MIT graduates cannot power a light bulb with a battery.

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"I'm not an electrical engineer.. I'm a mechanical engineer." Oh god.

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  • @inoffensiveusername4684
    @inoffensiveusername46847 жыл бұрын

    The woman who said the current couldn't flow without a complete circuit was technically correct... she simply didn't know that that base of the bulb could be used as a connection. Simply a misunderstanding of the properties of the bulb as opposed to electrical current theory. This is a prime example of education vs experience in the field.

  • @daemn42

    @daemn42

    7 жыл бұрын

    I don't think it's failure to understand the properties or construction of the bulb at all. I suspect that had she been given a 2nd wire she would have immediately connected it to the light bulb and battery correctly (as would several of the others). The problem here is not failure to understand how the most basic electrical circuit works, but failure to adapt when a simple problem is presented in a non-standard way. People just do not visualize a light bulb (or motor or almost anything else) in direct contact with its power source. I do think this non-adaptability (related to poor critical thinking) is a real problem, but the video misrepresents it.

  • @rajharsh3114

    @rajharsh3114

    7 жыл бұрын

    Blake Marshall When you connect the end of the bulb you basically complete the circuit. And I think she was an Indian. And there was another genius who was a Black person if you will.

  • @learningDeepL

    @learningDeepL

    7 жыл бұрын

    "In their classic paper Perception in Chess, Chase and Simon reported on a study that compared the abilities of experts and novices to remember the positions of pieces in chess. *When pieces were arranged on the board as they might be during a game*, the experts' memories were far superior to the novices'. When the pieces were arranged randomly, there was little difference between the memories of the experts and the novices. The traditional interpretation of this result is that an expert's memory is not inherently better than a novice's but that the expert has a knowledge structure that helps him or her remember particular kinds of information. When new information corresponds to the knowledge structure -- in this case, the sensible placement of chess pieces -- the expert can remember it easily. When new information doesn't correspond to a knowledge structure -- the chess pieces are randomly positioned -- the expert can't remember it any better than the novice. A few years later, Ben Shneiderman duplicated Chase and Simon's results in the computer-programming arena and reported his results in a paper called Exploratory Experiments in Programmer Behavior. Shneiderman found that when program statements were arranged in a sensible order, experts were able to remember them better than novices. *When statements were shuffled, the experts' superiority was reduced.* Shneiderman's results have been confirmed in other studies. The basic concept has also been confirmed in the games Go and bridge and in electronics, music, and physics." src. CodingHorrors

  • @Mr30friends

    @Mr30friends

    7 жыл бұрын

    ***** Holy fuck dude. I do not think you understand the simplicity of the task they were told to do. There is no excuse except for the editing.

  • 7 жыл бұрын

    It's a fucking light bulb not a nuclear reactor.

  • @noamorwell
    @noamorwell8 жыл бұрын

    I like how the only guy that did get it correct was the guy who answered "maybe", instead of giving in to the pressure of saying yes outright.

  • @PastPresented

    @PastPresented

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes, as indicated from 1:46 onward, what he recognised was that he needed more information about the battery and the bulb to answer Yes or No to the question. The video cheats by not showing people wiring the circuit correctly but still inevitably failing to light the 120v bulb with the 1.5v battery- except the cheat is, as most of the comments sadly illustrate, part of the education. If people don't consider all aspects of the situation (including, in this case, the fact that only the "maybe" guy was shown succeeding with a bulb of more suitable voltage rating) they will get the answers wrong.

  • @slayerphoenix6307

    @slayerphoenix6307

    7 жыл бұрын

    No, the question was whether they could light a light-bulb with a battery and a wire. It doesn't matter that they weren't able to light that light-bulb with that battery and that wire.

  • @PastPresented

    @PastPresented

    7 жыл бұрын

    It absolutely does matter, because the full correct answer to the question would be something like: "Yes, IF the battery provides a suitable voltage to make the bulb glow in the visible spectrum, AND the wire is long enough to connect the further terminal of the battery to the bulb, AND the bulb is a working light-bulb, as opposed to, for example, a tulip bulb".

  • @slayerphoenix6307

    @slayerphoenix6307

    7 жыл бұрын

    No the general statement contains all the subset possibilities. Proving that birds can fly does not entail proving that every bird can fly. Proving that two or more birds can fly would prove the statement, that birds can fly. If you try to expand the many influences that you are talking about, then you can go further into if the wire is too resistant to current, if the wire is conductive at all, if the surroundings can transmit electromagnetic waves, if you are talking about the moment in which the circuit is connected since inductance can prevent the current from immediately appearing, if the questioned does not have a seizure while attempting to do so. Being able to light a light-bulb in any situation proves the statement of yes to the question, "do you think you could light a bulb with a battery and wire?" One instance in which they cannot, does not disprove the possibility that they can. If that were the case, then all laws of physics would be "disproven." If anybody is wrong, the creators of this video are in the wrong for not displaying the correct way to light the light-bulb with that set of equipment, if there even was a way. By your logic, I could ask them the question, then immediately shoot them on the spot. Therefore their statement would be wrong because they couldn't prove it using the equipment I was about to provide them.

  • @slayerphoenix6307

    @slayerphoenix6307

    7 жыл бұрын

    Also, it is the question that needs fixing. "Do you think you could light a bulb with a battery and wire?" Should be "Do you think you could light THIS bulb with THIS battery and THIS wire?" Without specifying, the statement defaults to the general, and you just become an idiot that is trying to make graduates look like idiots with your flawed logic. If you tried to do this as a test for something like the SAT/GMAT/whatever, you would get sued and lose your job.

  • @ColeJT
    @ColeJT7 жыл бұрын

    The guy who said, "maybe" paid the most attention in class. All of my engineering professors (sadly, I'm not an MIT alum) told us the answer to ANY engineering question is almost always, "it depends."

  • @TheFatPeanut

    @TheFatPeanut

    3 жыл бұрын

    Same with the law

  • @radtech21

    @radtech21

    3 жыл бұрын

    Excellent. In most contemporary problems there are A LOT of variables.

  • @breathtakingsamurai981

    @breathtakingsamurai981

    2 жыл бұрын

    Or you say "I don't know" and then try it

  • @iwillshinelikesun

    @iwillshinelikesun

    2 жыл бұрын

    Q1. Are you an idiot *Maybe*

  • @CT-pi2gl

    @CT-pi2gl

    9 ай бұрын

    And notice he is the one who got it to light up

  • @drivingdown101
    @drivingdown1019 жыл бұрын

    How to create a video like this one: Ask person after person to try to complete a task, knowing that some proportion will fail. Stop when you have recorded as much footage of failure as you need. Omit successes when you edit your video so that the failures seem more frequent than they are. Release the video and see how much it provokes its audience.

  • @ameersalem27

    @ameersalem27

    7 жыл бұрын

    C Doyle The idea is that the task being asked requires much less intelligence than MIT graduates are given credit for. Anyone that has passed basic high school physics should be able to light a damn bulb.

  • @lubu4u312

    @lubu4u312

    7 жыл бұрын

    They showed some of them succeeding but who cares about what they actually did, YOU FEEL WRONGED EVEN THOUGH THERE'S NO EVIDENCE OF IT! THE OUTRAGE!!!! HOW COULD THEY!?!?

  • @ALiJ4LIFE

    @ALiJ4LIFE

    7 жыл бұрын

    C Doyle So true, Veritasium is a pioneer in this!

  • @JustMe-ld2cu

    @JustMe-ld2cu

    6 жыл бұрын

    Dude, have you any idea what you need to score in high school sciences and maths to be considered for MIT? I don't think there is a single student in my grade 12 physics class in my town that couldn't do it. Then you have some dumbass saying she was a mechanical engineer and not a electrical one? Holy shit!! And she'll have employers lining up with signing bonuses to hire her.

  • @hamidaminirad

    @hamidaminirad

    6 жыл бұрын

    An "engineer", no matter from which university from which country, who can't light up a bulb with a wire and a battery, is too much of disgrace for that student and for that university and he hasn't deserved his graduate. It's just like as if a math graduate wouldn't be able to prove the pythagoras formula of a²+b²=c², because both are stuff, that you learn at school and which are basic for that study.

  • @notSALTY.
    @notSALTY.7 жыл бұрын

    How many MIT graduates does it take to power a lightbulb?

  • @sekolahonlineteknikotomotif

    @sekolahonlineteknikotomotif

    2 жыл бұрын

    LOL :P

  • @davidedmundtochi5228

    @davidedmundtochi5228

    2 жыл бұрын

    oh no🤦‍♂️😆

  • @ronwilliams357
    @ronwilliams3579 жыл бұрын

    That's Harvard Yard... not MIT.

  • @alanansari6020

    @alanansari6020

    3 жыл бұрын

    harvard's still one of the top uni in the WORLD ...doesn't really change anything

  • @Kiyoen569

    @Kiyoen569

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@alanansari6020but Harvard is not known for its engineering like MIT is

  • @karast4746

    @karast4746

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@alanansari6020 not STEM student will never know how to solve this problem regardless which school

  • @elonmusk9814

    @elonmusk9814

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Kiyoen569 It is a very basic thing that children like me learnt in primary school. So everyone should have a sense of lighting a bulb 💡.

  • @alanansari6020

    @alanansari6020

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Kiyoen569 This is middle school level science !!

  • @awong2376
    @awong23766 жыл бұрын

    I've been a mechanical engineer working in silicon valley for over 25 years. I never understood why they can't teach these kids basic things instead of putting emphasis on calculus and thermo etc. which I have never used my whole career! Most of what they pay you for in the industry is to solve problems that no answer exists yet. You find the answer and tell the world what you find. Its' called Innovation. The engineering curriculum needs some serious updating as it is the same as is was in my time in the 80's! Teach them how to put things together, and produce designs that can be manufactured. There's wayyy too much theory and not enough real world working knowledge. Most of the new grads feel great about themselves at first with all their knowledge they picked up in college only to slowly discover over the years that you use very little if any of it.

  • @scottieb6442

    @scottieb6442

    Жыл бұрын

    Because most advanced research abstracts away fundamental knowledge

  • @alexlarson2466

    @alexlarson2466

    7 ай бұрын

    Just because you personally never use calculus or thermo does not mean it shouldn't be taught.

  • @aaronrios6470
    @aaronrios64708 жыл бұрын

    Lets ask this question to our presidential candidates.

  • @niveyoga3242

    @niveyoga3242

    8 жыл бұрын

    hahahaha xD

  • @temenow

    @temenow

    7 жыл бұрын

    Exactly! I always wondered why don't ,we as people, ask every candidate should be an engineer as a requirement? May be the world would focus on real issues rather than the politics we are blinded with currently.

  • @xdfckt2564

    @xdfckt2564

    7 жыл бұрын

    Too late. Too late. Keep asking the question to yourself.

  • @KA1blow

    @KA1blow

    6 жыл бұрын

    No, because not every person in the world is an engineer. Let's ask you about the strategical impact of the Northern European plain in both world wars, how about that ?

  • @stewiegriffin6503
    @stewiegriffin65037 жыл бұрын

    1) Question is misleading. If it was the right bulb, they could have done it. Battery is too weak for this kind of bulb 2) We only saw students who have failed. What about them who gave the right explanation why is it not working ? 3) Typical KZread video. Only clicks, shares and comments matters.

  • @cobyp99

    @cobyp99

    7 жыл бұрын

    yessssss someone understands something

  • @MoonstarTheTravis

    @MoonstarTheTravis

    7 жыл бұрын

    sure, only the students who failed are exposed. but only if 2 or 3 fail it is still tremendously disappointing

  • @bonbonpony

    @bonbonpony

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes. Because it shows that they give diplomas to people who cannot light a light bulb.

  • @timithy4569

    @timithy4569

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Bon Bon Why do all MIT graduates need to construct the circuit that lights a bulb without instructions? I think the large majority of people maybe 80%+, have never had to work with bare wire without instructions. And if they did, the MIT grads could quickly learn how to do it.

  • @bonbonpony

    @bonbonpony

    7 жыл бұрын

    timithy4569 Because MIT stands for Massachusetts Institute of *Technology* :P They don't need to deal with bare wire all the time, but they at least should know how to deal with it when they face such problems. (And they _will_ face!) If you only learn how to play with toys made by other people smarter than you, then you're not really that smart. One day there might be no smart people and their toys around and what then? You would have to be smart enough to build such toys yourself in order to do something more high-level next. Or your fancy toy may break and you will have to fix it. That's what engineers do, isn't it? :q

  • @abhishekbali.01
    @abhishekbali.017 жыл бұрын

    It's in no way related to what they are worth. Harvard Professor's saying that '...everything else that's built on it is questionable' is disappointing. It's like for Bill Gates to be Bill Gates, he needs to be able to fix my neighbor's crappy laptop.

  • @andrewness

    @andrewness

    7 жыл бұрын

    Which he probably could, in fairness.

  • @jamescrawford327

    @jamescrawford327

    7 жыл бұрын

    What Bill Gates did was to get lucky and then act like a stupid rock star.

  • @mikebetts2046

    @mikebetts2046

    7 жыл бұрын

    You are missing the point about Bill Gates. He is not as brilliant as his wealth would suggest. He is a leading philanthropist because of a fortunate combination of circumstances and not necesarily because he is a great person.

  • @mikebetts2046

    @mikebetts2046

    7 жыл бұрын

    Bill Gates did not invent a technology. His company wrote an operating system (software) and made a deal with IBM to use it on their PC's. Given the computer-craze that kicked shortly there-after, it was a bit like having a patent on air. Not to say that Microsoft did not in some way contribute to the computer market, but it was more IBM that invented technology.

  • @andrewness

    @andrewness

    7 жыл бұрын

    Mike Betts I think you could argue that software is a technology. But your general point stands.

  • @GetMeThere1
    @GetMeThere17 жыл бұрын

    Electricity/electronics is one of those things with a tremendous chasm between "book learning" and "practical experience." To answer even the simplest questions about what will happen if certain components are connected, etc., (much like the question in the video), you are MUCH better off if you have "played around" with lots of circuits and building and modifying common functional circuits. Even lab classes don't really help. You have to spend time, on your own, really working through the practical realities...

  • @jenniferfarnworth6340

    @jenniferfarnworth6340

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yup, my train of thought as well. I was less surprised at their inability to figure it out and more amazed that they gave some bullshit excuses or even said they could in the beginning. Instead of thinking to themselves, well, can I do this?

  • @imoutofideasforaname

    @imoutofideasforaname

    7 жыл бұрын

    Nah, these days everything is modular so if you focus on your circuit it is simple. Systems engineers will focus on everything working together as long as you take the necessary design decisions. I think they were just more caught off guard. Expecting to be interviewed about how it feels to graduate from the most prestigious uni in the world, but to see they are being asked a simple question in a degrading way. I doubt they are stupid. That is a fallacy. This is more insight into human psychology.

  • @deyesed

    @deyesed

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ding ding ding, that's why intense electronics courses all have difficult, long lab sessions.

  • @douglasscott9322
    @douglasscott93227 жыл бұрын

    "Do you think you could push a compact car down a hill?" "Of course." *Supplies an 86 Honda Civic full of cement with no wheels* _"There you go, M.I.T. Students are stupid."_

  • @randomstuff063

    @randomstuff063

    7 жыл бұрын

    DOUGLAS SCOTT Your humor is that of a smart person.

  • @fiar2003

    @fiar2003

    7 жыл бұрын

    DOUGLAS SCOTT Actually the light bulb problem has no tricks at all. It's simply assessing their understanding of a basic closed circuit. To discover their are MIT grads unable to solve this basic problem implies the teaching is fundamentally ineffective.

  • @douglasscott9322

    @douglasscott9322

    7 жыл бұрын

    Arif K​ How many volts is a standard Candle Bulb? How many volts can a D-cell battery output? Please link to us a 1.5v Candle Bulb of the same size in this video from any manufacturer. The only person who lit up a bulb, used a tiny DC compliant torch bulb, guess what it was designed to run on? My point still stands, you just do not understand both Physics and sarcasm.

  • @haakonness

    @haakonness

    7 жыл бұрын

    They are not stupid because they could not light up the >=20W light bulb. They are stupid because most of them could not even close the circuit. And they didn't understand why it would not light up even if they would have closed the circuit. Thats two basic things they should have known. I knew this when I was 8 or 9 . The guy that was shown with a small bulb was the one that said "maybe", because he understood that he needed more information about the battery and bulb.

  • @lubu4u312

    @lubu4u312

    7 жыл бұрын

    Lmao, Hakon is right, half the kids don't even put the wire to both ends. Its like they really just dont understand how a battery works. Oh but no a rich Ivy league school could never have dumb ass kids with rich parents. Its just cherry picking, yes :^)

  • @007Kellam
    @007Kellam7 жыл бұрын

    I want to know how none of them called out the fact that its a 120 volt AC bulb and a 1.5 volt DC battery. Did no one really get that?

  • @007Kellam

    @007Kellam

    7 жыл бұрын

    Valid point...

  • @siux94

    @siux94

    7 жыл бұрын

    Hailstorm i would say you dont know basics.. Transformer cant be made with dc..

  • @R3Cat

    @R3Cat

    7 жыл бұрын

    he said a boost converter, those dont work with AC, you just need some caps and an IC

  • @Nickgowans

    @Nickgowans

    7 жыл бұрын

    007K an AC lightbulb? they don't exist, either a lightbulb or an LED. An incandescent lightbulb works with both AC and DC circuits, a diode works only with properly configured DC circuits. Also the bulb looks an awful lot like a lightbulb from a cheap bike light or an internal light in a car. in which case it would be 12v, and 1.5v would be more than enough to light it.

  • @maxbauer1633

    @maxbauer1633

    7 жыл бұрын

    autoformer?

  • @micha8469
    @micha84697 жыл бұрын

    As electrical engineer I can say that this kind of question is completly wrong and misleading. What is a light bulb and what's a battery? Neither of these say anything about the power supply and the load except that we have DC power supply and that the load suppose to lit. This question cannot be answered correctly except: I don't have enough data to judge. But it also says something about them as young engineers, they don't have that habit to look for needed data, to solve issues from the very beginning. They just blindly say yes or no without having proper data to answer. Another thing is that asking mechanical engineer about electricity is not a good idea. There's a reason why people get specialized education. That's because no one can be great at everything or even lots of stuff. Not enough life, not enough time. But one can be great at one discipline. But we got to the point where people have good knowledge about one discipline but they don't know the first thing about anything else. And people with varied knowledge are really needed right now. I don't know about MIT but when I was getting education at my uni of tech, 90% of the program was pure theory. Now looking at it after a few years, you are not engineer because you got a degree. Engineer is a diploma + a few years of experience in your discipline. Then you can call yourself an engineer. I have a few friends that have the very same diploma as I do but they wouldn't be able to do anything practical, all they can do is sitting in front of computers.

  • @butanestove1514

    @butanestove1514

    7 жыл бұрын

    yo... my dude. they didn't just ask the question... they gave them the battery and the bulb and the wire. And they couldn't figure out how to do it. It's something that any one should be able to do before even starting an engineering degree.

  • @TheLcass

    @TheLcass

    7 жыл бұрын

    I was thinking exactly this , depending on the power of the bulb it might not light at all due to the power and voltage of the battery.

  • @micha8469

    @micha8469

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Butane Stove the truth is that people who said yes or maybe were kinda right. Generally (as they asked) it is possible. Those who tried also did it right but they didn't show the whole process. And there were none who said it's not possible except the girl who said she needed another wire to close the circuit and she wasn't wrong because generally you use a wire to connect the power source to the load but she didn't realise she can just touch ground pin to negative of the battery.or the other way. I don't feel like electricity is superior and any engineer should know that before starting an engineering degree. But I also find it weird that there are people who seriously can't tell what they need to light a bulb or how to use a battery, it doesn't take an engineering degree to know that...

  • @LegionStriker

    @LegionStriker

    7 жыл бұрын

    Leszek Michał I see where you're coming from, but honestly this is such a simple question there is no excuse. If you're an engineer I'd expect you are smart enough to understand the most BASIC fundamentals of electricity. This would probably happen at my university as well. There's a lot of retards who want to be "engineers" but haven't got the slightest inclination for learning. They barely squeeze into graduation because they know how to memorize answers. They lack intuition which is the only thing that matters. This is why even the most stupid individuals can specialize in one thing. I don't assume you're smart just because you graduate college. I've met plumbers who I would consider insanely smart as they have such a wide scope of knowledge and can learn anything very quickly.

  • @MaDrung

    @MaDrung

    7 жыл бұрын

    I think you don't understand that just because someone failed in the experiment (maybe they were hung over, didn't sleep for days or just panicked because they were put on the spot) doesn't mean they're not smart. They might have expected the question was a trick question and spent their time figuring out where the trick is. If you want to measure intelligence, IQ test is still the best method we have for that today.

  • @dragorific
    @dragorific7 жыл бұрын

    they just went through 4 years of hell, anxiety and exams. don't give them another test on the spot at the day of their graduation xD.

  • @owentimo

    @owentimo

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thats not how the REAL World works, Bruh.

  • @r__b6095

    @r__b6095

    7 жыл бұрын

    says someone who fucking calls themselves Sparta, Bruh

  • @owentimo

    @owentimo

    7 жыл бұрын

    How often do you think about fathers raping kids? Thats quite disturbing.

  • @colterhikel9819

    @colterhikel9819

    7 жыл бұрын

    Dragorific they were at MIT in Massachusetts, not a foxhole in Afghanistan. tell me more about this hell they were in.

  • @dragorific

    @dragorific

    7 жыл бұрын

    Colter Hikel True that xD

  • @DugeHick
    @DugeHick8 жыл бұрын

    Future looks so bright.

  • @MrMarkjon

    @MrMarkjon

    8 жыл бұрын

    it actually looks dark considering no one can figure out how to use a light bulb lol

  • @DugeHick

    @DugeHick

    8 жыл бұрын

    +MrMarkjon Just like graduates, not bright.

  • @shockwave3283

    @shockwave3283

    8 жыл бұрын

    looooolll

  • @Joe-yr1em

    @Joe-yr1em

    8 жыл бұрын

    +MrMarkjon classic

  • @ajnode

    @ajnode

    7 жыл бұрын

    Based on the hairstyles and fashions, I'd guess this was filmed in the early-mid 90s.

  • @socialistworker6823
    @socialistworker682310 жыл бұрын

    I'm an MIT dropout. I can do it because my dad was an electrician. I could do it before MIT. If someone came to MIT to be an architect, mechanical engineer or geologist they might have been initially stumped by this. If instead of asking the question on graduation day you stuck them in a room and told them make this bulb light they would probably be able to do it after some observation and thinking. It would be interesting to compare the time it took various graduates from different schools and majors.

  • @elonmusk352

    @elonmusk352

    3 жыл бұрын

    Is your father engineer or electrician?

  • @nolan412

    @nolan412

    2 жыл бұрын

    Architects need to build electrified buildings. Mechanical engineers have an electric motor somewhere. A geologist...use flashlights.

  • @kartikpandey8739

    @kartikpandey8739

    2 жыл бұрын

    Agreed. Most of them were not (must have not been) electrical engineering graduates.

  • @jaysaini955

    @jaysaini955

    2 жыл бұрын

    Socialist? Why bro?

  • @kenaaronbabbit9987

    @kenaaronbabbit9987

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm glad you're attempting to justify flunking out

  • @BetaChri5
    @BetaChri59 жыл бұрын

    Can't graduate? Just sue!

  • @CoryTheMan789

    @CoryTheMan789

    9 жыл бұрын

    A dose of Buckley

  • @thebubbclub

    @thebubbclub

    9 жыл бұрын

    BetaChri5 Haha, you got redirected from that video too?

  • @BetaChri5

    @BetaChri5

    9 жыл бұрын

    Crosseyed Butterfly Yes.

  • @12101DyM

    @12101DyM

    9 жыл бұрын

    Crosseyed Butterfly me too

  • @chaoswebz

    @chaoswebz

    9 жыл бұрын

    BetaChri5 me too

  • @KeystoneScience
    @KeystoneScience7 жыл бұрын

    Oh my, the cringe is real :P

  • @cuzOoba

    @cuzOoba

    7 жыл бұрын

    Keystone Science!

  • @KeystoneScience

    @KeystoneScience

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Constantine Marinos hi !

  • @cuzOoba

    @cuzOoba

    7 жыл бұрын

    I'm subscribed to you on both of my accounts haha. Love what you're doing, keep it up!

  • @KeystoneScience

    @KeystoneScience

    7 жыл бұрын

    Constantine Marinos haha xD thank you!

  • @AwesomeAdmirak

    @AwesomeAdmirak

    7 жыл бұрын

    Keystone Science Stop talking to yourself

  • @docdaneeka3424
    @docdaneeka34247 жыл бұрын

    And how many did they interview that did manage to light the bulb?

  • @insertphrasehere15

    @insertphrasehere15

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yeah I know, these are probably like the 4 people out of the whole graduating class that got it wrong.

  • @bighands69

    @bighands69

    7 жыл бұрын

    If they are engineers they obviously will be able to do it. But if they are computer science or finance then they will more than likely not know how to.

  • @thefilth7368

    @thefilth7368

    7 жыл бұрын

    Frankly, this is the type of thing you should be able to do in 3rd grade. They don't need their degrees to buy groceries or do the dishes and they certainly don't need their degrees to complete an electrical circuit. This is not about the degree, it's about the foundation that the degree is built on.

  • @docdaneeka3424

    @docdaneeka3424

    7 жыл бұрын

    Sure, there are lots of things we should consider 'basic knowledge' that you should get from a modern education, but it really is unreasonable to expect everything to sink in for everyone - if you look hard enough there will be people that don't know pretty basic facts. We can bemoan the fact that the education system is horrible, wasn't it so much better in the old days, you don't learn anything at university ... etc etc, but really it's not true: society hasn't collapsed into a bunch of idiots, we are going foward faster and faster and things are way way better than they were in the 'old days'. It's just silly to expect every single person to know how to make a simple electric circuit, even MIT graduates. Some people don't know how to cook food, some people don't tie their shoes properly - well ok, but overall things are fine. If they were electrical graduates, I'd be more worried - but the people that say 'you don't learn anything at university' have completely missed the point of university (or they were terrible students, or a terrible university)

  • @VioletTheGeek

    @VioletTheGeek

    7 жыл бұрын

    Um, with that larger bulb: none. A single D-cell battery is not enough power to light that bulb. Pretty sure that was the point.

  • @souravzzz
    @souravzzz7 жыл бұрын

    Did these people never play with batteries and bulbs when they were kids?

  • @Themoigt

    @Themoigt

    7 жыл бұрын

    U Wot M8 seems like they didn't

  • @greenanubis

    @greenanubis

    7 жыл бұрын

    +a_slight_veneer_of_privacy I dont see much sense to go into extremes of learning about something. Effort needed to go from that B+ to A is bigger than from B to B+. Its the law of diminishing returns. Meaning that you can with the same amount of effort be capable in a wide variety of fields or be great in just one field. Colleges do make people good in one thing, and that is getting good grades. Those 15% you are talking about are those that genuinely want to grow as a person, not just grow their skill of how to fake their competence.

  • @erikbahen8693
    @erikbahen86937 жыл бұрын

    Well that's unfair.. those kids were severely hung over.

  • @JustinHallPlus
    @JustinHallPlus9 жыл бұрын

    It was a trick question. The correct answer would have been "It depends on the battery and the light bulb."

  • @temp___

    @temp___

    9 жыл бұрын

    Justin Hall Explain.

  • @JustinHallPlus

    @JustinHallPlus

    9 жыл бұрын

    jmichaelrout Well every light bulb except that small one probably required more power to light up than that little battery could possibly deliver. That's why only that one guy barely got that tiny light bulb to light up. Give me a car battery though and you can light up the headlights on a car. Thus it all depends on the battery and the lightbulb that you're talking about.

  • @joakim2k10

    @joakim2k10

    9 жыл бұрын

    Justin Hall The question wasn't "can you power any light bulb with any battery?", so I fail to see the relevance here.

  • @JustinHallPlus

    @JustinHallPlus

    9 жыл бұрын

    Geir Sunde​ No, the question was actually very poorly worded "Can you light a bulb with a battery?" What kind of bulb? A garlic bulb? What do you mean light it? Set it on fire? The question should have been "Can you make this lightbulb turn on with this battery and wire?" Because no matter how you hook it up, a D cell battery isn't going to light up a 20 watt lightbulb, it's barely going to light up a 2 watt indicator light in fact, and even then the battery is going to get very hot very fast from all the current it has to deliver. A flashlight lightbulb? Yes, but they only show one of those in this video, and it's where the guy gets it to light up. All this is is an example of poor journalism.

  • @joakim2k10

    @joakim2k10

    9 жыл бұрын

    Justin Hall To be honest I think you're nitpicking. The essence of this was not the initial question, but the following demand for a demonstration where the given battery was sufficient to do the job.

  • @jurilentis5899
    @jurilentis58997 жыл бұрын

    Electrical engineer master race here.

  • @Diaryofaninja

    @Diaryofaninja

    7 жыл бұрын

    Juri Lentis Electrical engineers are gross. Chem Engineers are the best.

  • @Dpham279
    @Dpham27910 жыл бұрын

    uhhh most of the people were Harvard students not MIT.

  • @violacrb
    @violacrb8 жыл бұрын

    That's not what they teach in technical schools! They teach theory, equation derivation, mathematical transforms, laws of physics, etc. Practical knowledge? That's not worthy of academic institutions!

  • @MaxwellsWitch

    @MaxwellsWitch

    8 жыл бұрын

    Why not have both?

  • @davidgervais5974

    @davidgervais5974

    8 жыл бұрын

    practical knowledge can be learned outside of school, unlike theoretical knowledge. That is not my thought, but the one behind my school's teachings.

  • @ataraxia2894

    @ataraxia2894

    8 жыл бұрын

    Learning physics=learning about electricity. In order to light a bulb you need to have a closed circuit. Theories can be applied to real life for practical uses.

  • @MrOmnos

    @MrOmnos

    8 жыл бұрын

    They have labs, you can't be an engineering without going to labs. Labs carry around 30% of the marks!!

  • @davidgervais5974

    @davidgervais5974

    8 жыл бұрын

    MrOmnos labs have for main purpose to demonstrate the veracity of a theory, not to teach you how to plug a light bulb.

  • @connorb9261
    @connorb92617 жыл бұрын

    Part of this could be that the students have a good understanding of E&M and can wire circuits just fine, but have never stopped to look at a light bulb. It may not be immediately apparent where the two leads from the battery should make contact with the light bulb in order to turn it on, and then the fact that they are being put on the spot with a camera on them is causing them to be blind to seeing where the leads should go.

  • @TheBoss0110101001
    @TheBoss01101010017 жыл бұрын

    "I'm not an electrical engineer, I'm a mechanical engineer." What?

  • @Christoph1990

    @Christoph1990

    7 жыл бұрын

    DickButt I like your profile picture

  • @mikebetts2046

    @mikebetts2046

    7 жыл бұрын

    That would be similar to me (as an electrical engineer) saying I cannot figure out how to change the alternator belt on my car. These dolts need some vocational education.

  • @bighands69

    @bighands69

    7 жыл бұрын

    Mechanical engineers have no clue as to how current flows. How would we expect them to.

  • @mikebetts2046

    @mikebetts2046

    7 жыл бұрын

    bighands69 If a mechanical engineer has no idea of how current flows, then that engineer was not paying attention in certain classes. As an electrical engineer, I had to take courses in Newtonian physics, nuclear physics, statics, dynamics, thermodynamics, heat-transfer, mechanics of materials, chemistry, economics, etc. Ditto for mechanical engineers; assuming they are classically trained engineers and not just someone that rose up through the ranks and learned by hands-on.

  • @TheBoss0110101001

    @TheBoss0110101001

    7 жыл бұрын

    Didn't you have to take Physics: Electricity, Magnetism, and Optics? I am taking that and there is material about how batteries and resistors work. How the fuck did they pass that class and not know how to hook up a battery to a lightbulb?

  • @arendmookhoek4314
    @arendmookhoek43147 жыл бұрын

    butt, but i was doing this since i was five wtf man

  • @asgeiralbretsen

    @asgeiralbretsen

    7 жыл бұрын

    But some people have never done this very specific activity, which means that not everyone knows how to do it.

  • @arendmookhoek4314

    @arendmookhoek4314

    7 жыл бұрын

    but still COME ON

  • @igortcgg

    @igortcgg

    7 жыл бұрын

    The topic is actually so simple, that everyone should be able to do that. At least everyone who finished a primary school and had a physics course covering basics of electricity. I have no idea how US education system works, but in my country literally every adult (not mentally disabled) person SHOULD be able to do that. Of course it doesn't mean that each person in my country is actually able to do that, but from graduates of MIT I would REALLY expect this skill.

  • @arendmookhoek4314

    @arendmookhoek4314

    7 жыл бұрын

    igortcgg there you go, it would be fine if they couldnt hold all the wires but this was just pathetic, shorting the batteries out, only connecting one terminal WHAT THE FUCK AMERICANS

  • @asgeiralbretsen

    @asgeiralbretsen

    7 жыл бұрын

    I think I might have the answer. The do not learn this basic shit at MIT. They expect their students to know these things from before, however many people miss out on that one day in school when you get tought this, and many more forget it.

  • @calcyss7159
    @calcyss71597 жыл бұрын

    They might seem like idiots, but im pretty sure that they could tell you a lot of stuff you wouldnt even understand. Also these clips are probably cherrypicked. *UPDATE:* Since someone in the comments misunderstood me, to clarify: With "stuff" i meant e.g. highly advanced physics and/or math. To understand such things you do indeed need a certain level of intelligence. The premise of this video and title are inherently flawed, as this obviously does not mean they are dumb or unintelligent at all.

  • @calcyss7159

    @calcyss7159

    7 жыл бұрын

    But yes, its a bit funny they dont quite understand why the bulb wont light up properly/at all, lol

  • @damo3923

    @damo3923

    7 жыл бұрын

    And many of those things are simply crammed, muscle memory information that they can spew. Completely different from critical thinking.

  • @calcyss7159

    @calcyss7159

    7 жыл бұрын

    catindabox 334 Yes, thats not entirely wrong either.

  • @o11o01

    @o11o01

    7 жыл бұрын

    +calcyss In today's society, yes there is something wrong with that. An engineer especially needs to be capable of critical thinking. Almost any person in a high up field needs the ability to critically think.

  • @Kalervo80

    @Kalervo80

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes, regular guy working at car repair or somethin are smarter. Too bad they don't go to school if its so easy and earn 5x as much.

  • @tigas4d4
    @tigas4d47 жыл бұрын

    i did this shit when i was 7 in my grandpa car shop with car batteries, are these people serious

  • @wicket4969

    @wicket4969

    7 жыл бұрын

    Rick Harrison One thing I've learned after 21 years, it's that even Harvard students can be dumber than the average American

  • @calcyss7159

    @calcyss7159

    7 жыл бұрын

    Not necessarily dumber. Just learning completely different stuff, and sometimes too detached from reality and simple things. I believe they could explain things to you that you wouldnt even understand.

  • @wicket4969

    @wicket4969

    7 жыл бұрын

    calcyss lol true, but this is something they should've learned in high school if not first year right? I mean, I learned this in grade 9 science and grade 12 computer engineering.

  • @calcyss7159

    @calcyss7159

    7 жыл бұрын

    *****​ Well i personally never learnt this (im German), as i slept through it in school lol :D But anyone with a basic understanding of physics should know *why* this doesnt work, or rather why it doesnt work the way they are doing it. Closed circuits are a pretty basic concept.

  • @Armando51roosters

    @Armando51roosters

    7 жыл бұрын

    Rick Harrison An opinion? The best I can do is not give a fuck.

  • @antonnpn9063
    @antonnpn90637 жыл бұрын

    As a 4 year old me, that wouldn't be a problem

  • @olivierk3024

    @olivierk3024

    7 жыл бұрын

    anton arnqvist for me, a half year old, this isnt a problem

  • @ohlookitsme9913

    @ohlookitsme9913

    7 жыл бұрын

    anton arnqvist As a fetus me, that wouldn't be a problem

  • @spoderman2886

    @spoderman2886

    7 жыл бұрын

    OhLookItsMe as a sperm me this wouldn't be a problem

  • @iri8032
    @iri80324 жыл бұрын

    "How to achieve mental peace by trying to frame harvard/mit students after getting rejected by harvard/mit"

  • @theliterunner

    @theliterunner

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lmao, i thought i am the only one who can see these mfs

  • @ametedinov
    @ametedinov7 жыл бұрын

    This is filmed at Harvard, not MIT as many others have pointed out in the comments. It is sad how some people intentionally give such misleading clickbait titles.

  • @ivujvivj3399

    @ivujvivj3399

    3 жыл бұрын

    0.03

  • @ivujvivj3399

    @ivujvivj3399

    3 жыл бұрын

    0:03

  • @divyanshtiwari3547

    @divyanshtiwari3547

    2 жыл бұрын

    clearly the video narrator states harvard and 'mit'.......plz watch the video before getting your panties in a twist

  • @kingcletus1310
    @kingcletus13107 жыл бұрын

    lol our whole class did that in like 3rd grade. This video is fake.

  • @asgeiralbretsen

    @asgeiralbretsen

    7 жыл бұрын

    Hello good sir, did you know that every single person does not remember every single part of every single day they went to school? Some people might forget certain random unnecessary things like where the plus and minus is one a random type of bulb that noone ever uses, you fucking moron ;)

  • @noomeron

    @noomeron

    7 жыл бұрын

    Aski Found the MIT grad.

  • @tobiasbusch7284

    @tobiasbusch7284

    7 жыл бұрын

    Aski I remember that from 3rd grade

  • @louisuy_
    @louisuy_8 жыл бұрын

    I gotta be honest with you, I did this back in 4th grade in the Philippines.

  • @netsurfer10000

    @netsurfer10000

    8 жыл бұрын

    i gotta be honest with you. it's not because you're smart but because these people lack general education.

  • @louisuy_

    @louisuy_

    8 жыл бұрын

    +netsurfer912 Yes. I'm not saying I am, but yeah~

  • @louisuy_

    @louisuy_

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Louis Cubillas MIT's the school I dream to be in.

  • @Nico55RS

    @Nico55RS

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Louis Cubillas hahahaha I'm not sure why, but this comment resonated with me quite well.

  • @hichemchenafi7258

    @hichemchenafi7258

    8 жыл бұрын

  • @erikshure360
    @erikshure3607 жыл бұрын

    How many MIT graduates would it take to screw in a light bulb?

  • @user-lu6yg3vk9z

    @user-lu6yg3vk9z

    5 жыл бұрын

    erik shure 0 none of them will know how to do it.

  • @harrie205
    @harrie2057 жыл бұрын

    as a engineering student I hope they had to cherry pick to get this result.

  • @brendanstanford5612
    @brendanstanford56127 жыл бұрын

    I think I was like 6 years old when I took apart a flashlight and figured out the connections. And I had D's and F's in high school. WTF

  • @grouse7694

    @grouse7694

    7 жыл бұрын

    There's a difference between your actual intelligence and a number on a piece of paper.

  • @brendanstanford5612

    @brendanstanford5612

    7 жыл бұрын

    I hear that. I was shunned away from the traditional school system. Back 8 years ago when I graduated high school, my mind was finally free and I was able to learn how I wanted to learn. Since then I have literally done thousands and thousands of hours of research on what I wanted to learn. I see it as earning my own personal degree in the life I want to live.

  • @Low_pH

    @Low_pH

    7 жыл бұрын

    James Over Yonder none of this means anything

  • 7 жыл бұрын

    Legacy schools are about who you know and how much money you have, not what you know

  • @justin9571

    @justin9571

    7 жыл бұрын

    joseph hemler No lol

  • @fuckgoogle17

    @fuckgoogle17

    7 жыл бұрын

    Justin L it's at least, to a degree, about how much money you have. Scholarship aside

  • @theendurance

    @theendurance

    3 жыл бұрын

    majority of them have perfect SAT scores and perfect GPAs so....

  • @snowwhite7677
    @snowwhite76777 жыл бұрын

    Now that they are Graduates, the first thing they should have done is gone into Salary Negotiations BEFORE doing the Job...

  • @sheet-son
    @sheet-son7 жыл бұрын

    I spent 7 years as an electrician on the job site before I decided to go to engineering school. I know when I have experience against my classmates when they are much smarter on paper. BTW I did this in 4th grade science class was part of our test

  • @nursultannazarov8379

    @nursultannazarov8379

    Жыл бұрын

    Congratulations

  • @smeado3533
    @smeado35336 жыл бұрын

    I had a MIT graduate working for me at one point. Very intelligent girl obviously but she had trouble working on our instrumentation (it was a drinking water lab) and it took her an embarrassingly long time to put together a file box with instructions.

  • @redlinerer
    @redlinerer7 жыл бұрын

    the problem is, copying something off a blackboard and then memorizing it to pass a test doesn't teach. it's because doing a lab under a controlled setting with a teacher to help doesn't stimulate your brain the same way as being in the building where you just wired something wrong with a foreman screaming at you why aren't the fucking lights on! you learn incredibly fast and don't forget when you're under the hammer! not being babysat by a university.

  • @TheDoctorSalt

    @TheDoctorSalt

    7 жыл бұрын

    redlinerer in fairness to unit and especially MIT, it's an incredibly stressful place

  • @fyfoh

    @fyfoh

    7 жыл бұрын

    Spoken like someone who hasn't studied engineering at a university. Babysitting is the last term I would use to describe that experience.

  • @joshhyyym
    @joshhyyym7 жыл бұрын

    Obviously it's a load of bollocks. However, I will insert my joke: Even Harvard have art history students.

  • @yakir11114

    @yakir11114

    7 жыл бұрын

    she literally said she is an engineer

  • @Enedrapvp

    @Enedrapvp

    7 жыл бұрын

    mechanical engineer* though every engineering student that takes the basic sophomore level courses have had to learn circuits and probably made basic LEDs at some point.

  • @hyzercreek

    @hyzercreek

    6 жыл бұрын

    Well she couldn't have literally said she was an English major, because then she would literally know what the word "literally" means.

  • @rosemaryhofstedt6703

    @rosemaryhofstedt6703

    6 жыл бұрын

    Joshua Mcateer *has

  • @Douglasthehedgehog

    @Douglasthehedgehog

    6 жыл бұрын

    Gender studies is a real course at HARVARD

  • @my3dviews
    @my3dviews7 жыл бұрын

    How many MIT graduates does it take to screw in a light bulb? LOL

  • @yessopie
    @yessopie8 жыл бұрын

    I have to admit that I had to think for a few seconds to see how to do it with only one wire, since normally you would do it with two wires. Under pressure, with a TV camera in my face, or caught off guard, and all of this at an important event like a graduation where my head would already be swimming, I might not have been able to figure it out.

  • @Krebzonide
    @Krebzonide6 жыл бұрын

    They teach this in 8th grade science and I thought it was one of the more fun things in that class but they only spent like 2 days on it cuz it is so easy. Now I'm in 10th grade and I took digital electronics as a math credit and just a few days ago the teacher gave us a computer program to model circuits and I finished early so I made a simple binary calculator for fun.

  • @indianbrave

    @indianbrave

    Жыл бұрын

    Which country you are from ?

  • @Krebzonide

    @Krebzonide

    Жыл бұрын

    @@indianbrave I'm in the US.

  • @andypeterson2126
    @andypeterson21267 жыл бұрын

    oh my gosh! People don't go to school to learn, we go to get a piece of paper that employers recognize and will then hire us. Otherwise businesses would hire all those crazy asses from Russia

  • @hybodusshark6858

    @hybodusshark6858

    7 жыл бұрын

    Andy Peterson Exactly why college and state "education" is a scam made to deceive people.. separating the sheeple from the open minded ones..

  • @smokingpacman

    @smokingpacman

    7 жыл бұрын

    Hybodus Shark Ok, so if you're so open minded, try convincing the employer you're up to the job without a degree. Smart people still need official recognition or nobody would hire them. It's only a scam for dumb idiots but for smart people, uni is worth it.

  • @hybodusshark6858

    @hybodusshark6858

    7 жыл бұрын

    Andrew Wei What employer? If they judge ones status based on a so called 'degree' then there not worth my time now are they? Plenty of other jobs out there depending on where you look and how you live and spend your money and so forth.. yep Definetly worth busting ur ass in uni for a worthless piece of paper.. Enjoy wasting your time in college bud.. Very well worth it for you..

  • @smokingpacman

    @smokingpacman

    7 жыл бұрын

    Actually, I'd very like to get employed without a degree too. Please tell me how.

  • @andypeterson2126

    @andypeterson2126

    7 жыл бұрын

    Andrew Wei two words: MOTHER RUSSIA

  • @Vastatio
    @Vastatio2 жыл бұрын

    I kept expecting the professor to say “you just got jammed” 🤣

  • @alielshekarchee
    @alielshekarchee7 жыл бұрын

    I remember when I was 7 years old I used to light the bulb by using only a battery with no wires at all, by scratching the top of the battery's cover you can access to the negative near the positive end .

  • @dalehawley9927
    @dalehawley99277 жыл бұрын

    I've actually seen this whole documentary once. Does anyone know the link to the full version?

  • @AliRaza-fe8dg
    @AliRaza-fe8dg7 жыл бұрын

    Well, my brother is a topper PhD from MIT and I'm a bachelor from India, I still correct him on many things so, it doesn't matter where you've studied , it's about how good you are at something.

  • @ToothyGus
    @ToothyGus7 жыл бұрын

    "I'm not An electrical engineer. I'm a mechanical engineer. It's probably operator error" wtf??

  • @matthew562

    @matthew562

    7 жыл бұрын

    ToothyGus what about it? She admits she doesn't know what she's doing hence why she says that it's operator error.

  • @AttackPenguin666

    @AttackPenguin666

    7 жыл бұрын

    As someone doing Mech/Electrical Integrated course...the Mechanicals really aren't taught this stuff. One would assume they would know it from Physics A-Level (mandatory where I study) but this isnt always mandatory. Physics GCSE would cover it but boy, thats a long time ago...

  • @zalala

    @zalala

    7 жыл бұрын

    ToothyGus mechanical engineering can not stand on its own in todays world, unless its a steampunk era.

  • @DB-ty6tq

    @DB-ty6tq

    7 жыл бұрын

    Shahrizal Ibrahim you're a moron

  • @zalala

    @zalala

    7 жыл бұрын

    well everyone free to own their opinion, theres a reason why university are providing dual programme, mechanical and electrical, even within mechanical theres is electrical & electronic courses. but u my friend, are indeed an ignorant.

  • @-rpm
    @-rpm9 жыл бұрын

    What is basic and fundamental to you is not for someone else, if I say what a bitwise operator is for the one who posted the video she wouldn't know but a computer science person would know it. Similarly people who go to Harvard or MIT are not experts at everything, they are experts at their thing.

  • @RealationGames

    @RealationGames

    9 жыл бұрын

    Prathik Rajendran M Knowing a concept of _complete circuit_ is a bit more fundamental than bitwise operators. It's like asking an electrical engineer to use ball bearing and axle to assemble a wheel, or architecht to make a sandwich. It's fucking fundamental and simple as shit, not specialization. You can't make a sandwich because you didn't get a cooking degree? Even interior designer should be able to do that.

  • @rodluvan1976
    @rodluvan19767 жыл бұрын

    I can light it with a potato

  • @zombslaya7912
    @zombslaya79127 жыл бұрын

    Wow this is just common knowledge, I think I'm going to MIT now! If they graduated surely I can.

  • @kffire12
    @kffire123 жыл бұрын

    As a mechanical engineering student I am disappointed in my peer, however circuits was not my best course... so this is relatable.

  • @abaybektursun
    @abaybektursun7 жыл бұрын

    small sample size.

  • @LesTutosdUneMinute
    @LesTutosdUneMinute7 жыл бұрын

    I think that they made the shot with all the students we can see on the backgroumd, to grt this footage.

  • @xDELFYonceagain
    @xDELFYonceagain8 жыл бұрын

    Calm down people. They are still some of the smartest people in the world, anyone can make stupid mistakes.

  • @xDELFYonceagain

    @xDELFYonceagain

    8 жыл бұрын

    Thomas Anderson I'm the one who is months away from graduating with honours. So if there's an idiot here, it's not me.

  • @xDELFYonceagain

    @xDELFYonceagain

    8 жыл бұрын

    Thomas Anderson Well, you think they got into MIT by being stupid?

  • @1997CWR

    @1997CWR

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Trafalgar Congrats btw :D I personally think that many of them just have been asked to do that task at the wrong time at the wrong place. It is arrogant to assume that one is more intelligent, just because of one datapoint. In addition everyone can say they knew how to do it, but then again they weren't challenged.

  • @xDELFYonceagain

    @xDELFYonceagain

    8 жыл бұрын

    1997CWR My thoughts exactly.

  • @sujeetverma4259

    @sujeetverma4259

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Trafalgar I blow turtles

  • @thecaptain6148
    @thecaptain61487 жыл бұрын

    You're expecting a D battery to power a 60 watt lightbulb? *Edit; Read the rest of the thread before you call me an idiot.

  • @goldenduck7294

    @goldenduck7294

    7 жыл бұрын

    You can't figure it out either, huh?

  • @thecaptain6148

    @thecaptain6148

    7 жыл бұрын

    Golden Duck What can't I figure out? one wire connects to one of the contacts on the battery and one to one of the contacts on the bulb. Then you touch the other side of the battery to the second contact on the bulb. It doesn't matter which way the polarity goes, It's just a resistor. These people were stupid to only connect one side of the battery, but it could never power that bulb anyways.

  • @erikshure360

    @erikshure360

    7 жыл бұрын

    The Captain Depends on what it means to say "power that bulb".

  • @thecaptain6148

    @thecaptain6148

    7 жыл бұрын

    erik shure I mean heat the metal enough to start producing light.

  • @GewelReal

    @GewelReal

    7 жыл бұрын

    did you even watch it? 1 guy lit it up...

  • @juubes5557
    @juubes55577 жыл бұрын

    What the fuck... I thought they were talking about a 40w lightbulb. But a small lamp and a battery. Seriusly?

  • @bec_Divyansh
    @bec_Divyansh2 жыл бұрын

    What i learn from this is that we can learn about anything from anywhere if we want and nothing from everywhere if we don't!

  • @vll1976
    @vll19763 жыл бұрын

    I'm not an electrical engineer, I'm a mechanical engineer...

  • @til159

    @til159

    2 жыл бұрын

    Was shocked by that answer, but explains alot about todays society.

  • @Gonzaga78
    @Gonzaga787 жыл бұрын

    Pick 4 people that can't do it out of the 20 people you surveyed, put only one that can do it and there you have it, now everyone thinks every MIT student is dumb as a rock because only 1 in 5 can do it. one even stated that she wasn't an electrical engineer, that gives you a hint about how many people they could find that couldn't do it.

  • @putty93010

    @putty93010

    7 жыл бұрын

    The concept is so simple the excuse of not being an electrical engineer is like saying you're not an astrophysicist when you're not able to say which planet is 2nd from the sun. The concept is so simple you should go all day talking to people on campus without finding someone that can't do it...except that one student rolling on ecstasy that tried to suck on the battery. He's the only one that shouldn't be able to do this.

  • @Gonzaga78

    @Gonzaga78

    7 жыл бұрын

    putty93010 no, it is not. It's a simple concept, but it's not a "everybody in the world knows how to do it" thing. Everyone knows the theory, not everyone has done it in the past. You may be talking about the simplest thing ever, but if you ask a bunch of people to do it for the first time, it's more than certain that a small percentage of them will get it wrong on their first try. It doesn't mean that they are dumb, or that they didn't learn anything while studying, or that they don't understand electricity like someone said in the video. They clearly know the basics, they just don't have the "know how" to do it. It's not like the are connecting the wire to the bulb and sticking it on the ground, while leaving the battery out on the sun to 'recharge'. It only shows that they never tried that before, because they never needed to, and probably never will. I'm sure anyone of those who couldn't do that can do a better job in their fields than 90% of their competitors. (and no, i never went to MIT, nor any other school in america btw)

  • @putty93010

    @putty93010

    7 жыл бұрын

    Well I guess the term "dumb" is relative but children can do this (I think I was 7 the first time I did it). And Im'a hafta straight disagree with you. If they can't do this, they don't understand electricity and they are dumb when it comes to electrical concepts and practices.

  • @Gonzaga78

    @Gonzaga78

    7 жыл бұрын

    putty93010 Yeah, and i'm sure you did it on the first try without anyone telling you how to do it too. The rest of us mortals, have to learn how to do something before doing it.

  • @ostapkurtash6359

    @ostapkurtash6359

    7 жыл бұрын

    the thing is even mechanical engineers learn electric circuits and physics witch include electromagnetism (god help me with that one)! And more, I think that basic circuit analysis is required like a thing every engineer should know or he don't get engineer title at all! So don't come with the excuse "Oh I'm just a Mechanical Engineer don't ask me nothing about electricity cause I'm not obliged to know" because not correct argument.

  • @lastaviusdarby2771
    @lastaviusdarby2771 Жыл бұрын

    I'm an 8th grade Physical Science teacher and I just taught my students how to create a simple closed cirucuit using a battery (power supply), a light bulb (load), and a piece of wire (the conductor). However, only a handful of them figured it out on their own initially.

  • @wandersmut6326
    @wandersmut63267 жыл бұрын

    This video is disingenuous, it only makes a fool of the viewer and not the students. Notice that the black student is holding a different bulb than the previous students and listen very carefully to what he says. He was unable to light the first bulb and has just been handed a smaller one that will work with this power supply. It is likely that the clips of the other students are taken after they were unable to light the first bulb with a correct, closed circuit and have reverted to trial and error before giving up. They are hesitant to answer because they know it is a trick question. They are about to be handed a bulb that, like the one in your lamp, will not light with the low voltage a single D cell battery provides.

  • @wandersmut6326

    @wandersmut6326

    7 жыл бұрын

    Actually the video isn't disingenuous - the poster is. It seems the fact that not every bulb will light with every power source is the point they're trying to make but the way it has been cut out of context and posted with this title sets you up to believe they're morons while if you could have seen the big picture you might have a little more sympathy. It's so easy to get views and likes by putting people down, isn't it?

  • @cjeam9199

    @cjeam9199

    7 жыл бұрын

    Wander Smut I think you've misunderstood. The students are just not correctly closing the circuit because they've only been given one wire. Every time you see those large domestic bulbs there's a single flex going to it, which could explain why they're just touching the wire to the bulb, hand them a small bulb like that used more commonly in electronic projects and they're more likely to remember that you either need two wires or you need to hold the bulb onto the battery. Incandescent bulbs like that should light up with a battery albeit rather dimly.

  • @cjeam9199

    @cjeam9199

    7 жыл бұрын

    Wander Smut ah wait no sorry I've not completely read your comment closely enough. I don't know, I still think the point could be that people forget they have to close the circuit or just realise they don't actually have the necessary practical skills even though they understand what to do theoretically - connect the wire to the bulb. The bulbs should glow dimly when connected properly.

  • @thothheartmaat2833

    @thothheartmaat2833

    7 жыл бұрын

    Wander Smut well then he analyzed the materials and figured out the problem and the rest didn't. probably got himself a job somewhere. maybe this was a test a company did to look for someone to hire. some of them didn't get the offer.

  • @mdhvdubey
    @mdhvdubey3 жыл бұрын

    I used to light a bulb by motor in 7th std school.. and yet I can’t even go to iit ...

  • @dhruvshounak5516

    @dhruvshounak5516

    3 жыл бұрын

    Using motor to light a bulb..no wonder you were not able to qualify JEE

  • @mdhvdubey

    @mdhvdubey

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@dhruvshounak5516 why coz i could have used aa batteries.? dude stupid experiments like those are the reason why i love science..

  • @dhruvshounak5516

    @dhruvshounak5516

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@mdhvdubey no comments

  • @swastik_7294

    @swastik_7294

    3 жыл бұрын

    I make robots for fun and I didn`t even qualify IIT … It doesn't really matter.

  • @dhruvshounak5516

    @dhruvshounak5516

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@swastik_7294 i know

  • @JohnSmith-ts5wh
    @JohnSmith-ts5wh8 жыл бұрын

    My engineering faculty is only 27th in the world, but at least I can make a light bulb shine

  • @valdomero738

    @valdomero738

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Matthew Patroni Mine is not even on the chart, This is just propaganda though.

  • @otto.rivera
    @otto.rivera8 жыл бұрын

    this was about electric principles, I learn and make it on school, but must required certain conditions, the battery power, the power requirement of the bulb and the conductivity capacity of wire.

  • @BenjaminEsposti

    @BenjaminEsposti

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Otto Rivera Yup! And I'm only 19 years old ... hell I fix electronics things as well, and I haven't gone to college. Just goes to show, that with the right mind/thinking style, anyone can easily do anything.

  • @radiorob7543
    @radiorob75439 жыл бұрын

    Give me a 9V battery, and a small 9 or 12v bulb, and I don't even need the wire.

  • @rapturekevin
    @rapturekevin7 жыл бұрын

    And why is china winning you ask?

  • @MrTumbleweed

    @MrTumbleweed

    7 жыл бұрын

    Apparently because they can put two wires on a battery better? what exactly are they winning? winner of pollution? rudest tourists in the world? tragedy of the commons? Communism? They can keep on winning

  • @rapturekevin

    @rapturekevin

    7 жыл бұрын

    Mr.Tumbleweed the manufacturing and engineering sector. I bought a hartke amp says made in china yet its an American company. Yesterday got a new microwave oven says made in china yet its an American company. I could go on for hours and this coming from a Canadian. That's what china is winning.

  • @rikenm

    @rikenm

    7 жыл бұрын

    cheap labor and resources to build appliances are readily available there. Most of the time china just full on steal American technology.

  • @MrTumbleweed

    @MrTumbleweed

    7 жыл бұрын

    rapturekevin Lol, if thats them winning, they can keep on winning. We have plenty more they dont kiddo. Dont delude yourself. Lets be honest. On average who has a happier and more fulfilling life, a chinese or an american? Whose winning?

  • @BowersElectronics
    @BowersElectronics7 жыл бұрын

    Something I remember learning in kindergarden. we lit bulbs, powered dc motors, and made electromagnets.

  • @BowersElectronics

    @BowersElectronics

    7 жыл бұрын

    Jonathan Thomas In the state of Texas they save the harder stuff for college. ;)

  • @IAMDIMITRI

    @IAMDIMITRI

    7 жыл бұрын

    I know right! I broke toys to see how they work >

  • @BowersElectronics

    @BowersElectronics

    7 жыл бұрын

    ***** When I was in elementary school my parents worked for a hard drive repair company, and whenever there was a bad drive that already had the data recovered from it they would let me take it apart, and take out the magnets. I ended up putting two of them together on my ear and had a hell of a time trying to take it off... at least I was in style :P

  • @IAMDIMITRI

    @IAMDIMITRI

    7 жыл бұрын

    Blake Bowers omg haha, those are strong!!

  • @Rapscallion2009
    @Rapscallion20097 жыл бұрын

    best answer "Yeah, I can certainly try..."

  • @geoninja8971
    @geoninja89717 жыл бұрын

    I was fooled in the same way once... I remember it well - 1981, Year 3 in Primary school.....

  • @michaeletzel4877
    @michaeletzel48777 жыл бұрын

    The very first thing that came to mind was "how much voltage does the battery provide, how much voltage does the lightbulb require, and how much resistance does the wire have?" Of course it's possible to do it, but only IF the battery can supply enough to overcome the resistance of the wire and the lightbulb.

  • @billybobthornton8122

    @billybobthornton8122

    7 жыл бұрын

    Michael Etzel P = V^2/R all day

  • @Drawliphant
    @Drawliphant7 жыл бұрын

    1.5 volt is supposed to light up the big bulb? why did some of them get the small bulb?

  • @sujoydas7598

    @sujoydas7598

    7 жыл бұрын

    David Oliphant I have one of those big bulbs. it's a little dim at 1.5 volts but it works at that voltage

  • @bigmikesfa
    @bigmikesfa7 жыл бұрын

    They're on the right track with the closed circuit. The lightbulb (load) has a base that conducts decently and so the one gentleman completed the circuit momentarily with the small bulb. Before watching him I was going to answer the question with "yes but I need a pair of wire cutters to make two wires." I too was uncertain like the girl whether the bulb would light up without a second wire.

  • @gammelhund
    @gammelhund7 жыл бұрын

    Oh jesus christ. I'm scared and speechless.

  • @VanitasTheExpert
    @VanitasTheExpert7 жыл бұрын

    I interpreted the video as saying we build knowledge on a foundation that we were never taught to have. I, for one, have never been explicably taught many things that are supposed to be self-evident, but had to learn backwards in a way by doing higher level work. Of course they know how batteries and electricity works, but especially at that level, they are expected to know basic things, but are never taught those things out of need to cover bigger picture topics. I am thankful to be grounded with people who aren't as higher level as I've been taught and I learn just as much from them about the world that I never could have learned in my classes.

  • @WasifAli96
    @WasifAli9610 жыл бұрын

    Break the wire into 2 separate pieces & connect them individually to +ve & -ve terminal. Then connect the other 2 to bulb & it'll light up. (3rd grader)

  • @theDudeOfDudes

    @theDudeOfDudes

    10 жыл бұрын

    You don't even have to do that. Connect one end of your wire to one terminal of the battery and the corresponding terminal in the light(bottom or side of bulb) and connect the opposite battery terminal to the other end of the bulb and voila, you will have light. Given that you have enough current for the given light bulb.

  • @MChiribogaD

    @MChiribogaD

    9 жыл бұрын

    Wasif Ali That is what exactly I was thinking. I thought at the start of the video that the journalists were fooling the graduates. When I was watching the video I said to myself "Cut the wire into 2 pieces" and light it up. Basic electricity concepts. I don´t know what kind of bulb the journalist had, but I am sure the battery is a 9V one.

  • @WasifAli96

    @WasifAli96

    9 жыл бұрын

    MChiribogaD Pardon me but USA high school system i.e GED/Diploma has so many flaws regarding adequate academics skills given to students before going to university as compare to those in UK (Gce & Gcse's) which I've studied. Not being ostentatious but for us, this is a breeze.

  • @theDudeOfDudes

    @theDudeOfDudes

    9 жыл бұрын

    Wasif Ali They went to Harvard....the problem is not with the education. It's with those students.

  • @MChiribogaD

    @MChiribogaD

    9 жыл бұрын

    Wasif Ali I think the US education has some flaws considering the fact that the US is considered a developed nation. Countries located in Europe actually give more advanced programs that they do give in the US. Even countries in Hispanic America give more advanced programs than in the US. I have a friend that was applying for the UK and she was not admitted for getting into an university because the US curriculum from her school didn´t covered the programs that the UK high school system covered, thus, she applied for a foundation year. USA considers Calculus as AP,while in other countries is just part of the common curriculum. I am from Ecuador, and when I moved to Santo Domingo, DR, I went to an US school ( I don´t like to refer "American" just for the US but rather for the whole continent) and when they started giving Chemistry it was literally everything I saw last year in my last year in Ecuador, Math the same, and Physics...no physics bro! In senior year we just had physics, and guess what...the majority of topics I already covered them in Ecuador during 10th grade while in the US education they give them in 12th grade. In 11th grade I didn´t had physics. I was so sad, because physics is my favorite subject, so I decided to self-study physics with my physics book from Ecuador (Física "Paul E. Tippens") So that´s what I think. Best regards.

  • @pragmaticapproach1590
    @pragmaticapproach15902 жыл бұрын

    When they heard the question - their face turn from "premier confident" to the "bottom of a well". 😅

  • @TheUWPolar
    @TheUWPolar7 жыл бұрын

    So...can someone explain to me how to do it? I honestly don't know as I have not learned much in school related to this. I would appreciate just a straight forward answer. Thanks.

  • @djBC10000
    @djBC100009 жыл бұрын

    Since when do u need an electrical engineering degree to fkin light a bulb ? This is some shit all of us should have learned by the age of 8-11 I was fkin breaking atari game consoles and taking out the PCB and playing with it when i was 10..... it's basic knowledge people

  • @Warmedmammal
    @Warmedmammal7 жыл бұрын

    that's what happens when you are taught American Studies and Art at MIT

  • @janakrajpathak1405
    @janakrajpathak1405 Жыл бұрын

    body heat is audio,respiration,hear beat and respiration combined identity is full time busy in many dimensions.

  • @janakrajpathak1405
    @janakrajpathak1405 Жыл бұрын

    incidental automatic industry incident can happen in path of electricity.

  • @3dUber
    @3dUber9 жыл бұрын

    Okay this is just bad media. I'm willing to bet that the people they asked to create this circuit aren't even studying electrical engineering at all. One of them straight up said she was a mechanical engineer, and then the other guy asked for a tip, now that really doesn't strike me as the kind of guy who was studying electrical engineering. So asking the majority of a crowd that aren't electrical engineers how to create an electrical circuit is not going to get good results. Not just that, the circuit wouldn't work anyway because the battery is DC, and those lights are most likely AC, just like the majority of standard use light bulbs made in America. Even if the battery were AC(which isn't possible), it still doesn't have enough power to light a bulb like that. So asking a non-electrical engineer why that circuit wouldn't work is a complete bias on the entire situation. So good job America's media! You've gone and twisted the story again!

  • @TheArnoldification

    @TheArnoldification

    9 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Honestly, I thought I was alone here on the point about the media. I don't know, people just seem to have an *extremely* narrow understanding of what intelligence is, and the difference between intelligence and ignorance, intelligence and third party factors (such as having delayed motor functions, like myself), etc. Imo, they promote this way of thinking as it complements the average viewer in a way such that they ill want to tune in to the media station mor frequently, resulting in better ratings. It's just really frustrating arguing with people about this, because the argument is almost always either one-sided or the person I'm arguing with is an enormous hypocrite. Thank god the people I work with in my college aren't like that. :/

  • @3dUber

    @3dUber

    9 жыл бұрын

    William Coburn The bulb used is a very large one. The larger the bulb is the more current it is going to need to be lit. A small 1.5v battery like that simply cannot light a large bulb. And by the way, a resistor is not the primary component within an incandescent light bulb. Nothing within a light bulb even sort of resembles the works of a resistor. Incandescent light bulbs use thin tungsten filaments in a negative pressure bulb, or one filled with a noble gas, such as argon, to promote the dissipation of light. When the current travels through the tungsten, the tungsten burns because it can not support the current passing through it. Resistors do not light up or burn when they come in contact with large currents. They simply dissipate heat. And also, in standard "household appliances", when using an incandescent bulb such as the one shown in this video, no sort of step down transformation or rectification is taking place. The only thing taking place is the burning of the filament from a full 120 VAC power source. And the supposed "small light bulb", is hardly small. From the looks of it the bulb looks to be around 12v. Of course a 12v bulb will not be lit up by a 1.5v battery. It's common sense.

  • @3dUber

    @3dUber

    9 жыл бұрын

    William Coburn I understand where you're coming from, but don't twist my words. You know full and well what I mean when I said resistors don't burn up under large currents. I am referring to a large current in a diminished manor. Also, I never said that lightbulbs did not get hot, so you saying "You even say that the bulb filament 'burns' within the gas-filled vacuum enclosure, which contradicts your early statement since 'burning' implies heat dissipation", is, in a way redundant. And I have never seen a light bulb modeled as a resistor in circuit analysis. In no definition of a resistor that i've ever seen, has it exclaimed that anything that dissipated heat is considered a resistor. It isn't even really about the fundamental understanding of a light bulb. Especially when it seems as though most of the people being interviewed are not engineers of any kind. Sure, you could say that learning to light a bulb with a power source is a basic understanding of electricity, and that they should have learned that in middle school. But tell me, how many of the small things do you really remember in detail from middle school. For instance, if asked you to explain the tectonic structure of an earthquake, or how a mid-oceanic ridge is formed, i'm sure you could not tell me from memory.

  • @Quade235

    @Quade235

    9 жыл бұрын

    3dUber An incandescent light bulb does not care whether it's powered from a AC or DC source. It will light up, but very dimly. Try it yourself at home. Get a piece of wire and hold one end to the bottom contact on a battery, and the other end to the side (screw) portion of the bulb. Then, place the bottom of the bulb on the top contact of the battery. The orientation of the battery doesn't matter. Tell me the results.

  • @TheGrandMasterFunk

    @TheGrandMasterFunk

    7 жыл бұрын

    this is stuff that children should know how to do. I was taught this in grade 5, we were all given wire, batteries, and bulbs and told to play with them for 15 minutes and see if we could figure it out, then taught how and why it works... The problem is kids/teens/adults don't PLAY anymore

  • @Falcrist
    @Falcrist9 жыл бұрын

    These aren't engineering students. The second semester of physics or the first semester of circuits requires knowledge like this. Hell, in 8.02 (MIT's name for General Physics II), students are asked to build a motor out of a battery and some wire. These people have not done that course.

  • @zipporahthecushite7729

    @zipporahthecushite7729

    9 жыл бұрын

    Falcrist The woman at 1:25 says that she is a mechanical engineer.

  • @souradeepbiswas3267

    @souradeepbiswas3267

    9 жыл бұрын

    Falcrist Yes of course that's easy and believe me I am just a high school student.

  • @evolutionglitch4739
    @evolutionglitch47397 жыл бұрын

    I liked this video because of the vast importance of the very last question in the video.

  • @moexus
    @moexus8 жыл бұрын

    omg I learned this in the streets when I was 6 years old in a third world country, in that same country wI was taught ohm's law and circuits at age of 13

  • @vickyvm6
    @vickyvm64 жыл бұрын

    Well, filament bulb is only a resistor, it's glow depends upon its voltage/potential needed. Here, potential matters only. Nothing else 👍😊😊

  • @til159

    @til159

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exactley hahah all those butthurt students try to comment that it wont work regardless, just shows how stupid they are.

  • @atmnpatel5750
    @atmnpatel57509 жыл бұрын

    I never saw anyone explicitly state that they are MIT graduates in the video, and I think that the uploader got rejected when they applied and is lashing out.

  • @TheFIoridaMan
    @TheFIoridaMan7 жыл бұрын

    learning and remembering what you read in a book are two different things

  • @johnbatchler8551
    @johnbatchler85516 жыл бұрын

    Notice in this video both wires r connected to one side of the battery. In a closed circuit this build will work all u need is one wire connect to neg and the other to pos

  • @michaelrosche
    @michaelrosche7 жыл бұрын

    did this experiment in primary school, age 9..

  • @sufiyanadhikari8716
    @sufiyanadhikari87167 жыл бұрын

    Seriously? I mean.. Really? Harvard Engineers? Shorting the poles of battery? I could have done that in 8th grade... Worst kind of engineers they are...

  • @JorgeEscobarMX
    @JorgeEscobarMX7 жыл бұрын

    They use hats inside a class room. LOL

  • @jonathanliberty7328
    @jonathanliberty73286 жыл бұрын

    smile, you're on candid camera

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