The Ridiculous Engineering Of The World's Most Important Machine
The Ridiculous Engineering Of The World's Most Important Machine
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@veritasium Says:
Special thanks to Piotr Krzemiński for letting us use his Scanning Electron Microscopy photos in this video. Check out his channel: https://www.youtube.com/@nanopirate
@RR-by2iy Says:
I am an ASML hard veterans, I am extremely hungry for pizza.
@btsOT74ever571 Says:
cool , make nanorobots that can repair my cells and stop aging/diseases and make me the optimum human next!
@mycologycorner Says:
I spent 90 days in the Clark County Jail,las Vegas and your videos honestly helped me get through it. I watched every episode at least three times. Thank you, Veritasium. Your content made a real difference, not just for me, but for a lot of us. We were all hoping for more videos.
@kuntul_burung Says:
Memang ini kesalahan gurunya.... Kenapa kok mukul pake mistar harusnya pake papan tulisnya sekalian....??? Kalo perlu timpa pintu, bangku dan meja.... Kalo masih nakal juga anaknya, ya jemur hormat bendera... Kalo ga hormat juga... si anak tuker posisi biar jadi benderanya sekalian.. biar benderanya yang hormatin si anak yang lagi sibuk berkibar
@yingsingding Says:
china actually rebuilt this machine 5 years ago allot of information into this is on the dark web if you look hard enough they are offering big money on tech and information in this area this is why taking Taiwan is on the list they have spies in every country every sector including power,tech,military
@Mr850man Says:
Am I crazy or 400 million doesn't sound like much? Isn't that like a superyacht?
@eningtu6291 Says:
Did you see the film at the onset of the film. You could hear them say oh my God were is the machine, then you see the machine phase in from out of no were. STAR FLEET beamed the whole thing in. Next they said WOW the machine apeared out of no were. Joel Ramirez, Nicasio, California, Marin County, 25928 Nicasio Valley Rd., La Franchi Dairy, Admiral, STAR FLEET.⚓✅❌🎇🚀
@lavyagaur6293 Says:
A very insightful video Thanks @veritasium
@ArayaAndersen Says:
This video made me want a second follow up with Zeiss because WHAT
@AmandaHugandKiss411 Says:
The word your looking for is feasible vs unfeasible.
@VHx-f3j Says:
You just made my day.
@TioBalouz Says:
nvidia ad <3 what happpened, guys, expanding, selling out?
@Literally_lnsane Says:
“His computer makes that music”
@briannacassandra Says:
I can’t believe how simple you made this!
@jesuspabonbarcenas6910 Says:
Y luego te dicen q los humanos no pudieron construir las piramides
@EkimDyslexia Says:
gee as important as farm machines?:)
@ChessireSmile Says:
Dude wtf man. How is this here? I scimmed through it. This just not right.👎
@MimiBago-m7h2q Says:
i still can't understand .. hello from the Philippines 🇵🇭
@tderoo71 Says:
Amazing video, thanks for all the work you put into this! It just shows how much of a huge team effort it is to develop something like this and how much public money has been invested. Thus it also shows how wrong it is to somehow give a single human being billions in reward for at some stage leading a team as if they invented it or made it work.
@Jontae4288 Says:
The ppl who make the mirrors are awesome too, and they need special silicone as well
@nguyenthanhtinop365 Says:
Khác thường cũng tốt ạ ❤. Tôi không biết điều tôi không biết có đúng ko!?
@DSID-pt3fx Says:
These videos are visually cool, but as always, it's really difficult to follow for people without enough background knowledge. There are so many concepts that build on each other and each individual concept in my opinion was not explained well enough such that a layman could grasp it. I get the general idea but am lost as soon as more specific details are mentioned. Furthermore, when the animations are playing, I'm not sure where or what exactly in the diagram the explanations are referring to, or why it matters. The part with the wavelengths and angles was like this. So not only are the oral explanations really ambitious in terms of what they expect of the viewer, but the visuals aren't doing their job to help me understand intuitively. I think 3Blue1Brown does a much better job in this regard.
@VishalKumar-h9f6w Says:
I wish I found your channel sooner.
@robertredpath4817 Says:
A fantastic video that remains entertaining and educational. The amount of obstacles overcome by scientists and engineers to achieve this is a very knife edge financial risk...but put great science together with engineers who optimise a worthwhile task and the world gets to crack a problem that moves things forward. Left over labs from the atomic age...a bunch of people with a crazy idea and a set of engineers who have to make it work by refining systems across many disciplines can have amazing results. Now....if we can stop the politicians and accountants getting involved, we may have a few tricks left up our sleeve yet ;-) I particularly liked the part from the instalation engineers input about as soon as you left it stopped working and took 2 months to fix! Thats where reality hits hardest but becomes the final commercial hurdle :-)
@Eugene_Connor Says:
Human ingenuity is absolutely amazing.
@cjtdb Says:
im so confused why is this thumbnail and title in dutch?
@c094728 Says:
This is mind-blowing
@snakezula Says:
What a horrible way to end the video. No, the naysayers who aren't willing to try a new idea are the unreasonable ones. Trying something that has a chance to theoretically work is not illogical, not trying it when there are no other options for advancement is illogical. History has proven time and time again that the established "experts" on subjects are often times the most unreasonable people, they can't see past their own nose/accomplishments and will scoff at anything new.
@adampistoresi9314 Says:
If they have a machine like this and there burning and selecting atoms to make Theses chip then why can’t they do that to cancer or creating dna ? Or repairing cells?
@JayantMishra-k6s8i Says:
Genius guys
@ABathRobeSamurai Says:
also think about the rivers of blood spent by slaves and thr small people for this to be possible
@ABathRobeSamurai Says:
ifbthe shz is so accrate then why isnt every chip made an i9??
@JohnKuhles1966 Says:
33,806,034+ views
@chrisdelange4340 Says:
Please use the correct way of saying the numbers after a decimal point: Digits after a decimal point are almost always read out loud individually. You say "point" (or "comma" in some regions), then name each digit one by one. For example, 3.14 is said as "three point one four". For most situations (like giving a measurement or a price), you simply say the whole number first, say "point," and then state each digit individually.3.24 becomes "three point two four". It’s unacceptable to hear “zero point fifty five in a scientific program. Only in prices the cents after the dollars or euros are said as a number, like “one dollar fifty cents”.
@MrSamadolfo Says:
🤔 next do one on the Snowpiercer Engine ☺🚝
@hamarauabdullahihabubakar Says:
Keep them coming
@shannerol1873 Says:
Medieval people would see this machine and worship it like a god or something
@srikanthbn Says:
All of this to make AI work.
@nightowl5698 Says:
So are these the guys responsible for the eventual creation of my ryzen 9800x3d? 😮😊
@deathcorepyro Says:
Isnt it crazy that technology has developed so fast that we can literally interview the people that have made the core technologies within their lifespan? I think of it like imagine where we would have been if we could interview the people who made the pyramids. Along the way interviewing people like Galileo or Tesla, and putting that out for the masses to proccess on the scale of millions of viewers.
@Nicolasa-r4f Says:
сочетание скинове воперчатки оккультизм с красными ножами это вообще имбо
@Missedtrader Says:
How often does the laser miss? No
@dieselmunkey Says:
I didn't realize Bas Rutten was a scientist 🤣🤣🤣
@papirklips Says:
0:17 No, that's a stupid explanation and you know it.
@davidhardy9419 Says:
Engineers around the world will be trying to build their own versions of this machine. Maybe within several years they will succeed. Perhaps with many improvements. I hope ASML will have moved on by then and avoid the fate that Philips suffered as an industrial pioneer.
@TheWalkingSeven Says:
i use this machine in gregtech
@lostsoul4317 Says:
How did we humans managed to built all this is beyond my imagination 😮
@IanFernandez-t9n Says:
The journey felt like it's destiny.
@pyppetmaster21000 Says:
The company i worked for used asml machines for our chips. Before the company died

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