5 Interesting Things

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  • Опубликовано: 2 май 2024
  • Sign up for a free trial of The Great Courses Plus here: ow.ly/36MU30iqElD
    I get ideas for videos that I really like but they're too short for their own video. So I've collected 5 here into one video.
    * It's not really correct to say the wasp "wants" something. It's more accurate to say that the wasp has evolved traits that cause it to behave in certain ways. The same goes for the fig plant. It doesn't want to be pollinated. But this language of intent and desire is a useful shortcut when talking about evolved behaviour and traits.
    The vortex shedding animation was created by Cesareo de La Rosa Siqueira. Used here with thanks.
    The Great Courses Plus is currently available to watch through a web browser to almost anyone in the world and optimized for the US, UK, and Australian markets. The Great Courses Plus is currently working to both optimize the product globally and accept credit card payments globally.
    Twitter: / moulds
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Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @subzeroelectronics3022
    @subzeroelectronics3022 4 года назад +1954

    Everyone’s like,
    “Ew, dead wasps!”
    well, I’m sure we can all agree that living wasps are much worse for eating.

    • @Evp3
      @Evp3 3 года назад +11

      yum!

    • @elithomas8022
      @elithomas8022 3 года назад +9

      I dunno about wasps, but yellowjackets taste pretty good

    • @acidset
      @acidset 3 года назад +16

      We can also all agree on that figs are delicious.

    • @kaibroeking9968
      @kaibroeking9968 3 года назад +7

      But the living wasps are crunchy...

    • @eduarddvorecky3731
      @eduarddvorecky3731 3 года назад +7

      @@kaibroeking9968 come over, i've got some in my shed, and i'm happy to share a snack with you

  • @wolfandbrie5679
    @wolfandbrie5679 5 лет назад +719

    When two fig trees love each other very much. A wasp comes about and does the rest.

    • @OatmealTheCrazy
      @OatmealTheCrazy 2 года назад +17

      Or one fig tree loves itself

    • @SmokeyVlogs
      @SmokeyVlogs 2 года назад +4

      Dear God 😂

    • @radaro.9682
      @radaro.9682 2 года назад +10

      Anything done with wasps is terrifying, even when they basically a tool used during plant sex.

    • @ukrainiansturgeon8561
      @ukrainiansturgeon8561 2 года назад +6

      How... to... delete... someone’s... comment...
      *No Results.*

    • @harlequinems
      @harlequinems 2 года назад +8

      Do mummy and daddy tell the baby fig tree that the wasp is their version of the stalk delivering babies? 😆

  • @Stallnig
    @Stallnig 4 года назад +842

    "Son, i believe it's time for you to learn about the figs and the wasps."
    "Dad, I already know about the birds an- wait what?"
    "...also there's caterpillars"

    • @operator8014
      @operator8014 3 года назад +32

      Your dad's into some freaky stuff.

    • @ska4dragons
      @ska4dragons 2 года назад +25

      Sex talks are getting complicated the days...

    • @kaydubsthekoifish
      @kaydubsthekoifish 2 года назад +4

      I never had the talk. I learned it through a book, meant for kids between ages 5-8. To this day, it's still my favourite way I learned about it. There were other books in the series, directed at older audiences, but none of them explained it as nicely as the 5-8 one did. At least in my opinion.

    • @benwisey
      @benwisey 2 года назад +1

      What was the book called?

    • @salahmohamed6391
      @salahmohamed6391 2 года назад

      @@kaydubsthekoifish What was the book called?

  • @mrnicomedes
    @mrnicomedes 4 года назад +333

    Steve didn't *want* to use the word "want" in those ways, he's just an educational youtuber who has evolved to behave in a way that distills information and disseminates it in the most expedient fashion.

  • @RobertMilesAI
    @RobertMilesAI 6 лет назад +2268

    Excellent video, like the format, never eating another fig.

    • @MichaelErskine
      @MichaelErskine 6 лет назад +50

      Robert Miles I happened to be eating dried figs (as I do every morning with my first coffee at work) whilst watching this, but I knew what to expect about the wasp detail! 😁

    • @LeoStaley
      @LeoStaley 6 лет назад +30

      It's always awesome to see my favorite youtubers watching my other favorite youtubers.

    • @lawrencecalablaster568
      @lawrencecalablaster568 5 лет назад +35

      This actually make me want to eat more figs; I will absorb the power of the wasps that the figs absorbed!

    • @alexpotts6520
      @alexpotts6520 5 лет назад +45

      Most unpleasant for me was the realisation that the wasps mating inside the fig were siblings.

    • @alexpotts6520
      @alexpotts6520 5 лет назад +60

      One other thought - if figs digest wasps, are figs themselves suitable for vegans?

  • @robertpdot533
    @robertpdot533 6 лет назад +2274

    I've never wanted to not eat a fig any more than now.

    • @ieatiron
      @ieatiron 6 лет назад +97

      Figs, new recipe, now 70% more proteins! (apparently)

    • @NotOneToFly
      @NotOneToFly 5 лет назад +18

      How many fig newtons did you eat as a kid?

    • @BlazertronGames
      @BlazertronGames 5 лет назад +44

      I don't give a shit, figs are tasty!

    • @asparrow9876
      @asparrow9876 5 лет назад +74

      @@BlazertronGames I don't know why but the very fact that figs basically digest and break down wasps so I see none of them when I bite into one is so remarkable that it makes them tastier in my eyes.

    • @besserwisser4055
      @besserwisser4055 5 лет назад +15

      I love figs even more now.

  • @janbogar1250
    @janbogar1250 3 года назад +74

    Caterpillar: "Om nom nom."
    Lima bean: "There is always a bigger fish".

  • @WulframII
    @WulframII 2 года назад +22

    Steve - I just wanted to let you know that years later, your videos are still teaching me things.
    I was waiting in the truck while my wife was shopping and noticed these spirals going up the antenna of the truck beside me. I then realized that mine also had the spiral. It hit me, all these years later, that you had explained why they have the spiral in this very video!
    When my wife came out, I nerded-out and explained resonating frequency to her and your chimney example!

  • @Nixitur
    @Nixitur 6 лет назад +1634

    So, are figs considered carnivorous plants then? After all, they literally digest the wasps.

    • @GEricM
      @GEricM 6 лет назад +137

      Nixitur thats what i was thinking too, its the same thing other carnivorous plants do but figs arent obligate carnivores

    • @demandred1957
      @demandred1957 5 лет назад +50

      That's what I was thinking simultaneously while also thinking I'm never going to eat another Fig Newton.

    • @aJoats
      @aJoats 5 лет назад +125

      When you think about it though, it's not like the fig tree itself is consuming wasps for nutrients. It's killing them for reproduction, which is if anything more disturbing (alternately, infant figs only get to begin the journey of life by killing at least one wasp). Nature is so Metal 😉

    • @mosmicke
      @mosmicke 5 лет назад +54

      Hoansbuckler Rose hedges can trap sheep that then starves, dies and gives nutrition to the soil.

    • @aychar
      @aychar 4 года назад +23

      @@EchoHeo I dunno if it's like eating a murderer, that would be eating a fig tree rather than the fruit. This is more like sucking one off.

  • @preddy09
    @preddy09 6 лет назад +923

    I'm done eating image stabilization cameras, figs on the other hand seem delicious.

  • @lukilooser1
    @lukilooser1 4 года назад +37

    interesting fact 1.1 - dslr cameras with image stabilization actually move their imaging-sensor to cope with shaky footage - you can even hear and feel the mechanism working (at least on my older pentax)

    • @gian3458
      @gian3458 3 года назад +1

      Haven't had a Pentax, but it's sick that they started it all! Since manufacturers have removed the mirrors on their cameras, new mirrorless camera bodies have been slowly incorporating the in-body IS, only tractioning as of recent. Olympus really started the whole thing, at least on the mirrorless world back in 08, and from what I've seen they are the most effective. Though Fujifilm and Panasonic have really caught up a lot.

  • @diamondsmasher
    @diamondsmasher 4 года назад +62

    "Interesting things"
    Step 1: Cut a hole in a box.
    Uhh... I'm not sure I want to see the rest of this, Steve

  • @jaapsch2
    @jaapsch2 6 лет назад +336

    Love the vid. Here's an index:
    0:41 Image stabilization
    4:44 Fig wasps
    8:20 Chimney fins
    10:47 Lima beans
    12:31 String tower
    13:30 Great Courses Plus
    14:38 Bonus fig fact

  • @jamesdavis3851
    @jamesdavis3851 5 лет назад +80

    I love the air quotes to acknowledge that anthropomorphising scientific concepts is misleading but sometimes "useful". We've got a real teacher here. Fantastic videos Steve.

    • @iwatchwithnoads7480
      @iwatchwithnoads7480 Год назад +1

      Only children would be confused by it. But it's open youtube and children should be watching these. So he compensates with air quotes. Brilliant

  • @indyola9738
    @indyola9738 3 года назад +7

    The vortex shedding spoilers on towers are also useful when strapping down a tent with flat webbing belts. They are generally pulling the tent down toward the ground so the tent doesn't fly away. Typically rated for 5000-10,000 pounds of tension, the straps are attached to 1 inch wide stakes hammered 40 inches into the ground. The straps vibrate strongly in the wind, like that rubber band with the hairdryer. The fix is to give each strap a half twist or a full twist. totally stops.

  • @alikatts323
    @alikatts323 2 года назад

    Steve, you're an excellent teacher. Just binge watched a few of your videos, and I'm so impressed with how you're able to break down "difficult" concepts in a manner that is easy to comprehend, even if the subject matter is foreign to us. My kids (homeschool-High schoolers) love watching your videos too. Well done!!

  • @_ninthRing_
    @_ninthRing_ 6 лет назад +229

    It's fascinating to me how sophisticated plant communication actually is. There are plenty of examples of a single plant releasing a stimulatory chemical during an animal attack, triggering responses in neighboring plants of the same species. An example of this is the tobacco plant: It can actually alter the chemistry of it's leaves & stem to increase it's toxicity in response to attacks by tobacco beetles, and also signal to other tobacco plants to do the same - all without a central nervous system!
    There are rich & dynamic conversations between plants happening all around us, just at very different time scales...

    • @MerkhVision
      @MerkhVision 2 года назад +18

      IIRC the “toxic” compound that tobacco plants use to protect themselves is nicotine, so does that process you described end up with a stronger/more potent tobacco product? If so, do tobacco growers ever cause this effect intentionally to increase the quality of their yield?

    • @jacobmarshall5391
      @jacobmarshall5391 2 года назад +4

      @@MerkhVision interesting

    • @w.loczykij5354
      @w.loczykij5354 Год назад +5

      Just don't tell it to vegans.

    • @rmariboe
      @rmariboe Год назад +1

      Plants are too sophisticated. It must be unethical to grow them for eating 🤔

    • @sugarraybow
      @sugarraybow Год назад

      They do this by communcating by sound. They are clicking/poppig oxygen in a ultra high frequency. So yeah, plants can talk and listen to each other. Look it up somewhere on RUclips is Video from israelian scientists.

  • @SteveMould
    @SteveMould  6 лет назад +521

    ... number 2 will shock you! (to a greater or lesser extent than the other 4 things). Hope you like the format!
    Quick note about image stabilisation in the Pixel 2. It seems there is OIS (Optical Image Stabilisation) in the phone too, which is a type of mechanical stabilisation that involves moving the lens to keep the image stable. From my research this is used to reduce blur in still images but not to reduce shake in video. It's all about the internal sensors for video on the Pixel 2.

    • @piteoswaldo
      @piteoswaldo 6 лет назад +2

      Is that string tower a Buckminster Fuller sculpture? Very beautiful piece of art!

    • @wobblysauce
      @wobblysauce 6 лет назад

      Did not put pressure on the string, how do we know it is not just stiff.

    • @wierdalien1
      @wierdalien1 6 лет назад +2

      Steve Mould wait, london, backside of the Tate &Lyle sugar factory. . . Woolwich arsenal.

    • @feybart
      @feybart 6 лет назад +4

      I liked the content, but I wouldn't have minded multiple shorter videos (although I can imagine ad revenue goes up with longer videos).

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  6 лет назад +5

      Alistair Shaw correct! Good sleuthing.

  • @poe84it
    @poe84it 4 года назад

    You sir, are a kind one! One in a thousand! Thank you for your time spent sharing your curiosity, observation, knowledge and thoughts with us!

  • @dsmith8196
    @dsmith8196 4 года назад

    love this format. brilliant work, as always. thanks Steve.

  • @karlos0993
    @karlos0993 5 лет назад +353

    "fluid dynamics is complicated" is probably the understatement of the year xD

    • @gtb870
      @gtb870 4 года назад

      Carlos Muñoz was just about to say the same thing lol

    • @Slidaulth
      @Slidaulth 4 года назад +9

      The fact that this same process is why flags wave and amber waves of grain and ocean surface (non tidal/current) waves...well, same, highly related...yeah, it's a bit complicated...but beautifully complicated.

    • @CaTastrophy427
      @CaTastrophy427 4 года назад +10

      As the sister of someone who creates computer models of fluid dynamics in various situations, and really likes to try to explain it at family gatherings, I can agree that saying "it's complicated" is like saying "0° Kelvin is rather chilly". Though, she at least brings her laptop to show some of the cool stuff that she's done.
      I'll stick with data analysis. At least with that, you can explain it to people who know nothing about it by saying "so, given this bit of information, and this other bit, oh, and that bit over there too, I can tell you that this thing here is probably true, with decently high accuracy".

    • @felixbillington6151
      @felixbillington6151 4 года назад +1

      As a physics undergrad I can endorse this statement

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 4 года назад +3

      Fluid dynamics is dark sorcery. Easier to understand the life cycle of a black hole.

  • @stefanklass6763
    @stefanklass6763 6 лет назад +518

    The idea with Schrödinger’s cat was NOT to observe the cat. Man, you have to learn your stuff before putting cats in boxes!

    • @ubbeus
      @ubbeus 5 лет назад +28

      Human Person if I fits, I sits...

    • @besserwisser4055
      @besserwisser4055 5 лет назад +4

      *pictures of people shoving their butts into tight spaces*

    • @CheekyD21
      @CheekyD21 5 лет назад +19

      Have you tried PUTTING a cat in a box over allowing the cat to get in itself! Not pretty.

    • @JorgetePanete
      @JorgetePanete 4 года назад

      @@CheekyD21 ?*

    • @WlatPziupp
      @WlatPziupp 3 года назад +2

      Schrödinger's cat is how the most intellectual serial killers get their start

  • @dragoncurveenthusiast
    @dragoncurveenthusiast 5 лет назад

    Yesterday I told someone about the fig wasp related facts I learned from this video (when it first came out). I'm surprised by how much I remembered!
    Many videos I watch are interesting, but presented in a way that makes it hard to remember. Not your's! You have a way of explaining things that makes me remember them.
    Please keep it up!

  • @mariatrombley8630
    @mariatrombley8630 4 года назад +18

    I’m so glad I came across your channel!! So informative and extremely entertaining!!! You are so freakin intelligent...I feel smarter after watching lol!! Thank you for your wonderful content!!

  • @dynamicgecko1213
    @dynamicgecko1213 6 лет назад +316

    Man. That whole fig story was really interesting and rather tragic

  • @macronencer
    @macronencer 6 лет назад +35

    Did anyone else see that box setup at the start and think "he's found a way to spy on Schrödinger's Cat!" ?

  • @joshuacoppersmith
    @joshuacoppersmith 4 года назад +2

    I love the title, and I think each having almost nothing directly in common makes the video work. Any theme would in fact make it seem more like a countdown video.

  • @guppeeh
    @guppeeh 3 года назад

    Steve, you are currently the most interesting channel to me. Impressive science content and delivery. Love it!

  • @nihonium
    @nihonium 6 лет назад +312

    It's a really nice format actually. I quite enjoyed it :D

  • @KaliTakumi
    @KaliTakumi 6 лет назад +353

    So the fig tree eats fig wasps

  • @vaughnsigal4560
    @vaughnsigal4560 2 года назад +1

    After I found out about the deal with figs, I've loved every time I can inform someone who hasn't found out to see their reaction. It's always sheer disgust

  • @nithinanand2517
    @nithinanand2517 4 года назад

    Awesome format. Great content as always. Keep em coming

  • @zac8603
    @zac8603 5 лет назад +163

    I had no idea wasps had such complex relationships with different plants. I just thought they were stinging bastards.

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 4 года назад +36

      Wasps as a whole are the most terrifying creatures on Earth. They have many different kinds of life cycles, and all of them seem to be nightmarish in some way or another.

    • @JonnyD3ath
      @JonnyD3ath 4 года назад

      HA HA HA HA

    • @timesfly1081
      @timesfly1081 4 года назад +7

      Yora also they are all inbred abominations lol. The first thing they do when they hatch is start mating with their brothers and sisters. 🐝 🐝

    • @TheMrPurin
      @TheMrPurin Год назад

      @@Yora21 0⁰

    • @michaelcherokee8906
      @michaelcherokee8906 Год назад +1

      I mean, youre right, most of them are stinging bastards. But not all of them. My dad in Easton PA and I noticed this GIANT species of some kind of vespid this summer, naturally we both concluded it was the murder hornets from Asia finally having reached PA from where theyd made landfall in Washington state a few years ago. Two terrified days of either running to our cars or parking down the street from the hedge where the wasps had hived, my dad identified them for sure as a non-stinging species of fruit pollinating, harmless wasp. They look terrifying, but I guess this is one case where looks being deceiving is actually fortunate.

  • @nicstroud
    @nicstroud 6 лет назад +309

    That was a piss poor display of grass blowing.

  • @HaydenPK
    @HaydenPK 4 года назад +1

    Definitely do more videos like this! The fig wasp and caterpillar wasp stuff was facinating!

  • @antoninsebera152
    @antoninsebera152 2 года назад

    This channel should be mentioned by every schiool teacher to students. Very fun and educative.. I am 42 old and I love it.

  • @aJoats
    @aJoats 5 лет назад +262

    Just a friendly reminder that biology is a beautiful, brutal, horror show.
    Also, the video may be 8 months old, but the algorithm wanted me to see it now 🤔

    • @kylehooser5260
      @kylehooser5260 4 года назад

      same...

    • @FirstLast-cc6cv
      @FirstLast-cc6cv 4 года назад +8

      My biology teacher always said "biology is really the study of three things. Living things eating. Living things having sex (reproduction). Living things dying."

    • @blockshiftsdad4273
      @blockshiftsdad4273 4 года назад +1

      ah.

    • @acidset
      @acidset 3 года назад +3

      What's wrong with people? It's not like if a video is more than a month old it shouldn't show up on your feed.

    • @aJoats
      @aJoats 3 года назад +6

      @@acidset It was more of an interesting observation of the random popularity spikes of content. But there is something particularly amusing about getting a comment notification about it a year later as well 😉

  • @VyvienneEaux
    @VyvienneEaux 6 лет назад +6

    The fig varieties sold as "fresh figs" in the produce section of grocery stores are usually varieties that don't require pollination in order to fruit. As a result, fig wasps are not necessary for fruit production, and so fig farmers don't use them.
    Unfortunately, dry figs (like Smyrna and Calimyrna figs) do require fig wasps to pollinate them. It's quite interesting how it's done- Ficus carica is a diecious species, so the the fig wasps are cultivated separately on male fig trees and then the wasp-laden male figs are transported in paper bags with holes in them to female fig trees for pollination.

    • @btf_flotsam478
      @btf_flotsam478 7 месяцев назад +1

      ...you didn't watch until the end, did you?

  • @joshuap.4731
    @joshuap.4731 3 года назад

    I really enjoyed this. I've only just discovered your channel I'm excited to see it all.

  • @DeKosta
    @DeKosta 4 года назад

    Yes i love learning about these things you ordinary wouldn't necessary notice or think any deeper about! Keep it rocking!

  • @jponcelo
    @jponcelo 6 лет назад +41

    Well I unconsciously uttered, "Oh, interesting!" for each of these Interesting Things, so I suppose it does what it says on the tin. I very much like this format!

  • @dvorak2676
    @dvorak2676 6 лет назад +10

    oh my god the spiral fins
    i paused the video and haven't continued yet
    i was asking myself this exact question repeatedly recently (one tower next to my new home has that) and thinking i should seek for the explanation... and there it is, i'll know it in a few seconds...
    can't wait. thank you so much

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  6 лет назад +2

      :) hope it made sense!

    • @iamdave84
      @iamdave84 4 года назад +1

      If you often find yourself asking questions like these, you might also enjoy the RUclips channel Practical Engineering by Grady Hillhouse

  • @ChristiaanCorthals
    @ChristiaanCorthals 4 года назад +4

    Thanks, now I understand a bit more about my fig tree! The other items are interesting as well, of course

  • @SecretSquirrelFun
    @SecretSquirrelFun 2 года назад

    I hope you’ve done more of this format, I really enjoyed this video thanks 🙂🐿

  • @schregen
    @schregen 6 лет назад +3

    That fig thing was reaaaally interesting! I love fits!

  • @SlothfulTom
    @SlothfulTom 6 лет назад +9

    i enjoyed this format for short videos and the information that was presented.

  • @alext9067
    @alext9067 4 года назад

    Great format. Keep it going. The camera in the box was genius.

  • @Sir_Uncle_Ned
    @Sir_Uncle_Ned 4 года назад +1

    Why am I only finding this channel now? I feel a strong binge coming on!

  • @MarkAhlquist
    @MarkAhlquist 6 лет назад +104

    Regarding the Fig Wasps (#2)
    There's a great documentary about fig trees, I saw it years ago, called "Queen of Trees" and it shows the entire life cycle of these insane wasps.
    I found it: (last time I looked for it I couldn't find it)
    ruclips.net/video/xy86ak2fQJM/видео.html

    • @pw7225
      @pw7225 6 лет назад +1

      amazing video, thanks!

    • @aamirsuhail7271
      @aamirsuhail7271 6 лет назад

      Thank you so much. It was overwhelming.

    • @RoGeorgeRoGeorge
      @RoGeorgeRoGeorge 6 лет назад

      So beautiful, thank you!

    • @VerSalieri
      @VerSalieri 6 лет назад

      Mark Ahlquist thanks bud, looking forward to checking it out.

  • @sotonric
    @sotonric 6 лет назад +24

    Great video - thanks Steve. I never much liked figs in the first place - but I'm definitely never eating a fig again!

  • @andremanzolli5302
    @andremanzolli5302 3 года назад

    Great format, nice mix of subjects. No making something mandatory, some connections among subjects will be a plus. Congratulations!

  • @pbft.j
    @pbft.j 3 года назад

    I know this is old but I genuinely love your channel. Thank you!

  • @mcleishmartin
    @mcleishmartin 6 лет назад +7

    Really interesting stuff, thanks for sharing! You've inspired me to make the tension string tower! Just a small suggestion, the transitions between things were just a bit too fast, maybe pause for a second longer?

  • @moumous87
    @moumous87 6 лет назад +3

    Already knew about the fig pollination (quite well-known and plenty of videos) but the way he explained it is quite hilarious 😂😂😂 he seems genuinely shocked by the perversion of mother nature 😂

  • @rixterz11
    @rixterz11 4 года назад

    I like this type of video because it's more a thinking process rather than conveying facts without any thinking.

  • @torababdullah7952
    @torababdullah7952 4 года назад

    This channel is the embodiment of all the answers i have been looking for and Will be looking for.

  • @RobertT1999
    @RobertT1999 6 лет назад +50

    Technically this video should be titled 6 Interesting Things because the video just happens to be interesting too. But seriously, you've made an amazing video as always 👍🏻

    • @imveryangryitsnotbutter
      @imveryangryitsnotbutter 6 лет назад +3

      Does a set of all interesting things contain itself?

    • @RobertT1999
      @RobertT1999 6 лет назад

      You have a very good point there. The only way around that would be to say that although this interesting video is the container interesting things, the container of this video would be my internet browser. Like if I were to stuff a steamed bun with red bean paste, yeah, the tasty steamed bun may be the container of the tasty red bean paste and the steamed bun isn't contained within itself therefore a steamed bun only contains one tasty thing (being the red bean paste) but the container of the steamed bun is my stomach which would contain two tasty things.
      Damn, I'm hungry now! 😞

    • @erikhendrych190
      @erikhendrych190 6 лет назад

      So axiom of choice yes or not? :D

  • @jmunt
    @jmunt 6 лет назад +39

    I like the format. I hope you keep making them.
    Just one thing to think about: people might be more likely to watch the whole video if it was like a 10 minute 3 interesting things instead of a 16 minute 5 things. A lot of times I go on RUclips when I just have a few minutes to kill and I often don’t go back to finish a video that I didn’t have time to get through. Maybe that’s just me lol. I’d think RUclips analytics could probably tell you if it’s a common occurrence.
    Plus if you break the videos into smaller chunks, you can release them more often.... that’s my true motivation for the suggestion XD
    Ps. I think your videos are always worth coming back to finish watching. Keep up the good work!

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  6 лет назад +19

      This is really helpful. Thank you.

  • @masonminnerly3908
    @masonminnerly3908 4 года назад

    Yes to more of these videos please. Well done

  • @davidf2244
    @davidf2244 4 года назад

    I fucking love this guy. Just enough color commentary. Sticks to the information. I never wish I had 3x speed! Learning so much

  • @BarackObama090
    @BarackObama090 5 лет назад +9

    about the first experiment with the pixel 2. you fixed the picture to be always in front of the lenses, but I'm not sure if you know that those lenses are not statically fixed to the frame of the phone, they use a kind of springy mechanism to stabilize the footage. So every time you move, the camera lenses are moving too, not just a software effect.

    • @ZakKarimjee
      @ZakKarimjee 4 года назад

      I was thinking this - I have a Galaxy S7 and if you look at the camera and jolt the phone you can see it drifting slightly to the side!

    • @marshlow17
      @marshlow17 3 года назад

      Yep the pixel 2 had optical (ois) as well as electronic image stabilization

  • @Mjiujtsu
    @Mjiujtsu 6 лет назад +15

    wow, i never thought i could hate wasps more, and now i also don't like figs. yay science!

  • @darioinfini
    @darioinfini 3 года назад

    I had a friend who used to work at a company that made pollution probes that stuck into industrial chimneys. His job was to go around the country climbing up the side and calibrating these things. He said the calibration was a painstakingly delicate adjustment made with a small screwdriver and it was exceedingly difficult to do that when you and the structure are shaking wildly. I asked him why is the chimney shaking? He said I don't know! But THEY DO! I assumed years later that they must vibrate due to the wind just like any tall skinny structure in strong wind will do ... eventually you hit a resonant frequency induced by the wind and it starts shaking. Now I have a more refined explanation and their mitigation strategy. Thanks!

  • @theclipreaper
    @theclipreaper 3 года назад

    I searched for more than 40 minutes for the phone camera video, I knew it was by you but found nothing among your uploads! Good thing I remembered about this series

  • @MajidFouladpour
    @MajidFouladpour 6 лет назад +33

    This format is not bad at all (to be used as a spice)!
    By the way, no Patreon account?

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  6 лет назад +9

      Working on it! Thanks :)

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  5 лет назад +7

      Hey Majid. My Patreon is now up and running: www.patreon.com/stevemould. Let me know what you thin!

    • @flacciddice3324
      @flacciddice3324 3 года назад +1

      @@SteveMould I love that you actually remembered and came back to give a link to a specific person. 10/10 You deserve being popular

  • @Bebo18
    @Bebo18 4 года назад +3

    Could we use the string thing at the end to build a space elevator?

  • @mrmjdza
    @mrmjdza 4 года назад

    I LOVE THIS FORMAT!
    Also, I like how you chose the order: physics / computing, botany / symbiosis, physics / fluid dynamics, botany / biochemistry / symbiosis, physics / structural engineering ;p
    A scientist is just an arrangement of particles capable of observing and arranging particles in order to analyse how particles tend to arrange themselves...
    And then contemplate why particles exist in the first place, which has unfalteringly led to the discovery of new "indivisible" particles and "fundamental" forces.

  • @zaledalen9931
    @zaledalen9931 4 года назад

    All five things were indeed interesting. Thanks for doing this. I really enjoyed this one.

  • @JWentu
    @JWentu 6 лет назад +3

    I love this format. I already knew about the wasps thanks to Richard Dawkins' books. I strongly recommend them!

    • @25maxman
      @25maxman 6 лет назад

      JWentu nice!

    • @raykent3211
      @raykent3211 6 лет назад +1

      JWentu you strongly recommend the wasps?

    • @JWentu
      @JWentu 6 лет назад

      Of course! but never ever buy the books! Eheh... I am sorry if my comment was ambiguous. Of course I am recommending Dawkins' books: they are very very important to me, they definitely helped shaping my view of the world.

    • @raykent3211
      @raykent3211 6 лет назад

      JWentu I agree, he's knowledgeable and a good writer, but, .....wait for it .... can be a bit waspish.

    • @JWentu
      @JWentu 6 лет назад

      He indeed was pish, but he isn't pish any more.

  • @TmMagic57
    @TmMagic57 6 лет назад +41

    My car ran out of blinker fluid today, i accidentally bought a can of beep for my horn. >:/ Bad day made better with this video though. :)

    • @CockatooDude
      @CockatooDude 6 лет назад +2

      You aren't the only one man, this homeless guy stole 20 bucks from me today, I was pissed to say the least.

    • @Yrouel86
      @Yrouel86 4 года назад +2

      Yeah everyone knows you need Honk for the horn c'mon

  • @s0dfish110
    @s0dfish110 4 года назад

    You are a brilliant curator of knowledge!

  • @andrebartels1690
    @andrebartels1690 4 года назад +1

    No clickbait. These are more than 5 facts, and they all are interesting. Very nice contrast to those other mindblowing-whatnot-vids 👍

  • @kennethgrose7828
    @kennethgrose7828 4 года назад +4

    The stinger that deposits eggs are called ovipositor. I'm sure you knew that I just like pointing it out for anyone who doesn't know it.

  • @Leonardokite
    @Leonardokite 5 лет назад +5

    8:20 interesting, that reminded me of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. It reached resonant frequency and went down! But I'm sure Steve Mould already knew that.

    • @btf_flotsam478
      @btf_flotsam478 7 месяцев назад

      It wasn't actually a resonant frequency IIRC

  • @mahmoodulhasanbhaiyat5874
    @mahmoodulhasanbhaiyat5874 3 года назад

    I loved this video, please make more of this type!

  • @bilalrasool2318
    @bilalrasool2318 3 года назад +1

    the interesting thing #1 is just OIS, which is the movement of the camera lens to stabilize the video. The rolling shutter is probably the EIS, or the electronic image stabilization, which is described.

  • @magus104
    @magus104 6 лет назад +68

    what came first the wasp or the figg?

    • @liquidminds
      @liquidminds 6 лет назад +35

      a different version of both. back to a point where both were not co-dependent, but had options. Just that this option turned out to be the most lucrative, so the individuals that bet on this method, had more children than those that did, so over time, the whole species evolved into this direction.

    • @Egregius
      @Egregius 5 лет назад +19

      @Danny BRITZMAN Allow me to point out it was a perfect opportunity to point out something worthwhile despite the lameness of the set-up, as it did hint at a deeper question.

    • @abd4620
      @abd4620 5 лет назад +1

      And they want us to believe that its absolutely logical that all of this has happened.. By chance?!

    • @organicaca
      @organicaca 4 года назад +5

      @@abd4620 Who is they? Given enough time, chance can become something "intelligently designed"

    • @abd4620
      @abd4620 4 года назад

      @@organicaca logically mathematically and the time limit of the universe disagrees, can a book just pop out of non-existence? Supposing we gave it unlimited time which is not real whatsoever

  • @dyanpanda7829
    @dyanpanda7829 6 лет назад +33

    woo! new video from STTEEEEEEVVVE!! Thanks!

  • @shiraz99
    @shiraz99 4 года назад

    Sent here from “smarter every day’ - love the vids and 5 interesting things was actually about 7 in the end, great format more like this please. Also my wife makes fig jam, every jar about 8 digested wasps.

  • @orsmplus
    @orsmplus 4 года назад

    The string thing has to be my most favourite.
    Nothing satisfies me more than an engineer or scientist showing you something, just for pure amazement factor. Like, "Look at this. You seeing this shit?" *mind blown hand actions*

  • @StraightOuttaJarhois
    @StraightOuttaJarhois 6 лет назад +8

    I enjoy this video and want to see more like it. Wouldn't mind it being split up into several shorter videos either.

  • @lawrencecalablaster568
    @lawrencecalablaster568 5 лет назад +10

    I love figs &, counterintuitively, I love them even more now.

  • @jaynex903
    @jaynex903 4 года назад

    Very interesting indeed. And, What a beautiful evolution of the fig and it's wasp... Made for each other. It has lively and dramatic story to tell .

  • @johnathanflannagan2407
    @johnathanflannagan2407 3 года назад

    Subbed. I could watch this channel every morning to jumpstart my brain

  • @pegy6384
    @pegy6384 6 лет назад +7

    I will never eat figs again. I liked the video format--I don't want interesting ideas to fall by the wayside just because they're too short to stand alone.

    • @phantomkate6
      @phantomkate6 4 года назад

      Why don't you justust eat one of the varieties that are not pollinated by wasps?

  • @McFlegmato
    @McFlegmato 6 лет назад +6

    What plastic did you use for the string tower?

    • @jasondashney
      @jasondashney 4 года назад

      I say what string did he use. That string stayed semi rigid at the top. I want to try this with regular cotton string.

  • @richysvids
    @richysvids 2 года назад

    Loved this format. Who knew figs could be so interesting!!?

  • @jishan6992
    @jishan6992 Год назад

    Love this format

  • @mohammadthesineater
    @mohammadthesineater 6 лет назад +8

    Where are the beakers !! Thought there would be at least one

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  6 лет назад +5

      5 things and no beaker! I really am failing you.

    • @mohammadthesineater
      @mohammadthesineater 6 лет назад +1

      Steve Mould you are amazing, I love all your videos.
      Keep up the good work.
      All the best

    • @samtibbitts
      @samtibbitts 6 лет назад

      Steve Mould I think you owe us a video of you pouring figs out of a beaker.

  • @AK474000
    @AK474000 4 года назад +6

    The Fig wants the pollen cover pregnant wasp to burrow into a female fig to pollinate it.
    Pretty sure this is a plot of a Hentai somewhere.

    • @mahbubsaite3079
      @mahbubsaite3079 3 года назад

      The bi male figs tree wants the lesbian female figs to get 'fed' by the female wasp...?

  • @unbasedcontrarian6461
    @unbasedcontrarian6461 Год назад +1

    A video with quality explanations of several super interesting but unrelated things packed into one juicy package??? Love it! Anything to subtract from the endless stream of pointless TikTok style spam starting to pumped into the platform is a plus for me

  • @nigelthompson874
    @nigelthompson874 2 года назад +1

    Good show Steve. FYI The effectiveness of helical strakes for reducing vortex induced vibration was discovered in 1957 by Christopher Scruton and D. E. J. Walshe at the National Physics Laboratory in Great Britain.They are therefore often described as Scruton strakes

  • @CristiNeagu
    @CristiNeagu 6 лет назад +7

    To be honest, i would personally prefer 5 separate videos, each 3 minutes long. It makes it easier to watch on a quick break.

  • @psedonymouscat7282
    @psedonymouscat7282 6 лет назад +3

    6.13 the male wasps will then dig a hole out of the wasp...

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  6 лет назад +9

      That's what's know in the business as a mistake. Damn.

    • @raykent3211
      @raykent3211 6 лет назад +1

      Steve Mould sorry Steve, you are now so venerated that you're not allowed to make mistakes. Btw, the title according to RUclips protocol should be "the 5 most AWESOME things you NEED TO KNOW!!!". But OK, I guess you're learning as you go along. Just kidding, love your stuff.

  • @Cyrvs71
    @Cyrvs71 Год назад

    Looking outside at my parent’s fig tree and thinking, “…An apple will do just fine.” Small donation from Australia in appreciation, brother Steve. Keep up the excellent work, sir, for it certainly is worthy of much more praise than these few lines could hope to encompass.

  • @thelanavishnuorchestra
    @thelanavishnuorchestra 4 года назад

    This was very interesting. I like this format. Please collect up more interesting things!

  • @6alecapristrudel
    @6alecapristrudel 6 лет назад +3

    I never liked figs anyway.

  • @suvrotica
    @suvrotica 3 года назад

    Dude this 5 thingies was spot-on. Awesome!

  • @wenchinatrenchcoat8459
    @wenchinatrenchcoat8459 6 месяцев назад

    Yep very interesting and enjoyable format. Wasp seem to like to lay their eggs into every other living thing. Crazy that a plant get the better of them. I love learning these things. Thank you

  • @jeffreybernath6627
    @jeffreybernath6627 6 лет назад +8

    I liked this just fine, but I would be perhaps happier if these were indeed their own videos. Nothing wrong with a 3 minute RUclips video.