Hey you guys! This is the first video on an actual career sector/industry rather than a specific major. Let me know if you want to see more of these and anything you'd want me to emphasize (research, careers, companies, etc). Also comment any other sectors you'd want videos on (artificial intelligence, automotive, renewable energy, etc). Enjoy! P.S. In a week and a half videos will be coming much faster (Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays)
I did my final ap project on nanotechnology this year and I have an absolute obsession with it now. I’m going to major in chemistry and hope to get my masters or PhD after to specialize in nanotechnology... sO EXCITED
@@phenomenalphysics3548 Yes its a factor for me too. I m in 12th grade seeking abroad . I m planning for electrical engineering. But are u looking for scholarships cause europe is hard ig
I worked as a nanotech technician for about 5 years before the company went bankrupt...(poor management....excellent work)....i worked in the r&d fuel cell nanotech field with a associates in computer science. My jobs varied....and i liked it that way...something new all the times. I did work with carbon nanotubes.....just make sure you wear your PPE.
I absolutely love this video you made, it gave me more detail about nanotechnology. May i ask which is the best major for nanotechnology between these two: Mechanical or Electrical and Electronics engineering? And thank you very much.
Thank you! And it seems like they are both good starts from what I found. But later be sure to actively pursue nanotechnology in grad school/ your career though. Really focus on what aspect of engineering you like more between electrical and mechanical.
Thank you for your amazing videos, they're very helpful. Have you also made a video on "What is Electrical Engineering?" I think it could be in high demand and I, personally, would love to see it. I'm watching through some of the videos on your channel at the moment and I think they have been incredibly helpful so far. I want to switch to an engineering major but I can't quite make my mind up about whether I should pick chemical, mechanical or electrical. There are so many interesting things to do in any of these fields so it's super hard for me to kinda have to "settle" for one.
Thank you for the comment! And I actually never put up an official "What is electrical engineering" video because I went a slightly different route with the EE videos. So watch "Why is electrical engineering a difficult major (part 1 and 2)." Then watch the electrical engineering concentrations videos as well and you will have plenty of information on what EE is. I've only got one chemical engineering video up right now but there's also multiple mechanical videos as well as one on Electrical Vs mechanical engineering and how to pick the one that's right for you. Hope you enjoy!
Thank you so much for response! I watched your videos and electrical engineering seems like a very cool major for me. If I recall correctly, in one of your videos you said that you went for electrical engineering yourself but in retrospect would choose a different major. May I ask what you regretted about electrical engineering and which major you would love to have picked instead? I hope this is not too personal.
You got it! And not too personal at all, I'm here to help you guys with these things. Yes I probably would've picked a different major but it wasn't a matter of regretting EE at all. I really enjoyed the major. When I was trying to figure out what to study the biggest problem I had was that I was interested in so many things and had trouble narrowing it down. I loved EE but simply there were other subjects I realized I just may have liked more. But as an EE I got an internship my 3rd year, a job out of college, and still every month or so I get messages on Linkedin asking if I'm looking for a job, obviously not a bad choice lol.
Im a chemist and biochemist and my inorganic teacher uses this on carbon dots and he does a lot of frontier nanomaterial related research in Montreal (we have a lot of good engineering in this city)
Idk if this is what you are looking for, but look up mechanosynthesis, particularly diamondoid mechanosynthesis, the work done by Robert Freitas et al. Also look up Eric Drexler, and his famous Engines of Creation book. Watch Richard Feynman's "There is plenty of room at the bottom" seminar. Other keywords: molecular assembly, atomically precise manufacturing.
Hello I have a question, There is a Nanotechnology degree in University of Waterloo.... do you recommend going into a different field then going into Nano? Or just go to nano?
Can i get into this field for masters if i pursue computer science engineering at the bachelor level? and understand the basics of mechanical, electrical without any certificate proof(online degree)etc just a degree in CSE?? and by the way nice video
Check out the link below for what mechanical engineers do in nanotech. And yes biomedical engineers could also work in the sector as well, it's not so black and white as to which majors can or cannot work in the field. The one's I gave were just common one's to lead you toward that path. engineering.purdue.edu/ME/Research/Areas/Nano/index.html
When he said Nanotech in Medicine/ Nano Biotechnology in the video, that was mostly for biomedical engineers. The vast majority of Nano medicine research is being carried out by scientists with bioengineering, chemical engineering, or material science and engineering degrees at places like MIT and Harvard. You can look up faculty at MIT who are biomedical engineers and using nanotech for research and product developments like Sangeeta Bhatia for example or Paula Hammond.
Hey! Can you help me? Which major is best for working in nanomedicine, drug delivery, medical devices, nanobots: chemistry engineering or physics engineering ? (I would like to do biomedical engineering but it doesn't exist in my city).
All of those are gonna be different majors. Chemical engineering is going to help if you want to develop medicine. The rest that you mentioned would be a combination of electrical and mechanical engineering
You can join Pharmaceutical Engineering Dept! Nanotechnology in Mechanical Engineering! Shape - Memory Alloy (SMA)! Super Elasticity! Quenching! ruclips.net/user/shortswaM57HcQOd4?feature=share
Engineering physics definitely. I would take some electives for chem and biology, but for nano it's always best to concentrate on physics (and math lol). Hope it's not too late. I study engineering physics and nanotechnology programme so that's my POV. I even have a couple of friends in the research institute that studied chemistry wanting to go to nano, they always had to take a shitton of physics classes anyway, and their lack of knowledge in that department restrain them a lot.
@@mariaeduardalouzada9854 Good for you then :D. If you want to do nanomedicine I would still recommend taking chem/bio electives or ask around uni about research groups doing such things,
Would you do a video on software engineering ? you did a spot on video on materials science . Is there a difference between software engineering and computer science ? I want to program but I want to apply engineering method to software design
Thank you! And some schools don't even offer software engineering cause it is extremely close to computer science. My school did offer software engineering and I've checked out the curriculum and it is like 3 classes different than the computer science curriculum (not counting electives). If you want to program and work with software design you will be happy in each most likely. Many computer scientists end up becoming software developers.
Blood1397violet just to let you know, you could also learn how to code with a coding boot camp. It's a lot less expensive than college and takes less time because they only teach you things that you'll actually use in a job. There not for everyone, but worth checking out if you want a career in coding
MajorPrep yea majorprep we are the ai robot generation if you aint makin a robot you not doing it right. and we would make robos on my own for free if we knew how. its available on the Internet but i think ima bit too lazy to learn it all on my own even though i will eventually do that huh? COULD YOU MAKE A VIDEO SHOWING US HOW TO GET STARTED IN AI LIKE MAYBE SOME OPENSOURCE AI RESOURCES??????☺😊
I feel like a math major could also enter the field, but maybe I am wrong? And also, we can all agree that its a good thing chemical engineers are woroing on filtering out the "forever chemicals" that wre present on every square inch of 5he planet now. Even if you go in the middle of the Tongass National Forest in Alaska, youll find microplastics and other troubles. Filtering these out of water and air is of paramount importance now, because if it gets much worse, our nervous systems will eventually not function right, let alone other organs. Do or die.
Thank you! And I've actually started writing a script for automobile engineering cause it's been requested in the past, so yes that will be out in probably a few weeks.
Please do a video on researh in computer science especially AI,Machine learning,deep learning because these areas are new and of great demand.Also it would be awesome if you could focus your videos on research rather than careers ,as you have been making a lot of videos on careers.Thanks.God bless
@@fernandojaime6309 Too bad I didn't come across this comment a few years earlier. I myself study programme called engineering physics and nanotechnology, so I think I'm entitled to respond. To answer your question... no it's not possible to evade physics for nano. If you think about it, it doesn't make sense to go to nanotechnology and trying to not have physics. The whole reason nano exist is because of quantum mechanics. I don't want to discourage you, but it's really does not make sense. I actually talked to my fellow researchers that studied nanomaterial chemistry which has the least of physics of all nano degrees, and they still had one third of their courses driven by physics. I think the least physics you can get in nano is like 25% physics, 25% math and 50% chemistry. It won't go more down. The 50% math/physics will always be there, you can go study biotech, but that will only split your chem courses with bio. There is just necessary knowledge you need to have for nano, and it's physics.
I want to create nanobots to terraform planets by sending them their to change the biological make up of the planet & with them being so small would not impact the weight to send them and less metal/plastic/wiring resources.
To dumb it down cause we all know we want to learn this from iron man :) nanotech is just the smaller things are the better power source you have. As making things big can cause problems and not agile. Basically if your fighting a big big guy he will be slow and use to much power fast to you while you the small guy can save stamina and power from being small and fast.
I don't know what are you fundamentals man. I study engineering physics and nanotechnology programme. If your fundamentals are high school physics then I recommend to start with undergrad physics, because otherwise you will get overwhelmed with quantum mechanics. Books like Fundamentals of Physics by David Halliday volumes 1 and 2 (mostly 2 for quantum physics). Math is a must, again I don't know how is your math, but I will name the most important: all calculus classes are necessary, differential equations, complex numbers, a bit of statistics (but just the basics are OK), numerical method for simulations, theoretical mechanics (Lagrangian, Hamiltonian), continuum mechanics (so metrics as well), and lastly functional analysis. That's for math. Physics, as I said I need to know what you know, also this will change if you will try to concentrate more on chemistry. I know you said simple case studies, but I don't want to disappoint you, but even though it always sounds so fun, the studies are heavy on math and physics always, so sending you studies won't really help you in any way. You can ask me about what interest you though. I myself am in project team that is doing nanomagnetism and spintronics so that's where I'm the most proficient.
Yes I very likely will get business as well as econ in the near future. I know we focus mainly on stem but I'm really just trying to get all the popular majors I can.
Oh great study to manipulate the durability or etc of an ugh whatever is involved. While if alien exists they are on big things to travel through near neighbour star.
Hey you guys! This is the first video on an actual career sector/industry rather than a specific major. Let me know if you want to see more of these and anything you'd want me to emphasize (research, careers, companies, etc). Also comment any other sectors you'd want videos on (artificial intelligence, automotive, renewable energy, etc). Enjoy!
P.S. In a week and a half videos will be coming much faster (Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays)
MajorPrep A video on artificial intelligence would be pretty cool, especially the companies that work with AI.
A video on research would really be appreciated!
MajorPrep Please make a video on AI
MajorPrep Biotechnology
Web Design, Software
I did my final ap project on nanotechnology this year and I have an absolute obsession with it now. I’m going to major in chemistry and hope to get my masters or PhD after to specialize in nanotechnology... sO EXCITED
What was your project? Just for curiosity's sake
Ma'am I also want to develop a nanotechnology. Can you help?
I have a question. I am seriously looking forward to study this career but can I get into nanomedicine through a nanotechnology course?
@@Daniel-vg8fk What kind of nanotechnology course?
How's it going, Dr. Spicy?
Such an awesome underrated channel. Great video!
Thank you!
Awesome is an understatement
"It's nano tech, you like it?" - Tony Stark
@@phenomenalphysics3548 Through which engineering are u persuaing
@@phenomenalphysics3548 Are u indian student?
@@phenomenalphysics3548 Ya even i m indian. I live in saudi arab. Even i m trying abroad. U in 12th?
@@phenomenalphysics3548 Where u going ??. Nd is affordability a factor for u?
@@phenomenalphysics3548 Yes its a factor for me too.
I m in 12th grade seeking abroad . I m planning for electrical engineering. But are u looking for scholarships cause europe is hard ig
This video was the guide I need to make a huge change in my life as in a career itself
In my opinion nanotechnology has the greatest potential of any emerging technology.
That and AI
I agree. It just is better at so many things than what we currently have
I'd appreciate it if you could do an episode on Theoretical Physics vs Experimental Physics.
Your videos are excellent.
I worked as a nanotech technician for about 5 years before the company went bankrupt...(poor management....excellent work)....i worked in the r&d fuel cell nanotech field with a associates in computer science. My jobs varied....and i liked it that way...something new all the times. I did work with carbon nanotubes.....just make sure you wear your PPE.
How did you like working with it
Nanotechnology in Mechanical Engineering! Shape - Memory Alloy (SMA)! Super Elasticity! Quenching!
ruclips.net/user/shortswaM57HcQOd4?feature=share
How condensed matter physics is related to nanotechnology? Contrasts?
I absolutely love this video you made, it gave me more detail about nanotechnology. May i ask which is the best major for nanotechnology between these two: Mechanical or Electrical and Electronics engineering? And thank you very much.
Thank you! And it seems like they are both good starts from what I found. But later be sure to actively pursue nanotechnology in grad school/ your career though. Really focus on what aspect of engineering you like more between electrical and mechanical.
Thanks man!
this is amazing you dont understand how thankful i am for this!!
Thanks for this video👍 ...I helped me a lot in presentation at a seminar ..I gave you credits😉
Bro ur channel is one of my fav channel for science field
Hey! Im going into Bachelors of Nanotechnology at the Engineering at University of Waterloo, nice video!
Thank you for your amazing videos, they're very helpful. Have you also made a video on "What is Electrical Engineering?" I think it could be in high demand and I, personally, would love to see it. I'm watching through some of the videos on your channel at the moment and I think they have been incredibly helpful so far. I want to switch to an engineering major but I can't quite make my mind up about whether I should pick chemical, mechanical or electrical. There are so many interesting things to do in any of these fields so it's super hard for me to kinda have to "settle" for one.
Thank you for the comment! And I actually never put up an official "What is electrical engineering" video because I went a slightly different route with the EE videos. So watch "Why is electrical engineering a difficult major (part 1 and 2)." Then watch the electrical engineering concentrations videos as well and you will have plenty of information on what EE is. I've only got one chemical engineering video up right now but there's also multiple mechanical videos as well as one on Electrical Vs mechanical engineering and how to pick the one that's right for you. Hope you enjoy!
Thank you so much for response! I watched your videos and electrical engineering seems like a very cool major for me. If I recall correctly, in one of your videos you said that you went for electrical engineering yourself but in retrospect would choose a different major. May I ask what you regretted about electrical engineering and which major you would love to have picked instead? I hope this is not too personal.
You got it! And not too personal at all, I'm here to help you guys with these things. Yes I probably would've picked a different major but it wasn't a matter of regretting EE at all. I really enjoyed the major. When I was trying to figure out what to study the biggest problem I had was that I was interested in so many things and had trouble narrowing it down. I loved EE but simply there were other subjects I realized I just may have liked more. But as an EE I got an internship my 3rd year, a job out of college, and still every month or so I get messages on Linkedin asking if I'm looking for a job, obviously not a bad choice lol.
I am a big fan of nanotechnology ☺.
@Swami Satchitananda ???? WTF?!!!!.... fucking idiot!!
Can you do a video focusing on college programs and applications for renewable energy/environmental engineering?
Im a chemist and biochemist and my inorganic teacher uses this on carbon dots and he does a lot of frontier nanomaterial related research in Montreal (we have a lot of good engineering in this city)
Great overview, thank you!
Nanotechnology in Mechanical Engineering! Shape - Memory Alloy (SMA)! Super Elasticity! Quenching!
ruclips.net/user/shortswaM57HcQOd4?feature=share
Can I know the role of mechanical engineering in nano technology.
Bless chemistry
thanks for educating presentation on nanotechnology
What is the difference between nano and material engineering
I'm thinking of majoring in chemistry, my uni has two nanoscience courses :]
Squiderrant what uni?
Waterloo university in Canada offers a Nanotechnology Engineering degree that is accredited!
Hey majorprep i have a question regarding nanotech how do mechanical engineers manipulate matter? Plz ans
Idk if this is what you are looking for, but look up mechanosynthesis, particularly diamondoid mechanosynthesis, the work done by Robert Freitas et al. Also look up Eric Drexler, and his famous Engines of Creation book. Watch Richard Feynman's "There is plenty of room at the bottom" seminar. Other keywords: molecular assembly, atomically precise manufacturing.
A combination of mechatronics and nano technology is what I would liked to master, anyone can mentor me to do that?
Odd combination imo. If you want nano, it would make more sense to get into chemistry or microelectronics on the side rather than mechantronics.
Hello I have a question, There is a Nanotechnology degree in University of Waterloo.... do you recommend going into a different field then going into Nano? Or just go to nano?
Hey can u explain the nanodiagnostics other than cancer cells diagnosis?
Can you do a video on Robotics
TLDR: Robotics is a specific mix of Electrical and Mechanical engineering. Research those both first, if he makes a specific major, then it's great.
There are two main fields in Robotics research: Systems & Controls and Computer AI
Can i get into this field for masters if i pursue computer science engineering at the bachelor level? and understand the basics of mechanical, electrical without any certificate proof(online degree)etc just a degree in CSE?? and by the way nice video
Thanks!
Nanomachines, son. You can't hurt me, Jack.
Hi is it possible for an electronic communication engineer to pursue master in nanotechnology field special nanorobotics
It's a great video. Can you make one specifically on graphene ?
how about biomedical engineering?
What would a mechanical engineer do in the field of nanotech? Do Biomedical engineers also work in nanotech?
Check out the link below for what mechanical engineers do in nanotech. And yes biomedical engineers could also work in the sector as well, it's not so black and white as to which majors can or cannot work in the field. The one's I gave were just common one's to lead you toward that path.
engineering.purdue.edu/ME/Research/Areas/Nano/index.html
When he said Nanotech in Medicine/ Nano Biotechnology in the video, that was mostly for biomedical engineers. The vast majority of Nano medicine research is being carried out by scientists with bioengineering, chemical engineering, or material science and engineering degrees at places like MIT and Harvard. You can look up faculty at MIT who are biomedical engineers and using nanotech for research and product developments like Sangeeta Bhatia for example or Paula Hammond.
Im sorry if this has been asked before, but i was wondering if you would do physics engineering videos?
Yes definitely a common request and I will make sure to get it on the channel soon as I can!
MajorPrep thank you!
Great video
Can we make nano-augmentations like in Deus-ex and generator rex?
I am a Mechanical Engineering Student and I will apply for a Nanotech master here in Europe :)
hello! can you tell me what are are your research interests?
My EEE undergrad degree has the option of majoring in introduction to nanotechnology.Should I consider it?
best Lecture!
Nanotechnology in Mechanical Engineering! Shape - Memory Alloy (SMA)! Super Elasticity! Quenching!
ruclips.net/user/shortswaM57HcQOd4?feature=share
Hey! Can you help me? Which major is best for working in nanomedicine, drug delivery, medical devices, nanobots: chemistry engineering or physics engineering ? (I would like to do biomedical engineering but it doesn't exist in my city).
All of those are gonna be different majors. Chemical engineering is going to help if you want to develop medicine. The rest that you mentioned would be a combination of electrical and mechanical engineering
You can join Pharmaceutical Engineering Dept!
Nanotechnology in Mechanical Engineering! Shape - Memory Alloy (SMA)! Super Elasticity! Quenching!
ruclips.net/user/shortswaM57HcQOd4?feature=share
Engineering physics definitely. I would take some electives for chem and biology, but for nano it's always best to concentrate on physics (and math lol). Hope it's not too late. I study engineering physics and nanotechnology programme so that's my POV. I even have a couple of friends in the research institute that studied chemistry wanting to go to nano, they always had to take a shitton of physics classes anyway, and their lack of knowledge in that department restrain them a lot.
@@halbarad7932 That was my choice haha. Engineering physics at UFRGS (in Brazil). Second year of graduation. Thank you for the answer!
@@mariaeduardalouzada9854 Good for you then :D. If you want to do nanomedicine I would still recommend taking chem/bio electives or ask around uni about research groups doing such things,
Please do mechatronics
Great video!
Thanks!
Would you do a video on software engineering ? you did a spot on video on materials science .
Is there a difference between software engineering and computer science ? I want to program but I want to apply engineering method to software design
Thank you! And some schools don't even offer software engineering cause it is extremely close to computer science. My school did offer software engineering and I've checked out the curriculum and it is like 3 classes different than the computer science curriculum (not counting electives). If you want to program and work with software design you will be happy in each most likely. Many computer scientists end up becoming software developers.
Blood1397violet just to let you know, you could also learn how to code with a coding boot camp. It's a lot less expensive than college and takes less time because they only teach you things that you'll actually use in a job. There not for everyone, but worth checking out if you want a career in coding
Can u do videos on robotics and artificial intelligence?
Yes I will!
MajorPrep yea majorprep we are the ai robot generation if you aint makin a robot you not doing it right. and we would make robos on my own for free if we knew how. its available on the Internet but i think ima bit too lazy to learn it all on my own even though i will eventually do that huh? COULD YOU MAKE A VIDEO SHOWING US HOW TO GET STARTED IN AI LIKE MAYBE SOME OPENSOURCE AI RESOURCES??????☺😊
Finally! I waited for so long
The wait is over
I really want to study aerospace engineering but i was given materials engineering here in Nigeria what should I do?
Nanoengineering at UCSD. Good place to start
Its in San Diego. We all know that's expensive, I'm going to study in europe.
loved it
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE!!!
I will get on that!
I feel like a math major could also enter the field, but maybe I am wrong? And also, we can all agree that its a good thing chemical engineers are woroing on filtering out the "forever chemicals" that wre present on every square inch of 5he planet now. Even if you go in the middle of the Tongass National Forest in Alaska, youll find microplastics and other troubles. Filtering these out of water and air is of paramount importance now, because if it gets much worse, our nervous systems will eventually not function right, let alone other organs. Do or die.
Please can you do Automobile engineering?
BTW love your videos!
Thank you! And I've actually started writing a script for automobile engineering cause it's been requested in the past, so yes that will be out in probably a few weeks.
Please do a video on researh in computer science especially AI,Machine learning,deep learning because these areas are new and of great demand.Also it would be awesome if you could focus your videos on research rather than careers ,as you have been making a lot of videos on careers.Thanks.God bless
A.I seems to be a popular request, I will definitely get one one that! Maybe multiple videos cause A.I is a big sector.
How bout electronics engineering?
thought i heard about fpga circuits being reprogrammable
Can a math major get into nanotechnology
Can a chemistry student with no physics in undergraduate level enter into nanotechnology for masters?
Nira Chandi Hey! Were you able to get info about this? I was thinking the same thing
@@fernandojaime6309 Too bad I didn't come across this comment a few years earlier. I myself study programme called engineering physics and nanotechnology, so I think I'm entitled to respond. To answer your question... no it's not possible to evade physics for nano. If you think about it, it doesn't make sense to go to nanotechnology and trying to not have physics. The whole reason nano exist is because of quantum mechanics. I don't want to discourage you, but it's really does not make sense. I actually talked to my fellow researchers that studied nanomaterial chemistry which has the least of physics of all nano degrees, and they still had one third of their courses driven by physics. I think the least physics you can get in nano is like 25% physics, 25% math and 50% chemistry. It won't go more down. The 50% math/physics will always be there, you can go study biotech, but that will only split your chem courses with bio. There is just necessary knowledge you need to have for nano, and it's physics.
I just want to create the Mark 85
Me too😂😂
I want to create nanobots to terraform planets by sending them their to change the biological make up of the planet & with them being so small would not impact the weight to send them and less metal/plastic/wiring resources.
To dumb it down cause we all know we want to learn this from iron man :) nanotech is just the smaller things are the better power source you have. As making things big can cause problems and not agile. Basically if your fighting a big big guy he will be slow and use to much power fast to you while you the small guy can save stamina and power from being small and fast.
likes and dislikes today stand at 1024 to 12 - nice ratio almost 100 to 1! this is rare. i always check that while searching for interesting stuff
Please try a new video about robotics
Can someone share some simple case studies to start learning this topic
I don't know what are you fundamentals man. I study engineering physics and nanotechnology programme. If your fundamentals are high school physics then I recommend to start with undergrad physics, because otherwise you will get overwhelmed with quantum mechanics. Books like Fundamentals of Physics by David Halliday volumes 1 and 2 (mostly 2 for quantum physics). Math is a must, again I don't know how is your math, but I will name the most important: all calculus classes are necessary, differential equations, complex numbers, a bit of statistics (but just the basics are OK), numerical method for simulations, theoretical mechanics (Lagrangian, Hamiltonian), continuum mechanics (so metrics as well), and lastly functional analysis. That's for math. Physics, as I said I need to know what you know, also this will change if you will try to concentrate more on chemistry. I know you said simple case studies, but I don't want to disappoint you, but even though it always sounds so fun, the studies are heavy on math and physics always, so sending you studies won't really help you in any way. You can ask me about what interest you though. I myself am in project team that is doing nanomagnetism and spintronics so that's where I'm the most proficient.
Thanks
you didn't tell about how nanotechnology used in the mechanical field??
nice
what is industrial managment engineering ?
This is my dream to become a Nano technologist and become a tech billionaire like Bruce wanye 🦇🦇🦇
Better start studying math and physics then buddy :DDD
robotics please..
I know this isn't you normal type of major....but could you do a video on Econ
Yes I very likely will get business as well as econ in the near future. I know we focus mainly on stem but I'm really just trying to get all the popular majors I can.
Gremlin Comics was here for a character reference
I literally looked at the thumbnail and immediately thought fullerene
So can I do some work in nanotechnology without studying biology.
of course.
Oh great study to manipulate the durability or etc of an ugh whatever is involved. While if alien exists they are on big things to travel through near neighbour star.
Graphene condoms
Chemtrails need I say more
For me is quantum technology
Yeah what is the difference?
Terribile , mi ricorda un film di Robot , con la nanotecnologia potremo diventare tutti telecomandati !
I’m i the only kid in elementary school here
nice