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China's Amazing Water Canal | China's Future MEGAPROJECTS: Part 2

Adults Technology
South-to-North Water Transfer Project: The huge populations filling China's northern megacities have a shortage of the single most necessary resource for life: water. To solve that problem, the Chinese will soon be moving 44.8 billion cubic meters of fresh water each year from the wetter South to the dryer North.

Jing-Jin-Ji, A MEGALOPOLIS | China's Future MEGAPROJECTS: Part 1

Adults Technology
Jing-Jin-Ji: China is in the midst of a construction spree unparalleled in human history. These are the Megaprojects that will lift China into the future. China wants to make its capital, Beijing, the center of the world's largest supercity, by merging three provinces into one continuous megalopolis of 130 million people.

Why It's HARD To Land on Mars

Adults Technology
This video is about why it's harder to successfully land spacecraft and landers and rovers on Mars than on Earth, or Venus, or the Moon, or Titan, or asteroids. It all comes down to atmospheric density! When there's no atmosphere, you can do a powered descent in a flimsy tinfoil spacecraft like the Lunar Module, and when there's plenty of atmosphere you can do an unpowered descent via heat shield and parachutes like the space shuttle, Apollo command module, Soyuz, Huygens, etc. But on Mars with its thin air, you have to do both powered & unpowered descent, getting the worst of both worlds.

A soft silicone 3D-printed heart

Adults Technology
Swiss researchers have come a step closer to building a better artificial heart. It's a squishy prototype that's 3D-printed from silicone.

Baymax from Big Hero 6 is real. Here's who created him.

Adults Technology
Chris Atkeson, the creator of Big Hero 6's Baymax, wants to bring soft robots to the world.

The snakey, viney robot that can go almost anywhere

Adults Technology
Researchers at Stanford University developed a soft, squishy robot that "grows" like a vine and can squeeze through tight spaces. It can also lift heavy objects, which makes it potentially ideal for search-and-rescue operations.

6 things in tech today that Bill Gates accurately predicted back in 1999

Adults Technology
The Microsoft co-founder imagined much of the tech we use today before it even existed. He shared his thoughts in a 1999 book called "Business @ the Speed of Thought." Here's a quick look at 6 of his predictions that eventually came true, including a device you are probably holding in your hands right now.

The bizarre physics of fire ants

Adults Technology
They're not just an animal, they're a material. And that's got engineers interested.

It's not you. Claw machines are rigged.

Adults Technology
If you have played a claw machine you probably haven't won many prizes and maybe even thought they are rigged. Find out what really happened to your allowance.

Stretchy Batteries Are Coming... Here's How They Work

Adults Technology
Researchers have developed a way to make a battery and its casing stretchy, enabling future advancements in wearable electronics.

How does fracking work? - Mia Nacamulli

Adults Technology
Deep underground lie stores of once-inaccessible natural gas. There's a technology, called hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," that can extract this natural gas, potentially powering us for decades to come. So how does fracking work and why is it a source of such heated controversy? Mia Nacamulli explains the ins and outs of fracking.

Why there are twice as many solar jobs as coal jobs

Adults Technology
America is changing how it gets its energy, and coal is losing out.

Tesla's Model 3 is coming in July - here's everything you need to know

Adults Technology
Tesla is gearing up for the big reveal of the Model 3, its first mass-market car. CEO Elon Musk unveiled the car in March of 2016, but Tesla will show off the production version of the sedan in July. The summer premiere will offer the roughly 400,000 customers who preordered the vehicle a chance to see the final version before deliveries begin at the end of the year.

Everything we know about the iPhone 8 - including a total redesign

Adults Technology
Apple hasn't officially announced anything yet, but there are lots of rumours out there about what to expect from the next iteration of the company's flagship device. Since it's the 10th anniversary of the original iPhone, we will likely see some big changes. Here's what we think we know so far.

Revolutionizing Heart Surgery With Virtual Reality

Adults Technology
Have you ever wondered what it would be like to take a ride through the human body on the Magic School Bus? Well, a new bit of virtual reality technology is taking that concept and applying it to medical training. Doctors can now teleport inside the human heart and practice surgery over and over again, and this training could revolutionize the future of health care.

Meet NASA's new class of astronauts

Adults Technology
More than 18,300 candidates applied to be astronauts in NASA's latest class-smashing the record of 8,000 applicants in 1978-and only 12 got the job. Here's who made the cut.

Jumping Water Droplets Could Be the Future of Cooling Computers

Adults Technology
Engineers have created a new water-based cooling system that could put an end to electronics crashing and overheating.

This Is Not What Space Looks Like

Adults Technology
Amazing images of the far reaches of the universe are everywhere, but are they accurate? What does space really look like?

NASA Is Going to the Sun! But How...and Why?

Adults Technology
In 2018, NASA will launch a solar probe that will travel closer to the sun than any spacecraft before. But why? What are they looking for?

The Insane Plan to Tow an Iceberg to the Middle East

Adults Technology
A United Arab Emirates company wants to tow an iceberg from Antarctica to the desert for drinking water, but is their plan feasible?

Why don't perpetual motion machines ever work? - Netta Schramm

Adults Technology
Perpetual motion machines - devices that can do work indefinitely without any external energy source - have captured many inventors' imaginations because they could totally transform our relationship with energy. There's just one problem: they don't work. Why not? Netta Schramm describes the pitfalls of perpetual motion machines.