Michael Stevens: How much does a video weigh?
Michael Stevens is the creator and host of Vsauce, an educational YouTube channel that addresses scientific oddities, like "Is Your Red the Same as My Red?" Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
who are standing,
work than lounging.
Organization's online database
with this speech,
specifically weight,
that people can access all over the world
on my channel Vsauce.
as sincerely as I can,
concepts and scientists.
more than 2 million subscribers,
by more than 20 million people.
is a great way to get people in,
than just viewers or an audience,
everything you've made
to make in the future
audience that you can,
of answering the question,
at some of my videos.
because you think,
answer that question?"
people have watched
about what color a mirror is.
di cinque minuti sul colore degli specchi.
what would normally be kind of dry topics:
sarebbero argomenti di poco interesse:
how light works on the retina,
by putting two mirrors next to each other,
back and forth forever.
and it will get dimmer,
or absorbed every time,
that we perceive as green,
nella maggior parte degli specchi.
a video onto your computer,
won't actually increase or decrease.
to store them in one place,
of YouTube video
about 10 million electrons on your device.
and the energy it takes to hold them
for you to see the video,
that one minute of YouTube video
and you wouldn't really get in trouble,
we've ever invented
to actually to detect that change
to the negative 9th grams.
calculate it.
because when I was a kid,
of science books.
within, like, two grades,
you need space for them
than what we can do today.
electronic reader.
ever getting measurably heavier.
and viewers than ever before
of content like this happening.
are down there in the corner.
all together, collectively,
quello che posso fare da solo
into people's curiosity
fans and an audience
for brands and companies
what we ask and answer next.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Michael Stevens - YouTube educatorMichael Stevens is the creator and host of Vsauce, an educational YouTube channel that addresses scientific oddities, like "Is Your Red the Same as My Red?"
Why you should listen
Michael Stevens is an educator -- but when he answers questions, 3.2 million people tune in to hear the answer. That's because Stevens is the creator and host of Vsauce, an educational YouTube channel that addresses quirky but intriguing topics like "The Science of the Friend Zone" and "What Is Déjà vu?" Stevens has made a career feeding popular hunger for cool and interesting facts.
Michael Stevens | Speaker | TED.com