If you liked this definitely checkout some of his other videos. At the level of work that he does you have to have a really solid model of reality and a lot of learned experience of how to measure and manipulate at extreme scales. He makes it look easy but this kind of thing really isn't. Just a lot of fun seeing such a talented and educated person do a really neat demonstration.
Notably, he's also the inventor of the magneto-turboencabulator.
The description that boiled down to, it squeaks, was really well written.
Also it was released on the perfect date.
Nice, I remember encountering a sales pitch for an earlier version of this sort of device:
I just watched this a few hours ago and it's really cool! I never thought something of this speed would be possible in a garage with $1k or so in parts.
I remember this being a thing several years ago. The researchers in the video I originally saw used a Coke bottle.
Yeah and they stuck a label on the coke bottle presumably because some lawyer was worried about unintentional product endorsement.
"Hey light moves through their bottles that means it's a good product."
Yes he talks about that in the video. The researchers used $500k+ of equipment. He built a similar thing for under $1k
Once you go 1mil fps you can't go back
Neato
all cameras watch light move, it's all they do
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