Sometimes I do forget that the Vsauce office is literally right across the road from the Corridor office. Makes sense why they're able to get Wren on the podcast while still using the Vsauce office as their set.
I loved all the engineering and chemistry talk this episode. Kevin was making fun of it asking for it to be over but I could sit here for six hours listening to Will talk about electronics or Nigel talk chemistry. It's so interesting.
The heat pump has a higher tha 1 coefficient of performance where as the electric heater will only have a COP of 1. Up here in Canada we actually use a heat pump for heating in the winter because it uses less energy than using ele tric heating. However at a certain temperature, the heat pump will stop being as efficient because the coil temperature outside gets too close to the actual outside temperature and there is less heat transfer happening.
All the videos you've released in the past month or two have been some of the best yet. And please make the Mall Santa competition a yearly tradition. It was just perfect.
I discovered Will roughly a year ago. I'd probably seen a video or two over the years, but one of him and Michael popped into my recommended and I basically watched every video he'd made. The video after his house burned down is tragic, but I honestly think it's one of the best videos he's made to date; the mask slipped. He always plays a goofy sarcastic character and that video humanized the man behind the character while also proving that while you can do everything right (even if pretending to do things unsafely), you can still lose. And so, if I ever happen to run into Will, I plan to tell him I'm sorry his house burned down. Because even if it's an old tragedy for him, it's still a tragedy.
Super acids are normally measured using a different scale(the Hammett acidity function) to PH because it's more accurate/useful for such strong acid. Concentrated sulphuric acid has a PH of around 0.3, but a HAF of -12 which is easier to use/compare than fractions.
Amazingly the production value is very low VERY low, but you guys manage to bring awesome guests and make a fun show, I have watched every episode as they come out and I will continue to do so. Thanks guys, love you dad.
to be fair, the audio quality is totally adequate if not great, this is a PODCAST and the video is NOT the main aspect of this type of content. the video quality and production is totally fine for a PODCAST
interesting to hear these guys touch on the reliability of software. Out at the bleeding edge we're doing a lot better than C++(ish) on Arduino or Python on the Pi because of a couple things: forced error handling instead of exceptions and techniques for linting for bad memory use patterns or the borrow checker in rust. Relays come with issues, they're certainly better than most microcontrollers but it's also becoming easier over time to trust that (especially air-gapped) microcontrollers can reliably do their job and handle failures.
A heater is like a mint that can make a certain amount of coins for a unit of energy but its more efficient to use the same amount of energy to drive a truck to a bank vault where you can get even more coins and take them back to the room. Theres a large amount of latent heat even in freezing environments because the molecules still have thermal energy until absolute zero where they don't move at all.
@TechnologyConnections has a couple great videos on why heat pumps are more efficient than radiant heaters and gas burning furnaces for anyone interested
49:01 so my old science teacher did something a bit like this! We were 9-11yrs and we had to test a pen to see how the ink spread out to see which pen was the one used to write a blackmail note, and another lesson we had to test fruit gelatine in specific ways to figure out “what the alien was made of” 😂 it was a lot of fun. I blame him for my love of science for sure!
I never took chemistry in school because everyone told me it was really hard. I've regretted it ever since. A few years after I'd graduated school I bought an intro to organic chemistry book and read it cover to cover. Fascinating stuff! I'd love to learn more, it's just hard to find the time to read text books, especially since it'll never help me with my career.
What i like about theese is that the guest isnt the mail attraction on the conversation, they participate equaly or even les than the other guys. Feels good, not forced
Now we need a collab between Kevin and Michael Reeves where Kevin makes the rocket knife and Michael makes the guidance system for something totally unrelated and definitely not the rocket knife...
I was about to say I wasn't expecting this crossover, but then I just remembered that the Corridor building is on the same street as Vsauce, and William was recently on a Corridor Crew video.
For the mine water pump system, to minimize specialty hardware you could probably use off the shelf Magnetic Float Level Switches. They are common in water level sensing and septic tanks.
90% of the fun of multiplayer voice chat is the interactions, either wholesome moments or just pissing off people with mundane comments. Too many gamers get mad over the dumbest stuff its hilarious
1:43 Rhett and Link started making TH-cam videos around 2007 I believe, and they're still going strong, I'm pretty sure they are doing the best they've ever done on TH-cam right now.
So before youtube, people like Mega64, AVGN, Roosterteeth just posted stuff on their own websites for download, like early 00s, using like wmv files or mov files (in fact, the first three episodes of AVGN were something James Rolfe put on VHS tapes and passed around for his friends to watch). This was back when you'd have videos downloaded and share them over usb stick to friends. Then you had a few websites pop up like ustream, blip, gametrailers, ign, GameSpot, etc, and people would upload stuff to those places either through partnerships or whatever. It really wasn't until like 2009 or 2010 that the kind of og guys making videos about video games really got onto TH-cam, mostly because they realized hosting stuff themselves was expensive, and youtube would give them the most traction. I remember buying Mega64's DVDs online way back in the day so I could have higher quality versions of their skits for people like paxtv and ign.
You can tell when someone played runescape. It's a heavy weight the slows down the soul, and you can see the pain the eyes of your fellow scaping brothers.
For the tractor tire OneWheel, search up the RIOT wheel, basically a motorized tractor tire with a chair on the front, that rests on the gound. The trick is about 600 pounds of counterweights & flywheel in the hub, and when it's go time a winch/crane in the hub lifts the chair in relation to the hub. Then a motor can spin the tire around the hub and madness ensues.
I loved playing with flash in web design class. My senior year of HS I took a digital design class and we learned how to take images and break them down to parts and animate it. So we took pics of spongebob and made him wave or walk etc.
I also had the windows TV recording thing!!! I found out 3 years ago it was a card made by Hauppauge, Hauppauge also made game capture cards. I bought so many really shifting capture cards not even knowing I had one in my old PC. I tried it out a couple years back just to see how it did and it's pretty good
1:02:42 Michael entering the room and standing at the door for a second in the background is so creepy. Like the freeze frame of him when he turns around could be a horror image lol
I dont think you need the weights on the tractor tire one wheel. You could put the seat higher than the tire (like those tall unicycles at the circus). This would make it easier to get enough torque on the tire to get it moving since you have more leverage farther from the point of rotation. The biggest problem I can see is balancing side to side since any little wobble couldn't be recovered from unless you were moving pretty fast and could turn into the direction of the fall in time. I'm probably wrong about all that though.
Tbf to nile on the defense of chem here ( 46:02 ); You get more familiar with the elements as you learn their group, electron/proton shells, typical reactions, those reactions and some toxicological reports, et cetera. At some point you see a boiling temp, crystalizing temp, melting point, vaporization temp, specific gravity, NMR, mass spectrometer, a MSDS or pray to god for a slightly close chance of those graphs matching up with your product. It's literally alchemy nerds. Use it to profit and make a market for a new material.
Just to add to Nigel's talk about weak acids and hydrofluoric acid, 12% HF doesn't usually leave a burn, but can still kill you if untreated. "Weak" acids are terrifying
heat pump talk: isn't it better at heating because it's generating heat itself AND moving the heat from outside, versus the heating unit just generating heat itself?
Hearing them talk about how fucking hard the software always is makes me feel better lol. Currently in dev hell trying to make an arduino head tracking system
Stuff Made Here makes programming look very hard, but that is a huge leap forward from it seeming impossible without a huge team of 40+ engineers dedicated to it, and he just does it by himself.
It's funny how of all the podcasts they've had so far, them talking about VFX and internet stuff for the first 17 minutes has left me more confused than any time they've talked about chem or even physics. Lol
the guests you guys get on here are always top tier
for real every time they upload i think, ok who's up next? 🤔👍😍
@@codypalm i'm curious how they would interact with derek from veritasium
@@frigusium7216 probably sit there drooling with confusion as he explains the science behind some crazy subject 😋🤯
LIAR
@@codypalm ur dad
Michael from vsause just walking past casually is the coolest thing to ever happen. I love this podcast so much
Half-expected him to say "VSauce! Michael here!" when he entered the shot
1:02:51
@@PureAsbestos thanks kind stranger
They have a podcast with him as the guest. I think it's the same location too.
They're filming in the Vsauce office.
Sometimes I do forget that the Vsauce office is literally right across the road from the Corridor office. Makes sense why they're able to get Wren on the podcast while still using the Vsauce office as their set.
WHAT
That explains why I thought the corridor office looked weird here.
oh damn, i didnt know. thats really cool
Yea same alley! Fun fact, behind them is the Mr Fister 5000 used in CYSTM S2
I never would’ve expected to see Wren on the show! That was awesome. To be fair, Will appeared in a Corridor Crew video so it makes sense
I never knew! Which was Will in?
@@jackwong5816 i believe the hat gun video
@@jackwong5816 deepfake video. But true, will also appeared on Node with the hat gun video
Somehow the podcast putting in the least effort gets the best guests. I love it so much!
they're putting effort into seeming like not putting effort into it
I love the meme that they never have a studio they just squat in other studios
I loved all the engineering and chemistry talk this episode. Kevin was making fun of it asking for it to be over but I could sit here for six hours listening to Will talk about electronics or Nigel talk chemistry. It's so interesting.
The heat pump has a higher tha 1 coefficient of performance where as the electric heater will only have a COP of 1. Up here in Canada we actually use a heat pump for heating in the winter because it uses less energy than using ele tric heating. However at a certain temperature, the heat pump will stop being as efficient because the coil temperature outside gets too close to the actual outside temperature and there is less heat transfer happening.
Yeah, the heat energy a heat pump can provide is higher than the amount of electrical energy it uses, whereas a resistive heater it is lower.
Excited that Wren came on! Wren should do the egg drop challenge with William. That would be a ton of fun too.
they should all have a go at that.
But get Wren to edit the video so that his contraption looks incredible and wins, whatever the actual outcome was
@@stumcconnel even better!
This podcast brings together most of my favorite content creators. So glad it exists.
Every time Nigel talks it makes the line “Nigel spent all his skill points on chemistry” even funnier.
I always check out the chapter names "Nigel proves he knows things", "Michael had to pee" 😂
All the videos you've released in the past month or two have been some of the best yet.
And please make the Mall Santa competition a yearly tradition. It was just perfect.
35:20 correction - SO3 + H2SO4 forms pyrosulfuric acid - pyrosulfuric acid will react with water and form 2 equivalents of sulfuric acid
You guys are killing it with the guests. Great work!
im not a podcast guy but ive been with safety third from day 1. guests, hosts, content, everything is top tier down to earth content
I discovered Will roughly a year ago. I'd probably seen a video or two over the years, but one of him and Michael popped into my recommended and I basically watched every video he'd made. The video after his house burned down is tragic, but I honestly think it's one of the best videos he's made to date; the mask slipped. He always plays a goofy sarcastic character and that video humanized the man behind the character while also proving that while you can do everything right (even if pretending to do things unsafely), you can still lose. And so, if I ever happen to run into Will, I plan to tell him I'm sorry his house burned down. Because even if it's an old tragedy for him, it's still a tragedy.
Super acids are normally measured using a different scale(the Hammett acidity function) to PH because it's more accurate/useful for such strong acid.
Concentrated sulphuric acid has a PH of around 0.3, but a HAF of -12 which is easier to use/compare than fractions.
I'm so sorry that your house burned down and I'm glad you're making video's again. I used to always watch your videos!
Amazingly the production value is very low VERY low, but you guys manage to bring awesome guests and make a fun show, I have watched every episode as they come out and I will continue to do so. Thanks guys, love you dad.
Dude, this is like a quantum leap in production quality over William spilling yogurt all over himself in a mysteriously stained chair
Of course, I meant to say compared to other podcasts. But yes, episodes are getting better!
I think its low production value is what makes it authentic
to be fair, the audio quality is totally adequate if not great, this is a PODCAST and the video is NOT the main aspect of this type of content. the video quality and production is totally fine for a PODCAST
I was wondering how Technology Connections got roped into Open Sauce but with the 10 minute discussion of heat pumps it all makes sense
32:00 technology connections covered heat pumps. They're pretty neat
"it would be amazing if we could get a podcast with justin roiland at some point"
yeah i don't think that'll be happening tbh
interesting to hear these guys touch on the reliability of software. Out at the bleeding edge we're doing a lot better than C++(ish) on Arduino or Python on the Pi because of a couple things: forced error handling instead of exceptions and techniques for linting for bad memory use patterns or the borrow checker in rust.
Relays come with issues, they're certainly better than most microcontrollers but it's also becoming easier over time to trust that (especially air-gapped) microcontrollers can reliably do their job and handle failures.
A heater is like a mint that can make a certain amount of coins for a unit of energy but its more efficient to use the same amount of energy to drive a truck to a bank vault where you can get even more coins and take them back to the room.
Theres a large amount of latent heat even in freezing environments because the molecules still have thermal energy until absolute zero where they don't move at all.
@TechnologyConnections has a couple great videos on why heat pumps are more efficient than radiant heaters and gas burning furnaces for anyone interested
49:01 so my old science teacher did something a bit like this! We were 9-11yrs and we had to test a pen to see how the ink spread out to see which pen was the one used to write a blackmail note, and another lesson we had to test fruit gelatine in specific ways to figure out “what the alien was made of” 😂 it was a lot of fun. I blame him for my love of science for sure!
This is the first time Nigel led a discussion on this podcast
did they legit get wren to walk across the street to record in a huge ass room, instead of getting michael to do it in a closed off sound proof room
30:05 Please yes, I love listening to people geek out about math and engineering
Back in my day
In my rural town in Australia you had to download videos within iTunes because the internet was too slow for TH-cam
I'm sorry your house burnt down. I used to watch your videos in middle school. Glad you decided to make videos again!
I never took chemistry in school because everyone told me it was really hard. I've regretted it ever since. A few years after I'd graduated school I bought an intro to organic chemistry book and read it cover to cover. Fascinating stuff! I'd love to learn more, it's just hard to find the time to read text books, especially since it'll never help me with my career.
It doesn't pay for shiiiiiiiiit.
SirWren is one of the best people I’ve ever seen online and I’m happy you guys got to talk to him.
What i like about theese is that the guest isnt the mail attraction on the conversation, they participate equaly or even les than the other guys.
Feels good, not forced
WREN! LETS GOO! Any day I can get a dose of Wrens optimism, its a good day.
We need to get Wren to do an egg drop challenge with William. That would be hilarious
I'm glad that Kevin and Wren got along so well together, they should totally work on the one wheel project in the future
Now we need a collab between Kevin and Michael Reeves where Kevin makes the rocket knife and Michael makes the guidance system for something totally unrelated and definitely not the rocket knife...
I was about to say I wasn't expecting this crossover, but then I just remembered that the Corridor building is on the same street as Vsauce, and William was recently on a Corridor Crew video.
Man I love Wren, such a genuine person.
I love it when vsauce just walks up and chimes in, i very much appreciate how casual this podcast is.
Omg yes I'm so excited for this, Wren is awesome!
Loved the acknowledgement that software engineering is hard af
24:51 I remember Quake 3 in 2000 with a 56k modem just slaying people on the space map with rail guns only. Ahhh the good ol years.
I'm so happy you got wren on here, he and Michael reeves are pretty much everything I aspire to be!
Last night paymoneywubby expressed interest in being on the podcast. You should make it happen.
You guys don't need VFX, you create them. You need to have a VFX competition.
Honestly SFX vs VFX would be a pretty cool video
@@slowazzd2165 Wren did a video with Adam Savage exploring just that, if you search "corridor Adam Savage" it should come up
For the mine water pump system, to minimize specialty hardware you could probably use off the shelf Magnetic Float Level Switches. They are common in water level sensing and septic tanks.
I have never had this much fun listening to four nerds gushing about science
90% of the fun of multiplayer voice chat is the interactions, either wholesome moments or just pissing off people with mundane comments. Too many gamers get mad over the dumbest stuff its hilarious
1:43 Rhett and Link started making TH-cam videos around 2007 I believe, and they're still going strong, I'm pretty sure they are doing the best they've ever done on TH-cam right now.
colin furze started pretty early on as well
"It was like a small community but like a big community, it's like a medium-sized community" - Big Willy 2023 or 2022 maybe, probably, definitely
m
So before youtube, people like Mega64, AVGN, Roosterteeth just posted stuff on their own websites for download, like early 00s, using like wmv files or mov files (in fact, the first three episodes of AVGN were something James Rolfe put on VHS tapes and passed around for his friends to watch). This was back when you'd have videos downloaded and share them over usb stick to friends. Then you had a few websites pop up like ustream, blip, gametrailers, ign, GameSpot, etc, and people would upload stuff to those places either through partnerships or whatever. It really wasn't until like 2009 or 2010 that the kind of og guys making videos about video games really got onto TH-cam, mostly because they realized hosting stuff themselves was expensive, and youtube would give them the most traction. I remember buying Mega64's DVDs online way back in the day so I could have higher quality versions of their skits for people like paxtv and ign.
just started watching and i catch an episode before its been out for an hour and we have these amazing guests, love this show
You guys got Wren! heck yeah. hands down this is the best podcast online atm
I was not expecting this crossover but it is an absolute treat to see Wren here
So when is Will getting Technology Connections onto the show?
Corridor crew is great. Wren is great. Love the collab.
You created the most complicated description for a mini split system.
I'm really enjoying the guests lately. Wren is so likeable.
Hell yeah Wren and Corridor are awesome, great guest to have on. Glad to see some of my favourite people on YT hanging out together!
All my favorite TH-camrs in one place
You can tell when someone played runescape. It's a heavy weight the slows down the soul, and you can see the pain the eyes of your fellow scaping brothers.
Listening to you guys talk about heatpumps right after taking thermo really made me feel better about myself :p
I feel like Technology Connections was almost summoned during that heat pump convo
Careful. The show is getting better and better and I do really feel like it's worse.
Wren is awesome, his scale videos are some of my favorites on YT. Corridor has put out lots of great videos this year.
For the tractor tire OneWheel, search up the RIOT wheel, basically a motorized tractor tire with a chair on the front, that rests on the gound. The trick is about 600 pounds of counterweights & flywheel in the hub, and when it's go time a winch/crane in the hub lifts the chair in relation to the hub. Then a motor can spin the tire around the hub and madness ensues.
I loved playing with flash in web design class. My senior year of HS I took a digital design class and we learned how to take images and break them down to parts and animate it. So we took pics of spongebob and made him wave or walk etc.
Love hearing Nigel talk chemistry
Mega64 has been around before TH-cam and are still amazing
I also had the windows TV recording thing!!! I found out 3 years ago it was a card made by Hauppauge, Hauppauge also made game capture cards.
I bought so many really shifting capture cards not even knowing I had one in my old PC. I tried it out a couple years back just to see how it did and it's pretty good
1:02:42 Michael entering the room and standing at the door for a second in the background is so creepy. Like the freeze frame of him when he turns around could be a horror image lol
This was an awesome episode, so stoked to see Wren on here!
I dont think you need the weights on the tractor tire one wheel. You could put the seat higher than the tire (like those tall unicycles at the circus). This would make it easier to get enough torque on the tire to get it moving since you have more leverage farther from the point of rotation. The biggest problem I can see is balancing side to side since any little wobble couldn't be recovered from unless you were moving pretty fast and could turn into the direction of the fall in time. I'm probably wrong about all that though.
YOOOO they got the boi WRENDER on the podcast. Aight i don't really care about any podcasts but I gotta watch this now
Tbf to nile on the defense of chem here ( 46:02 ); You get more familiar with the elements as you learn their group, electron/proton shells, typical reactions, those reactions and some toxicological reports, et cetera. At some point you see a boiling temp, crystalizing temp, melting point, vaporization temp, specific gravity, NMR, mass spectrometer, a MSDS or pray to god for a slightly close chance of those graphs matching up with your product. It's literally alchemy nerds. Use it to profit and make a market for a new material.
How did this crossover even happen. This is amazing.
I'm delighted that 2 of my favorite channels got together for this (and the Vsauce Cameo). Some of my fav content!
you guys have no idea how much im freaking out that you have sir wender. low key finna get the patreon to see the rest of the podcast :]
Wren seems like such a generally chill and fun guy.
THE CROSSOVER IVE DREAMED OF
I like how Michael knows exactly about neural radiance fields as I do, namely that Wren has been tweeting about them way too much
You guys should try getting Cody'slab on the pod
Great Michael cameo
Love the new set guys! Looks just like VSauce's!
32:00 - technology connections did a whole multi hour video on this y'all should watch
I love how MIchael from Vsauce just randomly appears at the end, lol
For anyone wanting more about perflouroantimonic acid. Chemforce has a video where he tests stuff with it.
What they were talking about with mechanical engineering at university is soo true, It was a painful 4 years for me.
You can actually emulate CODMobile on PC and it will count you as being on a controller. I did that a couple years ago just to mess with people.
When you "write" a byte into an arduino, you really just apply +/- 5v to a circuit inside the silicon.
Just to add to Nigel's talk about weak acids and hydrofluoric acid, 12% HF doesn't usually leave a burn, but can still kill you if untreated. "Weak" acids are terrifying
"Nigel proves he knows things" lol
heat pump talk: isn't it better at heating because it's generating heat itself AND moving the heat from outside, versus the heating unit just generating heat itself?
Poor Wren was barely in this video! But a great group of people to watch.
Hearing them talk about how fucking hard the software always is makes me feel better lol. Currently in dev hell trying to make an arduino head tracking system
Look up ‘Yacht Rock’ and ‘IKEA Heights’ for classic Channel 101 series.
Stuff Made Here makes programming look very hard, but that is a huge leap forward from it seeming impossible without a huge team of 40+ engineers dedicated to it, and he just does it by himself.
It's funny how of all the podcasts they've had so far, them talking about VFX and internet stuff for the first 17 minutes has left me more confused than any time they've talked about chem or even physics. Lol
I love wren so happy to see him on the podcast