Yooo, long time no see! Just so you're updated, I've spent the last week in North Carolina, and I've filmed no less than 3 BIG videos that are all dropping this July 🔥 For more Tech Fails: th-cam.com/video/IErvIekMD3U/w-d-xo.html
I had one of those pacemakers. I kept asking about getting it updated, and my cardiologist kept telling me that I didn't need to update it. Evidently the update could stop your heart from beating for a certain amount of time, and they were worried about that with me, since I was (and still am) totally dependent on a machine to keep my heart pumping. It got replaced with a different model pacemaker because the battery was almost gone, so my tech is now updated, finally. :/
the peloton treadmill incident was a throwback. when i was a toddler, i stuck my hand under my father's treadmill while it was still running. at 25, i still have scars.
@@evergreen7260 just make sure kiddos are away from treadmills until they're old enough to use them (or at least avoid them. if you're using a treadmill, keep kiddos away, and id probably advise unplugging a treadmill when it's out of use, bc sometimes mechanisms have randoms spurts of juice, even when they're on, or a kiddo can turn it on unintentionally. even better, id put it somewhere safe where it's unlikely to fall over on someone, and just pull it out when it gets used. that being said, listen to an Expert over someone who stuck their hand in a treadmill when they were little lol.
If it were to happen it would shot up to 9/1or 10/10 besides 6/10 isnt like a school grade 6/10 still means extremly Fd up but didnt kill over 300 pepole like the 10/10
@ALF2003official makes no difference, something getting a 5/10 fail when it resulted in actual deaths of kids insane, especially if followed by selfie sticks that mainly failed d/t human stupidity rated 8/10 I'm always confused by his rating system lol
People will never accept responsibilty for there actions because they are allowed to blame others and get paid to do so. That was absolutely the parents fault.
The Abbott Pacemaker sounds like part of the game "Watchdogs", where you literally have to hack the big bad's pacemaker to kill him... Kinda scary that that actually was a real possibility at some point...
there's also this game called hacknet that have one mission for you to hack a pacemaker connected to wifi the very same thing Arun said happened at once, you upload a test routine into that pacemaker so it will pump victim's heart at 300bpm then suddenly reduce it to 50, then go 300 again
Actually all Pacemakers can be hacked, hence why it was in watchdogs. The issue with Abbott Pacemaker was that all you needed was a simple remote bought online.
My friend got manhunt 2. He played it once and then hid it from himself. He had terrible nightmares for almost months and needed a therapist. Definitely deserved to be banned. (Don’t worry, he’s ok now. At the time he was a dumb teen)
Both Manhunt games created a bunch of controversy. I think the main reson for Manhunt 2 getting banned and censored was because you were supposed to swing your arms with the Wiimote in a way that was similar to killing someone. I did see some news report and the host looked shocked beyond belief. But then again most NEWS programs show videogames as the most dangerous device in your home.
Tbh the whole point of manhunt 2 is that a psicopath director is making you kill people for is movie critising the over abondance of violence in movies
still one of the best games I've ever played when i was a kid 🤫 one thing i learned from playing violent video games is that you're making a clear line between reality and fantasy, yeah i am brutally killing someone in a video game but i legit got scared when i was holding plastic knife at a sandwich making class in 1st grade so yeah win-win situation.
10:35 This is a common misconception. While part of the reason was the battery being too thin, the main issue was a manufacturing defect in the corner of most of the batteries at launch, which was a tiny dent in the top (left?) corner. This would cause the battery to eventually short out, as the dent caused both terminals to eventually touch each other. Most people's phones were exploding while fast charging, which was likely due to the increased power going through the battery, and lithium-ion batteries do not take well to being shorted out like that. Edit: Normally defects of that scale would be perfectly fine, and would never cause issues, but they made the battery too thin, meaning it shorted it out easier. Just wanted to clarify that.
I remember seeing the Nano all over the place. The problems you mentioned weren't it's only downsides tho, it wasn't the strongest from what I know. This one time, I was going back home from school in the school bus. This nano came in like a snail, rammed into us, our bus drove away and what I saw behind was the car with a dent so big. Like the whole front was curved inward lmao and the lady driving was just flabbergasted
@@Blue967 I mean, she didn't look scared or confused at all, just surprised about what just happened. I just picked the word that matched. If it didn't, idk, I'm not a native English speaker
13:40 (The dart) When I was 4, I got hit on my right eye by a similar one of those, but for my luck, it had a plastic point. I call luck because it didn't gouge my eye out but all else was an issue. It aggravated my eye sight with a real bad keratocon and even after a corneal transplant, the issue persists to this day (29 years later), making me being a slave for rigid lenses just to be able to properly see anything with my right eye.
@@Icecream_MSM Rarely. It just bothers me that I have a real bad astigmatism that causes double vision. Astigmatism causes a "ghost image" of all you see. Since I also have it duplicated, it makes quite hard to see. But a rigid lens fix both of those issues, allowing me to have near perfect eyesight. You can partially see where the dart hit my eye, on the corner, it damaged the cornea and the transplant didn't fully cover the damaged part.
For the last one - there's a little more about it. The problem is that Boeing wanted to rush the plane out and touted the MAX as a direct replacement to the 737, with no additional training needed. However, because of the engine being placed right on the wing instead of under the wing, the thrust would naturally make the 737 MAX nose up more than the 737, so they used software to adjust the flaps automatically, bringing the nose down to emanate the 737. The issue of the crashes was caused by that software misenterpeting incoming data, and automatically taking the plane down regardless of how hard the pilots tried to pitch up. All because a competitor was releasing a plane they thought would outcompete the Boeing 737. It's even more of a tragedy than is presented here. EDIT: not the flaps, the trim was being adjusted
If anyone's wondering, the 737 lineup is more than 50 years old. And according to rules, if a plane's next iteration doesn't change too much, you don't have to be trained again for the new model, saving airlines money. So, if you got your license on the first 737, you can fly the latest 737 Max. This is why Boeing hasn't retired the 737 name.
@@nogoat The name doesn’t have to do anything with pilot training requirements. They kept the name for marketing purposes and because of the public trust in the well-known 737 name.
Arun: "This product placed easily accessible, untraceable, highly dangerous nuclear weapons in the hands of millions" Also Arun: "This one gets a solid 5 out of 10"
“Lawns darts” In Russia during USSR and some time after children used to play a game called “knives”. The idea was plain and simple: you throw a knife into a drawn circle on the ground and draw lines to the point where the knife landed to acquire field for yourself.
Such a good video. So detailed for each item, a good slow pace that doesn't bore but also doesn't go too fast... just everything. I'm so glad you heard us and changed a couple things about your videos! I missed these awesome videos.
This comment section is the most dumbest in entire internet. Literally every video is littered with dozens of comments like this, admiring edit and production skills. It's like those dumbos never watched a good video or a movie which were edited by professionals.
its the parents fault at that point why put a treadmill where the todler can get to it. its called babyproofing. not the company's fault some larents are stupid
To this day my favorite banned iPhone app was the secret tethering app that looked like a basic calculator that allowed you to tether other devices to your internet without going through your carrier and didn't require a jailbreak. My second favorite was the secret app store disguised as a coloring book app that let you download the premium paid apps for free again, without a jailbreak.
@@randomodude Dang, I don't remember the coloring book one but the calculator one was called FlashArmyKnife. I had them when I had an iPhone 5S which was my last iPhone before going to Samsung. Imo 5 was the best model
To this day my favorite banned iPhone app was the secret tethering app that looked like a basic calculator that allowed you to tether other devices to your internet without going through your carrier and didn't require a jailbreak. My second favorite was the secret app store disguised as a coloring book app that let you download the premium paid apps for free again, without a jailbreak.
My man started out the video rolling immediately; no fuss, no muss, we're at cruising speed already. Wished all content creators followed this example.
Hi Arun, about the 737 MAX, Boeing tried to mitigate retraining pilots to be able to make use of the 737 MAX Asap. So they fitted it with MCAS, which corrects the automatic pitch up maneuvoure due to the larger engine fitted under its wing. Unfortunately, the MCAS would often (if not always) over trim the aircraft causing it to go into an irreversible dive.
Yeah, didn't they add larger engines, but because they were larger they didn't fit in the normal location, so they also had to move them forward? Basically, the plane should have required a new type rating due to all the changes, but boeing didn't want that as airlines didn't want to train pilots again. So instead they marketed it as the same (for pilots anyway) as the 737. And due to that, pilots were not trained on the new systems, and ultimately, died
@@midnigh7x Correct. Boeing wanted to compete with Airbus without an overhaul, and then tried to fix a hardware problem with a software. They definitely deserved the first place in this list.
Great to see you including a wider variety of stuff in these videos beyond just electronic devices, especially the pharmaceutical industry. If you're going to include banned medications then the top of the list in your next video should be Thalidomide. What it did was absolutely tragic, it was banned decades ago yet people are still suffering and living with severe disabilities to this day. Thousands of families destroyed and lives lost too.
An easy tie for that Lithium and ketamine for acute depression. Lithium can cause all kinds of awful problems including brain damage. It was based incomplete science, and families desperate to provide reliefe to people suffering from depression. The other one that's just as criminal is the massive, massive failure of the diabetese medication and the abject failure of any goverment to keep a private company from raping patience, all because fairly well wide spread condition.
In a tragic way, thalidomide tragedy was the wake up call and the start of modern system of pharmacovigilance. I am sure bextra victim will be higher without lessons learned from that tragedy.
17:45 an aviator here. I don’t wanna be the party pooper, but if a plane crashes, it doesn’t necessarily end up being fatal, there have been more plane crashed where (almost) everyone survived than being fatal. The 737 MAX’ had problems with their sensors and a coding bug in the system that should keep everyone safe, resulting in it going into a nosedive. Anyways, I love your videos and theres always something to learn about :) I’m sorry for my commentary above, but I just wanted to note this.
Tata nano was not banned, but it didn't had good impression not because of the fire and also there were only few cases of it catching fire. But it failed because it was so narrow, small and light weight that it would tip over at high speeds on highway.
Ironically, the most violent version of manhunt 2 was on the family friendly wii. It was censored on the executions, but the motion control for the kills was next level.
Ok for the peloton one they actually fixed it. About half a year ago after they started noticing the safety issues, they added a code you had to know in order to even get the treadmill to work. But yeah I could definitely see the treadmill leading to many safety problems still Edit: also they made a new model of the treadmill that is still being sold
For the 737 Max, I think a big reason why it was sped through FAA approval since both the update to the Airbus A320 neo and more importantly, the Airbus A220 which was originally designed, engineered and manufactured by the Canadian company Bombardier as the "Bombardier CS series". These were much more fuel efficient than the Boeing 737 and US airlines such as Delta made huge orders for this advanced aircraft. There seemed to be some backroom deals done by Boeing and the FAA where they first banned the aircraft not for any safety reasons, but because they said the Canadian government helped with investment (Which apparently the US government never does for Boeing and their numerous defence contracts /s). Eventually Airbus partnered with Bombardier and assembles some parts of the plane in their Alabama plant. It's a very well designed plane, and rather than innovate and compete, Boeing tried to weasel their dangerous plane onto the market. Airbus saw the value and innovations of the plane and partnered with, and then bought up Bombardier's passenger plane division. (Makes it cheaper to produce now since Airbus has way more buying power than Bombardier)
Airbus got a looooot of business out of it so at least there was one winner. Honestly prefer flying on Airbus. Most of the Boeing planes in Australia are quite outdated.
@@JamesTK Yeah, Boeing doesn't want to invest in innovation it seems anymore and decided to use protectionism to fight against innovation. (and then causing people to die as a result).
Another issue was that they skimped on backup sensors on the 737 max so that if one sensor was faulty and therefore tried to adjust things there wasn't a secondary sensor to stop this. As such the autopilot would adjust things erroneously taking control away from the pilots at critical junctures.
There was also another problem with the fit-bit, when some of the straps would irritate your skin and leave a rash and still the company hasn't dealt with it yet.
reminds me of a "trophy case" i saw in a hospital, full of things that had to be surgically removed... one was a Lawn Dart. there was also a shelf bracket that had been "pop-riveted" to someone's hand. but ALL the rest were fishing lures.
Also with the Boeing case the ceo simply tried to brush it off with pilot error, saying their training wasn’t good enough, and eventually resigning but taking a huge amount of money out of it. Plus Boeing WAS known for their incredible quality, but with wanting to keep up with airbus they rushed orders just leaving mistakes as if they weren’t there leading to even more backlash.
Even among aviation fan, many still use that same argument, basically supercharged by a dose of american exceptionalism and racism considering the most famous accident happened in Ethiopia and Indonesia.
I do that but I turn it to low. The few times I forgot, it got warm and I woke up because it felt like someone was scratching my leg…it was the heat. Never burned myself tho so idk how anyone can sleep with a blanket on high let alone not feel of their on fire 😳
I live in Ireland, and my dad managed to get a copy of the manhunt game when it came out. Presumably before it was banned. We still have it, and honestly it’s still pretty shocking that this game was ever released.
Firemaker125 Eh, I mean it just depends on how used to violent games you are I guess. I’m not super used to them, and I found it really bad. But people that play and see that type of thing more might find it less shocking. It’s really subjective, to be honest.
@@carafeeley The sound effects are the main brutal parts. Outside of that, it’s all minor body damage and heads exploding. It’s brutal, but it’s not as bad as people acted.
The inclusion of Bextra reminds me how pharmaceutical companies convinced doctors that opioids were not as dangerous as previously thought and convinced doctors to focus on their patients comfort (as in, freely prescribe dangerous and highly addictive pain relievers that were previously reserved for the terminally ill). This basically turned physicians into legalized heroin dealers, greatly to the benefit of pharma's profits. Many died, families/lives ruined, stocks soared, lawsuits fought, fines paid, and business as usual. I'd think that would be a huge fail (except for those that benefited).
9:00 the fact that it is prefectly legal for people to take your picture in public places, and now you have to deal with companies selling your picture for "market research" is unsettling.
Hey Aaron, can you sometime compile a list of all the sponsors you've partnered with so far. I've seen your video where you mentioned how you decide to partner with a product and I find them actually useful. But it's hard to keep a track of all so if you squeeze all of them at one place, that'd be great.
5:21 The more bigger failure was how they marketed it. The only branding they did was how cheap it was. Hence many didnt wanna to buy the car because the neighbourhood would think they were poor
About the Boeing: there was a flaw in the coding so basically they used this software to like see if the nose was too high up of the plane to correct it, but the problem was it was only tested in military planes like hornet, so the plane corrected the angle too much and made it dive straight to the ground since the system thought the plane was in danger
Also they only used one AoA sensor for the MCAS. Even a kid in his mother's basement would think that you'd need at least two... in case one of the sensors fail. The NTSC discovered that on the LionAir plane, the AoA sensor had been miscalibrated before the accident and it was therefore faulty. This was why Dennis Muilenberg (then the CEO of Boeing) initially blamed the crash on pilot error (really though? What reference did they have to troubleshoot MCAS, you didn't mention any of it in the checklist) and mistakes by LionAir maintenance crews. The Eithiopian Air crash was what really turned the screw on the program. If it was just one crash I'm pretty sure the design flaw would have only been discovered incognito and rectified without anyone knowing about it, but the second crash made the suspicion seem more credible. Apparently the Ethiopian plane also did have a miscalibrated AoA sensor (there are also more controversies surrounding the second crash; the NTSB disagreed with the EAIB regarding the conclusion of their final report, believing that a bird hit the plane before MCAS misactivated) but it doesn't change the fact that Boeing is absolutely culpable for the design flaw of MCAS which they stalled on rectifying and tried to hide from the type checklists because they didn't want the MAX to incur extra pilot training costs.
3:05 Now here’s the main problem with this, Polaris isn’t mainly at fault here. If anything the manufacturers at the dealership that sell the OHVs are at fault. This is because the OHVs do not come fully built when they are delivered to a dealership, the mechanics have to wire the power and put on the roll cage that goes on top of the OHV if it comes with one . The OHV only comes with the whole body itself that’s delivered. The mechanics/dealer manufacturers still have to put some of the parts together in order for it to work.
The problem with fitting touchscreens is going through different menus to adjust or turn something on, which is far more distracting than using a mobile-phone in your vehicle!
Love your videos mate. The editing, the energy, the audio, BGM, cinematography, colours, everything. I know this makes me a textbook nerd, but I literally watch your videos to relax. I Am loosing weight with you. Have lost 7 kgs since july.
Im dead serious when I say that you could make a whole video on fork and I'll run to my phone the second I get the notification that you upload that video ❤️ All of the effort you put into your videos is really paying off. Im sure I'm not the only one who think that. Keep it up king👑 Love your work and your vids are making my day ❤️😊
5:57 If you have battery that bloated then don't keep it in a room with you or your kids. Not only that can catch fire, but also it leaks very toxic fumes! That's bad -bad!
When you say Tesla had to recall those cars, does that mean they had to take the cars back, or just that they had to push out a software update? I haven't heard of this specific instance, but I know that Tesla often "recalls" their cars in legal terms, but that practically speaking it means "we pushed out a software update the next day."
It was OTA software Update. Tesla fixes most of the issues with Over the Air Update. Saying 'Recall" for evs makes it sound so stupid and makes people no more want EVs.
That's just the governent legal term that every car manufacturer has to use. Originally it meant something must be fixed by mechanic. But with connected computers, stuff can get fixed remotely these days.
For me personally the hearthrate monitor was actually the most scary of them all. I mean the fact that someone could literally control your heart is extremly insane.
Not extremely relevant, but in the TV series Fringe, there was a guy that was claiming he was fixing all sleep problems, however in real life it was just stealing their dreams, not only making them much more aggressive / problematic in life (since they can't get refreshed by having dreams, that's a huge part of our sleep system actually) but also he could drive them mad for a little bit, which of course enough to kill everybody around lol. Yeah, I love that show :D
You should have included the drug/substance Thalidomide in this video. It tops most other medical disasters, but mostly made its mark in Europe I believe. 10 000 births with (severe) defects and an unknown number of deaths.
And Canada, it really only got stopped in the states by one really awesome person- Frances Oldham Kelsey - she stood her ground and prevented it from getting clearance
(better?) known as "Contergan" in Europe, in case anyone wants to look up videos on that topic (there are a few good ones out there, I only recently watched the one by Plainly difficult, which I can recommend).
As a kid in the 70s, I remember a couple of a neighbors playing a safely conducted game of lawn darts. I was still scared of the big pointy ends of those darts. I didn't want to get near their game. Didn't surprise me when I later heard of bans on them.
7:53 Imagine having control of ur own heart consciously. And having some power profiles like power saving, performance, auto, manual, etc. With a heart rate slider on your phone which you can toggle on your phone to actively control your heart rate. Kinda is steroids on another level.
4:24 also...a kid killed another kid in US (i maybe am wrong of the location) mimicking an exact killing scene from manhunt 2...probably one of the few cases where games directly inspired a murder
Lithium batteries are a fire waiting to happen. I have had bulging batteries from Samsung, Nikon and Apple. If they had cracked then the damp air would have caused them to ignite! Half a ton of batteries in a BEV is very dangerous. Almost impossible to put the fire out.
Yooo, long time no see! Just so you're updated, I've spent the last week in North Carolina, and I've filmed no less than 3 BIG videos that are all dropping this July 🔥
For more Tech Fails: th-cam.com/video/IErvIekMD3U/w-d-xo.html
finally, youre back! cant wait for the videos
Amazing content 🔥
Great! thanks for these amazing videos
Yo
Ok
“The developers of the SMTH app are actually the repair workers for the phones”
No wonder
😂😂😂
Nice lateral thinking bro
Why do I enjoy watching dangerous fails 😅
Why the “?
Arun: "This product killed over a hundred people"
Also Arun: "7 out of 10"
He rated 7 out of 10 because that was how much of a fail it was
@@henry-thang excellant logic use sir
Well it was a 7/10 fail, so that’s a pretty bad rating
That's because the 10/10 killed nearly 400
100/100
I had one of those pacemakers. I kept asking about getting it updated, and my cardiologist kept telling me that I didn't need to update it. Evidently the update could stop your heart from beating for a certain amount of time, and they were worried about that with me, since I was (and still am) totally dependent on a machine to keep my heart pumping. It got replaced with a different model pacemaker because the battery was almost gone, so my tech is now updated, finally. :/
Thank goodness for that!
@@Mrwhosetheboss reply plss😊
@@furyroad1781 Insensitive much? Get a life.
@@furyroad1781 ah yes, the fatherless person who wanted to get noticed by a content creator.
Do you still have it implanted? If so isn’t it scary that it might just fail and kill you?
the peloton treadmill incident was a throwback. when i was a toddler, i stuck my hand under my father's treadmill while it was still running. at 25, i still have scars.
Jesus, glad you ended up okay
i guess they banned treadmills since
as a grownup toddler minded i am now terrified
@@evergreen7260 just make sure kiddos are away from treadmills until they're old enough to use them (or at least avoid them. if you're using a treadmill, keep kiddos away, and id probably advise unplugging a treadmill when it's out of use, bc sometimes mechanisms have randoms spurts of juice, even when they're on, or a kiddo can turn it on unintentionally. even better, id put it somewhere safe where it's unlikely to fall over on someone, and just pull it out when it gets used. that being said, listen to an Expert over someone who stuck their hand in a treadmill when they were little lol.
So you're why they have those shields.
Arun: "This product destroyed the entirety of Earth"
Also Arun: "6 out of 10 fail"
copied idea
@nkr dinla its fun not a fail
Selfie sticks: 7 out of 10 fail
@@Krypticaal true but some countries outright banned it because of the gore
@@sk1zlet I know
Samsung: tries to never mention the explosive galaxy, hoping everyone forgets about it
Arun: releases a video annually mentioning the phone
Exactly what i was thinking lmaoo, samsung when they stumble across this video: Uh rubbing salt on wounds are we
💀
lmao
Yeah Samsung will probably get hate from the Samaung haters for this phone
and also conveniently forgetting the same issue happened with macbooks
Arun: '' this product was so terrible it gave random people a button to kill anyone they wanted with complete anonymity''
also Arun: '' 6/10 ''
Simple because no one did get killed from it
If it were to happen it would shot up to 9/1or 10/10 besides 6/10 isnt like a school grade
6/10 still means extremly Fd up but didnt kill over 300 pepole like the 10/10
@@Inksploded still
Seems like a good stealth kill for hitmen
@@7ninekrueg573 let me introduce to you a first Watch_Dog game :D
Arun "this device can kill your baby 5/10"
He meant a 5/10 fail, not 5/10 good!
@ALF2003official makes no difference, something getting a 5/10 fail when it resulted in actual deaths of kids insane, especially if followed by selfie sticks that mainly failed d/t human stupidity rated 8/10
I'm always confused by his rating system lol
@amandaclbn8324 I don't think any baby's were hurt I think?
@@MICHAEL_8191 don't remember and not willing to re-watch the video 😂 I'll take your word for it
Yeah
The treadmill tech reminds me how big of a responsibility a product creator takes upon before thinking to release the product in the market.
Accurate! lmao
Tbh hard to call it a failure ...More like irresponsible parenting..
You are right but I think the parents were mostly at fault there. Why would any responsible adult leave a child on/near an operating treadmill?
Not tech fail. Just dumb kids and even dumber parents.
Hey let's make a cool product with great tech...oh forgot to make it idiot proof!
People will never accept responsibilty for there actions because they are allowed to blame others and get paid to do so. That was absolutely the parents fault.
Arun: "This product is a nuclear bomb which destroyed the entire observable universe"
Also Arun: "A solid 3.5 out of 10"
also arun: "This video game was buggy, which is obviously a 9/10"
The Abbott Pacemaker sounds like part of the game "Watchdogs", where you literally have to hack the big bad's pacemaker to kill him... Kinda scary that that actually was a real possibility at some point...
there's also this game called hacknet that have one mission for you to hack a pacemaker connected to wifi
the very same thing Arun said happened at once, you upload a test routine into that pacemaker so it will pump victim's heart at 300bpm then suddenly reduce it to 50, then go 300 again
Actually all Pacemakers can be hacked, hence why it was in watchdogs. The issue with Abbott Pacemaker was that all you needed was a simple remote bought online.
litterly i thought of that when i saw that
I was gona comment the same lol
@@vixter_ a lot of pacemaker is not really hackable since it doesn't connect to anything
watch dogs and hacknet one is CONNECTED TO *INTERNET*
My friend got manhunt 2. He played it once and then hid it from himself. He had terrible nightmares for almost months and needed a therapist. Definitely deserved to be banned. (Don’t worry, he’s ok now. At the time he was a dumb teen)
Is he ok?
@@lydianorris8124 he’s OK now he got over it after like eight months
You know there are content warnings in video games, right?
@@MoeruGoRoundwhen was the last time you took one seriously?
@@froggotheboi 10 years ago I guess?
Both Manhunt games created a bunch of controversy. I think the main reson for Manhunt 2 getting banned and censored was because you were supposed to swing your arms with the Wiimote in a way that was similar to killing someone. I did see some news report and the host looked shocked beyond belief. But then again most NEWS programs show videogames as the most dangerous device in your home.
Tbh the whole point of manhunt 2 is that a psicopath director is making you kill people for is movie critising the over abondance of violence in movies
I mean, it was in like 2007. I bet if they released a similar game now, no one would give a shite. Some have gotten extremely gory and no one cares.
still one of the best games I've ever played when i was a kid 🤫 one thing i learned from playing violent video games is that you're making a clear line between reality and fantasy, yeah i am brutally killing someone in a video game but i legit got scared when i was holding plastic knife at a sandwich making class in 1st grade so yeah win-win situation.
@@thenamesfidel
same, I played Manhunt 2 on my psp a crap ton when I was 7
The game was Rockstars way of saying fuck you to game censorship
Man, I seriously love this series and the fact that you buy these failed products, steps thing up a notch.
lmao i just imagined him buying a 737 max 😂
@@radi709 Yeah. Very funny😅🤣🤣🤣
@@radi709 yy TTY than mah thangham tnaan than y yy
@@aadhilrilwan5975 godzilla had a stroke and f*****g died trying to read that
Goofy ah thumbnail
10:35
This is a common misconception. While part of the reason was the battery being too thin, the main issue was a manufacturing defect in the corner of most of the batteries at launch, which was a tiny dent in the top (left?) corner. This would cause the battery to eventually short out, as the dent caused both terminals to eventually touch each other. Most people's phones were exploding while fast charging, which was likely due to the increased power going through the battery, and lithium-ion batteries do not take well to being shorted out like that.
Edit: Normally defects of that scale would be perfectly fine, and would never cause issues, but they made the battery too thin, meaning it shorted it out easier. Just wanted to clarify that.
It's not a note 7 it's a fan editon because it's running samsung home editon and the note 7 didn't get that update
My pixel 7 had the same defect
13:54 that image is absolutely terrifying for some reason
That is straight up manslaughter
Yh
I remember seeing the Nano all over the place. The problems you mentioned weren't it's only downsides tho, it wasn't the strongest from what I know. This one time, I was going back home from school in the school bus. This nano came in like a snail, rammed into us, our bus drove away and what I saw behind was the car with a dent so big. Like the whole front was curved inward lmao and the lady driving was just flabbergasted
@@happymaguire7806 what's that supposed to mean-
@@happymaguire7806 oh look, random unwarranted sexism.
@@mojo200 what did he say??
Flabbergasted: greatly surprised or astonished.
@@Blue967 I mean, she didn't look scared or confused at all, just surprised about what just happened. I just picked the word that matched. If it didn't, idk, I'm not a native English speaker
The smile Arun had while declaring "Now is when things get fatal". He is the one who would support the terminators, for the tech of it.
For real lol.
"But NOW, is when things get FATAL. 😃😃"
_"A kid was sucked under a treadmill and died"_
Arun: I'll give it 7 out of 10.
it was the only case, the plane killed hundreds of people
7 is still bad yknow
@@Some_CTGuy Some of you just can't get the irony, ha?
@@ThompterSHunson He gave it a high score bc of how bad it is.
@@lunix3259 the comment is basically sayin that the rating wasnt high enough
I guess you could say
“The Samsung note7 has 97 mental illnesses and is banned from most public spaces.”
12:25 Arun really said “yeah one kid died from this treadmill, imma just give it a 7/10”
That's still a death. A terrible thing to be caused by a consumer product.
It's failure point 7/10 is very bad
@@Photo0021The higher stuff up on the list killed more people, the ratings are relative. 7 is still too low imo
13:40 (The dart)
When I was 4, I got hit on my right eye by a similar one of those, but for my luck, it had a plastic point.
I call luck because it didn't gouge my eye out but all else was an issue.
It aggravated my eye sight with a real bad keratocon and even after a corneal transplant, the issue persists to this day (29 years later), making me being a slave for rigid lenses just to be able to properly see anything with my right eye.
Ur are a pirate (NO OFFENCE)
@@Icecream_MSM None taken.
And yeaaahh xD
I love torrenting stuff. So the bad eye fits it too well.
@@dlib89 k so dose it still hurt
@@Icecream_MSM Rarely. It just bothers me that I have a real bad astigmatism that causes double vision.
Astigmatism causes a "ghost image" of all you see.
Since I also have it duplicated, it makes quite hard to see.
But a rigid lens fix both of those issues, allowing me to have near perfect eyesight.
You can partially see where the dart hit my eye, on the corner, it damaged the cornea and the transplant didn't fully cover the damaged part.
@@dlib89 double vision is common without injures
Arun will never let any tech fail be forgotten by history hahah, cant wait for videos in july :)
Ayyyy
It is july
@@seb2208 heh
Can't wait for covid vaccines in a few years when all the data comes out
@@almomedvedec896 bruhh
Who immediately set out to find man hunt 2 just because its banned 😂
Tictok is going to be banned i dounlond it
For the last one - there's a little more about it.
The problem is that Boeing wanted to rush the plane out and touted the MAX as a direct replacement to the 737, with no additional training needed. However, because of the engine being placed right on the wing instead of under the wing, the thrust would naturally make the 737 MAX nose up more than the 737, so they used software to adjust the flaps automatically, bringing the nose down to emanate the 737. The issue of the crashes was caused by that software misenterpeting incoming data, and automatically taking the plane down regardless of how hard the pilots tried to pitch up.
All because a competitor was releasing a plane they thought would outcompete the Boeing 737. It's even more of a tragedy than is presented here.
EDIT: not the flaps, the trim was being adjusted
Small correction, it was adjusting the trim, not the flaps.
If anyone's wondering, the 737 lineup is more than 50 years old.
And according to rules, if a plane's next iteration doesn't change too much, you don't have to be trained again for the new model, saving airlines money.
So, if you got your license on the first 737, you can fly the latest 737 Max.
This is why Boeing hasn't retired the 737 name.
@@nogoat The name doesn’t have to do anything with pilot training requirements. They kept the name for marketing purposes and because of the public trust in the well-known 737 name.
*emulate, not emanate.
@@Martuhhhh Ah, thanks.
Samsung: Trying to pretend the exploding galaxy phone never happened.
Arun: Releasing a video twice every year reminding the world of it.
while also conveniently forgetting the macbooks having the same issue and getting banned
@@grimpandaslayer8555 no MacBooks have same issue just stopp bullshiting around !
@@grimpandaslayer8555 No one in the history of tech has fucked this up as much as Samsung. He's not forgetting anything.
Arun: "This product placed easily accessible, untraceable, highly dangerous nuclear weapons in the hands of millions"
Also Arun: "This one gets a solid 5 out of 10"
Still loving how you are spending more time on each product in these roundups. Way more fun to watch, thanks!
“Lawns darts”
In Russia during USSR and some time after children used to play a game called “knives”. The idea was plain and simple: you throw a knife into a drawn circle on the ground and draw lines to the point where the knife landed to acquire field for yourself.
Such a good video. So detailed for each item, a good slow pace that doesn't bore but also doesn't go too fast... just everything. I'm so glad you heard us and changed a couple things about your videos! I missed these awesome videos.
Agreed!
This comment section is the most dumbest in entire internet. Literally every video is littered with dozens of comments like this, admiring edit and production skills. It's like those dumbos never watched a good video or a movie which were edited by professionals.
'Can we just animate it in the edit..while I leave some bad feedback on ebay'
Lol that second part
😂😂
Wow the Peloton one suprised me didn't realise that happened really bad 😭
@DON'T CLICK ON PROFILE PHOTO ok 🤣
@DON'T CLICK ON PROFILE PHOTO k cool
But isn't that one the parents fault?
its the parents fault at that point why put a treadmill where the todler can get to it. its called babyproofing.
not the company's fault some larents are stupid
To this day my favorite banned iPhone app was the secret tethering app that looked like a basic calculator that allowed you to tether other devices to your internet without going through your carrier and didn't require a jailbreak. My second favorite was the secret app store disguised as a coloring book app that let you download the premium paid apps for free again, without a jailbreak.
can you tell the names please?
@@randomodude Dang, I don't remember the coloring book one but the calculator one was called FlashArmyKnife. I had them when I had an iPhone 5S which was my last iPhone before going to Samsung. Imo 5 was the best model
@@HelloYersoGae do u think it’s still possible to acquire? sorry for asking but I want to like see it
To this day my favorite banned iPhone app was the secret tethering app that looked like a basic calculator that allowed you to tether other devices to your internet without going through your carrier and didn't require a jailbreak. My second favorite was the secret app store disguised as a coloring book app that let you download the premium paid apps for free again, without a jailbreak.
@@Theunicorn2012 bruh did you just repeat the comment
9:11 grandma is ready, she’s holding a gun❗️👵 🔫
My man started out the video rolling immediately; no fuss, no muss, we're at cruising speed already. Wished all content creators followed this example.
Hi Arun, about the 737 MAX, Boeing tried to mitigate retraining pilots to be able to make use of the 737 MAX Asap. So they fitted it with MCAS, which corrects the automatic pitch up maneuvoure due to the larger engine fitted under its wing. Unfortunately, the MCAS would often (if not always) over trim the aircraft causing it to go into an irreversible dive.
Yeah, didn't they add larger engines, but because they were larger they didn't fit in the normal location, so they also had to move them forward?
Basically, the plane should have required a new type rating due to all the changes, but boeing didn't want that as airlines didn't want to train pilots again. So instead they marketed it as the same (for pilots anyway) as the 737. And due to that, pilots were not trained on the new systems, and ultimately, died
@@midnigh7x correct, you got more info than this comment
@@midnigh7x Correct. Boeing wanted to compete with Airbus without an overhaul, and then tried to fix a hardware problem with a software. They definitely deserved the first place in this list.
They are two accidents 737 Max in Ethiopia and Indonesia
Boeing installed a faulty MCAS. And they lied about how the plane behaved like the previous generation 737-800.
Great to see you including a wider variety of stuff in these videos beyond just electronic devices, especially the pharmaceutical industry. If you're going to include banned medications then the top of the list in your next video should be Thalidomide. What it did was absolutely tragic, it was banned decades ago yet people are still suffering and living with severe disabilities to this day. Thousands of families destroyed and lives lost too.
Oh wow.. Worse than my autism and I thought I had it worse, just glad I'm alive I should be thankful for even being here this day.
YES!!
An easy tie for that Lithium and ketamine for acute depression. Lithium can cause all kinds of awful problems including brain damage. It was based incomplete science, and families desperate to provide reliefe to people suffering from depression.
The other one that's just as criminal is the massive, massive failure of the diabetese medication and the abject failure of any goverment to keep a private company from raping patience, all because fairly well wide spread condition.
In a tragic way, thalidomide tragedy was the wake up call and the start of modern system of pharmacovigilance. I am sure bextra victim will be higher without lessons learned from that tragedy.
what did it do?
17:45 an aviator here. I don’t wanna be the party pooper, but if a plane crashes, it doesn’t necessarily end up being fatal, there have been more plane crashed where (almost) everyone survived than being fatal. The 737 MAX’ had problems with their sensors and a coding bug in the system that should keep everyone safe, resulting in it going into a nosedive.
Anyways, I love your videos and theres always something to learn about :) I’m sorry for my commentary above, but I just wanted to note this.
Another aviator and I agree with u on this, keep flying dude!
This guy is amazing! Never fails to entertain us😂
6:06 grate idea to get rid of any mistake
Tata nano was not banned, but it didn't had good impression not because of the fire and also there were only few cases of it catching fire. But it failed because it was so narrow, small and light weight that it would tip over at high speeds on highway.
Its one of a many reasons.
@@rustamravi1039 nano is still better than ford figo and duster
@@rustamravi1039 it's far better than a Suzuki Alto with its coke can build nano was built tough and is by far a cheapest car to maintain
@@atulyatejapadival330 not true at all. Its build quality is horrible. Discontinuation of it,is for greater good.
You know that the 737 fail is bad when Arun updates the Theranos incident from a 10/10 fail to a 9/10 fail
It's quite literally a plane crashing which is some of the most tragic disasters that can take place
Beoing 737 Max then: Not enough tests.
Boeing 737 Max now: Still not enough tests!
Ironically, the most violent version of manhunt 2 was on the family friendly wii. It was censored on the executions, but the motion control for the kills was next level.
Fans uncensored PSP, so maybe with Wii as well.
Ok for the peloton one they actually fixed it. About half a year ago after they started noticing the safety issues, they added a code you had to know in order to even get the treadmill to work. But yeah I could definitely see the treadmill leading to many safety problems still
Edit: also they made a new model of the treadmill that is still being sold
Even that is a joke since without a subscription the treadmill is a literal boat anchor
For the 737 Max, I think a big reason why it was sped through FAA approval since both the update to the Airbus A320 neo and more importantly, the Airbus A220 which was originally designed, engineered and manufactured by the Canadian company Bombardier as the "Bombardier CS series". These were much more fuel efficient than the Boeing 737 and US airlines such as Delta made huge orders for this advanced aircraft. There seemed to be some backroom deals done by Boeing and the FAA where they first banned the aircraft not for any safety reasons, but because they said the Canadian government helped with investment (Which apparently the US government never does for Boeing and their numerous defence contracts /s). Eventually Airbus partnered with Bombardier and assembles some parts of the plane in their Alabama plant. It's a very well designed plane, and rather than innovate and compete, Boeing tried to weasel their dangerous plane onto the market.
Airbus saw the value and innovations of the plane and partnered with, and then bought up Bombardier's passenger plane division. (Makes it cheaper to produce now since Airbus has way more buying power than Bombardier)
Airbus got a looooot of business out of it so at least there was one winner. Honestly prefer flying on Airbus. Most of the Boeing planes in Australia are quite outdated.
Bombardier is a really nice company to work with tho
@@JamesTK Yeah, Boeing doesn't want to invest in innovation it seems anymore and decided to use protectionism to fight against innovation. (and then causing people to die as a result).
Another issue was that they skimped on backup sensors on the 737 max so that if one sensor was faulty and therefore tried to adjust things there wasn't a secondary sensor to stop this. As such the autopilot would adjust things erroneously taking control away from the pilots at critical junctures.
I just went on an Airbus and a Boeing (specifically Airbus A330 and Boeing 757) in the same day. This was quite interesting.
10:56 when he said “planes, trains” I was really hoping he would say automobiles
Bruh imagine.
2:42 That right there... That small hiss sound is the sound of utter disappointment... The sigh is the cherry on top..
There was also another problem with the fit-bit, when some of the straps would irritate your skin and leave a rash and still the company hasn't dealt with it yet.
That’s not FitBits fault. Either you’re having an allergic reaction or the strap is on way to tight
well that is the only current problem i have, but its fixable by just buying a new strap
Probably should’ve put a before .
Get better skin
even apple watches has that problem..buy strap that suits your skin
Any fail that caused death is a 10/10
IF it was due to user error and not the device, then it isn't. If the device is the cause, then no, follow Spinal Tap's model, 11/10
I remember lawn darts here in the UK, I was so jealous of my friends that had them - now I'm kind of glad I didn't have them!
KIND OF??
@@yungmo1599 Well, yeah - it looked really fun... :D
I had lawn darts in the 80's. Never had any issues with them as simply used common sense when playing with them.
reminds me of a "trophy case" i saw in a hospital, full of things that had to be surgically removed...
one was a Lawn Dart.
there was also a shelf bracket that had been "pop-riveted" to someone's hand.
but ALL the rest were fishing lures.
@@Vormulac1 Yeah if you're careful they could be pretty fun. But most of us don't go outside anymore :(
Also with the Boeing case the ceo simply tried to brush it off with pilot error, saying their training wasn’t good enough, and eventually resigning but taking a huge amount of money out of it. Plus Boeing WAS known for their incredible quality, but with wanting to keep up with airbus they rushed orders just leaving mistakes as if they weren’t there leading to even more backlash.
Even among aviation fan, many still use that same argument, basically supercharged by a dose of american exceptionalism and racism considering the most famous accident happened in Ethiopia and Indonesia.
Using a electric blanket while SLEEPING? That is madness...
If you got fucked up joints bones etc sometimes it’s a requirement for sleep.
I do that but I turn it to low. The few times I forgot, it got warm and I woke up because it felt like someone was scratching my leg…it was the heat.
Never burned myself tho so idk how anyone can sleep with a blanket on high let alone not feel of their on fire 😳
I can tell you are not a victim of certain chronic ailments...
bro summoned the entire aviation community with the last one 😂
Arun: "This product killed 150 people"
Also Arun: "8/10 Fail"
The higher the score the worst it is
That's still pretty balanced
2:51 That rocket is a failure itself 😂😂😂😂
I live in Ireland, and my dad managed to get a copy of the manhunt game when it came out. Presumably before it was banned. We still have it, and honestly it’s still pretty shocking that this game was ever released.
Is it really? It’s not that brutal; hell, even at the time it wasn’t that violent. Modern games can be a lot worse.
Firemaker125 Eh, I mean it just depends on how used to violent games you are I guess. I’m not super used to them, and I found it really bad. But people that play and see that type of thing more might find it less shocking. It’s really subjective, to be honest.
@@carafeeley The sound effects are the main brutal parts. Outside of that, it’s all minor body damage and heads exploding. It’s brutal, but it’s not as bad as people acted.
you are my favorite TH-camr, your videos are just too interesting to see
The inclusion of Bextra reminds me how pharmaceutical companies convinced doctors that opioids were not as dangerous as previously thought and convinced doctors to focus on their patients comfort (as in, freely prescribe dangerous and highly addictive pain relievers that were previously reserved for the terminally ill). This basically turned physicians into legalized heroin dealers, greatly to the benefit of pharma's profits. Many died, families/lives ruined, stocks soared, lawsuits fought, fines paid, and business as usual. I'd think that would be a huge fail (except for those that benefited).
imagine having a heart-pacer attached to you which you paid thousands of dollars for, just to know it was faulty. 💀💀
It was not faulty per se (like it performed its function well) but was vulnerable to hacking by ppl wanting you to die.
dude lemme turn on the ac real quick ,its hot in here *dies of heart attack*
@@ciubciubpl Fuckk
9:00 the fact that it is prefectly legal for people to take your picture in public places, and now you have to deal with companies selling your picture for "market research" is unsettling.
I think it's illegal in a few places. It's infringing on privacy I think.
@@MochoStudiosYTits illegal in my country probably lol
i just love how most of these products on the list were recalled due to overheating
Hey Aaron, can you sometime compile a list of all the sponsors you've partnered with so far.
I've seen your video where you mentioned how you decide to partner with a product and I find them actually useful.
But it's hard to keep a track of all so if you squeeze all of them at one place, that'd be great.
subtitles spell it like Aaron that why he probably got aruns name wrong
Why would he do that?
It should be ARUN
5:21 The more bigger failure was how they marketed it. The only branding they did was how cheap it was. Hence many didnt wanna to buy the car because the neighbourhood would think they were poor
Arun will never let any tech fail to be forgotten. Can’t wait for the July videos :)
Woah… your comment is so genuine that I litterally just saw the original comment with 2 hour gap. :)
@@Instabruh.User.. I don't even know you.
@@Instabruh.User.. Comments are content as well, and it's bad in my opinion. Keep up the _great_ work I guess.
I love that youtube has recommend to me your channel
About the Boeing: there was a flaw in the coding so basically they used this software to like see if the nose was too high up of the plane to correct it, but the problem was it was only tested in military planes like hornet, so the plane corrected the angle too much and made it dive straight to the ground since the system thought the plane was in danger
Also they only used one AoA sensor for the MCAS. Even a kid in his mother's basement would think that you'd need at least two... in case one of the sensors fail.
The NTSC discovered that on the LionAir plane, the AoA sensor had been miscalibrated before the accident and it was therefore faulty. This was why Dennis Muilenberg (then the CEO of Boeing) initially blamed the crash on pilot error (really though? What reference did they have to troubleshoot MCAS, you didn't mention any of it in the checklist) and mistakes by LionAir maintenance crews. The Eithiopian Air crash was what really turned the screw on the program. If it was just one crash I'm pretty sure the design flaw would have only been discovered incognito and rectified without anyone knowing about it, but the second crash made the suspicion seem more credible.
Apparently the Ethiopian plane also did have a miscalibrated AoA sensor (there are also more controversies surrounding the second crash; the NTSB disagreed with the EAIB regarding the conclusion of their final report, believing that a bird hit the plane before MCAS misactivated) but it doesn't change the fact that Boeing is absolutely culpable for the design flaw of MCAS which they stalled on rectifying and tried to hide from the type checklists because they didn't want the MAX to incur extra pilot training costs.
“Have you had a Fitbit?” *nervously looks over to the Fitbit on my left wrist*
Me in that situation: *Screaming*
3:05 Now here’s the main problem with this, Polaris isn’t mainly at fault here. If anything the manufacturers at the dealership that sell the OHVs are at fault. This is because the OHVs do not come fully built when they are delivered to a dealership, the mechanics have to wire the power and put on the roll cage that goes on top of the OHV if it comes with one . The OHV only comes with the whole body itself that’s delivered. The mechanics/dealer manufacturers still have to put some of the parts together in order for it to work.
Wouldn’t that still be the fault of Polaris, though? It sounds like they forgot to mention either the proper torque specification or thread sealant.
@@spod2998 No, because dealer employees are trained by the dealer high rankings who are told how to assemble them correctly. But some people fuck up.
I got a Verizon ad as soon as you hit the table at 7:12
0:49 I find it kinda hard to describe a screen larger than those on most laptops as minimalist.
When nothing but the screen 😊
The problem with fitting touchscreens is going through different menus to adjust or turn something on, which is far more distracting than using a mobile-phone in your vehicle!
Love your videos mate. The editing, the energy, the audio, BGM, cinematography, colours, everything. I know this makes me a textbook nerd, but I literally watch your videos to relax. I Am loosing weight with you. Have lost 7 kgs since july.
Ikr the videos have gotten so much better
Wow that's awesome
Entertaining as always! You and your team work so hard and it shows! Just take care of yourself ;)
17:40 one of the crashes was lion air flight 610, this plane crashed because of a takeoff software malfunction
3:48 I thought this is related to a bathroom LOL 🤣
4:45 that car still exists here lmfao
There are a lot of disastrous tech fails, but Arun is definitely not one of them. Keep them amazing content coming! 🔥
Smooth
Is he the real mrwhosetheboss or is it scam.
Pls can anyone say I got the same msg and I even paid so pls help me
@@dineshkrishna803 that is a comment bot who spams mrwhosetheboss videos. it's a scam; try to get your money back in any way possible
@@cubecoyote6979 how can i get it back
@@dineshkrishna803 bro forget it you can't get it bk it's gone forever
10:06 they want you to feel the burn literally
3:30 🤣🤣🤣 I think they didn’t even test their vehicle 🤣
Man it's hilarious... Imagine your steering wheel comes off out of no where 💀
ohio logic
:]
This is such a good video, Arun. The amount of research, locations, and editing that this video needed is enormous. Thank you for doing this 👌❤️
such a good video about things that were or never should be 'banned' as per the title?
Im dead serious when I say that you could make a whole video on fork and I'll run to my phone the second I get the notification that you upload that video ❤️
All of the effort you put into your videos is really paying off. Im sure I'm not the only one who think that. Keep it up king👑
Love your work and your vids are making my day ❤️😊
Yaaas. Tech cutlery video! xD But… maybe. ^^
your videos are the best, I love watching them when I'm angry, they always calm me down in my opinion, the best creator
5:57 If you have battery that bloated then don't keep it in a room with you or your kids. Not only that can catch fire, but also it leaks very toxic fumes! That's bad -bad!
exactly...
Can we just appreciate the great quality content every time he posts a vid. Legend
Even having watched the full video, I still think that the pace maker is the biggest 10/10 on the list.
I’ve seen that part, and it’s a mega yikes.
Electric blankets are the worst invention, you’re telling me that people can’t wait 5 minutes to let their own body heat warm up
you're telling me you've never woken up freezing cold in the middle of the night? they're big in places that don't have indoor heating
When you say Tesla had to recall those cars, does that mean they had to take the cars back, or just that they had to push out a software update? I haven't heard of this specific instance, but I know that Tesla often "recalls" their cars in legal terms, but that practically speaking it means "we pushed out a software update the next day."
It was OTA software Update. Tesla fixes most of the issues with Over the Air Update. Saying 'Recall" for evs makes it sound so stupid and makes people no more want EVs.
@@dconnectzone Well saying 'recall' did not end Ford, so calm down.
@@camogap7392 he's right tho, in that context it does sound stupid.
That's just the governent legal term that every car manufacturer has to use. Originally it meant something must be fixed by mechanic. But with connected computers, stuff can get fixed remotely these days.
D Connect Zone
Bullshit, it's no different than non ev vehicles that get recalled. By your logic no one wants non ev's.
I just love your enthusiasm... also Keep it up on that workout 😉, looking healthy
Yh thanks for commenting
7:34 you had the perfect opportunity to rickroll us
Lol
13:08
Product issue ❌
User skill issue ✅
For me personally the hearthrate monitor was actually the most scary of them all. I mean the fact that someone could literally control your heart is extremly insane.
yeah
Not extremely relevant, but in the TV series Fringe, there was a guy that was claiming he was fixing all sleep problems, however in real life it was just stealing their dreams, not only making them much more aggressive / problematic in life (since they can't get refreshed by having dreams, that's a huge part of our sleep system actually) but also he could drive them mad for a little bit, which of course enough to kill everybody around lol.
Yeah, I love that show :D
If Deus Ex tells us anything, in the future we can have a problem....
You should have included the drug/substance Thalidomide in this video. It tops most other medical disasters, but mostly made its mark in Europe I believe. 10 000 births with (severe) defects and an unknown number of deaths.
And Canada, it really only got stopped in the states by one really awesome person- Frances Oldham Kelsey - she stood her ground and prevented it from getting clearance
(better?) known as "Contergan" in Europe, in case anyone wants to look up videos on that topic (there are a few good ones out there, I only recently watched the one by Plainly difficult, which I can recommend).
As a kid in the 70s, I remember a couple of a neighbors playing a safely conducted game of lawn darts. I was still scared of the big pointy ends of those darts. I didn't want to get near their game. Didn't surprise me when I later heard of bans on them.
7:53 Imagine having control of ur own heart consciously. And having some power profiles like power saving, performance, auto, manual, etc. With a heart rate slider on your phone which you can toggle on your phone to actively control your heart rate. Kinda is steroids on another level.
8:00 I almost lose faith in Abbott if they hadn't act quickly about this horrific issues. Eventhough I never bought Abbott products before.
Covid test
That's heartbreaking
17:00 Theranos already got a 10/10 fail from Arun🙂
Yes, it did, but this category is more extreme than that video
@@carminepoli2045 💯 that 737 is 😵
At least the 737 MAX has a happy ending.
Lol
@@wta1518 Your statement didn’t age well 😬
I watched this video on a Samsung Chromebook so seeing the explosive galaxy note 7 made me feel like my computer was gonna blow up lol
4:24 also...a kid killed another kid in US (i maybe am wrong of the location) mimicking an exact killing scene from manhunt 2...probably one of the few cases where games directly inspired a murder
It didn't (i think) as far as i know, the copy of manhunt of that dude was a fake one.
Blaming videogame for violence shows why mental health care is so bad.. you cannot blame 1 thing for complex issues
news article?
Lithium batteries are a fire waiting to happen.
I have had bulging batteries from Samsung, Nikon and Apple.
If they had cracked then the damp air would have caused them to ignite!
Half a ton of batteries in a BEV is very dangerous. Almost impossible to put the fire out.
yup!