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Mark Rober is an American YouTuber, engineer, inventor, and educator. He is known for his YouTube videos on popular science and do-it-yourself gadgets . Before he became a YouTuber, Rober was an engineer with NASA for nine years, where he spent seven years working on the Curiosity rover at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory .
People Make Games (PMG) is a British investigative video game journalism YouTube channel. The channel focuses on the developers and people who make video games . People Make Games has reported on topics such as video game crunch , [ 2 ] [ 3 ] outsourcing , [ 4 ] and worker exploitation .
Mark Rober's latest video features "Backyard Squirrel Maze 2.0," an intense squirrel obstacle course built to deter critters from his bird feeders.
Flagship channel; long-form technology-related videos 16.1 million 8.40 billion: 7,150 November 25, 2008 Techquickie: Short-form technology-related videos. [44] 4.32 million 900 million: 1,270 January 15, 2012 (hiatus since November 28, 2024) [60] Channel Super Fun: Formerly Active, miscellaneous videos and game show–esque challenges [61] 1. ...
Monthly, a fledgling Silicon Valley startup, has tapped celebrities and well-known creators in its bid to break into the e-learning space with its model of immersive, 30-day online classes. On ...
Team Trees (stylized as #TEAMTREES) is a collaborative fundraiser that raised 20 million U.S. dollars before the start of 2020 to plant 20 million trees. The initiative was started by American YouTubers MrBeast and Mark Rober, and was mostly supported by YouTubers. [1]
The Fine Brothers, creators of the React franchise. The franchise was launched with the YouTube debut of Kids React in October 2010, and then grew to encompass four more series uploaded on the Fine Brothers' primary YouTube channel, a separate YouTube channel with various reaction-related content, as well as a television series titled React to That.
YouTube Rewind 2010: Year in Review and YouTube Rewind 2011, however, have less than 10 million views each. The Ultimate 2016 Challenge became YouTube's fastest video to reach 100 million views, doing so in just 3.2 days. It is also the eighth most-liked non-music video of all time with over 3.40 million likes.