I know what you mean! I'm 61 and I remember a time when you left the house no one could reach you until you got to a telephone. Now you carry a small phone with you wherever you go, that's also a mini computer that can fit into your pocket! Amazing!😲
@@kasen9487 This is a video about technology, not religion. While the sentiment is sweet, this is the wrong place for those types of comments. I’m sure a lot of people would agree.
I would like to say that I really appreciate the amount of research you do on all of these videos, I also eventually want to be a RUclipsr, and I think I've learned a lot from you. The combination of funny and informative content you create really showed me what a good video is, and also what people are more likely to watch. I just really wanted to tell you that I value the entertainment and informative moments you give me by making these videos, thanks be amazed 😁
Wow, thank you so much! We really do try our best to deliver on quality and accuracy, so it means a lot to hear stuff like this. Good luck with your future RUclips adventures, and please enjoy our videos in the meantime!
all I can say is wow. I'm amazed at these technological creations. as a science savy myself who can build pc towers and arcade machines from scratch, this is truely centuries of skills ahead of me
There's a reason why space agencies such as NASA have such high entry-level requirements for its astronauts. Space will kill just about anyone who's not cream of the crop. I've heard it described before as something like, "You'd have to be 2/3 Steven Hawking-level smart and a world-class triathlon athlete."
@@coreylou326 go play antimatter dimensions without any infinity and eternity and reality stuff and points too (infinity and time/eternity dimensions are included in infinity and eternity stuff)
Great video! I love your Content! I'm glad when ever anyone mentions space exploration. @15:40 it was worded like there was only one Falcon 9 sea landing, when there have been 100+. @16:00 There have only been 6 maned Crew Dragon missions to date. Not 30+ and Dragons require a Falcon 9 to GET to space. @15:26, the part of Starship that flips after a belly flop is only about 15 stories tall, not 36.
I know at first, living on Mars would be cool, but a couple of issues are,1. if you have pets, you couldn't bring them up to Mars safely.2. You wouldn't get to see your friends for a very long time 3. Finally, if the food or water runs out, you won't be able to get down back to Earth
1. Why brings pets? It's a science colony not a living colony. By the time it's a living colony pets would be allowed. 2. That's the case for literally any far away location on earth. Astronauts currently go weeks sometimes months without seeing their loved ones. Finally if it was a living colony I would imagine you have the option to move your family. Much like a naval family in the military. 3. Only when mars is for research only. If it gets opened for living then the colony would be self sufficient. Also your "issues" are faced daily on earth. There are countless others you would deal with living on another planet.
I'd like to be alive to see the world stop spending billions on weapons to kill each other so we might see these future projects be completed within these time frames.!
Fluffy, the comedian who is the 1st to sale out Dodgers stadium. Is now going to be the first comedian to sell out a space station. That's one hell of a resume...😁🤗
As with millions of others over the centuries, I have been and still am fascinated and amazed about our universe. Yet I do wonder how much the world we all share would now be, if all the billions that has been spent on space probes, cameras etc, had been spent on saving and protecting our world. For no matter how much we learn about other planets, suns and galaxies, it profits us little if we lose our own world
I think the advent of space based solar power has a drawback that might cause the tech to fail. See, if we start "beaming" our energy towards earth via satellites, you can expect bleed through which could heat up the atmosphere quite a bit or be like one of Tesla's main problems with his transmissible electricity. Which was atmospheric Ionization created by the device. As some of the electricity that bled out would remain stuck in the atmosphere and eventually when the charge would reach a critical point, seek to ground itself in a catastrophic way, I.E. Massive thunderstorms.
wow the inaccuracies of this video really make me rethink watching this channel anymore and make me wonder how much other misinformation you guys have put out in previous videos
10:12 More heat in the atmosphere from the lasers heating up the air in between causing more global warming as the more laser communication the more heat.
Back in about 1989 i remember talking about space travel in science class and i mentioned to my then science teacher that a giant elevator would be a good idea and he laughed essentially saying it was an absurd idea. Imagine my surprise when I start seeing actual plans for them. You hear that, Mr. Evans?!?
@@DIRTYPLACCYnot really. A tower like elevator yeah it wouldn't be stable and would collapse almost instantly. But a tether like structure with a station at the top orbiting earth and remaining tethered to earth. A separate device would go up and down the tether moving materials, people, and cargo in general.
@6:22 I agree that Webb is incredibly great. But I'll go for Hubble. Hubble see the objects through visible light while Webb sees through infra-red so that it can see further objects than the predecessor.
Just random facts. The Eisenhower interstate system requires that one mile in every five must be straight. These straight sections are usable as airstrips in times of war or other emergencies. The first known contraceptive was crocodile dung, used by Egyptians in 2000 B.C. Rhode Island is the smallest state with the longest name. The official name, used on all state documents, is "Rhode Island and Providence Plantations." When you die your hair still grows for a couple of months. There are two credit cards for every person in the United States. Isaac Asimov is the only author to have a book in every Dewey-decimal category. The newspaper serving Frostbite Falls, Minnesota, the home of Rocky and Bullwinkle, is the Picayune Intellegence. It would take 11 Empire State Buildings, stacked one on top of the other, to measure the Gulf of Mexico at its deepest point. The first person selected as the Time Magazine Man of the Year - Charles Lindbergh in 1927. The most money ever paid for a cow in an auction was $1.3 million. It took Leo Tolstoy six years to write "War & Peace". The Neanderthal's brain was bigger than yours is. On the new hundred dollar bill the time on the clock tower of Independence Hall is 4:10 By the way I don’t mean the time in the vid. Each of the suits on a deck of cards represents the four major pillars of the economy in the middle ages: heart represented the Church, spades represented the military, clubs represented agriculture, and diamonds represented the merchant class. The names of the two stone lions in front of the New York Public Library are Patience and Fortitude. They were named by then-mayor Fiorello LaGuardia. The Main Library at Indiana University sinks over an inch every year because when it was built, engineers failed to take into account the weight of all the books that would occupy the building.
I'd probably have to ask someone at NASA about this, but why is the secondary mirror on the James Webb telescope smaller than that of the Hubble, causing the incoming light to be focused down to a smaller point?
it's because the JWST looks in the infared spectrum, the longest wave length on the electromagnetic spectrum. thus the infered waves must be focused onto a smaller point to produce the clear and stunning images we recieve from the JWST
Me in 2050: "Back in my day we had the PS5 and the Nintendo Switch" My grandkid: "Did they have GTA 6?" Me in 2050: *throws kid out the window* Life lesson: Don't bring up anything that doesn't exist.
i have a question, and consider this, im the guy who solved the heat vector, when the hell did laser beams become stable enough to use? last i checked there was a fall off issue?
I think this would help within the near future of the good people of earth. but this really could take 10-100 years. in conclusion I think that it could happen in many of our life times but is still in the works.
@16:05 dragon has only completed ONE flight carrying human passengers yes it has gone to the iss nearly thirty time 24 currently if i remeber correctly 23 of those were cargo only missions and only ONE had human passengers
For the test of the inflatable magig for space...why weren't they testing the limits in a vacuum? Because with earth airpressure wouldn't it push back a bit making the possibility that it would go for higher PSI?
9:31 I have one problem with using light for bringing internet to the public. There's too many radicals in the atmosphere for the lasers to work like that. Light bends and can't travel through solid walls. That's why we use fiberoptic's, it gives the light a secure place to travel. It has nowhere to go but directly to the devices. Radie waves work well too because they have antenna to conduct too. Lasers are too expensive to be honest because it needs a grid of devices to direct the system and it's not going to be secure. What if one of the lasers are blocked the light from getting to the public? Also, what happens if one of the lasers go off because of debris?
I see a lot of things going wrong with the space elevator, it's a good idea but yeah, a lot can go wrong. Imagine being stuck in the middle of space. I can't even handle a 4 story building elevator and these guys wanna try and take it all the way to space. Forget it.
I got a question if we switch Venus and plot spot and move plot closer to the sun would that make plot a planet 🤨 cause isn’t there other planet that are not close to their like plot
Our flight into space is an amazing accomplishment but I personally feel that scientists would be better use looking for ways to save the planet we're on rather than looking for another planet for us to destroy.
I am 78+, and my wife will be 80 in 5 weeks.
So much in space technology has happened
in our lives, and it seems Star Trek will come
true one day.
So inspirational
I know what you mean! I'm 61 and I remember a time when you left the house no one could reach you until you got to a telephone. Now you carry a small phone with you wherever you go, that's also a mini computer that can fit into your pocket! Amazing!😲
Jesus loves you
@@pathecat_ Jesus loves you
@@kasen9487 This is a video about technology, not religion. While the sentiment is sweet, this is the wrong place for those types of comments. I’m sure a lot of people would agree.
Be Amazed! My brother! Thanks for uplodaing a video about space!
I would like to say that I really appreciate the amount of research you do on all of these videos, I also eventually want to be a RUclipsr, and I think I've learned a lot from you. The combination of funny and informative content you create really showed me what a good video is, and also what people are more likely to watch. I just really wanted to tell you that I value the entertainment and informative moments you give me by making these videos, thanks be amazed 😁
Same
Don't ask why I Replied to my comment
Wow, thank you so much! We really do try our best to deliver on quality and accuracy, so it means a lot to hear stuff like this. Good luck with your future RUclips adventures, and please enjoy our videos in the meantime!
@@BeAmazed oh man I never saw this thank you so much, idk you even responded. But I now have a few videos on my channel so I'm doing a bit better now
I am blown away how great this video is. Awesome work
Amazing videos as always❤️
If someone doesn't paint an AstroBee Bot to look like the Companion Cube from Portal, I will lose all faith in humanity.
oof
all I can say is wow. I'm amazed at these technological creations. as a science savy myself who can build pc towers and arcade machines from scratch, this is truely centuries of skills ahead of me
There's a reason why space agencies such as NASA have such high entry-level requirements for its astronauts. Space will kill just about anyone who's not cream of the crop. I've heard it described before as something like, "You'd have to be 2/3 Steven Hawking-level smart and a world-class triathlon athlete."
@@CrimsonA1 So basically Steven Seagal.
@@coreylou326 go play antimatter dimensions without any infinity and eternity and reality stuff and points too (infinity and time/eternity dimensions are included in infinity and eternity stuff)
@@cougher9000 If the whole point of that was to confuse the bot, I’m not sure if that even did anything. 💀
@@noahater5785 lol idk what i was thinking but ok
Love your videos
Plz make more videos abt space exploration.I got sucked in 😢I was sad wen it ended
Time for mankind to do real work.
Time for us to grow up.
We now have all the knowledge and tech to do big.
Im amazed. I love videos like this thank you. Im giving a like, subscribed and alerts on.
Great video! I love your Content! I'm glad when ever anyone mentions space exploration.
@15:40 it was worded like there was only one Falcon 9 sea landing, when there have been 100+.
@16:00 There have only been 6 maned Crew Dragon missions to date. Not 30+ and Dragons require a Falcon 9 to GET to space.
@15:26, the part of Starship that flips after a belly flop is only about 15 stories tall, not 36.
Your wrong
Why didn't the Sun go to college?
It already had a MILLION DEGREES.
Great video🙂👍
I'm 10 years old and I already love this guy's channel.
😂
If space technology is already this advanced i cant imagine what its going to be like in 50 years.
Not much
A Sci-fi like spaceship that can only be seen in movies and games that's what I wants to see and ride on like I was driving a car.
Relatable
Damn it really makes you think what is out there!
Missed a perfect opportunity to throw in the impostor from among us with that spaceman scene at the beginning
Bro It Just Blows My Mind How Big Space Is
this is a good video so i subscribed
I love your videos
Live ya vids man ❤️❤️ keep up the great work :)
@@coreylou326 no scammer
@@That1monarchmain Don't worry I reported him
I know at first, living on Mars would be cool, but a couple of issues are,1. if you have pets, you couldn't bring them up to Mars safely.2. You wouldn't get to see your friends for a very long time 3. Finally, if the food or water runs out, you won't be able to get down back to Earth
Wouldnt even be that cool it would be horrible fukk mars 😂
1. Why brings pets? It's a science colony not a living colony. By the time it's a living colony pets would be allowed.
2. That's the case for literally any far away location on earth. Astronauts currently go weeks sometimes months without seeing their loved ones. Finally if it was a living colony I would imagine you have the option to move your family. Much like a naval family in the military.
3. Only when mars is for research only. If it gets opened for living then the colony would be self sufficient.
Also your "issues" are faced daily on earth. There are countless others you would deal with living on another planet.
I'd like to be alive to see the world stop spending billions on weapons to kill each other so we might see these future projects be completed within these time frames.!
Yay I’m part of the og fans
Fluffy, the comedian who is the 1st to sale out Dodgers stadium. Is now going to be the first comedian to sell out a space station.
That's one hell of a resume...😁🤗
As with millions of others over the centuries, I have been and still am fascinated and amazed about our universe.
Yet I do wonder how much the world we all share would now be, if all the billions that has been spent on space probes, cameras etc, had been spent on saving and protecting our world.
For no matter how much we learn about other planets, suns and galaxies, it profits us little if we lose our own world
No matter what we do, some time in the future we will lose our world. The only answer is to become multi-planetary, the sooner, the bettter.
I think the advent of space based solar power has a drawback that might cause the tech to fail. See, if we start "beaming" our energy towards earth via satellites, you can expect bleed through which could heat up the atmosphere quite a bit or be like one of Tesla's main problems with his transmissible electricity. Which was atmospheric Ionization created by the device. As some of the electricity that bled out would remain stuck in the atmosphere and eventually when the charge would reach a critical point, seek to ground itself in a catastrophic way, I.E. Massive thunderstorms.
Excellent video!!!!!!!!
wow the inaccuracies of this video really make me rethink watching this channel anymore and make me wonder how much other misinformation you guys have put out in previous videos
This needs to be a series. Every Episode With Pewdiepie = EEWP&Gordon Nightmares
This is the first Be Amazed RUclips video I have been early to watch it.
Starship has repeatedly had issues with the heat shield tiles falling off.
We've heard that story before.
That is required to be solved.
So good!!!
Get this comment to 100 likes!
Or else
love your vids if ya see this i just want to make srue you have a good day
My favorite is Webb, because it is more clear and better.
Great video
I'm AMAZED
Love ur vids
I fly planes so anything that relates to aviation i love it
16:41 sad earth noise
9:40 Oh look a piece from the movie RV with Robin Williams. I love that movie!
Do a video like this: Oldest houses in the world that still exist today.
Nice👍👍👍👍
I Love your video
Commented on 2023 6 January
The day this video was published
Wish everyone who sees the best in 2023.lets meet in December
Omg im so early 2 minutes I love your videos so much i really enjoy plus i get to learn new facts!❤
flat earth people should consider checking in to that space hotel once available 😅
10:12 More heat in the atmosphere from the lasers heating up the air in between causing more global warming as the more laser communication the more heat.
Back in about 1989 i remember talking about space travel in science class and i mentioned to my then science teacher that a giant elevator would be a good idea and he laughed essentially saying it was an absurd idea. Imagine my surprise when I start seeing actual plans for them. You hear that, Mr. Evans?!?
Still a stupid idea
@@DIRTYPLACCYnot really. A tower like elevator yeah it wouldn't be stable and would collapse almost instantly. But a tether like structure with a station at the top orbiting earth and remaining tethered to earth. A separate device would go up and down the tether moving materials, people, and cargo in general.
A space elevator has been thought of since as early as 1959.
@6:22 I agree that Webb is incredibly great. But I'll go for Hubble. Hubble see the objects through visible light while Webb sees through infra-red so that it can see further objects than the predecessor.
Just random facts. The Eisenhower interstate system requires that one mile in every five must be straight. These straight sections are usable as airstrips in times of war or other emergencies.
The first known contraceptive was crocodile dung, used by Egyptians in 2000 B.C.
Rhode Island is the smallest state with the longest name. The official name, used on all state documents, is "Rhode Island and Providence Plantations."
When you die your hair still grows for a couple of months.
There are two credit cards for every person in the United States.
Isaac Asimov is the only author to have a book in every Dewey-decimal category.
The newspaper serving Frostbite Falls, Minnesota, the home of Rocky and Bullwinkle, is the Picayune Intellegence.
It would take 11 Empire State Buildings, stacked one on top of the other, to measure the Gulf of Mexico at its deepest point.
The first person selected as the Time Magazine Man of the Year - Charles Lindbergh in 1927.
The most money ever paid for a cow in an auction was $1.3 million.
It took Leo Tolstoy six years to write "War & Peace".
The Neanderthal's brain was bigger than yours is.
On the new hundred dollar bill the time on the clock tower of Independence Hall is 4:10 By the way I don’t mean the time in the vid.
Each of the suits on a deck of cards represents the four major pillars of the economy in the middle ages: heart represented the Church, spades represented the military, clubs represented agriculture, and diamonds represented the merchant class.
The names of the two stone lions in front of the New York Public Library are Patience and Fortitude. They were named by then-mayor Fiorello LaGuardia.
The Main Library at Indiana University sinks over an inch every year because when it was built, engineers failed to take into account the weight of all the books that would occupy the building.
the elevator is cool, I read about it several years ago; hard to say which one comes first
I like the space elevator
I’m already subbed how do I pick web
MAKE A VIDEO OF PEOPLE WHO SURVAIVDE DEADLY THINGS
Weekend trips to the stars really more like lifelong trips
NASA literally built companion cubes from Portal
"Life immitates art"!
I'd probably have to ask someone at NASA about this, but why is the secondary mirror on the James Webb telescope smaller than that of the Hubble, causing the incoming light to be focused down to a smaller point?
it's because the JWST looks in the infared spectrum, the longest wave length on the electromagnetic spectrum. thus the infered waves must be focused onto a smaller point to produce the clear and stunning images we recieve from the JWST
5 mins ago watched your cursed object vid was amazing and this too
6:30 It's not game changing tech. It's earth changing tech.
let's sing the months of the year, only heard audio layered on a random tiktok video but am i correct 💯
It's nice to know that science is used for something other than blowing up stuff
would you be able to lift 6x as much in the space gym at the space hotel????
Op lifting pr
I remember watching shows like this when I was in Elementary School, 60 years ago. Where's my flying cat?!!! It's all a pipe dream.
The way people drive and you want flying cars🤦♂️
Just be happy with your cell phone, computer, electric cars and 80 inch tv ffs!
The tech that gets priority will be that which is most profitable for the corporations to undertake , for their investors
Hello Be Amazed viewers.
Me in 2050: "Back in my day we had the PS5 and the Nintendo Switch"
My grandkid: "Did they have GTA 6?"
Me in 2050: *throws kid out the window*
Life lesson: Don't bring up anything that doesn't exist.
Astro Bees would also be great cat toys like the roombas 😂
I want there to be a vote on making the nasa robots look like actual bumble bees
If hit the subscribe button I would not be subscribed anymore. But I did hit the like button. ❤❤❤
Mr. Beast in 4 years: "spending 48Hours on The Voyager Station"
Those "Astrobees" are pretty cool. Reminds me of "Huey, Dewey and Louie" drones on "Silent Running".
Could anyone please tell me sources to look into about current technology advancements in the space industry. I’m trying to learn as much as I can.
i have a question, and consider this, im the guy who solved the heat vector, when the hell did laser beams become stable enough to use? last i checked there was a fall off issue?
I think this would help within the near future of the good people of earth. but this really could take 10-100 years. in conclusion I think that it could happen in many of our life times but is still in the works.
0:00 - Hi BA. 30:12 - Like from me. Cheers.
Whf is this comment???
It’s actually closer to around 14.7billion years
ASTRO bee is wild!
I WAS 20TH TO LIKE
@16:05 dragon has only completed ONE flight carrying human passengers yes it has gone to the iss nearly thirty time 24 currently if i remeber correctly 23 of those were cargo only missions and only ONE had human passengers
For the test of the inflatable magig for space...why weren't they testing the limits in a vacuum? Because with earth airpressure wouldn't it push back a bit making the possibility that it would go for higher PSI?
9:31 I have one problem with using light for bringing internet to the public. There's too many radicals in the atmosphere for the lasers to work like that. Light bends and can't travel through solid walls. That's why we use fiberoptic's, it gives the light a secure place to travel. It has nowhere to go but directly to the devices. Radie waves work well too because they have antenna to conduct too. Lasers are too expensive to be honest because it needs a grid of devices to direct the system and it's not going to be secure. What if one of the lasers are blocked the light from getting to the public? Also, what happens if one of the lasers go off because of debris?
The first 3 should be named Huey, Dewey, and Louie 😁
They're coming up w Prometheus technology
I see a lot of things going wrong with the space elevator, it's a good idea but yeah, a lot can go wrong. Imagine being stuck in the middle of space. I can't even handle a 4 story building elevator and these guys wanna try and take it all the way to space. Forget it.
10:40 finally I can tell someone who says that they’re lagging that they’re not lagging
The image at 11:01 on the TV (screen right) is from episode 101 (originally, scene 4) of The Witcher (Netflix) and uncredited. Tut.
19:18 I love how the camera cuts make it seem like the scientist was still there and were blown to smithereens.
hahah, that was unintentional but hilarious now you've pointed it out 🤣
Omg robot companion cubes🤣
Question. Radio waves travel at the speed of light much like a laser would, so how would the laser then be faster? Bandwidth?
Hubble, allll the way.
Cool
Why do those Martian homes look like the pods from alien
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Oh thacs
They can take clear pictures of things half a light year away, but not a clear picture of the moon ?
I got a question if we switch Venus and plot spot and move plot closer to the sun would that make plot a planet 🤨 cause isn’t there other planet that are not close to their like plot
Look at 3:25 and you can see Mark rober
Our flight into space is an amazing accomplishment but I personally feel that scientists would be better use looking for ways to save the planet we're on rather than looking for another planet for us to destroy.