Spyke
chaosvideo·ChaosVideobylinearchaos

Blocked Drain 803

Ollie is a drain clearing expert in Australia. He records every job and posts nearly daily, minimal editing. He shows you every step, what he's thinking and how to correct problems as he goes along. He's never political, always polite and he almost always gets the job done.

I've watched everything he's put out for the last few years, kind of a guilty pleasure.

View original on lemmy.world
chaosvideo·ChaosVideobylinearchaos

You'll regret spamming me... (LTT)

Viture makes 3D headsets as close as they can to regular glasses (fwiw an attempt was made), they repeatedly asked LTT to review them, and they got their wish.

The headset looks pretty ridiculous, makes everyone sick, has horrid optical angles, but is kind of neat.

Watching them alternate between showing the nice parts and roasting the bad stuff is a hoot.

View original on lemmy.world
chaosvideo·ChaosVideobylinearchaos

ElectroBOOM replaces his hedge trimmer with a DIY deathtrap (15m)

Mehdi Sadaghdar best known for his electrical theatrics and sending many a capacitor to it’s grave, decides to scrap together a hand held lawnmower to trim his tiny bushes.

Not sure about Odysee as a video host, but it can’t hurt to mix it up a bit if the content is there.

https://odysee.com/@ElectroBOOM:9/making-a-mini-hedge-trimmer-(don%E2%80%99t-diy:dOpen linkView original on lemmy.world
chaosvideo·ChaosVideobylinearchaos

Kick-off video for Ben Eater’s series on designing a 6502 computer from scratch. This episode introduces writing hello world on a 6502 in assembly.

Ben Eater makes tutorial-style videos on electronics, computers, networking and all other sorts of serious geekery.

This video is the kickoff for a series where he builds an 8-bit 6502 based computer from scratch, on breadboards, and then proceeds to show you how to program it, from scratch with an EEPROM writer that he made, on a breadboard.

I have some serious geek envy for this guy. He also sells kits on his website with all the components where you can follow along.

View original on lemmy.world
chaosvideo·ChaosVideobylinearchaos

Which AA Battery is Best? Can Amazon Basics beat Energizer? Let's find out! - Project Farm (11m)

wikitubia: Todd, better known as Project Farm, is an American YouTuber and reviewer who makes tool review videos. He test products which claim they are better than others, along with genuine against knock-off products.

It's a slightly order video, but I think one that resonates well, Which AA battery is best? In true project farm style, Todd uses ever trick on the farm (and a few from amazon) to save you money.

View original on lemmy.world
chaosvideo·ChaosVideobylinearchaos

The world depends on a collection of strange items. They're not cheap by Veritasium (19m)

Derek Alexander Muller is an Australian-born American-Canadian science communicator, filmmaker, and television personality, who is best known for his YouTube channel Veritasium.

Sometimes he's spot on, sometimes he's controversial but he's always interesting.

In this episode he explores NIST (US National Institute of Standards and Technology) and explores and explains their ingredients and why there's so expensive.

This video is a companion for the NileBlue video explaining the ingredients a little more thoroughly.

View original on lemmy.world
chaosvideo·ChaosVideobylinearchaos

Making the World's Purest Cookie by NileBlue (29m)

Nigel Braun (NileRed/NileBlue) is a Canadian chemist and science communicator residing in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

He's recently off hiatus and back with more crazy antics. Historically he mostly covered interesting chemistry reactions but he's branching out.

In this episode, Nigel mistakes NIST standard ingredients for pure and fresh ingredients and makes the worlds worst cookie

I've posted a companion video by Veritasium further explaining the NIST ingredients the Nigel is using here.

View original on lemmy.world
chaosvideo·ChaosVideobylinearchaos

Kia Sportage luxury feature hacking (with schematic) by bigclivedotcom (18m)

Clive Mitchell, or "Big Clive" is an electrician who lives on the Isle of Man. He has a love for electronics. He regularly disassembles working and broken electronic devices on his show, takes a picture of the PCB, reverse engineers them, then explains to you in detail how the circuit works, why it failed, how to fix it, and what to do to make it better.

Here he takes a luxory car ionizer to bits and explains how to modify the unit to work if you didn't pay for the feature.

View original on lemmy.world