How does a camera work?

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  • Опубликовано: 13 июл 2024
  • Cameras are everywhere! There are probably 2 or even 3 cameras in your pocket right now. But how do they work? How can they take some of the most amazing pictures ever?
    Do you want to support in-depth engineering and technology education? Support us on: / brancheducation
    Website: www.branch.education
    On Facebook: / brancheducation
    On Twitter: / teddytablante
    On Insta: / brancheducation
    Or Join us on RUclips Memberships: / @brancheducation
    Table of Contents:
    0:20 Section 1: Intro
    1:10 Section 2: System Layout
    3:51 Section 3: Analogy between a Smartphone & a Human
    7:45 Section 4: Camera and Sensor Details
    11:30 Section 5: Questions & Thought Experiment
    Visit our website: www.branch.education
    Erratum:
    0:52 Smartphone is misspelled as Smarphone
    9:54 Audio says 4096 when it should be 4095. Text is Correct
    13:54 Exoplanet is misspelled as Exoplant.
    Animation built using Blender 2.79b www.blender.org/
    Post with Adobe Premiere Pro and Adobe After Effects
    Work Cited Alphabetized:
    Fossum, Eric. Hondongwa, Donald "A Review of the Pinned Photodiode for CCD and CMOS Image Sensors." IEEE Journal of the Electron Devices Society, Vol. 2, No.3, May 2014, pp33-43
    Wase, Yashashree, "CMOS Image Sensor and Quanta Image Sensors: Past, Present and Future", "Advanced CMOS Pixel Technologies." College of Engineering at University of Idaho, pp1-22
    Wikipedia contributors. "Active Pixel Sensor." , "Photodiode." , "Sunlight." , "Visible Spectrum." , "Eye." , "Evolution of the Eye." , "Human Eye." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 25 May. 2018.
    Music Attribution in Order:
    Marxist Arrow by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBlLC...
    Music: Clover 3 by Vibe Mountain
    Video Link: • Video
    Daydream Bliss Sybs
    • Daydream Bliss / Sybs ...
    Timelapsed Tides, Asher Fulero
    • Timelapsed Tides, Ashe...
    You Will Know, Text Me Records / Leviathe
    Sunburst, Tobu & Itro is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution License
    www.7obu.com
    • Video
    #HowDo #Camera #Smartphone

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @creaky2436
    @creaky2436 4 года назад +1143

    Can you imagine how long it takes to produce these professional quality videos? We don’t deserve it! You’re too good to us.

    • @reathact
      @reathact 3 года назад +12

      totally agree with you bro

    • @Tech-gv6qk
      @Tech-gv6qk 3 года назад +20

      This channel deserves million subscribers

    • @krishanSharma.69.69f
      @krishanSharma.69.69f 2 года назад +6

      Yes, I can.

    • @SmokieJay
      @SmokieJay Год назад +4

      We need to save this information just in case we experience a modern day version of the destruction of Alexandria’s library

    • @jk5099
      @jk5099 Год назад

      They don't do it for us lol its about views and money

  • @merrickv2028
    @merrickv2028 5 лет назад +251

    Your visuals are amazing. I usually have trouble learning technical stuff like this, but as a visual learner, this has done way more for me than any lecture could! I wasn't expecting a huge amount of thorough explanation and I appreciate how in depth this video is. Nothing is better than being able to visually comprehend this!

    • @BranchEducation
      @BranchEducation  5 лет назад +49

      Glad you enjoyed it! I agree fully, and I also am a visual learner, and I'm excited to make many more videos that can go into the underpinning visual science behind many sciences and technologies.,

    • @leif1075
      @leif1075 Год назад +1

      @@BranchEducation who wrote the music in this video, especially the intro?? Thanks for sharing

    • @Spidy_S
      @Spidy_S 8 месяцев назад

      Please tell how you are editing like this

  • @deepakrawat921
    @deepakrawat921 5 лет назад +709

    Who are you man???. Doing a great job.

    • @ernestedwards8563
      @ernestedwards8563 4 года назад +15

      I really like you guys for the videos you make that are full of Information Technologies.
      Thank you very much.
      ernie 8>)

    • @irehabiphonerepairtraining1191
      @irehabiphonerepairtraining1191 4 года назад

      Great information man., just tell about you used animation software please

    • @raja_uma1r
      @raja_uma1r 4 года назад +3

      blender 3d

    • @Somd55
      @Somd55 4 года назад +8

      One person can’t produce miracles! There is a team behind this, he is no doubt narrating it in a fine way!

    • @aryanrawat8475
      @aryanrawat8475 3 года назад

      Yess bro ❤️

  • @mangeshsodnar8426
    @mangeshsodnar8426 4 года назад +100

    I started respecting the camera of my phone 😢😭😭😭

    • @Rahulkrish37
      @Rahulkrish37 3 года назад +3

      U r an mechanical engineer!

    • @dbuc4671
      @dbuc4671 3 года назад

      yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy

  • @chrisnagy1308
    @chrisnagy1308 3 года назад +27

    My goodness, this is so well made. I probably watched ten other videos on cameras and none of them were this good. I loved how you actually explained in depth how every single component worked. Even though the concepts involved are not simple, you broke them down in a way to really make it understandable. I am astounded by this video, truly magnificent.

  • @vineetupadhyay9121
    @vineetupadhyay9121 5 лет назад +167

    Great content , deep and fundamental explanation of the concept and working this a good engineered video with amazing graphics appreciate the hard work applause. THIS CHANNEL IS A HIT

  • @sendijsbaraks5419
    @sendijsbaraks5419 5 лет назад +52

    Finally I understand how the camera work, big thank you.

  • @danielpapukchiev3754
    @danielpapukchiev3754 2 года назад +6

    I absolutely love this channel! Starting from the name - I always thought how cool it would be if I create a map of all the different topics and somehow connect them - you did that ... perfectly. Also, I love how there are different points of view with very engaging animations. As a visual learner, this is pure gold. I will recommend it to everyone I know, keep it up!

  • @siddharthgusain1364
    @siddharthgusain1364 5 лет назад +9

    Everything explained in just 14 minutes. U are doing a great job man.Keep on making these type of videos.I'm waiting for more

  • @slartibartfast426
    @slartibartfast426 5 лет назад +25

    So glad I found this channel!

  • @judydanolko3627
    @judydanolko3627 4 года назад +10

    Whoever is behind these brainy explanations, you're amazing! you're so good in making videos like this! More please!

  • @pratulvenkatesh
    @pratulvenkatesh 5 лет назад +68

    12:15
    While I agree the spectrum of colors we see is partially influenced by the light emitted by our star, visible light isn't "visible" because it's the only thing available. Rather visible light is the em wave of the right wavelength capable of interacting with most of the matter at the molecular scale.
    For e.g we cant see something by bouncing radiowaves off of it as it just passes through unless it is a few metres thick.
    Quite a beautiful coincidence don't you think how most of the light we receive from our star happens to be in the visible spectrum.

    • @pratulvenkatesh
      @pratulvenkatesh 5 лет назад +24

      I happen to watch this documentary recently on how animals see and it's honestly so fascinating.
      Houseflies have 4 types of color receptors 2 of which like in the UV range :o
      Did you know mantis shrimp have SIXTEEN types of photoreceptors! That way they don't have to calculate what color they are looking at and can detect the color directly. They can even detect other characteristics of light and apply them such as polarization. You'd think it'd be only to detect the environment better but they use this varying polarized light to send different signals
      It's so amazing how the colors we see is an incredibly human only perception, other creatures may be seeing the same light but can perceive completely different color

    • @shivamverma9515
      @shivamverma9515 3 года назад +2

      Read everything but understood nothing 😅

    • @pratulvenkatesh
      @pratulvenkatesh 3 года назад +19

      @@shivamverma9515 Hey! So essentially, the range of the electromagnetic spectrum that we term as 'visible light,' is visible only because it has the right wavelength to interact with most matter.
      By interact, I am referring to reflection, absorption, etc. In comparison if the light ray is of too high wavelength (or too less), such as radiowaves and X-rays respectively, then these kinds of rays just pass through most matter.
      Visible light (red-blue part of spectrum) is 'visible' because it's the right size to interact and light up most things. It just happened to be a coincidence that the majority of the light we receive on earth is in this spectrum!
      Hope that, that explained it better?

    • @scubasteve6175
      @scubasteve6175 2 года назад +2

      are there stars that don't emit visible light or mostly produce wavelengths outside of our spectrum? i'm just curious as you seem very knowledgeable

    • @pratulvenkatesh
      @pratulvenkatesh 2 года назад +4

      @@scubasteve6175 yup the hotter the star is, shorter the wavelength of light emitted by stars is (more energy) so there are high energy stars that produce x-rays and gamma rays produced by neutron stars, pulsars, supernovae explosions, etc. on the lower end there are cold stars that produce faint infrared rays such as brown dwarfs which are difficult to observe with visible light telescopes as they don’t produce much visible light and only infrared.

  • @gheorghealexandrucristian
    @gheorghealexandrucristian 5 лет назад +14

    I like your branching approach, how one thing relates to another. This is the way to learn stuff. Keep up the good work!

  • @gilberteinstein5048
    @gilberteinstein5048 5 лет назад +10

    It's great! I expect a lot more videos from you. And thank you a lot.

  • @MichaelSmith-on1ig
    @MichaelSmith-on1ig 2 года назад +1

    I absoluteley love everything about your videos. The narration, the content and the visuals are on top. Thank you for the contribution!

  • @melihtopcu97
    @melihtopcu97 4 года назад +2

    dude popped up in my recommend section, best explanations I've come across on each vid. Incredible presentation. Geeking out on your vids

  • @kuntalhd
    @kuntalhd 4 года назад +84

    One person takes one picture a day.
    My phone laughing at this. 😐

    • @BranchEducation
      @BranchEducation  4 года назад +16

      Do ya think it’s more or less?

    • @kuntalhd
      @kuntalhd 4 года назад +12

      @@BranchEducation wayyy much more.

    • @fredthegamerschrarder7716
      @fredthegamerschrarder7716 4 года назад +3

      Yeah I like take 15 pictures a day and my sister takes even more 😂

    • @Rbrijeshr
      @Rbrijeshr 3 года назад

      @@BranchEducation less

    • @standupyak
      @standupyak 3 года назад +2

      @@BranchEducation my gallery is filled with memes

  • @GururajBN
    @GururajBN 2 года назад +2

    Our smart phones are pretty thin. I am impressed that within that thin space there’s a tiny motor which moves the lenses back and forth for focusing. And there are semiconductor layers and micro lenses for each pixel points. There are sixteen million of them in a moderate quality camera. This degree of miniaturisation is inconceivable for a lay person like me. I prostrate before the collective genius of the scientists, designers and engineers who made the smart phone cameras work so well. I don’t even want to ask who makes the camera lenses, micro lenses, what is the manufacturing method.
    It must have been a huge effort to squeeze in all these intricate details in a fourteen minutes video. I felt that this episode could have been restricted to mere description of the smartphone cameras and the electronics could have been discussed in a separate video.

  • @eddiecoleman2301
    @eddiecoleman2301 2 года назад +1

    This was an incredible ride, instant sub. You're amazing man, thanks for articulating it so so well. And the visuals 👌👌

  • @rah4254
    @rah4254 5 лет назад +2

    Wow, fantastic, starts out simple and slowly gets harder and harder, can't believe how much engineering goes into a camera

  • @fredoo6627
    @fredoo6627 3 года назад +8

    This is painfully underrated.

  • @umeshpant8941
    @umeshpant8941 5 лет назад +4

    Your content and graphics are awesome man!
    There is no place for doubts..you are doing great. Keep going🔥

  • @JosephEudave
    @JosephEudave 5 лет назад +2

    This is the best and most complete video about cameras and light i have ever seen.
    Great work friend.

  • @jantoleu8392
    @jantoleu8392 3 года назад +1

    Absolutely amazing piece of work! Very informative and useful. Thank you!

  • @rohanracer896
    @rohanracer896 5 лет назад +4

    Bro never stop making such informative videos... Loved and appreciates your work...😊

  • @thegreathesam9748
    @thegreathesam9748 3 года назад +4

    truely underrated channel, amazing deep accurate contect with amazing graphics, cant imagine how much time and resources is spent on each video, amazing job

  • @raunak5344
    @raunak5344 4 года назад

    Sir, I love you, a big fan of yours!
    For many many days (almost 2-3 years) I wanted to watch (and learn) such videos on RUclips and finally I got it in such a high quality 3D form !!
    Thanks a lot

  • @alienware18
    @alienware18 4 года назад

    Amazing amazing video Branch Education ! Can't wait for more ! Simply outstanding video editing and explanation ! :)

  • @rioZon
    @rioZon 5 лет назад +3

    Good job.
    Its very easy to understand in an animated video like this.
    Thank you for the content.

  • @gurpreetbanwait6097
    @gurpreetbanwait6097 5 лет назад +80

    10 out of 10. Man ,,,,the way it is linked with evolution that was amazing

    • @YogeshPersonalChannel
      @YogeshPersonalChannel 5 лет назад +7

      Exactly. I was going to say the same. The last few minutes were fabulous.
      We always read about the em spectrum and the visible region of it shown in color. Well color is just in mind. Other species might have their different 'color' region sliced from em spectrum

    • @Vysair
      @Vysair 4 года назад +1

      @@YogeshPersonalChannel Mantis shrimp can see the most 'light' wave

  • @edde591
    @edde591 3 года назад

    Amazing work. Your videos help understand these complicated things so much easier.

  • @Dasher_The_Viral
    @Dasher_The_Viral Год назад

    Thank you for these videos!
    I love to further my understanding of how different types of technology work, and the fact that you share this information for free makes you a great person!

  • @raz0229
    @raz0229 5 лет назад +50

    You deserve Millions.

    • @nebulai9587
      @nebulai9587 4 года назад +2

      Of what. Money? Subs? Hoes? Hamsters?

    • @TypicalSardine
      @TypicalSardine 4 года назад +4

      All of the above

    • @dear_imran
      @dear_imran 3 года назад +2

      @@TypicalSardine nailed it

  • @dongato6838
    @dongato6838 4 года назад +8

    2:41 - KITTY!!
    Also, great job breaking this down. Really concise.

  • @puneetchhabra2578
    @puneetchhabra2578 Год назад

    This was just awesome video man!
    Really appreciate the efforts. We need more such creators.🔥
    Thanks for the video.

  • @jeffyoung4989
    @jeffyoung4989 2 года назад

    Bro,I love your channel. Fancy and educational!

  • @HyungnamGu
    @HyungnamGu Год назад +33

    To capture color images, a filter has to be placed over each cavity that permits only particular colors of light. Virtually all current digital cameras can only capture one of three primary colors in each cavity, and so they discard roughly 2/3 of the incoming light. As a result, the camera has to approximate the other two primary colors in order to have full color at every pixel. The most common type of color filter array is called a "Bayer array"
    A Bayer array consists of alternating rows of red-green and green-blue filters. Notice how the Bayer array contains twice as many green as red or blue sensors. Each primary color does not receive an equal fraction of the total area because the human eye is more sensitive to green light than both red and blue light. Redundancy with green pixels produces an image which appears less noisy and has finer detail than could be accomplished if each color were treated equally. This also explains why noise in the green channel is much less than for the other two primary colors.

  • @shahidmeir7379
    @shahidmeir7379 3 года назад +5

    imagine the work going on in PCB when camera records an 8K video at 1000 fps .
    electronics is always astonishing

    • @BranchEducation
      @BranchEducation  3 года назад +2

      No kidding

    • @shahidmeir7379
      @shahidmeir7379 3 года назад +1

      @@BranchEducation thank you for giving me a chance to say thank you to you for all those informative and interesting videos.
      thank you so much .
      bdw i didnt understand "No kidding "

  • @willishuang1999
    @willishuang1999 Месяц назад

    Thank you for this very professional and educational video. It's really helpful.

  • @YeahWhiplash
    @YeahWhiplash 4 года назад +10

    I loved this video! I'd really like to see a breakdown of more advanced, high end cameras such as an arri alexa, red, cannon c-500, or sony fx9.

  • @MdSheraj
    @MdSheraj 2 года назад +3

    Our eyes are most sensitive to green light.

  • @priscillatablante5416
    @priscillatablante5416 6 лет назад +1

    So fascinating! Unraveling what seems like pure magic! and so clearly explained.

  • @togi64739
    @togi64739 8 месяцев назад

    absolutely amazing video, thank you!

  • @prantokumarsarker9460
    @prantokumarsarker9460 5 лет назад +4

    Wow man that's just awesome 😍😍😍😍😍
    A huge thank for you😍

  • @yy84869
    @yy84869 5 лет назад +19

    New subscriber great content learn with fun
    You deserve *1M* subscriber and you get it soon

  • @vivekakaviv
    @vivekakaviv 5 лет назад +1

    Great video!. Loved the way you linked everything.

  • @sigma_upriser
    @sigma_upriser 2 года назад +1

    Mind blowing content. Kudos to the creator. Really appreciate the hard work done to get this done.

  • @michel-manuel
    @michel-manuel 5 лет назад +7

    I've really loved this channel from the beginning, it's been really helpful , and I can see a lot of work goes into making such video. Keep it up🙏🏾🙏🏾🔥🔥🔥

    • @BranchEducation
      @BranchEducation  4 года назад +1

      Thanks for watching!!

    • @All-us
      @All-us Год назад

      ​@@BranchEducation please,wich program you're using for editing these videos

  • @user-uw1wq9rj8g
    @user-uw1wq9rj8g 5 лет назад +67

    Fell in love with this channel. Subscribed!

  • @mmmurattti
    @mmmurattti 3 года назад +1

    That was absolutely amazing, thanks a lot, you mentioned every detail, I definitely will use these materials for my students, thanks a lot

  • @stevewilsonraj
    @stevewilsonraj 3 года назад +4

    OMG 😱........It's a blessing that i found ur channel. U r totally killing it.
    Thankyou..... from the deep down of my heart ❤️. Mind blown 😵

  • @AmitTiwari-wf1xj
    @AmitTiwari-wf1xj 5 лет назад +15

    Your knowledge is really appreciable. And the great part is your command on such challenging topic. Keep it up ...

  • @swagh38
    @swagh38 Год назад

    Incredible video. Please continue your great job.

  • @MrBlunt419_
    @MrBlunt419_ 3 года назад

    Need more of this. Clear visualization of things being taken apart.

  • @Sam-vi6on
    @Sam-vi6on 5 лет назад +3

    Spectacular explanation

  • @kiwanukapeter2919
    @kiwanukapeter2919 5 лет назад +4

    thank you a lot.
    though the explanation is so complicated for me to understand well

  • @alien-x0815
    @alien-x0815 3 года назад

    gr8 video !! U guys have explained the basic fundamentals that r not taught in our school and have answered all the questions I had regarding this topic...Thanx a lot :)

  • @MeeMee-gz5vp
    @MeeMee-gz5vp Год назад

    Brilliant presentation! Thank you for sharing 🙏

  • @helencardrick1048
    @helencardrick1048 3 года назад +9

    Is it sad that I learn more from watching this stuff before going to school than what I learn at school

  • @tenyharyati9355
    @tenyharyati9355 4 года назад +4

    this is amazing and im starting to see everything different now :)

  • @lucifertensubam9643
    @lucifertensubam9643 5 лет назад +2

    Really appreciate making such a video

  • @maninimahapatra649
    @maninimahapatra649 3 года назад

    this video is impossibly perfect, every single question in my mind got answered at once, not a single other doubt left. Surprisingly perfect.

  • @kumudperera2428
    @kumudperera2428 4 года назад +23

    Greatest job i ever have seen in youtube❤️

  • @steventurner215
    @steventurner215 3 года назад +4

    1. I think it is because of the range of frequency that green covers and 2. Depending on the star it may be difficult for us to see in our current state.
    ALSO cameras can pick up ultraviolet light that our eyes cannot. You can test this yourself by pushing the buttons on a remote aimed at a camera.

  • @Thisisdawgxiety
    @Thisisdawgxiety 11 месяцев назад

    this is so deeper than I expected! thanks for this amazing video!

    • @96ddog
      @96ddog 5 месяцев назад

      Bro I thought there was a mirror

  • @abdulloabdukarimov3654
    @abdulloabdukarimov3654 4 года назад +1

    Great Job! The explanation is very scientific, yet is very easy to comprehend!

  • @rezanouri7532
    @rezanouri7532 5 лет назад +12

    what an amazing video :) I wish everyone could and would have the heart to teach others WHAT YOU KNOW the way you do :) You are for sure a great person and so good at educating others. THANK YOU

    • @BranchEducation
      @BranchEducation  5 лет назад +11

      Thanks a ton!! I'm really glad you like the videos. It takes time to make them, but I hope if enough people collaborate, we will be able to make an entire high school & college curriculum.

    • @adithyagalipelli2934
      @adithyagalipelli2934 2 года назад

      @@BranchEducation yeah, the current curriculum is so outdated!

  • @barrygorden8338
    @barrygorden8338 6 лет назад +40

    This is fascinating to me, but i doubt I am the intended audience. Is it college students? high school students?
    I loved the graphics: electrons shooting out of boron atoms can make my day!
    I admired the writing too - great turns of phrase such "tasty but not efficient", "multi-layered labyrinth" (great name for a band), "massive grid of light-sensitive squares", and last but not least "conceptual simplicity yet structural complexity"
    And what is the thing that both you and Carl Sagan have bout soup?

  • @user-si2ek1fl4o
    @user-si2ek1fl4o 2 года назад

    Amazing! Very clear and easy to understand!

  • @ripompaul6531
    @ripompaul6531 5 лет назад +2

    Great work!
    Thanks for the explanation.

  • @vasudevaraju6796
    @vasudevaraju6796 4 года назад +7

    Wow,this whole process works in milliseconds

  • @quantumcity6679
    @quantumcity6679 5 лет назад +45

    So complicated but so much information about 👀 and 📷........
    🤔🤓😀 say cheese!!! 📸

    • @BeanDogTally
      @BeanDogTally 5 лет назад +1

      Asteroid Melroy 💦🔙💦💦💦💦💦💦👌👌👌🙅‍♂️🌝👍🆓😎😄😎😄yea 🥓🥝🥓🍍

    • @niluthere411
      @niluthere411 5 лет назад

      @@rainbowpanda7042 they have their mind in wavelength

    • @hariss8011
      @hariss8011 4 года назад +1

      no

  • @neerajtripathi1428
    @neerajtripathi1428 4 года назад

    *just fell in love with this channel at this time and you know you are masterpiece* 😍😍

  • @PsycheTruths
    @PsycheTruths 5 лет назад +7

    Great teacher in the world his teaching method is so good and advance i like it good and keep it up Allah protect you

  • @minoritymajor261
    @minoritymajor261 5 лет назад +3

    Awesome content

  • @andresbujosa7385
    @andresbujosa7385 3 года назад

    These videos are amazing! Awesome awesome work

  • @adityavora9503
    @adityavora9503 5 лет назад +1

    Amazing and interesting content!
    Great animations as well!!!😍
    Hope to see more videos on smartphones and technology !!!

  • @Astro.004
    @Astro.004 5 лет назад +660

    1.2trillion is SMALL considering there are women on Earth

    • @fluent_styles6720
      @fluent_styles6720 5 лет назад +58

      I don't think 1 picture a day is accurate lol

    • @user-vi3pi9rf7w
      @user-vi3pi9rf7w 5 лет назад +37

      My guess was 50T

    • @abhajihadi
      @abhajihadi 5 лет назад +2

      😂

    • @MohaMMaDiN55
      @MohaMMaDiN55 5 лет назад +20

      When he assumed that each person takes 1 photo a day, he did not mean that this is precisely true. He just assumed this number because there are a lot of circumstances such as not all people in the world hold a phone neither do all of them take pictures regularly everyday.

    • @Xykaru
      @Xykaru 4 года назад +6

      @@MohaMMaDiN55 He specifically only factored in people with phones at the rate of 1 photo per day per cellphone owner. 50 trillion sounds significantly more likely, albeit I absolutely guarantee is higher.

  • @charlemagne111027
    @charlemagne111027 5 лет назад +14

    Great video. Went from very basic to advanced. Personally, the beginning was too basic. The description of how the sensor works was very interesting!

  • @denysk.1178
    @denysk.1178 4 года назад

    Fantastic, can’t stop watching

  • @empoweringgminds
    @empoweringgminds 3 года назад

    wow.. very nicely explained.. logical flow with good animations.. keep up the good work. Thanks

  • @anuhartripathi800
    @anuhartripathi800 5 лет назад +6

    Dude where do you get such type of information, your videos are great.

    • @BranchEducation
      @BranchEducation  5 лет назад +5

      My prior job was to making semiconductor equipment, so I was exposed to a lot of tech. But really most of the info comes from school and lots of research.

  • @anim8dideas849
    @anim8dideas849 5 лет назад +5

    This animation style reeks blender 3d so nostalgic

  • @jonesigi2
    @jonesigi2 4 года назад

    You have done lot of hard work to explain so much in detail. Great. Thank you..

  • @mauriciolavin
    @mauriciolavin Год назад

    Amazing effort to share knowledge, great video!! thanks

  • @MrCatomic123
    @MrCatomic123 5 лет назад +3

    im curious where you got your assets that were made in blender for the 3d models, and exploded diagrams. They all looked really good and represented the internals very effectively. Did you make them yourself or find them on a database?

    • @BranchEducation
      @BranchEducation  5 лет назад +10

      I had to make them myself, doing the teardown of the phone also gave me a good sense of where each component was located with respect to other components. The phone was my previous one, giving it a second life!

  • @aabcusshreepad3147
    @aabcusshreepad3147 5 лет назад +6

    It's nyc
    Increases interest of children in technology

  • @subbu2185
    @subbu2185 Год назад

    Extremely informative, to the point and logic galore

  • @BebowMont
    @BebowMont 3 года назад

    awesome channel! just found it today ! totally subscribing!

  • @dmitrybain6820
    @dmitrybain6820 5 лет назад +5

    I does see it easy when water fall on my screen it magnifies the spot

  • @3dfvan640
    @3dfvan640 5 лет назад +8

    ah beloved science

  • @adamyork3529
    @adamyork3529 5 лет назад +2

    I really like what you’re doing. Please keep doing it.

  • @shafaqatali5049
    @shafaqatali5049 Год назад

    Thanks a lot for making this amazing video which have helped me to clarify many concepts related to imaging.

  • @Shadow77999
    @Shadow77999 4 года назад +3

    7:25 What program did you use to simulate that?

  • @r0nni34
    @r0nni34 4 года назад +5

    Our eyes works as the camera optic nerve as the pcb our long term memory as SSD and short term memory as Ram where the image you just see gets stored then brain run a identification algorithm and it run through your whole memory and find the object similar to wht you are seeing that's how you identify things.. then it runs another algorithm to determine at what level of importance the object you are seeing hold... If it is not important your brain keep that in the temporary memory and flushes it out with time
    ....... depending upon the importance point the object you are seeing gets like if its on 1 you are basically going through your everyday routine and your brain will clear it in about 10 to 30 mins and if it were of level 5 (higest level) like your crush just proposed you then your brain stores it in long term memory and at the same time run other algorithm to give additional attributes/tags to the memory such a certain smell or a view (which explains why you feel nostalgic to some smells or images).so if you continue learning things the database in your brain keeps getting bigger and bigger which results in intelligence cause your brain will have more things in database to compare...with
    Fun fact your brain never stops learning .. it learnd to keep on doing things when you are not even paying attention like putting food in your mouth or breathing ,chewing without hurting your toung and walking with a samrt phone it keeps on improving its autopilot.
    As a computer science student i find the algorithm running a human facinating and I'll love to one day implement them on machines ..

    • @deepanshugupta1376
      @deepanshugupta1376 4 года назад +1

      My long term memory probably works like a 5400 RPM HDD😂😂😂😂

  • @kickbuttowski2861
    @kickbuttowski2861 5 лет назад +1

    Your videos are very informative and easy to understand. Thanks for your contribution.

  • @Life_42
    @Life_42 Год назад

    Love your channel!

  • @hellothere-lu5si
    @hellothere-lu5si 5 лет назад +3

    How pc work and video games?

  • @avi12
    @avi12 5 лет назад +3

    4:16 Short-term memory ≠ RAM
    The RAM is simply a list of instructions that is constantly sent to the CPU, which uses its components to perform them, and then retrieve the results back to the RAM which returns the result to the software that uses those values.

  • @sudharshans1737
    @sudharshans1737 3 года назад +1

    That last question will create goosebumps on me,nice work 🙌