Any areas of knowledge welcomed.

From my side: “Andrew Huberman”. The guy is a neurobiology professor at Stanford and explains how your brain works in simple words. Gives a lot of advices on how to live and function at your best.

39 comments
  1. I like learning random stuffs so CGP Grey, dude cover from LotR lore to the history of the name Tiffany to why don’t we tame Zebras

  2. In no particular order (just looking through my subscriptions for edu channels I’d recommend- depending on your interests obviously)

    * Institute of Human Anatomy (biology)
    * The Engineering Mindset (electronic engineering)
    * SmarterEveryDay (engineering)
    * Mark Rober (engineering)
    * Project Farm (tools/products real world comparisons)
    * Shadiversity (middle ages history)
    * scholagladiatoria (middle ages weapons)
    * Paul Harrell (firearms)
    * Forgotten Weapons (historical firearms)
    * Ben Eater (programming)
    * Einzelganger (philosophy)
    * Geek’s Lesson (programming)
    * OverSimplified (history / short form very entertaining videos)
    * Extra Credits (same as oversimplified but goes into deeper detail)
    * Everyday Astronaut (s p a c e)
    * Kyle Hill (engineering/science general)
    * Veratasium (engineering/science general)
    * Japanese Ammo with Misa (language)

  3. engineerguy – I like his way of explaining engineering stuff in simple terms. no uploads recent days, but his past videos are gem.

  4. “Be smart” – great for bite sized bits of general knowledge about science & life in general.

  5. Yeah I really don’t have a favorite but here’s a few that I regularly watch:

    Anton Petrov (Astrophysics)

    PBS Space Time (Astrophysics)

    C And Rsenal (Historic Firearms)

    Inrangetv (Karl Karsada’s channel that cover a whole litany of firearms and historical events involving firearms)

    SandRhoman History (Covers Renaissance and Early Enlightenment Era conflicts)

    Plainly Difficult (Engineering Disasters)

    Rex’s Hangar (Historical Aircraft)

    Ed Nash’s Military Matters (Historical Aircraft and other military history)

    Drachinifel (Naval History)

    TechnologyConnections (Musings and explanation of common household objects)

    BigCliveDotCom (Circuit board and electronics disassembly)

    Defunctland (Disney, Themepark, and educational TV documentaries)

  6. zefrank1

    It’s all thanks to him and even Jerry (albeit rarely) that I have such a wealth of knowledge on animal genitalia.

  7. Smarter everyday, CPG Gray, the infographics show, kurzgesagt, Mark Rober, and Fix This House are all great channels. All super fun to watch too.

  8. Historia Civilis

    Explanations of ancient battles & campaigns (mostly roman) as seen from a general’s/commander’s point of view

  9. MIT opencourseware (Anything)

    Steve Brunton (Math/dynamical systems)

    StatQuest (Stats)

    MITCBMM (Neuroscience/Computational Neuroscience)

    Ninja Nerd (Lots of stuff, mostly bio/med)

    The Coding Train (Programming basics and challenges)

  10. Buisness Insider, the B1M, Fermilab, History Matters, RealLifeLore

    And im gonna include ProjectFarm because that treasure of a man educates on what tools are the best and why, and shows how theyball perform. I never buy a tool without seeing if he has a video on it first

  11. CrashCourse on world history. From what I’ve gathered from other places, it is quite accurate. And good entertainment.

  12. Vsauce: rarely posts except shorts but his old stuff is gold
    Veritasium: his last couple of videos mix science with storytelling and I love that
    CGP grey: it’s mostly for nerds like me
    Oversimplified: this guys makes u watch 30 mins history videos on loop. I cant ever get enough

  13. NileRed is great. He does chemistry videos where he does some crazy things.

    A couple videos he’s done:
    – Making bipolar medication from his own urine
    – Making grape flavoring and hot sauce from a pair of rubber gloves
    – Making moonshine from toilet paper
    – Making cotton candy from cotton balls

  14. Eternalised! But his videos are getting demonetized which is real shitty for him.

  15. I really like Tom Scott. Covers a variety of subjects and can make the mundane seem truly fascinating.

  16. Numberphile! Mathematics, but really well explained and they cover a ton of super interesting concepts.

  17. Kings and Generals covers military history and has dabbled in social and cultural history as well. I’ve assigned videos to my intro students as a way of passive revision.

  18. Smarter Everyday and Practical Engineering. Nile Red as well, even though I have no experience with chemistry.

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