It would be greatly appreciated if you could take a quick second and tell us what you think or provide feedback on the video. Was it too complicated or was a specific section confusing? What about the pace of the video? Was a section too slow or did it move too fast? This feedback is extremely useful and it helps us improve on future videos! So, thank you!
I can only thank you for the hard work on putting together information so valuable people may not even realize - these videos have in their respective scope, more valuable and more important data than many universities. Thank you once again.
@@angadsingh9314 : Consumer desire has driven a great many things, from a desire to getting somewhere sooner. e.g cars. To playing ever more realistic games. e.g. video cards.
@@angadsingh9314 Very right in ancient India education was free for all but today's world you have to pay for it thus many poor people are left uneducated today
@@brodriguez11000 Agreed. But on the other hand, this desire has fuelled corporations' greed even more and they are willing to do less than moral things if they could make a profit out of it.
@@brodriguez11000 And yet, these very same cars are destroying our environment, and those amazing video cards are made from slave-mined minerals. Really sucks.
Nah mate, some retarded video of a song with lyrics containing booty, ass, nigaa, money, bitches... will go viral instead and be on youtube trending... not good stuffs like these...
As a computer engineer involved in both SOC and FW implementation for over 3 decades, I am still blown away when you look holistically at what is built. And this only covers the Edge device let alone the communication bits, the flash memory (other videos discussing that amazing technology) , the cellular network, data network including undersea cables, the hyperscaler data centers. It really is beyond a single person’s comprehension. Well maybe except for you. Thank you for sharing not only your awesome research, but your graphics and data visualization and story telling skills. You truly are a gift to our world. Thank you so much!!
Thank you greatly!! The more research I do, the more I realize the little that I know. I'm always looking for like minded experts who are interested in educating and better preparing the next generation of scientists and engineers.
As a microelectronics Engineering graduate student, I really appreciate how simple and concise this video is, despite the fact that it explains YEARS worth of advanced Engineering classes.
Yo why this channel is so underrated it The depth every single video he makes is astounding and it was made beautifully
4 ปีที่แล้ว +5
Because for the average Joe, it takes effort to sit through and you have to really be curious and pay attention to enjoy it. Many don't have the interest, that's where sharing becomes useful. I half watch many videos during my work shift, but I know I need to save these for later to devote my full attention to them, otherwise I would stop working.
@ Thanks for your full attention. The target is to improve college curriculum to better prepare and fill the future with top notch engineers. I want to be alive when space travel becomes commonplace, and high quality engineering is a necessity.
That’s the dream. It’s always perplexed me why thousands of teachers develop thousands of separate engineering class curriculum, and they are all based off of a textbooks - which costs a ton of $$ and a solid chunk of the students don’t even read.
@@BranchEducation I have thought the same thing many times. We now live in an age of computers where we can copy a video and play it in many places at once. This means larger teams should be focusing on one good course and then duplicating it. I'm so happy to see someone doing it. THANK YOU
i agree most teachers are garbage and they do more harm than good. i am sure most people have a thirst for knowledge and it seems like teachers stifle it.
a whole semester's long lectures on "Micro Processors" compressed in 25minutes. plus its even more detailed. words cant thank you enough for this great knowledge.
Yea, but it's tough to follow for me, I guess I'll have to rewatch it a couple of times to fully understand all the information in the video, but I can't imagine that it could be explained much better than this, still a great video.
Its not that simple, universities do dive into a lot more detail than this. They will explain the architecture, ALU, registers, cache, ROM, bus, timings, pipelining and a lot more. This is just the basics (not that that's bad, you gotta start somewhere). But don't downplay what university courses offer. They also have a different target market, its like comparing apples to pears.
I find your videos fascinating. I'm a long-retired old-school computer engineer, that maintained large mainframe systems which were implemented with transistor gates and logic. These SOC designs remind me of a room full of computer modules wired together with coax cables that I used to maintain. The amount of miniaturization and lowering of costs is staggering. I am proud to have been a part of it and to see where engineering and manufacturing have gone. To you young engineers, keep it going as we're still nowhere near our human potential.
Oh my god!!! Even as a PHD student in the field of IC design, this video just blew my mind!! You just bridged a huge gap between how these ICs work together to produce an image or perform different tasks!!! Kudos to you man!! Seriously hats off !!
Man I'm lost for words here. I can't imagine how time consuming it must be to churn out one of these exceptionally well done videos. I'm just really sad that the general population is not interested in this kind of thing for you to go viral. You deserve every bit of support to keep this going. I'm way more thankful and appreciative of the tech around me after your videos. I honestly can't fathom how human kind has become so advanced
How can it be called advanced if there can't be such a thing as a free will only ever increasing entropy as we currently know? So far the advancement has only resulted in population explosion and increase in net suffering. Hard to avoid any cognitive biases but it seems like inherent optimism bias and terror management theory will always help regardless of ideologies such as antinatalism based on consent and efilism.
@@INTJ791Hard to avoid any cognitive biases, but it might be just a result of cumulative culture and ability to scale things up. When it comes to advancement in things like social skills most people are still affected by a specific socioecological environment (pan troglodytes proactive political games over status, dispersed fertile females and offspring compared to pan paniscus society based on more or less egalitarian female/male coalitions and playful prosociality/sociosexuality for promotion of group stability regardless of age and gender as a byproduct of domestication syndrome). Obedience to abstract laws and authorities in general population due to self-domestication syndrome according to the Goodness Paradox (Richard Wrangham) is another factor in humans.
This is something on extraordinary level...Being an chip design engineer I am really shocked to see the accurate detailing of your content. Hats of to you sir...
... I, for one, appreciate the general overview. I'm not bored. If someone doesn't know about photons and the basics of how computer data works, they can google it or watch other videos?
@@Olivia-W I agree. For most of my videos [not all] I focus on content that can't be found else where. Some of the videos have the info elsewhere- but I feel like it isn't presented effectively.
@@BranchEducation Well, for you it may be "just", but according to me, its a lot of effort. Models and animations are mind-blowing. Thanks a lot for putting your efforts to fulfil the curiosity and knowledge stock of our young minds for free.
I'll certainly treat my smartphone with reverence after seeing this. I had *no idea* there was so much going on inside my cellphone. It's the kind of thing you don't think about unless something's not working properly. Whoever put this video together did an excellent job. It was instructional without being overly technical. It's amazing how fast these computer achievements happened. Only 24 years after the invention of the transistor, Intel introduced the 4-bit 4004 with 2,300 random logic transistors. Now we're using 64-bit multi-core processors with billions of transistors. I'm 65 now and when I was younger I thought the quick rate of our technical advancements was a great thing, but as I got older I started realizing that maybe we're not ready for some of these advancements.
@@BranchEducation I thank you for the great content! I sincerely love it all, but the SSD video was the one that got me here. Your work is superb! Congratulations!!
The millions of people are subscribed to their phones. It take a lot of brain power and attention span to watch and take in this type of video and the phones are taking most of that away from here.
I'm not sure which is more magical, to know or not to know. No going back though! In all seriousness, these videos are the apex of audio visual communication and education. Thank you.
Let me start by stating that you guys, hands down, do the best explanation videos of modern electronics. You hit that perfect balance, at least for me, of deep detail and easy to understand graphics and anecdotes. The narration is clean and clear, and the writing is very good. The visual aids are obviously extremely helpful too and well sourced. I literally became a member about 10 minutes into this video based on how well the video was providing value to me even at that point. Keep up the awesome work, and I hope you guys continue to grow support for this type of media. In terms of critical feedback I would simply say that repetition is key, so perhaps do reviews of each section as you move along, and do a quick review at the end of everything. Cheers!
I am a VLSI DESIGN ENGINEER ... All these complex engineering is my daily routine .... Thanks for the hard work you made to make this video so easy to understand.
It's absolutely mindblowing what a single person (with mad skillz that is) can do in blender and a little premiere nowadays O_o frikkin' gorgeous animation And also presentation from phil!
@@SerPapus Apple manufactures nothing, they design something on a pc and then send it of to foxcon and tsmc(who actually produces cpu's and they then buy "5nm" machines from i think a dutch or so company)
The bit about the image processing is awesome. The ISP in particular does all of those intricate tasks just to give us that quality image that people in the 1900's could only wish for, all in the blink of an eye. It made me appreciate my phone camera despite how it has frequent shutter lags and take grainy photos in bad lighting conditions.
Branch education: this is how transistor works. Me: should replace professors in my college. Hmm waiting for one day when this video be one of the most viewed TH-cam video. All the best..........................
Fantastic video! As an electrical and computer engineer, it's awesome to see how much detail you get into for everything. I think for the average person the explanation can get complicated but there's so much important stuff that I really appreciate what I can learn from this.
Intuitive. Educational. Entertaining. Thorough. I've learned much from your channel. I'm amazed how well you use animation so effectively to explain a process. Thank you and keep up the good work; I'm certain these videos aren't easy to make but you're very much appreciated.
Just great job!! As Stefan I am 40 Years in high-Tech Multidisciplinary systems (where 5 years of them as SW Architect and Manager in Intel in the Cellular division. I am amazed of your capability to explain so well, simple. yet accurate a complex machine as the SOC of a cellular system!!! All your episodes should be a must learn at school!!
I really like how structured your videos are! You start by telling us about the content of the whole video, thus preparing us for what's coming. This is important because watching a video this in-depth requires good focus, which is much easier to achieve if you are prepared for what's to come. You also talk quite slowly but manage to make it very pleasant to listen to your voice. Although someone else already mentioned this, I want to underline once again how glad/lucky we can be to be able to watch all this very detailed content for free! Thank you
Great work. I am also in the semiconductor industry as an IP/SOC design verification engineer and I have to say the details given are mostly accurate. Looking forward for your future videos
I have a question. If the design and manufacturing of the chips are so secretive, what would happen if we lost access to this knowledge and expertise suddenly? Suppose a war broke out in Taiwan and the tmsc company’s buildings were bombed and destroyed. Would there be a huge setback in manufacturing of chips?
@@Brian_S_O_Tuireann Yes there would be an initial setback. Although the manufacturing techniques are confidential the science behind it is known by a lot of people and with time it is possible to create new method or if we have engineers from tsmc we can reverse engineer their techniques. We must also know that critical technology components like their photolithography machines are made by a Dutch company called ASML. Thus it's possible to recreate what TSMC is doing.
I need you to at least know that your work wasn't in vain, and every video of yours inspires me even more to study and work either for Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, ASUS, or for my own brand, you teach me and inspire me to learn more than anything on TH-cam
These topics are 1: Quite complex to understand and so can get boring and 2: Most people aren't interested in spending time learning how their phone works. Can't blame them: watching cartoons or playing videos game is arguably more entertaining and less tasking to the brain.
These videos truly deserve to be treasured. The quality of the visuals, the explanation, everything is done so extremely well. I wish these kinds of videos existed when I was in school, I would be in a different career path. Keep up the great work!
You are explaining this complex lecture for free using interesting animations. But our college professors even after getting handsome paycheck are just reading the PDFs in the name of online classes
I never comment on any stuff who gives us sufficient knowledge. But this channel deserves a simple single word that is "amazing". You deserve to boast on TH-cam platform
It's collaboration. That is why collaboration is more important than single genius. No human could ever think of and develop these systems in a single lifetime. It took decades and many hard working people to develop this. The hardcore development and thinking is usually done by underpaid scientists...
Just think, just not too long ago in 1958 the first transistor was invented. Tech has come a long way, in fact more then we know for what they have now, that hasn't even hit mass production. Cool but also scary at the same time.
You appeared like an angel who shown such complex info so easily and in such understandable fashion.. I am really enjoying creators comments and your content.. It's a humble request.. please keep making such videos.. Being an electronics engineer myself, I am definitely gonna support this channel and share your videos alot with my friends.. thanks alot for doing this👏👏
I cannot handle this much free content....my brain is filled with so much joy; it takes some time to process this free 'quality' knowledge. Thank you TH-cam. And a very biggest thanks for putting your time and effort into this video😭i really hope this video to cross 100k+ likes
It is just humbling, to see this vast amount of engineering complexity. Thank you to every engineer, past or present, who contributed to these magical innovations 🙏 . And thank you for making these videos ❤️.
This was perfect! Never did I get stuck or found anything too complex. Perfectly explained! Please keep up the good work. Been following your channel since long. It's amazing. Also, please do make the video about the details of the chip manufacturing process. Can't wait to learn more.
Brilliantly created in such a way that makes it not only easy to follow the complexities of SoC but visually pleasing. I look forward to watching sequel videos to SoC that go more in depth.
You literally did an amazing job. Thanks for creating videos for free. Really appreciate it❤. Can feel the work you have done for this 25min long video.
This "journey to the centre of the SoC" was awesome. The explanation was simple without compromising important information. I haven't ever got such an easy-to-understand explanation anywhere else. I am eagerly waiting for the detailed video on microchip fabrication. I have something to ask: What are the technical differences between a smartphone's motherboard and a PC's motherboard?
First off I want to give a sincere thank you to everyone that helps make these videos. I have a learning disability, so the level of detail and how its explained is amazing, helpful, and greatly appreciated. Second, What blows my mind is that channels like Unspeakable, that kills brain cells get millions of subs/ likes , but a channel like this that enriches your knowledge only get a mill.
this channel devotes textbooks of information at lighting speed before pausing when you're just trying to keep up with them asking you to like and subscribe. hardest working channel on youtube. james brown would approve
These videos have been excellent! Thank you so much for the time end effort put forward in them! Many videos don't get as specific or detailed as I want and your videos always do! Keep up the great work.
Hey Branch Education...could you please make another amazing video how the SoC is made in a factory?! That would be very interesting to see and know. I've spread your channel far and wide on our business site. I absolutely love your videos!!! 😇
Thanks for watching! I also want to make a video about manufacturing and semiconductor fabs [factory], but first I gotta make connections and get invited to one of them! Otherwise, it would be just an insane amount of modelling required.
@@BranchEducation That's gonna be great! The work you put into the animation is astonishing and must take a very long time. It's greatly appreciated! 💙😇
In our world today, every nook and corner has a miniaturised world contributed by many many professionals who worked hard over days, years and decades to bring forward their skilful products, discoveries and view points. But they all still would need the likes of you who could assemble together, narrate and provide relevant visualisation to explain to the rest of us what has been constructed, achieved and built upon. You sure are a wonderful gift to humanity and deserve full applauds. Thank you so much.
@@ymom11 The snapdragon's 888 die size is 72.3mm, and a 300mm wafer can hold 977 of these. A finished wafer usually goes for around $10,000, by doing the math it checks out that the snapdragons only cost about $10 mass produced. That's insane!
@@PhilEngel1 not really since you also have to pay the workers, there are other materials used and not every chip you produce works. alot of them are just thrown away cause they dont work
It's very fascinating to see that all process that happends is just a bunchs of zeros and ones that sometimes I can't just comprehend it all because there's so many of said process and they're stores in a very, very small transistor. Great job for making this video!
Thanks!! We’ll make the manuf. video eventually. The hope is to collaborate with a company that does the fabrication- It’s an amazing world of machinery and engineering in there.
I would agree with the comments on the extremely high quality of this production and that I can view it gratis. Phenomenal video. Many thanks to Branch Education.
It would be greatly appreciated if you could take a quick second and tell us what you think or provide feedback on the video. Was it too complicated or was a specific section confusing? What about the pace of the video? Was a section too slow or did it move too fast? This feedback is extremely useful and it helps us improve on future videos! So, thank you!
I can only thank you for the hard work on putting together information so valuable people may not even realize - these videos have in their respective scope, more valuable and more important data than many universities. Thank you once again.
You kidding,this is art
thank you very much
Another amazing video!! Thanks again!!
Nothing. Everything was perfect!
This is so detailed. The quality of this video maan... This is unbelievable that these videos are completely free, and how underrated the channel is.
Capitalism is responsible for all the good AND bad things in the world. its fucking wild man. I don't know whether i like it or hate it lol
@@angadsingh9314 : Consumer desire has driven a great many things, from a desire to getting somewhere sooner. e.g cars. To playing ever more realistic games. e.g. video cards.
@@angadsingh9314 Very right in ancient India education was free for all but today's world you have to pay for it thus many poor people are left uneducated today
@@brodriguez11000 Agreed. But on the other hand, this desire has fuelled corporations' greed even more and they are willing to do less than moral things if they could make a profit out of it.
@@brodriguez11000 And yet, these very same cars are destroying our environment, and those amazing video cards are made from slave-mined minerals. Really sucks.
That was amazing and fascinating ! Those illustrations must have taken months to complete.. hope this video goes viral !
I keep finding you on the comments if videos I watch lol
Ima a subscriber love your videos
but the Earth is flat :)
You should make a see thru cpu lol
Nah mate, some retarded video of a song with lyrics containing booty, ass, nigaa, money, bitches... will go viral instead and be on youtube trending... not good stuffs like these...
Amazing !!!
As a computer engineer involved in both SOC and FW implementation for over 3 decades, I am still blown away when you look holistically at what is built. And this only covers the Edge device let alone the communication bits, the flash memory (other videos discussing that amazing technology) , the cellular network, data network including undersea cables, the hyperscaler data centers. It really is beyond a single person’s comprehension. Well maybe except for you. Thank you for sharing not only your awesome research, but your graphics and data visualization and story telling skills. You truly are a gift to our world. Thank you so much!!
Thank you greatly!! The more research I do, the more I realize the little that I know. I'm always looking for like minded experts who are interested in educating and better preparing the next generation of scientists and engineers.
I agree with u bro.
@@BranchEducation Thank you so much.
People have no idea how fortunate they are that we have such abilities, and this is just for cell phones.
its what happens when we all put our minds together
As a microelectronics Engineering graduate student, I really appreciate how simple and concise this video is, despite the fact that it explains YEARS worth of advanced Engineering classes.
I am just a teenager of class - 12. Even then I am watching his videos as they are so amazing and simple to understand that I cannot ignore it anyway.
Please can you tell me what are the other chips of a smartphone except system on a chip?
@@edulife306 the system on chip itself is a combination of different chips
Yo why this channel is so underrated it
The depth every single video he makes is astounding and it was made beautifully
Because for the average Joe, it takes effort to sit through and you have to really be curious and pay attention to enjoy it. Many don't have the interest, that's where sharing becomes useful.
I half watch many videos during my work shift, but I know I need to save these for later to devote my full attention to them, otherwise I would stop working.
@ Maybe put them on Blue-ray.
@ Thanks for your full attention. The target is to improve college curriculum to better prepare and fill the future with top notch engineers. I want to be alive when space travel becomes commonplace, and high quality engineering is a necessity.
@@brodriguez11000 Haha. Oh blue-ray. After that we'll press a record of the audio.
@@BranchEducation what a futuristic man you are !.
THIS is how ALL education should be!!! Incredible accurate detail = SUPREME CLARITY
That’s the dream. It’s always perplexed me why thousands of teachers develop thousands of separate engineering class curriculum, and they are all based off of a textbooks - which costs a ton of $$ and a solid chunk of the students don’t even read.
@@BranchEducation 100%
@@BranchEducation I have thought the same thing many times. We now live in an age of computers where we can copy a video and play it in many places at once. This means larger teams should be focusing on one good course and then duplicating it. I'm so happy to see someone doing it. THANK YOU
@@BranchEducation Probably because otherwise they would loose money..
i agree most teachers are garbage and they do more harm than good. i am sure most people have a thirst for knowledge and it seems like teachers stifle it.
a whole semester's long lectures on "Micro Processors" compressed in 25minutes. plus its even more detailed. words cant thank you enough for this great knowledge.
gotta drag out that degree for 8 years c'mon....get that money
Yea, but it's tough to follow for me, I guess I'll have to rewatch it a couple of times to fully understand all the information in the video, but I can't imagine that it could be explained much better than this, still a great video.
Its not that simple, universities do dive into a lot more detail than this. They will explain the architecture, ALU, registers, cache, ROM, bus, timings, pipelining and a lot more. This is just the basics (not that that's bad, you gotta start somewhere). But don't downplay what university courses offer. They also have a different target market, its like comparing apples to pears.
I find your videos fascinating. I'm a long-retired old-school computer engineer, that maintained large mainframe systems which were implemented with transistor gates and logic. These SOC designs remind me of a room full of computer modules wired together with coax cables that I used to maintain. The amount of miniaturization and lowering of costs is staggering. I am proud to have been a part of it and to see where engineering and manufacturing have gone. To you young engineers, keep it going as we're still nowhere near our human potential.
Atleast, I am no where near my true human potential
Oh my god!!! Even as a PHD student in the field of IC design, this video just blew my mind!! You just bridged a huge gap between how these ICs work together to produce an image or perform different tasks!!!
Kudos to you man!! Seriously hats off !!
Man I'm lost for words here. I can't imagine how time consuming it must be to churn out one of these exceptionally well done videos. I'm just really sad that the general population is not interested in this kind of thing for you to go viral. You deserve every bit of support to keep this going. I'm way more thankful and appreciative of the tech around me after your videos. I honestly can't fathom how human kind has become so advanced
And to think there are 668 dislikes. Why?
@@ZombieKid-c6v unreal!
How can it be called advanced if there can't be such a thing as a free will only ever increasing entropy as we currently know? So far the advancement has only resulted in population explosion and increase in net suffering. Hard to avoid any cognitive biases but it seems like inherent optimism bias and terror management theory will always help regardless of ideologies such as antinatalism based on consent and efilism.
@@uvwuvw-ol3fgwe talking about smartphone here, it's advanced for general people brain on how things like this can work, like magic y know,
@@INTJ791Hard to avoid any cognitive biases, but it might be just a result of cumulative culture and ability to scale things up. When it comes to advancement in things like social skills most people are still affected by a specific socioecological environment (pan troglodytes proactive political games over status, dispersed fertile females and offspring compared to pan paniscus society based on more or less egalitarian female/male coalitions and playful prosociality/sociosexuality for promotion of group stability regardless of age and gender as a byproduct of domestication syndrome). Obedience to abstract laws and authorities in general population due to self-domestication syndrome according to the Goodness Paradox (Richard Wrangham) is another factor in humans.
This is something on extraordinary level...Being an chip design engineer I am really shocked to see the accurate detailing of your content. Hats of to you sir...
I cant believe im watching this for free
Don't put ideas in his head
TRUE !
DAMN they way it was explained is also TOP-NOTCH
Well- good for you, all the content I make will be free! No pay walls ever.
@@BranchEducation you sould put donations for this kind of vids ,
U can pay me if you want...😝🤣
This is next level info graphics..salute. The middle section was fast as complexity increases u should slow down
... I, for one, appreciate the general overview. I'm not bored. If someone doesn't know about photons and the basics of how computer data works, they can google it or watch other videos?
@@Olivia-W I agree. For most of my videos [not all] I focus on content that can't be found else where. Some of the videos have the info elsewhere- but I feel like it isn't presented effectively.
0.5x
If it's fast u can try 0.5-0.75x in that section 😂😑
Hi
Honestly can't image the efforts one had to put in to make such a detailed video. Kudos!
Just a ton of research, and then 2 or so months of modelling and animating.
@@BranchEducation just?
@@BranchEducation Well, for you it may be "just", but according to me, its a lot of effort. Models and animations are mind-blowing. Thanks a lot for putting your efforts to fulfil the curiosity and knowledge stock of our young minds for free.
@@BranchEducation admirable
@@BranchEducation that's not 'just a' work😁
I'll certainly treat my smartphone with reverence after seeing this. I had *no idea* there was so much going on inside my cellphone. It's the kind of thing you don't think about unless something's not working properly.
Whoever put this video together did an excellent job. It was instructional without being overly technical.
It's amazing how fast these computer achievements happened. Only 24 years after the invention of the transistor, Intel introduced the 4-bit 4004 with 2,300 random logic transistors. Now we're using 64-bit multi-core processors with billions of transistors.
I'm 65 now and when I was younger I thought the quick rate of our technical advancements was a great thing, but as I got older I started realizing that maybe we're not ready for some of these advancements.
That size-comparison to a grain of table salt is mind blowing. It puts things in perspective.
The only TH-cam channel that provides the fundamental knowledge of electronics.
Keep it up👍
Wow, thanks
I can't understand why there's no millions of people subscribed to this channel. This is superb!!! I've watched all your videos!
Thanks for joining!! What was your favorite and least favorite set of videos?
@@BranchEducation I thank you for the great content! I sincerely love it all, but the SSD video was the one that got me here. Your work is superb! Congratulations!!
It may be due to "abstraction effect"
@@victorboechat5370 the SSD video genuinely blew my mind the first time I watched it
The millions of people are subscribed to their phones. It take a lot of brain power and attention span to watch and take in this type of video and the phones are taking most of that away from here.
I'm not sure which is more magical, to know or not to know. No going back though! In all seriousness, these videos are the apex of audio visual communication and education. Thank you.
The perfect level of simplification and detail.
Thanks for the input!
I'm an electronics engineering student, and this content is pure art to me, thank you so much for creating and sharing this knowledge.
I am just a teenager of class - 12. Even then I am watching his videos as they are so amazing and simple to understand that I cannot ignore it anyway.
This is probably the best video that I have seen in 2020
Incredible education! There's probably a majority of people that don't know what it takes to put smart technology into the palm of their hands.
Let me start by stating that you guys, hands down, do the best explanation videos of modern electronics. You hit that perfect balance, at least for me, of deep detail and easy to understand graphics and anecdotes. The narration is clean and clear, and the writing is very good. The visual aids are obviously extremely helpful too and well sourced. I literally became a member about 10 minutes into this video based on how well the video was providing value to me even at that point. Keep up the awesome work, and I hope you guys continue to grow support for this type of media. In terms of critical feedback I would simply say that repetition is key, so perhaps do reviews of each section as you move along, and do a quick review at the end of everything. Cheers!
Thanks a ton for joining!! I'll keep that in mind for future eps. I like recaps as well.
I am a VLSI DESIGN ENGINEER ... All these complex engineering is my daily routine .... Thanks for the hard work you made to make this video so easy to understand.
I think I have found the cure to my insomnia! But in all seriousness, fantastic job and clear explanation
This guy 😆 I enjoy your videos 👍
Woke up at 3am and found this, quite a coincidence.
Nice to see you here, i like your videos
😂
lol, sup @serpentza funny seeing you in these parts
Thanks!
It's absolutely mindblowing what a single person (with mad skillz that is) can do in blender and a little premiere nowadays O_o
frikkin' gorgeous animation
And also presentation from phil!
Thanks!! Its appreciated.
It is absolutely astonishing that anyone can manufacture circuits at this scale.
That’s why I love apple. Their at 5NM.. like what? When will they reach 3NM? Or 1NM? Or what’s after that?
@@SerPapus Apple manufactures nothing, they design something on a pc and then send it of to foxcon and tsmc(who actually produces cpu's and they then buy "5nm" machines from i think a dutch or so company)
the ...nm process node is not invented/developed by apple. Thats the job of tsmc and asml(who mostly makes the fancy euv machines)
@@marcrobert2925 idk what your talking about. But it sounds smart
@@marcrobert2925 lol..... but why aren’t other companies sending their designs to this company then and making 5MN SoCs?
I have recommended this channel to a lot of my inner circle to understand how smart phones work and each one had their mind blown.
Keep. it. up!!!
The bit about the image processing is awesome. The ISP in particular does all of those intricate tasks just to give us that quality image that people in the 1900's could only wish for, all in the blink of an eye. It made me appreciate my phone camera despite how it has frequent shutter lags and take grainy photos in bad lighting conditions.
This was an excellent video!
Branch education: this is how transistor works.
Me: should replace professors in my college.
Hmm waiting for one day when this video be one of the most viewed TH-cam video.
All the best..........................
@pk5l ouip you don't deserve to learn
I wonder what has taken longer: The development of this smartphone technology or the creation of this high-quality video.
ikr, the effects and animation are top notch👌👌
The development of this smartphone technology. 4000 million years of evolution and some very clever minds.
Both of them😅
One of the best 25 mins of my life. This video is worth like a whole year of studying in college maybe ❤
Fantastic video! As an electrical and computer engineer, it's awesome to see how much detail you get into for everything. I think for the average person the explanation can get complicated but there's so much important stuff that I really appreciate what I can learn from this.
Intuitive. Educational. Entertaining. Thorough. I've learned much from your channel. I'm amazed how well you use animation so effectively to explain a process. Thank you and keep up the good work; I'm certain these videos aren't easy to make but you're very much appreciated.
I knew it would be complicated how these things work, but this was INSANE.
Probably the best video on TH-cam. This channel deserves 1Million +
Just great job!!
As Stefan I am 40 Years in high-Tech Multidisciplinary systems (where 5 years of them as SW Architect and Manager in Intel in the Cellular division. I am amazed of your capability to explain so well, simple. yet accurate a complex machine as the SOC of a cellular system!!! All your episodes should be a must learn at school!!
I really like how structured your videos are! You start by telling us about the content of the whole video, thus preparing us for what's coming. This is important because watching a video this in-depth requires good focus, which is much easier to achieve if you are prepared for what's to come. You also talk quite slowly but manage to make it very pleasant to listen to your voice.
Although someone else already mentioned this, I want to underline once again how glad/lucky we can be to be able to watch all this very detailed content for free!
Thank you
This is incredible. I love how you're showing what exactly happens when you do a very specific task.
Great work. I am also in the semiconductor industry as an IP/SOC design verification engineer and I have to say the details given are mostly accurate. Looking forward for your future videos
I have a question. If the design and manufacturing of the chips are so secretive, what would happen if we lost access to this knowledge and expertise suddenly? Suppose a war broke out in Taiwan and the tmsc company’s buildings were bombed and destroyed. Would there be a huge setback in manufacturing of chips?
@@Brian_S_O_Tuireann Yes there would be an initial setback. Although the manufacturing techniques are confidential the science behind it is known by a lot of people and with time it is possible to create new method or if we have engineers from tsmc we can reverse engineer their techniques. We must also know that critical technology components like their photolithography machines are made by a Dutch company called ASML. Thus it's possible to recreate what TSMC is doing.
I need you to at least know that your work wasn't in vain, and every video of yours inspires me even more to study and work either for Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, ASUS, or for my own brand, you teach me and inspire me to learn more than anything on TH-cam
My question is " Why this channel is so underrated , this channel deseves millions of subscribers and billions of views"
Reality is only cringe and negative content rules
@@FirstnameLastname-cl4op Well, obviously, most people don't come to TH-cam to learn, they come here to be entertained.
@@angadsingh9314 Oh I don't know. How many pull up a how-to video? Or what's the best thing to buy?
These topics are 1: Quite complex to understand and so can get boring and 2: Most people aren't interested in spending time learning how their phone works. Can't blame them: watching cartoons or playing videos game is arguably more entertaining and less tasking to the brain.
@@addanametocontinue Agreed. TV is really good these days too lol
These videos truly deserve to be treasured. The quality of the visuals, the explanation, everything is done so extremely well. I wish these kinds of videos existed when I was in school, I would be in a different career path. Keep up the great work!
You are explaining this complex lecture for free using interesting animations. But our college professors even after getting handsome paycheck are just reading the PDFs in the name of online classes
Well hopefully it will inspire professors to step up their game! Education is a tide that lifts all boats.
An amazing quote. “Education is a tide that lifts all boats.” Thank you for sharing your in such a productive and impactful way.
This is the only channel where I immediately go to like and comment how good it is as soon as they ask, consistently impressive
I was literally thinking about how much tech and effort was put into these phone while I was on shrooms.
This is the hands down most interesting videos I've ever found about how CPU's work. Thank you for your hard work and making it understandable.
Cpu pffft
System on chip...
In all its entirety and glory
🧐🤸👌
@@217RockStar217 i stand humblely stand corrected..
I've never seen such amazing and in depth art like this, simply beautiful. Thank you.
I'm fascinated! Never ever I'd expect something of that quality on the Internet, let alone on TH-cam! Thank you!
The incredible detail that is put into every single animation and 3D model is beyond amazing, great job!!
Premium quality content! You deserve to be on television, like the Science channel.
The animation is on a level of excellence I've witnessed only in major motion pictures. It's absolutely incredible ☺️
I never comment on any stuff who gives us sufficient knowledge. But this channel deserves a simple single word that is "amazing". You deserve to boast on TH-cam platform
this is insanely crazy tech , can't imagine how a person can even thinking of making this chip. it's really mind blowing
that's y humans named this era a silicon age.....
It's collaboration. That is why collaboration is more important than single genius. No human could ever think of and develop these systems in a single lifetime. It took decades and many hard working people to develop this. The hardcore development and thinking is usually done by underpaid scientists...
Maybe they didn't, maybe they just retro engineered it... go figure.
Just think, just not too long ago in 1958 the first transistor was invented. Tech has come a long way, in fact more then we know for what they have now, that hasn't even hit mass production. Cool but also scary at the same time.
Excellent video ♥️. Right amount of detail, design, animation, pace, enthusiasm and fun. I guess we have a new Ted-Ed in town.
Oh wow! We’ve never been compared to Ted-Ed, so thank you! That’s a really great compliment.
You appeared like an angel who shown such complex info so easily and in such understandable fashion.. I am really enjoying creators comments and your content.. It's a humble request.. please keep making such videos.. Being an electronics engineer myself, I am definitely gonna support this channel and share your videos alot with my friends.. thanks alot for doing this👏👏
I cannot handle this much free content....my brain is filled with so much joy; it takes some time to process this free 'quality' knowledge. Thank you TH-cam. And a very biggest thanks for putting your time and effort into this video😭i really hope this video to cross 100k+ likes
It is just humbling, to see this vast amount of engineering complexity. Thank you to every engineer, past or present, who contributed to these magical innovations 🙏 .
And thank you for making these videos ❤️.
Thank you! I’m glad you enjoyed it. I thank those engineers as well! They have really uplifed everyone.
This is so detailed video.👌👌 I'm E&TC engineering student. I'm sharing to my teachers they may learn how to teach.
Why are my eyes tearing up ?
I'm so in love with technology.
Me too mann
Oh Bhai dil chura liya tumne
As a computer science student, that video helps more more than any lecture and notes in University. Spot on Sir!
This was perfect! Never did I get stuck or found anything too complex. Perfectly explained! Please keep up the good work.
Been following your channel since long. It's amazing.
Also, please do make the video about the details of the chip manufacturing process. Can't wait to learn more.
Glad it helped!
@@BranchEducation Glad you're posting such amazing videos for free! You're doing a truly amazing work.
Brilliantly created in such a way that makes it not only easy to follow the complexities of SoC but visually pleasing. I look forward to watching sequel videos to SoC that go more in depth.
You literally did an amazing job. Thanks for creating videos for free. Really appreciate it❤. Can feel the work you have done for this 25min long video.
Thanks branch education, this is a help from me, as I get into job, I'll do more
Thank you, greetings from India
This "journey to the centre of the SoC" was awesome. The explanation was simple without compromising important information. I haven't ever got such an easy-to-understand explanation anywhere else. I am eagerly waiting for the detailed video on microchip fabrication.
I have something to ask: What are the technical differences between a smartphone's motherboard and a PC's motherboard?
We can do this!!
100k likes and 10k comments ❤️❤️
Such level of content can't go unseen.
the quality of this video is simply amazing, and the cadence and speed makes it accesible to intermediate english speakers. extremely well done.
Yet another fantastic video, such a complex domain made understandable! I really enjoyed watching it :)
Glad you enjoyed it!
Been waiting for these kind of videos for years. Thank you so much!!!
Amazing Video !! Have been looking for such a detailed video in a long time! Request to cover CPU, NPU,GPU and Memory Controllers is detail!
Thanks for watching! Noted- well get to each topic eventually.
First off I want to give a sincere thank you to everyone that helps make these videos. I have a learning disability, so the level of detail and how its explained is amazing, helpful, and greatly appreciated. Second, What blows my mind is that channels like Unspeakable, that kills brain cells get millions of subs/ likes , but a channel like this that enriches your knowledge only get a mill.
an amazing video. video went beyond my expectations. looking forward to the series .
This was an eye-opening video. I appreciate the tech far more now.
me too...
It's beautiful. I've looked at it for five hours now.
Incredible stuff. No fluff. Thank you!
I was not notified of the video upload. I am finding this 4 days later, even though I subscribed.
😮 Well at least it got to you eventually. Even tho it's work- there are notification settings- and the bell.
@@BranchEducation I have personalized notifications turned though, perhaps my college schedule is the problem. :P
Great videos love how in-depth and specific you get
The graphical fidelity of these videos is amazing, and really makes understanding the concepts of chip/SOC design far more accesible.
this channel devotes textbooks of information at lighting speed before pausing when you're just trying to keep up with them asking you to like and subscribe. hardest working channel on youtube. james brown would approve
Amazing level of detail and correctness, subscribed. Looking forward to detailed CPU video.
These videos have been excellent! Thank you so much for the time end effort put forward in them! Many videos don't get as specific or detailed as I want and your videos always do! Keep up the great work.
Hey Branch Education...could you please make another amazing video how the SoC is made in a factory?! That would be very interesting to see and know. I've spread your channel far and wide on our business site. I absolutely love your videos!!! 😇
yes please!!
Thanks for watching! I also want to make a video about manufacturing and semiconductor fabs [factory], but first I gotta make connections and get invited to one of them! Otherwise, it would be just an insane amount of modelling required.
@@BranchEducation That's gonna be great! The work you put into the animation is astonishing and must take a very long time. It's greatly appreciated! 💙😇
In our world today, every nook and corner has a miniaturised world contributed by many many professionals who worked hard over days, years and decades to bring forward their skilful products, discoveries and view points. But they all still would need the likes of you who could assemble together, narrate and provide relevant visualisation to explain to the rest of us what has been constructed, achieved and built upon. You sure are a wonderful gift to humanity and deserve full applauds. Thank you so much.
After watching this I’m not mad at how much some phones cost. It’s like they’re worth over a million dollars
The fist chip costs millions or even billions of dollars to make. Each chip after with mass production only costs a couple of dollars
@@ymom11 The snapdragon's 888 die size is 72.3mm, and a 300mm wafer can hold 977 of these. A finished wafer usually goes for around $10,000, by doing the math it checks out that the snapdragons only cost about $10 mass produced. That's insane!
@@PhilEngel1 not really since you also have to pay the workers, there are other materials used and not every chip you produce works. alot of them are just thrown away cause they dont work
And yet we have to throw away after couple of years because battery dies and it's non removable, sad...
Apple: Write that down!!
Incredible video wish I had watched this before!
ur animations are superb and voice is great
Much Appreciated!
It's very fascinating to see that all process that happends is just a bunchs of zeros and ones that sometimes I can't just comprehend it all because there's so many of said process and they're stores in a very, very small transistor. Great job for making this video!
This is amazing.
Impossível assistir isso e não se apaixonar.
This is incredible! I can't even imagine how much did it cost to make such graphics.
You can make graphics like this for free if your using a professional program and if your a professional yourself
I would pay for these kind of contents
The making of this video is insane. We salute you.
I still can’t believe humans invented something like this!
Well, now you do
You sure it wasn't aliens? :-D
@@brodriguez11000 😉
it's all begin when Alan Turing wanted to decode Nazi's secret code. dayumm.. :o
Its from Aliens dude, Humans cant do that in d very beginning
Absolutely amazing presentation ! I would love to watch the manufacturing animation of these chips on such nano scale.
Thanks!! We’ll make the manuf. video eventually. The hope is to collaborate with a company that does the fabrication- It’s an amazing world of machinery and engineering in there.
This is enough to make anyone's mind to blowing awesome 👍
I would agree with the comments on the extremely high quality of this production and that I can view it gratis. Phenomenal video. Many thanks to Branch Education.