Showing posts with label Favourite YouTube Videos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Favourite YouTube Videos. Show all posts

Friday, January 15, 2016

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 118)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, it's time to feel the music.

  • First, it takes fourteen instances of Mr. Smooth McGroove to cover "The One Who Bares Fangs at God" from Xenogears.
  • Next in the further vein of video game music to make the hair stand up on your (well, my) arms, Caitlin and Vaughan cover Time's Scar from Chrono Cross
  • Finally, Slamacow produced a video to Laura Shigihara's "From the Ground Up" which tells a beautiful story about love, life and rebirth.

Friday, January 08, 2016

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 117)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we get out our sciencing tools and get our feet wet.

  • From Sixty Symbols we see what happens when physicists decide they want to do something interesting on a Friday afternoon. The science is interesting, and the visuals are awesome, though I have to confess to some jealousy since if I go outside on a Friday afternoon I'm probably goofing off.

Friday, January 01, 2016

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 116)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we swear, we share and we care (honestly that was the best I could come up with using the thesaurus... sorry).

  • First, Michael from Vsauce has some bad words to say to us.
  • Next, John Green talks about how the Vlogbrothers and Nerdfighteria handles the phrase Don't Forget to Be Awesome, how trade marks work and how not forgetting to be awesome doesn't become less awesome when it gets shared.
  • Finally, Yungtown needed to put some words about his crushing crush into song. Which he did along with the very awesome Satchell Drakes.

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 115)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we go to school, learn some chemistry and get our axe ready for dancing.

  • First, Laura Shigihara is ready for her first day of high school, singing the theme she wrote for the game High School Story.
  • Next, we get a chance to watch 500 videos of Periodic Videos ... or at least to celebrate them.
  • Finally, we get to listen to an instrumental piece created by the one and only Brentalfloss.

Friday, December 25, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 114)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we take the day to give our cats the best and worst presents ever.

  • First, Simon's Cat meets a spirit of Christmas terror, deals with it appropriately (I think) and then gets a prize! 
  • Second, he puts his new found powers to less ... kind purposes.
  • Third, he gets hold of the very best cat toy ever!

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos(Volume 113)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we mash, we rant and we sooth!

  • First, Pomplamoose mashes their way into our hearts playing with Tupac, Lorde, Beck and themselves all at the same time.
  • Next, Emma Blackery has some strong words to sing about one of Google's many failures to make us like using Google products ... or let us use to Google products that we like ... or just put the freaking videos in the subboxes ... ... ... (For the record this was the one where they forced everyone to sign up for Google+ to use YouTube, which managed to single-handedly double the number of YouTube accounts everyone needed and to this day freaks me out about once a quarter by logging me into that OTHER account...). Issues ... what issues?
  • Finally, Laura Shigihara and Britaney Gaither calm things down with "Kaze no Toori Michi" from My Neighbour Totoro. Giant, furry forest spirits help make everything better. (As do awesome artists.)

Friday, December 18, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 112)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we look ourselves, and death in the face. Then we lighten up and vlog, then think about the most effective way to hit people with iron sticks.

  • First, VSauce videos are always amazing, but this one leaves me stunned and speechless every time I watch it. Here, Michael looks at the immense power we are able to wield and how we wield it. It makes me want to be a better ape.
  • Next, in a slightly lighter vein, Kevin Gisi returns. You may not have noticed he left, but that's mostly a side effect due to the time travel I'm making you do. Also don't worry about the bacon, thanks to the general effect of us travelling forward at one second per second we should be able to skip directly by the past that already happened... I think.
  • Finally, Lindybeige has a point about sword pommels that we need to be aware of.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 111)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we meet the very interesting Lloyd "Lindybeige", so named because he's terribly fond of beige and the Lindy Hop. Beyond this he spends an awful lot of time thinking about things and also doing things. I don't always agree with the thoughts he thinks, but most are pretty interesting. Here are some of the things he's thought about:

  • First, he has some thoughts about cloaks. Largely that they're terribly useful and possibly there is some reason that people used them for the most of human history.
  • Next, he thinks about leg hold traps and how it's fairly likely that historians keep holding them upside down. I don't have any expertise to assess his theory, but I do have to say that it looks to me like Occam's Razor applies well here, what's the simplest way to use the object that doesn't require us to make up anything else to make it work.
  • Finally, Lloyd thinks about quick draw bazookas ... or what people actually did with two-handed swords, when they actually used them.

Friday, December 11, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 110)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we talk technology and learning, spiders and raindrops.

  • First, on SciShow Talk Show, Hank Green talks to Professor Rick Hughes about education and technology. I particularly like the concept of the "Comfortable Consumer vs Competent Creator". I think it's difficult for students in Computer Science to distinguish between the things that are part of the underlying mathematics and logic of computation and the things that are part of the computational structure's people have created. It's also difficult then for students to know when they need to create new things for themselves and when they should use the tools that already exist.
  • Next Simon's Cat encounters a spider, and comes out quite a bit better than Simon ... or the spider.
  • Finally, Nataly Dawn does a beautiful cover of "Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head." I think the cover is beautiful, but as a Calgarian, I'm a little confused by the song. Usually raindrops are hurled at my face by powerful wind or are snow. Still, this one makes me happy to listen (and makes me think of lemonade). 

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 109)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we sing our victory, answer questions and then absolutely nothing creepy happens at all.

Friday, October 16, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 108)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we face life and death, obsession and the limited resources of language.

  • First, we have Brentalfloss's Zidane to Vivi original song. I was going to say that I don't remember liking the music to Final Fantasy IX so much, but then I realized that (I'm pretty sure) this is 100% original Brentalfloss composition. Yay 100% Brentalfloss composition.
  • Next, Kevin Gisi talks about his obsessions and then invents a British person to read the news... 
  • Finally, Gunarolla was asked to sing a song without repeating words, which he could do without any detectable problem at all...

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 107)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we accidentally the whole ... food!

  • First, Kevin Gisi tackles the dreaded, I don't know what to make a video about video. As it turns out most issues are complex and there are a lot of ways to look at them. I like the idea of sticking to a schedule (he said as all his deadlines sailed past) because it forces you to keep going and not to get stuck on things, but there's also something to be said for getting things done as well as you can when you get them done. I guess that's why there are two models of Patreon funding.
  • Next a squirrel discusses why there aren't that many squirrel super heroes.
  • Finally, we recently watched AcapellaScience set string theory to Bohemian Rhapsody, but in case you're still looking for nerdy content in the from of incredibly long rock songs, here Pat the NES Punk and Brentalfloss present us with: Nintendohemian Rhapsody.

Tuesday, October 06, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 106)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we get excited about Mars, Star Wars and the Internet!

  • First, on Sci Show, Hank Green gets excited about finding water in the soil of Mars. It's funny then that as I'm posting this, we just discovered that there are flows of liquid water across the surface of Mars. (So you can watch Hank get excited about water on mars again in about 75 more favourites posts. 
  • Next the people at Sincerely Truman, lay down some rules for Mr. Abrams on what's essential to make Star Wars good. I think the rules are pretty good ones, and I'm cautiously optimistic that the new movies will follow these. 
  • Finally, Lauren Fairweather reminds us that the Internet can be really awesome.

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 105)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we find out how the world works and then choose to ignore it anyway.

Friday, September 25, 2015

Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 104)

In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, fight bugs and we look at how to come together, both online and offline.

  • First, in a follow up to a video his about what to do with YouTube, Kevin Gisi, takes a more serious look at what the options are to replace YouTube. He may not have had what he needed in pocket, but I am glad (as I said last time) that Subbable and Patreon came to exist and while they haven't solved all of the problems I think it's better for creators and fans today than it was back then.
  • Next, Adam Savage shows off his favourite video game and discovers that as soon as anyone films you playing a game your skill immediately drops off by about 90%.
    • Finally, The City of Calgary, put together a video to thank all of the volunteers and the city that came out to help put peoples homes and the city back together after the flood here in 2013.  Not going to lie, I may have cried into my coffee cup rewatching this one.

      Tuesday, September 22, 2015

      Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 103)

      In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we have to move, have to run and have to sing!

      • First, on Periodic Videos we watch as Prof. Poliakoff prepares to leave one of the labs his group has used for a very long time. As a person who gets very attached to places and things I understand his feelings. Even when it's the right thing to do sometimes moving on is hard.
      • Next,  let Mr. Smooth McGroove pick up your spirits as he races to eat everything he can see.
      • Finally,  because doing largely unrelated projects when you should be working on your thesis, is totally foreign to me *cough cough*, I'd like to present AcapellaScience singing about String Theory to the tune of Bohemian Rhapsody. 

      Tuesday, September 15, 2015

      Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 102)

      In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we go to a dark place, a duck place and a community place.

      • First, Mr. Smooth McGroove takes us to the dark world. It's a dark place and menacing.
      • Next, Kevin Gisi, tells the old programmer's parable about the rubber duck. Rubber duck debugging is important and I think he make a good point that it's worth employing in other parts of life.
      • Finally, Kevin talks about how the "YouTube Community" needs to think about YouTube, not itself a community, but simply as a platform. Hank Green's Subbable approached this although didn't quite get the traction I think it deserved. I still think this is a problem on the Internet, too many people are relying on companies to form their communities rather than taking that control themselves.

      Friday, August 28, 2015

      Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 101)

      In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we say the words that we know, stompa our feet and play crazy songs at all hours of the night.

      • First, John Green, illustrates the United State's inability to understand hats. I'd say more, but I need to go get the car out of the parkade.
      • Next, it's time to get up and Stompa Your Feet along with Serena Ryder.
      • Finally, Hank Green and friends prove that 3AM is definitely the best time of day to play Louie Louie. 

      Tuesday, August 25, 2015

      Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 100)

      In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we invent colour, eat cereal and follow the whims of Nerdfighteria.

      • First, Mr. Smooth McGroove brings vibrancy and colour to a black and white (yellow?) world, singing the Muda Kingdom Theme from Super Mario Land.
      • Next, Mr. Charlie McDonnell talk about whether or not it's worth it to spend ten minutes of your life watching him eat cereal. Well that and the worth of how we spend our time doing anything.
      • Finally, Mr. Hank Green, does... things...

      Friday, August 21, 2015

      Blog: Favourite YouTube Videos (Volume 99)

      In this volume of my favourite YouTube videos, we find out what the Ze Frank do, get reflective on sea and fire and then do our very best not to drop our punch cards.

      Rereading

      A little while ago, somewhere out there on the Internet, I ran across a thing about the joy and value in rereading books. I’ve managed to lo...