm sure we all knew someone like this, but surely they wouldn't be the only ones selected to participate
Generally when I hear "resilience" in a place that it isn't really applicable, or which would be better served with a different descriptor, I tend to presume that the story is A.I. generated.
Not to say I don't enjoy it regardless. I find then to actually be pretty fun.
She was lifting car engines!? Lol & smfh
4 cylinder engines arent that heavy. Maybe around 500-600lbs. That can definitely be lifted by 2 people
@@the.regulargamer Yeah, go ahead and try it with _your_ young daughter. She can lift 250-300lbs, right? 🤣
I've actually picked up a 2.7L 4-cylinder Toyota engine before, with the help of a brother. Both of us were adult males of average strength. The engine was heavy, but that was only part of the problem. The bigger problem was both of us getting a solid grip on the thing. The process was very difficult, strenuous; we managed without injury, but it was definitely a dangerous operation.
Just because it can be done with two able-bodied men doesn't mean it regularly is, especially in a properly-equipped auto shop. Substitute in a little girl? ROFL!
I mean... assuming the engine is much smaller and/or lighter due to advanced metallurgy and hyper advanced technology. Maybe 60-100 lbs. It wouldn't be easy. But... I could see it. It also never said she didn't have help lifting the engines. So for all we know there were 4 children lifting a single engine together. We also don't know she wasn't using a device to reduce the impact of the weight; such as a pulley system. A pulley system wouldn't completely remove the weight. But it does make it easier and many people can use the pulley system at the same time; 8, 10, 12, 14 who knows how many. They would then just have to hold it up until an adult pushed the car out of the way and then came over to help them lower it.
There's simply a lack of information that makes it hard to discount the possibility.
@@FanfictionEnjoyer Hey man, we could just as easily say the engines the little girl was man-handling weren't anything like what we have in our cars. Maybe the engines of the story were 30lb electric motors utilizing room-temperature super conductor materials. Or maybe they were 10lb micro machines powered by pixie farts. The story doesn't say. And that's a problem because, while the story relies on real-world context to fill in some of the blanks, it doesn't provide modifiers or cues to limit the degree to which the audience applies this context.
Who's at fault: the audience, for failing to think outside the box? Or the writer, for failing to tell them they should?
A writer's job is to communicate. Good communication requires knowledge of and consideration for the audience. We know a writer has failed to communicate well when a significant portion of the audience misunderstands or misinterprets what was written.
@@warpedweirdo I agree. And I stand by my earlier statement: There's simply a lack of information that makes it hard to discount the possibility.
Mixing metric and imperial measurements...
Must be from the UK!
thank you for the video
What was the weight of the cube? I didn't hear them reveal that?
Clearly no more than a couple hundred pounds, MAX.
Doesn't make sense that none of the stronger students in the class were willing to try.
Doesn't make sense that a proper machine would have difficulty lifting it.
Don't know what lesson or knowledge a teacher might be trying to impart by having students attempt to lift a heavy object.
Contents of the box weren't even all that impressively heavy either; 1 cubic meter of lead weighs 25000lbs here on earth. If that weighed less than 200lbs on whatever planet this story occurs on, the planet would have less than 1% of Earth's gravity, and the little girl wouldn't be able to walk without magnetic boots or something to keep her feet on the floor, because she'd weigh less than 1lb herself. That's less than the moon's gravity (which is 16.6% of Earth's)! Since the story doesn't mention this, we can assume the exotic materials in the box weighed less than plain old lead.
Strange story.
You can build machines that lifts 1000 times more than a human. Why this feeble machine?
Moreover. 1mx1mx1m of something of extreme density. Even if it was only gold it should be 20 metric tons. How would a little girl lift that? Even if she got extra strength from will power?
OK - maybe the gravity was 1/200 of Earth's Then it would only be 100 kg of gold. But, then would sitting and walking be hard.
What would be the gravity on other planets? If much higher on earth, humans would have an advantage. Also, the musculature, or equivalent, would have a distinct differential. Levitational ability? Well, who knows?
Levitation? Really?
Humans have no mechanism for self-levitation beyond flapping our limbs about this way and that - you know, like when treading water. That's not what you're referring to, right? Or maybe blowing really hard, or spitting, if the gravity is near-nil.
Bro, do you even lift?
All sorts of problems with this AI-generated story. Just like every other AI-generated story.
Good thing I use an ad blocker; this tripe isn't worth the fraction of a cent my view of an ad might generate.
No link to the original and use of AI? Lazy channel. What's the point
. . . seems like low effort, like an ai made this