The most important screws EVER MADE!

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  • Опубликовано: 30 апр 2021
  • Please support me on Patreon
    / machinethinking
    website
    machinethinking.co
    The Making of a Renaissance Book (1966)
    • The Making of a Renais...
    The Various and Ingenious Machines of Captain Agostino Ramelli (Ramelli, 1588)
    archive.org/details/gri_33125...
    De Re Metallica (Agricola, 1556)
    archive.org/details/bub_gb_yP...
    De Re Metallica (Hoover (English Translation) 1912)
    archive.org/details/deremetal...
    De Architectura (Vitruvious, 1543 version)
    archive.org/details/ita-bnc-m...
    I quattro libri dell'architettura (Palladio, The Four books of Architecture, 1581 version)
    archive.org/details/gri_33125...
    Rare Book School
    rarebookschool.org/
    Internet Archive
    archive.org/
    Open Library
    openlibrary.org/
    Project Gutenberg
    www.gutenberg.org/
    Crypt background used in animations
    www.blendswap.com/blend/13097
    Printing press 3D model (JuanG3d)
    sketchfab.com/3d-models/guten...
    Ramelli Bookwheel (and chair!) Blender model: Juan Gonzalez
    sketchfab.com/juang3d
    CAD for 3D printable Bookwheel: Eruc Forsell
    Research assistance: Daniel Brownstein
    dabrownstein.com/
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @AlRoderick
    @AlRoderick 3 года назад +1120

    1530s: Dere Metallica makes things easier to copy.
    1997: Metallica tries to make things harder to copy.

    • @MartinClausen
      @MartinClausen 3 года назад +1

      Funny.

    • @Gameboygenius
      @Gameboygenius 3 года назад +32

      Ah the memories. There was a flash animation where Lars Ul-rich ranted about how money GOOD! Napster BAD!

    • @ericbeyer8229
      @ericbeyer8229 3 года назад +22

      A Napster joke? Oh wow, throw-back!

    • @Strothy2
      @Strothy2 3 года назад +2

      I'm so young I don't know what you are talking about 92er here

    • @carlospitcher4335
      @carlospitcher4335 3 года назад +16

      how about :
      1530s: Dere Metallica makes things easier to copy.
      1997: Metallica dares to make things harder to copy.
      just a thought...

  • @Jesse__H
    @Jesse__H 3 года назад +1186

    I love these youtubers who put out super rare and SUPER high-quality minidocs. It's always exciting when a new one drops. Always worth the wait.

    • @Just_Sara
      @Just_Sara 3 года назад +18

      I nearly spit out my tea when I saw he actually posted. A VERY big day!

    • @TheCulturallyLost
      @TheCulturallyLost 3 года назад +6

      I love this guys uploads, his videos are always so well produced

    • @Watchyn_Yarwood
      @Watchyn_Yarwood 3 года назад +9

      I enjoy learning about all things mechanical but even if I didn't I would watch/listen just for the narration. This guy as a very pleasant voice and excellent oratory.

    • @michaelchristensen9938
      @michaelchristensen9938 3 года назад +13

      The modeling done with the Blender software to visualize the Book Wheel for 15 seconds worth of content is very appreciated here.

    • @gangoffour6690
      @gangoffour6690 3 года назад +12

      Far superior to any of the mind numbing drivel on TV which I gave up 12 years ago. Another great video here 👍

  • @ArnoWalter
    @ArnoWalter 8 месяцев назад +70

    Gutenberg did not just combine preexisting ideas, he invented the alloy of lead and Antimon, crucial for casting letters. He invented a quick and easy method to repeatedly cast letters, because unlike Korean or Chinese, with the Latin alphabet you need a ton of vowels just for one page. He perfected the ink, so it would be quick drying, and give a crisp image. The results from Asia look spotty and cheap in comparison. And he designed the Gutenberg font himself because he knew, to be successful, the result needed to be at least as good as a scribes work. He was a true genius and did not just combine other peoples invention. The Gutenberg Bible is one of the most famous book designs in history, not because of the technology, but because of the artistic value.

    • @KaimasterXD
      @KaimasterXD 4 месяца назад +4

      Reminds me a bit of Apple. There were phone with touch screens before the iPhone and we had tablets before the iPad and neither used brand new tech but they combined and perfected everything in a way never really seen before. Sometimes a raw idea is enough to transform the world but more often than not the last 10 or even 5 percent are the hardest but also most important ones.

  • @UliTroyo
    @UliTroyo 3 года назад +370

    I love that there are so many people as excited for a new Machine Thinking video as I am.

    • @RaXXha
      @RaXXha 3 года назад +5

      I had completely forgotten that I subbed to this channel, but this was great! 😁

    • @calholli
      @calholli 3 года назад +2

      @@RaXXha Go back and watch all of his videos-- they're so good.

    • @noahfusek5896
      @noahfusek5896 3 года назад +3

      I’m a big fan of the community around this channel as no one has hit the dislike button

    • @k20nutz
      @k20nutz 3 года назад +3

      I literally said Ooooo out loud.

  • @LetsTakeWalk
    @LetsTakeWalk 3 года назад +183

    And when the world needed him the most, HE RETURNED!

  • @Mengmoshu
    @Mengmoshu 3 года назад +259

    I'm so glad that we didn't end up with The Goosemeat Bible or Project Goosemeat.

    • @kidmohair8151
      @kidmohair8151 3 года назад +8

      I suppose Good Mountain is better, but there is something to be said for the Goosemeat Bible....people might not take it so literally/seriously

    • @CBielski87
      @CBielski87 3 года назад

      @D das ze gayest scheiz i eva herd

    • @opiniondiscarded6650
      @opiniondiscarded6650 3 года назад

      Sounds tasty 😋

    • @blackmarketyardsale
      @blackmarketyardsale 3 года назад +1

      And by glad, you mean disappointed, right?

    • @markfryer9880
      @markfryer9880 3 года назад +1

      I heard that the Goodemeat Bible was a very fat read!
      Ok that was my Dad Joke for the day but cut me some slack Melbourne is into it’s 4th Lockdown in a year.
      Mark from Melbourne Australia

  • @humanrightsadvocate
    @humanrightsadvocate 3 года назад +96

    3:48 One small squeak for man, one shrill screech for mankind.

  • @shaunmodipane1
    @shaunmodipane1 3 года назад +1

    Give this man some likes! He made an entertaining 20+ min video about books and screws.

  • @mikestutt8574
    @mikestutt8574 3 года назад +2

    Your videos are one of the descendants of James Burke’s Connections series. And for that, many thanks to you and Prof. Burke!

  • @beansnrice321
    @beansnrice321 3 года назад +39

    It's funny, my mom was a typesetter for NIU press and she did a speech at a typesetters convention on this basic subject. She went from the dawn of writing and into web and multi media, as well however, but the centerpiece of her lecture was basically your argument here. Great stuff!

  • @awenmckee4995
    @awenmckee4995 3 года назад +4

    our man, goosemeat

  • @onesimpleclik
    @onesimpleclik 3 года назад +70

    Man, you deserve way more people supporting you on Patreon, only 34 people out of 231,000 subscribers... Come on people, support this dude!

    • @machinethinking
      @machinethinking  3 года назад +22

      The number is a bit higher, just crossed 100! Patreon takes several hours to update as people join.

    • @redstone71
      @redstone71 2 года назад +1

      @@machinethinking I missed this video. I do not remember youtube notifying me that you had posted 5 months ago. But it did notify me of your new video today. So I will sign up as this is amazing and I am honored to get to be a more direct part.

  • @tatianatub
    @tatianatub 3 года назад +32

    distributed memory that travels through time and space sounds like a awesome name for a book

  • @sinebar
    @sinebar 3 года назад +31

    I have my grandfather's old machinist handbook printed back in the 1940's. He gave it to me when I was going to engineering school. While there I took a machine shop course which probably taught me more about mechanical engineering than the course work.

  • @dinoflame9696
    @dinoflame9696 3 года назад +8

    This is one of those A-tier youtube channels.

  • @bhuuthesecond
    @bhuuthesecond Год назад +4

    I’m liking the progression the illustrators made from their good hand drawn diagrams to their insane woodcuts.

  • @HunterHogan
    @HunterHogan 3 года назад +12

    15:58 "Remember Alice? It's a song about Alice." Extremely funny, outrageously subtle, allusion.

    • @jamesslick4790
      @jamesslick4790 3 года назад +1

      👍😊👍

    • @machinethinking
      @machinethinking  3 года назад +5

      You're right that's exactly where that's from! I was looking for a sentence to fill a few moments so people could linger on the image a little longer, but also remind them this was all really about screws. That's what came to mind and I'm glad a few people picked up on it!

  • @xeigen2
    @xeigen2 3 года назад +96

    Clicked on this so fast

    • @islandfd3s
      @islandfd3s 3 года назад +2

      Finding these videos is always the highlight of my day! I'm so happy when they come out.

    • @Bibibosh
      @Bibibosh 3 года назад

      Why?

    • @kizzjd9578
      @kizzjd9578 3 года назад

      Who?

    • @SHAD0WZOMBIE
      @SHAD0WZOMBIE 3 года назад

      MACHINE THINKING! Hell yea!!!!!

  • @cuteswan
    @cuteswan 3 года назад +3

    Dang, I never knew Gutenberg had gotten _screwed_ . 😎Thanks for another fantastic lesson.

    • @WanderingDad
      @WanderingDad 3 года назад +1

      Lots of examples, good inventors aren't always brilliant businessmen.

    • @CorePathway
      @CorePathway 4 месяца назад

      Quite a twist.

  • @peterkratoska3681
    @peterkratoska3681 3 года назад +29

    Thanks for this. Coming from a family with a print tradition I enjoyed watching this. I consider Gutenbergs printing press probably the 2nd most important invention of the last millennium (along with the steam engine). I wanted to add some relevants facts on Gutenberg, he was also a goldsmith and as a goldsmith would have been familiar with the hallmark punch (which was basically a metal punch that would be used to stamp the goldsmiths insignia or initials on to his work. This allows for the big leap in making movable type - as the process involved cutting steel punches which would then be punched into forms - and those forms would then cast the movable type which was a mix of lead tin and antimony.
    Gutenberg got his name from the house that he lived in (it is known as under the roof). It was fairly common for a house to become known by a certain family name that lived there, and the name would be passed on to those living in the house at a later time even if they were unrelated. (This particular thing happened in my family when some 300 years ago one member bought a farm and later his family adopted the name, my parents visited the farm house in the 90s and the lady living there said her grandfather bought the farm in the 1870s and his name was different but even now she is known by the original family's name that lived in the house 300 years ago).
    Finally around 1450 the other major event of consequence was the conquest of Constantinople by the Ottoman Turks. This led to a flight of learned refugees, similar to the one that brought Einstein and many scientists to America as the fled the Nazis. These refugees brought many books of knowledge and science from the Greeks and printers like Aldus Manutius in Italy published them helping to spread information that had been lost to Western Europe for a long time.
    One other small factoid. Those ink pads are made of dog skin - as dogs do not have pores so they make for clean ink transfer.

    • @JelMain
      @JelMain 5 месяцев назад

      The concern about the Ottomans starts at the turn of the century. Oddly, Cardinal Pierre d'Ailly, convenor of the Council of Constance, is from the same family La Pucelle was: the one tried to end the Hundred Years War so Christendom could crusade, the other restarted it so the only crusaders were the HRE, and they were heavily defeated at Varna

  • @calholli
    @calholli 3 года назад +29

    I love this channel. You guys need to fund this man so I can watch more.

  • @inkscapevideo4271
    @inkscapevideo4271 2 года назад +1

    Watching the video explaining the ramifications of information availability while on RUclips which is arguably a superior form of information transfer

    • @0MoTheG
      @0MoTheG 2 года назад

      True, watching RUclips you can learn just about anything these days.
      BUT what was not discussed is the downside of cheap communication:
      People do not understand that no information is better than false information and that too much information is just noise and the same as no information. That is a serious problem.

  • @hedgehog3180
    @hedgehog3180 3 года назад +1

    I happened to have just started on A Canticle for Leibowitz when this video came out which is a neat coincidence since that's a book about monks trying to preserve knowledge after an apocalypse.

  • @RealWolfmanDan
    @RealWolfmanDan 3 года назад +5

    That may be the greatest description of what a book is and does I've ever heard.

  • @verdantpulse5185
    @verdantpulse5185 3 года назад +14

    My favorite book: Biringuccio's 'Pirotechnia'. His delight in the casting process still shines through half a millenium later.

  • @nickjohnson410
    @nickjohnson410 7 месяцев назад

    These videos bring new meaning to the phrase "just screwing around".

  • @skenzyme81
    @skenzyme81 3 года назад +2

    RUclips at its BEST. Thank you.

  • @Rouverius
    @Rouverius 3 года назад +30

    For me, it's pretty amazing to own a Bible in my own language that's not so cost prohibited that it had to be chained to the pulpit or locked behind a monastry door.

    • @HadleyCanine
      @HadleyCanine 3 года назад +9

      Thinking about it in terms of Bibles, probably a better example of the impact of the printing press would be Gideon's Bibles. Made for nobody in particular, with the intent of being placed where they're most likely to get stolen. You probably couldn't pay a monk enough to help with that back before the printing press, but these days they're a household name across the globe.

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 Год назад +1

      There's also the idea that one of the earliest printed English Bibles, the Tynsdale Bible, was also one of the first English "dictionaries", by default. Before then, there wasn't even a standard, agreed-upon English word for an egg!

  • @kris856
    @kris856 2 года назад +12

    Fantastic! I have just discovered your YT channel and binge watched every single video of yours. Man, these are so much more interesting and funny than any TV popular-scientific show. You deserve millions of subs and views... Thank yo from the bottom of my heart for your splendid work.

  • @gromit7573
    @gromit7573 3 года назад +6

    When I was studying at Trinity in Dublin I used to go to the Long Room (7:36).
    Being in a centre of knowledge and information older than the US declaration of Independence is a kind of feeling I just can't describe, but everyone should experience it if they have the chance.

    • @davidb6576
      @davidb6576 3 года назад

      Thank you for identifying that scene! What a magnificent design, so evocative to me of a center of knowledge...

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 Год назад

      Once I went to "Open Cambridge", viewing some of the early collections donated to the colleges by collector-monks. The USA? Some of fhose books are older than Macchu Pichu!

  • @HylanderSB
    @HylanderSB 3 года назад +8

    That you’ve gotten to 230K subs WITHOUT a Patreon is an encouraging sign for the future.

  • @7MPhonemicEnglish
    @7MPhonemicEnglish 2 года назад +3

    Yes, the printing press and the dictionary froze the English language spelling. Most damaging is the way it froze our alphabet. The basic premise of the English Alphabet is that letters represent speech sounds, however we never completed that goal. We have some letters that represent multiple speech sounds and some speech sounds represented by multiple letters (ie. C, K, Q all used for the sound at the beginning of 'cat'). We need 33 letters to represent all the speech sounds used in English including the glottal stop, so we fell 7 characters short. This failure causes a large penalty in efficiency of communication and makes it difficult to spell words where virtually ZERO difficulty would exist if we had a finished the job of creating a True Phonetic alphabet instead of a 67% completed alphabet that failed to abide by the rule - one letter per speech sound and one speech sound per letter.

    • @thegoodobserver
      @thegoodobserver Год назад +1

      Interesting comment. Never heard that before. Makes sense as 33 seems to be a magical number. Thanks for sharing.

    • @7MPhonemicEnglish
      @7MPhonemicEnglish Год назад +1

      @@thegoodobserver There are two additional vowel sounds that we use but they don't need their own letters for interesting reasons. Well, one of them is represented by the letter (L) but we call that a consonant. It's actually both, for example, in the words 'little', it's a consonant at the beginning of the word and a vowel at the end. Conveniently, the single letter (L) works well to represent both.

  • @deepindercheema4917
    @deepindercheema4917 3 года назад +12

    The green book seen at 8:50 is Tim Hunkin 'Everything you needed to know. This was his rudiments of wisdom every sunday in the Observer Magazine in the UK. Well worth getting. He also made projectile burst inflatable sheep for the Pink Floyd in '77

    • @jacobyunderhill3999
      @jacobyunderhill3999 3 года назад +2

      Tim has been releasing remastered versions of the original "Secret Life of Machines" series along with producing a new series on components on his channel.

  • @markpfeifer1402
    @markpfeifer1402 3 года назад +1

    It is now no longer books but RUclips videos that transmit specialized knowledge across society.

    • @machinethinking
      @machinethinking  3 года назад +1

      There's a short segment that I cut all about how books transformed education but I had to cut it because this one went way too long. It was the original transition into the part where I talk about how now your phone is not a book and yet all books at once. I had to record a new part to smooth that over and if you listen (not even that closely) you can hear the two different recordings.

  • @evensgrey
    @evensgrey 2 года назад +1

    Quirks of early printing technology sometimes produced strange spellings. In English, we spell the words 'love' and 'glove,' bur pronounce them 'luv' and 'gluv'. This appears to be because the first printer to set up in England and start printing English-language books in England had a glitch in his typeface that tended to close up the top of his 'u,' so he started to replace it with a more consistently printable 'o' which rapidly became the accepted spelling because it was first.

  • @lapaleves
    @lapaleves 3 года назад +4

    you never expect to get something in your eye just when you listen about Gutenberg. THAT makes everything.

  • @steelcannibal
    @steelcannibal 3 года назад +20

    YAYYYYY!!! What a wonderful surprise!

  • @klausklemens
    @klausklemens 3 года назад +42

    I live in a German city with a library from 1572. They have one of those surviving Book-wheels. The most amazing thing about the library, besides the books, is the smell. Old librarys have a very destinct smell that i find incredibly soothing. (The library en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herzog_August_Library) They have some very important books including the 2. most expencive book in the world.

    • @johnmcclain3887
      @johnmcclain3887 3 года назад +1

      Oh how I envy you!!! I've been to a couple, in my youth in Europe, and there is nothing like it I've ever experienced. I was in Naples and Barcelona, and spent time all around the Med, and later, visited as a Marine, in my travels. You must really enjoy that. I appreciate your sharing. Thanks for some fond memories, revived.

    • @techstuff9198
      @techstuff9198 2 года назад +2

      That smell is old wood pulp and the human skin oil that soaked into it. Give or take the inks' scent.

    • @evensgrey
      @evensgrey 2 года назад +6

      @@techstuff9198 Very old books are usually printed on linen rag-fiber paper. This paper is much more durable than wood pulp paper. Wood pulp paper came along when there simply wasn't enough rag fiber paper for all purposes, leading to terms like 'pulp magazine' because they were printed on cheaper wood-pulp paper. This has been a problem, because without special and complex treatment (which can be done during manufacture, producing 'archive quality' paper), wood pulp paper disintegrates from internal chemical interactions after a century or so. This has contributed to the complete loss of some texts we know were published in the early twentieth century, such as a couple of stories written by H. P. Lovecraft. We know the exact magazine issues they were published in, but there are no surviving copies and nobody transcribed or otherwise preserve the stories.

    • @swayback7375
      @swayback7375 8 месяцев назад +1

      In America our library’s smell like toxic chemicals, we would never let a building get old enough to take on a smell like that. Yuck.

  • @andrew.r.lukasik
    @andrew.r.lukasik 3 года назад +2

    Amazing story of a humble screw that could, thank you.

  • @BlueJeebs
    @BlueJeebs 3 года назад +2

    And the video you just posted on the internet explaining these effects is just as revolutionary as the printing press you've talked about!

  • @ismaelabufon1696
    @ismaelabufon1696 3 года назад +26

    Out of the billions of books ever written and made, we tend to focus only on those which we find more valuable.
    Likewise, out of the billions of videos ever made and uploaded to youtube, we choose to watch yours, as they are just insanely insightful, entertaining and thought provoking.
    Once again.... thanks for making these! --- If you have any video editing areas I could help, I'd happily do.

  • @csours
    @csours 3 года назад +8

    The channel lives!

  • @Enonymouse_
    @Enonymouse_ 3 года назад +2

    From ancient times to modern times, one thing remains the same.. A good screw can fix just about anything. :D

  • @alexanderSydneyOz
    @alexanderSydneyOz 2 года назад +1

    Wow. Every second of that video is worth listening to, and considering. Not only for the facts, but also for the thought provoking musings and interpretations of history. Thanks very much.
    I realise this was touched on, but just to emphasise the point, the likes of Twitter allow every single human to speak directly to every single human, simultaneously, if only they choose to Follow the speaker. And each one of them can directly reply back. Only, say, 40 years ago, the only way common and garden individuals could speak directly to groups of individuals, was to stand in front of them on a ladder (etc). It's remarkable how humans can assimilate such change so easily!

  • @richardborrell443
    @richardborrell443 3 года назад +25

    The quality of the production is excellent and remains fascinating. Take your time!

  • @Questionhunt9159
    @Questionhunt9159 2 года назад +6

    I have only watched 4 videos so far but I have gained more useful knowledge on the stuff that interested me in that short time than I have in years... keep up the good work! This channel just gained a new super fan. The world has forgotten the basics bc nobody teaches from the beginning anymore

  • @linkbond08
    @linkbond08 3 года назад +2

    How have I missed this channel for so long.
    So many years wasted 😭

  • @flewprettygood8911
    @flewprettygood8911 3 года назад +1

    I have just watched both of the screw videos and I now truly realize. Math, geometry, and history were the most important studies in school. Yeah science and writing is cool but for blue collar people ( which is most of us btw ) those subjects are what we need.
    Imagine saying, hang on and I’ll do the math. You break out your paper and write it out and check it. Or with knowing geometry well, how creative you can be just by simple knowing shapes. Mix both of them and you can do anything. My dad always said “ math never lies” . Thankyou

  • @Vagolololo
    @Vagolololo 3 года назад +28

    I'm really hoping this series is like an in-depth James Burke's Connections.

  • @ramakrishnanr3877
    @ramakrishnanr3877 3 года назад +9

    By making such high quality contents you are making knowledge easily accessible to people around the world,just like herr Gutenberg had done.

  • @chasbari
    @chasbari 11 месяцев назад

    Brings back childhood memories of when we would screen print our Christmas cards every year. We would write the script, render the pictures, and then my dad would meticulously cut the screens. The printing process was a family activity. My dad made the screen print table with a Hoover vacuum cleaner (of course.. he worked there.. package design engineer and then in carpet research) providing the suction to hold the paper in place. You would release it by way of a foot pedal that would break the suction. Sometimes I got to run the squeegee across the screen to ink that run. We often did multiple colors requiring several passes, one color run at a time followed by the next. Precise positioning allowed for this. Several hundred cards each year. This was just one of the many creative things we did. I guess that's why I enjoy these videos so much. So well done.

  • @hobsondrake
    @hobsondrake 3 года назад +2

    One of the best channels on YT. Keep up the excellent work.

  • @michelhv
    @michelhv 3 года назад +38

    Thing is, it might not have been Gutenberg so much as the expansion of the paper trade that propulsed the book into prominence in Europe. When paper became relatively cheap and abundant, so did the number of books augment.

    • @scottd.5166
      @scottd.5166 3 года назад +10

      I would argue that the expansion of the paper trade is a bit of a chicken and egg problem. If they were not wanting to print a lot of books there probably would not have been the demand for paper, and if the paper was not available they would not have printed as many books. That said the number of books that they wanted to print would create a demand for paper that would get more people into the paper trade and drive innovation. It would be interesting to explore what happened in depth and find out where the driving forces were.

    • @EmpJustine
      @EmpJustine 3 года назад +1

      Then the important screw in this case is the one in the papermaking press?

    • @garywheeler7039
      @garywheeler7039 3 года назад +2

      It was genius the way he cut a metal stamp or die to make impressions in what would later become lead letters. Making the duplication of hundreds of letters easy. A metallurgical masterpiece.

    • @alexanderkupke920
      @alexanderkupke920 3 года назад

      @@EmpJustine I think at that time paper was Air dried and no press involved. Not entirely sure, but I think they only started way later to use a pres to get as much water out of the paper as possible. Also do not forget, despite being roughly made the same way, those early papers had been different from todays cheap Printer Paper we all know. While modern paper is made from wod pulp for quite a while now, at those times other plant based fibers like flax, hemp, cotton and possibly even wool had been used.
      Today paper made of cotton is more like a speacialty and used if the paper should not dissolve in water (money for example)

    • @markfryer9880
      @markfryer9880 3 года назад +1

      @@alexanderkupke920 The smart money these days is made from plastic polymer with see through windows and hologram security devices. An Australian Invention and licensed around the world.

  • @T3sl4
    @T3sl4 3 года назад +3

    Subtle callout with that Hunkin book on the shelf. Nice.

  • @iniclof
    @iniclof 3 года назад +1

    Man, another awesome video. This is one of the best channels in youtube. Congratulations!

  • @stauffap
    @stauffap 3 года назад +1

    I'm glad i didn't miss this video. Great content! I was looking forward to this since your last video.

  • @imdeplorable2241
    @imdeplorable2241 3 года назад +14

    This was the best 26 minutes and 46 seconds of my day today. I absolutely loved it. Your videos just fascinate me.
    Thank you very much.

  • @tipperzack
    @tipperzack 3 года назад +3

    You are wonderful. A great love for the knowledge of machines.

  • @BuffaloWarrior7
    @BuffaloWarrior7 3 года назад

    I can't put in words how much I appreciate content like this.

  • @g1234538
    @g1234538 4 месяца назад

    MT, I think your videos represent the best answer to questions I've had about the fundamentals of what led to all the innovations in machining in the past few centuries. The questions of "ok, how did we get to doing all this highly-precise stuff?" or "how were they doing it X many years ago? how did everything evolve?" are questions I didn't even know how to approach because I barely have experience in manufacturing! Seeing precision devices made 100, 200, 300 years ago seems more mindboggling when you place them on the "timeline" of innovations, clockwork and watchmaking is just one insane part!
    Heck, the way you referred to books as being able to be "the exact thoughts of someone hundreds of years before you", then pulling out books on that exact topic is so good, I went to actually check out the book because it was just what I was interested in!
    There's so many topics that are in books but are "hidden" behind the difficulty of finding them, and it's sometimes not until someone makes a great video do I know that source even existed lol
    perhaps I just need to get better at research
    Anyway, your videos are so incredible!

  • @richardspringer6517
    @richardspringer6517 3 года назад +3

    What a remarkable channel. Never thought I'd be interested in something like this, but here I am. I'm learning so much.

  • @bassmechanic237
    @bassmechanic237 3 года назад +5

    Your voice and speech cadence, especially when you get excited, reminds me of my best friend when I was in the navy as a submarine mechanic. I love your videos and just want to say thank you for sharing. Your video on the lathe and precision and the big ton presses really opened my eyes to what all that did for the world. Godspeed to you and your family. Again, thank you.

  • @pierrelecaillou6966
    @pierrelecaillou6966 3 месяца назад

    In 19 54 I was a "printer's devil" learning the trade of printing and movable type. Thanks for the memories.

  • @sidneyhirst1925
    @sidneyhirst1925 3 года назад +1

    WOW!!!! A new video !!!!!! We have been waiting forever !.... Great Quality !

  • @michaelseery5588
    @michaelseery5588 3 года назад +9

    Yay, we’re back!

  • @dduraeso
    @dduraeso 3 года назад +3

    Amazing work! Congrats!

  • @Sl4gyster
    @Sl4gyster 3 года назад +2

    Your thoroughness just blows my mind. I'm literally sitting here amazed at how well this was done. And now I'm searching for old books and I hate reading xD

  • @daniel-gardner
    @daniel-gardner 3 года назад +1

    Fantastic videos! Thank you so much for producing!!

  • @adolfemmanuelesparas3922
    @adolfemmanuelesparas3922 3 года назад +8

    Sir, I deeply admire and salute your sharing of knowledge! And you have an innate talent in doing so! I wish your profession is a teacher or professor.. because you are born to teach and educate people! You are a gem in YT!

  • @LeoPlaw
    @LeoPlaw 3 года назад +6

    Thank you very much for bringing "De architectura" and "The Four Books on Architecture" to my attention! This will fill in a gap in my knowledge.

  • @DJJonPattrsn22
    @DJJonPattrsn22 4 месяца назад

    I especially appreciate and love the images of gorgeous & magnificent libraries near the end of the presentation.
    Absolutely stunning & inspiring!

  • @Particelomen
    @Particelomen 3 года назад +2

    What I would love from this channel is a video series taking simple concepts from how they first were performed, how they developed and how this journey have influenced what we use today. For example; the concept of artificial lighting, going from torches, to oil lamps, the light bulb and the modern LED, or the concept of writing apparatus, long distance communication, ranged weaponry, celestial measuring instruments, power generators, metal forging and so so much more!

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 Год назад

      Technology Connections has a video series on the development of early interior lighting, from oil lanterns to gas jets with glowing mantles (which are radioactive!). Don't know if he's going to extend it into the early development of electric light (which is also interesting, especially the race to make the best filament and vacuum in a bulb).

  • @gordy15604
    @gordy15604 3 года назад +3

    This video is delightful and I love the subtle humor

  • @sindreherstad8739
    @sindreherstad8739 3 года назад +4

    It might take a long time, but every video is fantastic and helps to put history and progress in perspective

  • @rogeriopalma2386
    @rogeriopalma2386 4 месяца назад

    I’ve no much to say… thanks for your time to remember us about só big and só precious are the time and effort behind all things that we all read and watch.
    Regards from Brazil

  • @renehagha1414
    @renehagha1414 2 года назад +1

    Need to get back at it and post more. Great videos.

  • @screwnacorn
    @screwnacorn 3 года назад +3

    real shame this stuff doesn't get more love in school history classes

  • @Zarzapan
    @Zarzapan 3 года назад +3

    Your vids are always interesting. Learn something every time. Thank you

  • @AndreluizCunha
    @AndreluizCunha 3 года назад +2

    I can't thank you enough for this video. This kind of passion will drive mankind to the future, not technology alone. Cheers.

  • @HippoXXL
    @HippoXXL 3 года назад

    High quality documentaries are the best entertainment. Thanks a lot!
    Greetings from germany,
    Marcus

  • @Elristan
    @Elristan 3 года назад +3

    This video gave me so many chills. Thank you.

  • @trey2099
    @trey2099 3 года назад +4

    WHAT?!?! You have Moore's Foundations of Mechanical Accuracy? I don't want to know how much you paid for that. I would love to see reviews of books related to machinery and tools.

    • @machinethinking
      @machinethinking  3 года назад +1

      Online copies sell for big dollars but if you contact the Moore company directly you can get it for $150 brand new. Still not cheap, but much less than other sources!

  • @yetanotherjohn
    @yetanotherjohn 3 года назад

    Wonderful Video! And remember folks: Don Quixote, one of the first novels, was a book about a man who went mad... from reading too many books!

  • @nah_bro_really
    @nah_bro_really 2 года назад

    This was worth every minute of watching.

  • @user-mu2ze3xi1y
    @user-mu2ze3xi1y 3 года назад +9

    Hell yesssss need more machine thinking in my life

  • @mr.hollywood835
    @mr.hollywood835 3 года назад +4

    Great video! You inspired me to look for an historical book talking about old machines just like you did. Hope my university library has one.

  • @jdblake3224
    @jdblake3224 3 года назад +1

    Glad you are posting videos still! Keep them coming

  • @mellissadalby1402
    @mellissadalby1402 3 года назад +1

    What a remarkably good video! Splendid.

  • @VuLamDang
    @VuLamDang 3 года назад +3

    HE'S ALIVE

  • @GumRamm
    @GumRamm 3 года назад +6

    Awesome news on the patreon! I’m sure people would also enjoy livestreams of you just talking about the videos and the cool stories you learned about when doing the research.

  • @jyalpert
    @jyalpert 3 года назад +2

    Amazing Alice’s Restaurant callout

  • @thomasbramwell9592
    @thomasbramwell9592 2 года назад

    Cut away books from the 50's are so beautiful.

  • @nickverbree
    @nickverbree 3 года назад +3

    Always so excited for your videos! I'd love to see you tackle iron production and/or metallurgy, and how that changed how machines could be made.

  • @TheWizardGamez
    @TheWizardGamez 3 года назад +22

    I saw this on my home page like 3 times and didn't realize it was you. THEN I REALIZED, GOD TEIR CONTENT. and this is just after AHOY(the cool weapons guy BRI'ish) dropped a vid... WHAT A GREAT WEEk

  • @cristianpopescu78
    @cristianpopescu78 11 месяцев назад

    This is so fascinating!! As a Kid I have made my own books middle age style by Hand. About how our elder made anything by hand,theirs house medicine,have questioned old people still living then.
    Thanks you Sir!

  • @gedreillyhomestead6926
    @gedreillyhomestead6926 2 года назад +2

    Just found your channel - excellent! My favourite set of books is a complete set of Popular Mechanics from 1945. I love the fact that not only does it give you tons of projects to build but how build the tools and machines you need to build those projects. 👍 😎

  • @Birb_of_Judge
    @Birb_of_Judge 3 года назад +4

    Yes, a new video.
    I've been waiting for this one

  • @dominikmarekdominiak
    @dominikmarekdominiak 3 года назад +5

    Finally a new video! Can't wait to watch it tonight :)

  • @LadyAnuB
    @LadyAnuB 3 года назад +2

    Love the Subscribe woodcut. Cover the modern and medieval worlds in one.

  • @xyrex5243
    @xyrex5243 3 года назад +1

    THE RETURN OF THE KING