My favourite invention isn't in this video (I believe) in the 16th century the print was invented in Germany actually the protestant bibles were the first thing printed. As a book lover I got to love this invention😂
Gutenberg invented his technology in the 15th century and the first books he printed were Latin bibles. But what you have in mind is true. The reformation would have been a purely academical matter that had reached nobody really if it had not been for the printing press that made it a popular movement. With some justification it was the first European media event: Newspapers and flyers, propaganda from both sides, pamphlets and caricatures circulated in great numbers. People who could not read would find someone who could in the village or corner pub and papers were read aloud there.
There are so many, it's almost impossible to pick just one. The car, the rocket launcher, stealth bomber, aspirin, 3D filming technology, Fanta, the Highway, the radio. i guess there are a few more parts.
And might I add that Röntgen discovered the x-rays in my home town of Würzburg in 1895 and was awarded the first Nobel Prize in Physics for it. Like the Curies he refused to take out patents related to his discovery of X-rays, as he wanted society as a whole to benefit from practical applications of his discovery.
There is even more, the first jet aircraft, the first modern rocket, and the Germans also had a hand in medicine and laser technology. Even if there is a lack of individual positions, they have always produced good inventors and engineers.
Even the old Germanic people boiled some tea from the bark of willow trees ( Latin name "salix") when they had a bad cold. And "salix" is where the name salicylic acid comes from. Apirin is based on that substance.
1. As a German I am not surprised at all that we invented the ring binders. Even in the age of digitalization, they are being used a bit to much. 2. Fun Fact about Zuse. He invented the first Computer because he was to lazy to do the calculations by hand.
My TOP 5: Chemical fertilizer. (Feeding the world is a big deal.) Printing press. 1440: Johannes Gutenberg Lightbulb. (1854, Heinrich Göbel. It wasn't Thomas Edison in 1879) Telefon. (1859: Philipp Reis) Dynamo. (1866: Werner von Siemens) The 1800s where really a great time for big inventions. Britain, the US, France and Germany where just pumping out stuff that changed the world.
This Karl Benz guy is the reason why it is called Mercedes-Benz, he was the founder of the one of the companies that would merge into Mercedes-Benz in 1926. This Werner von Siemens is the founder of the Siemens Cooperation, one of the worlds largest producers of electrical engineering and electronics products in the world. Siemens produces Trains, Trams, Subway trains, CT scanners for hospitals, High-voltage transformers, Steam turbines, Wind turbines, Washing machines and many many more.
Karl Benz had a daughter called " Mercedes" that's why, Mercedes Benz 😜 Mr Siemens also invented the first fully functional power plant, one of them was used in a watercave build by Ludwig || in 1878, that is one of those crazy fairytale Palace that Guy has built 🤪🤴 In that cave was a fully functional light system and a wave maker, so he could sit on his, swan like boat, softly rocking on the waves and listen to opera from Wagner, he was also the guy who built the Neuschwanstein castle, basically the inverter of the Disney castle 🤔🧐😜
The coffee filter was also invented by a German. Melitta Bentz registered the coffee filter with the patent office in 1908. Melitta Bentz (1873-1950), a housewife from Dresden, registered her new coffee filter with the Patent Office on 20 June 1908. Until then, coffee was usually brewed by pouring fine coffee powder into hot water and waiting until the powder had settled to some extent at the bottom of the pot.
Germanium is not a mineral, but a metal. It was used as semiconductors before silicon. The CRT was also used for television for decades. The classic tube TV. Also the motorcycle was invented one year before the car.
Two very important German inventions they didn't mention are the Gutenberg printing press (printing with mobile rearrangable letters as opposed to just carving the whole page into a printing plate, which revolutionized the production of written media in the renaissance area, making books available for the mass of the population for the first time and enabling newspapers) and the Haber/Bosch ammonium synthesis (which enabled the mass production of artificial fertilizer).
- Nuclear fission by Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner (1938) - Letterpress printing with movebale letters by Johannes Gensfleisch called Gutenberg (~1450) - the political spektrum (right for the conservatives and left for the progressives) For the first time realized in the federal assebly of 1848/1849 in Frankfurt after the Revolution of 1848 (In the speakers sight the lefties were sitting in the left and the right-wingers were sitting on the right side) - the pressure differential method that makes until today operations in the thorax possible by Ferdinand Sauerbruch (1904/05) - Jet fighter 'Heinkel HE 178' in 1939 by Hans von Ohain
german inventions americans seem quite fond of are the assault rifle, ballistic missiles, night vision devices, bomb aiming systems and quite a few more military related technology. also book printing was invented by a german. until then everything had to be written and copied by hand.
Konrad Zuse used old 35mm film material as a storage medium for his computers. He punched holes into them just in the same way as those early IBM punchcards did or teletype machines. Reading those codes was therefore much a mechanical matter and he used telepone relais for that. Lots of early computers used perforated tape in the early days and mechanical switches. If some insect made its way into them and got stuck in a switch the machine failed and an endless search for for the source of this malfunction started. Even today we use the name "debugging" for finding the cause of errors and malfunctions in our purely electronic devices. Parallel to Zuse scientists at the Manchester Institute for Science and Technology used radio valves for their calculation machines.
fair point...and we invented marxism. which i guess had a biggr impact on the world than ringbinders but thats just me and about 10 million dead people
They forgot the engines invented by Otto and Diesel that made cars and ships as we use them today possible. And yes, the same way there were movable letters invented before Gutenberg, there was also an Austrian inventor of a similar engine who was holding older patents on his engine. But today Otto‘s and Diesel‘s engines are afaik the most common. Especially the giant Dieseln engines that propels modern gigantic freight ships.
Greetings from Hamburg/Germany! I really like your reaction vids! By the way, maybe you know the movie Inglourious Basterds. One American actor acts a Nazi. Every German noticed he's not German but American. Why? He ordered 3 beers with his forfinger, his long finger and his ring finger. In Germany you take the thumb, the forfinger and the long finger. ;-)
They forgot one of the (if not the) most important inventions in human history. The printing press. Arguably both the renaissance and industrial revolution would have been drastically different. Also the christian reformation wouldn't have been nearly as widespread if it wasn't for the printing press allowing normal citizens to be able to buy a bible and read it instead of just a priest reading parts to you. It also helped in spreading the messages of the Reformists among the people.
You show catode Ray tubes but don't mention it's the most important part of a TV (till LCD came up)? Poor. It's the technic behind the screen, it's THE SCREEN
Remember the cathode ray tube? Well, based on that came the vaccuum relais tube, which was basically the mechanical version of the modern day transistor. So the first programmable fully automated computer was based on the vaccuum relais tube, with hundreds of finely mashined vaccuum relais switching on and off, giving the binary coding still in use today. This technology remained until the early 1970's when the transistor was perfected. In the USA the holes in the processing boards that the vaccum tubes were mounted in had to be covered by a round black covers to prevent dust and moisture from collecting in them. These covers were then VISUALLY confirmed by the programmers as being in place, because that was easier than following the thousands of electric cables. So a missing cover indicated a missing vaccuum tube, which then was screwed into its socket to reprogram the computer. But one day a bug, a real live insect, crawled into one of the sockets and literally got fried by the current. But visually it wasn't any different from the black cover, so the programmers didn't screw in a tube because they thought that socket was covered. Which made the computer release total rubbish answers. This is the origin of the term "we've got a bug in the code" which later was shortened to "a bug".
my fav will always be Gottfried Leibniz, inventor of the binary system. Basiclly the foundation of everything that makes us a technological civilization
One thing is wrong! And everyone says it wrong the inventor of the Automobile/car is gottlieb-daimler he invented the first ever car. Karl benz was just a partner fun fact : they never talked to each other they just send the things to build a car and then karl benz name The car like his daughter :Merzedes Benz. We people in schorndorf (my hometown and the borntown from Gottlieb-daimler ) often say „ Daimler „ instead of „ Mercedes (Benz)“. Haha it always hurts me bc its pretty sad that daimler always gets forgotten
Wow, I never thought that the bike was invented by Germany (considering that it is the favourite means of transportation of our neighbors, the Dutch). Thank you indeen for this very interesting video - I like it !!
The first computers were these huge things at the size of a small room, and they could do less calculations than a modern calculator. The computer from Konrad Zuse and the Computer by Alan Turing that helped crack the German Enigma code in WW2 could basically only add and subtract numbers. The revolutionary part was the computer could be given a pattern and could then attempt to match it by calculating a whole lot of combinations way faster than humans could do it. The huge thing on the wall is the memory and the closet size thing is the processor. Which today is the size of a potato chip inside your smartphone.
Zuse's Z3 is Turing-capable, unlike the Allied computers, which were specially built for the decheffration of the Enigma. This means that if time and energy requirements as well as material failure are not taken into account, Windows 10 or Linux could run on the Z3.
@@sylviarohge4204 Yearh i know it is Turing-capable, it is the only reason why Konrad Zuse's computer is deemed the "first" in the world. The Enigma decipher was not, and the first British Computer was made in 1947.
How is it possible that a german invented the cathode ray tube, basically setting the foundation for television as we know it, but still the TV programm and shows are all shit....
The MP3 format was developed and thus the first MP3-Player both came out of the Fraunhofer Institut in Munich. The jet engine was invented during WW2, however, parallel to that GB also invented the jet engine in basically the exact same time frame without the inventors knowing from each other. The world's 1st printing pressveas invented in the 15th century by Johannes Gutenberg and the first book in print was the Bible which Martin Luther had translated as the first German Bible available just before that. The wheel... was not invented in Germany although we would love to think that..😬 But the best invention of all is the famous German apple pie😋
You have to react on german music! My favourite Invention is the Döner! It was invented by a Turk which was living in Berlin! At least, germans invented the trains! The first locomotive was in work from Nürnberg to Fürth in Bavaria!
Still, the car with combustion engine is invented by Benz. It's not the first automobile car with an engine at all, that belongs to a French guy known as Cugnot, but it was steam powered around 1770.
Really, those were pretty lame german inventions. What about the tv by Ardenne, the rocket by von Braun and the theory of relativity by Einstein? Those were better for mankind than bikes.
The liquid fuel rocket was not invented by von Braun. It was first theorized by Ziolkowsky ( a Russian in the 1890s I believe and by Obert (German) in the 1920s - he at least claimed that he never heard of the russian scientist). The first Liquid fuel rocket was started by an american (Goddard) , von Braun just made them much bigger and flying further.
My favourite invention isn't in this video (I believe) in the 16th century the print was invented in Germany actually the protestant bibles were the first thing printed. As a book lover I got to love this invention😂
Hey Selena!! Thanks for watching :) That is so cool!!!! We didn't know that!!
A lot of people see this as the most important invention in history of modern mankind
Actually there was printing before in china, but Gutenberg invented printing with moveable letters.
@@elpresley thank you for educating me I didn't knew that. I only learned about Gutenberg in school 😅
Gutenberg invented his technology in the 15th century and the first books he printed were Latin bibles. But what you have in mind is true. The reformation would have been a purely academical matter that had reached nobody really if it had not been for the printing press that made it a popular movement. With some justification it was the first European media event: Newspapers and flyers, propaganda from both sides, pamphlets and caricatures circulated in great numbers. People who could not read would find someone who could in the village or corner pub and papers were read aloud there.
There are so many, it's almost impossible to pick just one.
The car, the rocket launcher, stealth bomber, aspirin, 3D filming technology, Fanta, the Highway,
the radio.
i guess there are a few more parts.
Thanks for watching, Robert!
Erste Autobahn war in Italien bei Mailand, sorry
The S-Bahn.
plasma TV, invented first by manfred von Ardenne,in East Germany.they didn'thave the money to put it on the market tho.
the chopper
In fact, the German word for X-Rays is "Röntgenstrahlen" - Röntgen rays, named after the creator of these tubes.
We call it røntgen in Norway too :)
in Finnish it's just röngten.
@@ivylasangrienta6093 In Germany we say just röntgen too. i need to have my leg x-rayed = Ich muss mein Bein röntgen lassen.
Röntgenstraling in the Netherlands
And might I add that Röntgen discovered the x-rays in my home town of Würzburg in 1895 and was awarded the first Nobel Prize in Physics for it.
Like the Curies he refused to take out patents related to his discovery of X-rays, as he wanted society as a whole to benefit from practical applications of his discovery.
The "coolest" invention probably is the fridge. Carl von Linde 1871.
There is even more, the first jet aircraft, the first modern rocket, and the Germans also had a hand in medicine and laser technology. Even if there is a lack of individual positions, they have always produced good inventors and engineers.
To be fair the British had developed their own jet engine at the time, so it’s kind of a common invention yet a separate development cycle
@@klamin_original they were developing it, germany had already build and tested it and used it.
Even the old Germanic people boiled some tea from the bark of willow trees ( Latin name "salix") when they had a bad cold. And "salix" is where the name salicylic acid comes from. Apirin is based on that substance.
1. As a German I am not surprised at all that we invented the ring binders. Even in the age of digitalization, they are being used a bit to much.
2. Fun Fact about Zuse. He invented the first Computer because he was to lazy to do the calculations by hand.
My TOP 5:
Chemical fertilizer. (Feeding the world is a big deal.)
Printing press. 1440: Johannes Gutenberg
Lightbulb. (1854, Heinrich Göbel. It wasn't Thomas Edison in 1879)
Telefon. (1859: Philipp Reis)
Dynamo. (1866: Werner von Siemens)
The 1800s where really a great time for big inventions.
Britain, the US, France and Germany where just pumping out stuff that changed the world.
Diesel Engine (1896)
Automobile (1886)
Computer (1941)
Electron Microscope (1931)
X-Rays (1895)
Contact Lens (1801)
Printing Press (1465)
Radar System (1905)
MP3 (1993)
Bunsen Burner (1855)
Rocket Powered Aircraft (1928)
Airbag (1951)
Speedometer (1902)
Aspirin (1897)
Beer (1516)
Bicycle (1817)
Chip Card (1969)
Hang Glider (1894)
Gummy Bear (1922)
Helicopter (1936)
Fanta (1941)
Coffee Filter (1908)
Adhesive Tape (1901)
Accordeon (1822)
Reinforced-Concrete TV-Tower (1956)
Ring Binder (1886)
Kindergarten (1840)
Cocaine (1859)
Electric Passenger Train (1879)
Morphine (1804)
Gramophone (1887)
Harmonica (1820)
Geiger Counter (1913)
Radio Waves (1886)
Christmas Tree (1527)
Motorcycle (1885)
Truck (1896)
Zeppelin (1895)
Bra for mass production (1912)
Trolleybus (1882)
Tram (1897)
Theory of relativity (1905/1915)
And even more!!
Kühlschrank zum Beispiel 😅
Wankel engine
ABS
Jet engine Messersmith ME 262
Stealth Jet Horten 229
Magnet train Transrapid 07
Boxer engine
Hybrid car technologie Audi Duo
…….
This Karl Benz guy is the reason why it is called Mercedes-Benz, he was the founder of the one of the companies that would merge into Mercedes-Benz in 1926.
This Werner von Siemens is the founder of the Siemens Cooperation, one of the worlds largest producers of electrical engineering and electronics products in the world. Siemens produces Trains, Trams, Subway trains, CT scanners for hospitals, High-voltage transformers, Steam turbines, Wind turbines, Washing machines and many many more.
Siemens is a thing in america too
@@Pharo02 Yearh, so is Mercedes-Benz, but it not always obvious to connect it, Siemens did way more than trolleycars ^^
@@YekouriGaming I am from Germany :D
@@YekouriGaming But Mercedes Benz is worldwide known
Karl Benz had a daughter called " Mercedes" that's why, Mercedes Benz 😜
Mr Siemens also invented the first fully functional power plant, one of them was used in a watercave build by Ludwig || in 1878, that is one of those crazy fairytale Palace that Guy has built 🤪🤴
In that cave was a fully functional light system and a wave maker, so he could sit on his, swan like boat, softly rocking on the waves and listen to opera from Wagner, he was also the guy who built the Neuschwanstein castle, basically the inverter of the Disney castle 🤔🧐😜
The coffee filter was also invented by a German. Melitta Bentz registered the coffee filter with the patent office in 1908.
Melitta Bentz (1873-1950), a housewife from Dresden, registered her new coffee filter with the Patent Office on 20 June 1908. Until then, coffee was usually brewed by pouring fine coffee powder into hot water and waiting until the powder had settled to some extent at the bottom of the pot.
Fun fact, when I was in college, studying computer science, my class had Konrad Zuse's son Horst as a guest professor for one semester.
so they mentioned ring binders but not rocket engines....or diesel motors. oook...not sure if ringbinders are that big of a deal XD
Coolest invention? The mp3-file-format is pretty nice! :-)
Germanium is not a mineral, but a metal. It was used as semiconductors before silicon. The CRT was also used for television for decades. The classic tube TV. Also the motorcycle was invented one year before the car.
Two very important German inventions they didn't mention are the Gutenberg printing press (printing with mobile rearrangable letters as opposed to just carving the whole page into a printing plate, which revolutionized the production of written media in the renaissance area, making books available for the mass of the population for the first time and enabling newspapers) and the Haber/Bosch ammonium synthesis (which enabled the mass production of artificial fertilizer).
Love to Look your Videos, greetings from Bavaria
The cathode ray tube was also used for TV sets for decades.
- Nuclear fission by Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner (1938)
- Letterpress printing with movebale letters by Johannes Gensfleisch called Gutenberg (~1450)
- the political spektrum (right for the conservatives and left for the progressives) For the first time realized in the federal assebly of 1848/1849 in Frankfurt
after the Revolution of 1848 (In the speakers sight the lefties were sitting in the left and the right-wingers were sitting on the right side)
- the pressure differential method that makes until today operations in the thorax possible by Ferdinand Sauerbruch (1904/05)
- Jet fighter 'Heinkel HE 178' in 1939 by Hans von Ohain
Germany made the first plane and the first jet+rocketplane these are my favs
german inventions americans seem quite fond of are the assault rifle, ballistic missiles, night vision devices, bomb aiming systems and quite a few more military related technology.
also book printing was invented by a german. until then everything had to be written and copied by hand.
MP3 is a German invention too
to mention a more recent one: the MP3 music format
Konrad Zuse used old 35mm film material as a storage medium for his computers. He punched holes into them just in the same way as those early IBM punchcards did or teletype machines. Reading those codes was therefore much a mechanical matter and he used telepone relais for that. Lots of early computers used perforated tape in the early days and mechanical switches. If some insect made its way into them and got stuck in a switch the machine failed and an endless search for for the source of this malfunction started. Even today we use the name "debugging" for finding the cause of errors and malfunctions in our purely electronic devices. Parallel to Zuse scientists at the Manchester Institute for Science and Technology used radio valves for their calculation machines.
Dieselmotor, Ottomotor, Hubschrauber, Buchdruck, Strahltriebwerk, Glühbirne, Reinheitsgebot, Telefon, Motorrad, TV, MP3 and so on.
I mean german beaurocracy is infamous! Of course we would invent ring binders... 😅
fair point...and we invented marxism. which i guess had a biggr impact on the world than ringbinders but thats just me and about 10 million dead people
@@OrkarIsberEstar you're dead? I'm very sorry to here this😞
@@stopske9332 inside XD. also we finally got Wifi up here, i mean those satellites are regularely passing by the golden gates
Der Raketenantrieb und der Düsenjet.
Germany, the land of the poets and thinkers
I love your energy while reactin
They are a lot other videos about German inventions
don't forget the Atomic Bomb, Jet Propulsion, and Flying Wing 😏
without Einstein, the United States had developed the atomic bomb far too late
They forgot the engines invented by Otto and Diesel that made cars and ships as we use them today possible. And yes, the same way there were movable letters invented before Gutenberg, there was also an Austrian inventor of a similar engine who was holding older patents on his engine. But today Otto‘s and Diesel‘s engines are afaik the most common. Especially the giant Dieseln engines that propels modern gigantic freight ships.
Folks, I love you...Greetings from Germany!!!
Fun fact about automobiles: Mr. Benz invented it... his wife was the first one who drove it. 100km in 3 days!
Greetings from Hamburg/Germany! I really like your reaction vids! By the way, maybe you know the movie Inglourious Basterds. One American actor acts a Nazi. Every German noticed he's not German but American. Why? He ordered 3 beers with his forfinger, his long finger and his ring finger. In Germany you take the thumb, the forfinger and the long finger. ;-)
They forgot one of the (if not the) most important inventions in human history. The printing press.
Arguably both the renaissance and industrial revolution would have been drastically different. Also the christian reformation wouldn't have been nearly as widespread if it wasn't for the printing press allowing normal citizens to be able to buy a bible and read it instead of just a priest reading parts to you. It also helped in spreading the messages of the Reformists among the people.
Even the rocket with which you Americans flew to the moon was invented and developed by a German.
"I aimed for the stars but hit Londondon" - NASA chief
You show catode Ray tubes but don't mention it's the most important part of a TV (till LCD came up)? Poor. It's the technic behind the screen, it's THE SCREEN
I think the printer press was the most powerful invention. Gutenberg/Germany
Fun fact: The first digital programmable computer was used to manage people in the concentration camps.
Remember the cathode ray tube? Well, based on that came the vaccuum relais tube, which was basically the mechanical version of the modern day transistor.
So the first programmable fully automated computer was based on the vaccuum relais tube, with hundreds of finely mashined vaccuum relais switching on and off, giving the binary coding still in use today. This technology remained until the early 1970's when the transistor was perfected.
In the USA the holes in the processing boards that the vaccum tubes were mounted in had to be covered by a round black covers to prevent dust and moisture from collecting in them. These covers were then VISUALLY confirmed by the programmers as being in place, because that was easier than following the thousands of electric cables. So a missing cover indicated a missing vaccuum tube, which then was screwed into its socket to reprogram the computer.
But one day a bug, a real live insect, crawled into one of the sockets and literally got fried by the current. But visually it wasn't any different from the black cover, so the programmers didn't screw in a tube because they thought that socket was covered. Which made the computer release total rubbish answers. This is the origin of the term "we've got a bug in the code" which later was shortened to "a bug".
Sometimes I am proud to be a German😆 Even when I haven`t done anything for these Inventions.
watching the video and reading the comments seems to me as if we would all still live in caves without the germans
my fav will always be Gottfried Leibniz, inventor of the binary system. Basiclly the foundation of everything that makes us a technological civilization
One thing is wrong! And everyone says it wrong the inventor of the Automobile/car is gottlieb-daimler he invented the first ever car. Karl benz was just a partner fun fact : they never talked to each other they just send the things to build a car and then karl benz name The car like his daughter :Merzedes Benz. We people in schorndorf (my hometown and the borntown from Gottlieb-daimler ) often say „ Daimler „ instead of „ Mercedes (Benz)“. Haha it always hurts me bc its pretty sad that daimler always gets forgotten
Wow, I never thought that the bike was invented by Germany (considering that it is the favourite means of transportation of our neighbors, the Dutch). Thank you indeen for this very interesting video - I like it !!
Oh there's a whole story about him having a race against a runner to prove his balance bike (Laufrad) to be superior because no one believed him:D
The first computers were these huge things at the size of a small room, and they could do less calculations than a modern calculator. The computer from Konrad Zuse and the Computer by Alan Turing that helped crack the German Enigma code in WW2 could basically only add and subtract numbers. The revolutionary part was the computer could be given a pattern and could then attempt to match it by calculating a whole lot of combinations way faster than humans could do it.
The huge thing on the wall is the memory and the closet size thing is the processor. Which today is the size of a potato chip inside your smartphone.
Zuse's Z3 is Turing-capable, unlike the Allied computers, which were specially built for the decheffration of the Enigma.
This means that if time and energy requirements as well as material failure are not taken into account, Windows 10 or Linux could run on the Z3.
@@sylviarohge4204 Yearh i know it is Turing-capable, it is the only reason why Konrad Zuse's computer is deemed the "first" in the world.
The Enigma decipher was not, and the first British Computer was made in 1947.
There is a "List of German inventions and discoveries" on Wikipedia.
And mp3, V2 Rocket Number 1 in the Space 😎🍻🇩🇪🤘🏻🌻😘
German Technology 💪
We came from outer Space🛸👽🇩🇪👋
voltage meter... omg i have no words for IQ in that video
How is it possible that a german invented the cathode ray tube, basically setting the foundation for television as we know it, but still the TV programm and shows are all shit....
Hey can you react to some german Music?
Maybe to Rammstein?
The MP3 format was developed and thus the first MP3-Player both came out of the Fraunhofer Institut in Munich.
The jet engine was invented during WW2, however, parallel to that GB also invented the jet engine in basically the exact same time frame without the inventors knowing from each other.
The world's 1st printing pressveas invented in the 15th century by Johannes Gutenberg and the first book in print was the Bible which Martin Luther had translated as the first German Bible available just before that.
The wheel... was not invented in Germany although we would love to think that..😬
But the best invention of all is the famous German apple pie😋
Clearly Fanta xP
Im not really agree to this video...in germany are so many things invatet what really chance the world and not the ring binder
You have to react on german music!
My favourite Invention is the Döner! It was invented by a Turk which was living in Berlin!
At least, germans invented the trains! The first locomotive was in work from Nürnberg to Fürth in Bavaria!
...and i do know who does less on bicycle...me either^^
Could you react to German inventions part 2
Does people in the USA realy donst know that the car was invented in Germany?
Still, the car with combustion engine is invented by Benz. It's not the first automobile car with an engine at all, that belongs to a French guy known as Cugnot, but it was steam powered around 1770.
They forgot mp3
hehe the first cp you start with .........youtube...?
Germany inventet the taxi too
This was only very small number of inventions which have been made in Germany.
Please react to 10 everyday things you use didn't know were invented by Chinese
Ganz liebe Grüße 🙋
Watch karl benz video
these are so useless inventions. germany invented so much better things
Can you please react to top 10 Chinese invention that you use on daily basis
Really, those were pretty lame german inventions. What about the tv by Ardenne, the rocket by von Braun and the theory of relativity by Einstein? Those were better for mankind than bikes.
The liquid fuel rocket was not invented by von Braun. It was first theorized by Ziolkowsky ( a Russian in the 1890s I believe and by Obert (German) in the 1920s - he at least claimed that he never heard of the russian scientist). The first Liquid fuel rocket was started by an american (Goddard) , von Braun just made them much bigger and flying further.
It gives a Video "German Inventions" from Dr dot dexy
Hallo Nick Müller! "it gives" versteht ein Engländer nicht (wenn er nicht zufällig deutsch kann). Die Entsprechung wäre "there is / there are".
Reaction please Alffy Rev Wonderland lndonesia. 🇮🇩
Döner....just Döner
mp3
great vlog.if youre interested in check out 25 things you dont know about germany/were german"
Hi, your videos show much of what the world has to offer! Thanks for that ;)
PS: Germanium was‘nt „invented“, it was discovered.
There are so much more
.... LOL
Und dann sieht man in den Gesichtern das die dachten sie sind die einzigen auf der Welt 😂 👌 nee sorry ihr habt nur den Abklatsch von allem
HMM Gutenberg, Diesel, Otto .....
React on 12 great inventions we can thank India
That would be cool!!! Thanks :)
React to brazilian ARMY fanchant gives everyone goosebumps
Yes you will love it
Please check out 12 great invention from India
There have been times, when germany was rather good. Currenty it develops into an islamic trainingscenter.