Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The blog is called Backreaction and it is run by both Hossenfelder and her husband Stefan Scherer who is also a physicist. [12] She contributed to the Forbes column "Starts with a Bang" [13] and to The Guardian [14] [15] as well as Quanta Magazine, [16] New Scientist, [17] Nature Physics, [18] Scientific American, [19] Nautilus Quarterly, [20 ...
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.
Dianna Leilani Cowern (born May 4, 1989) is an American science communicator.She is a YouTuber; she uploads videos to her YouTube channel Physics Girl explaining various physical phenomena.
Patrizia Mosca, Chief operating officer at Kurzgesagt, speaks at the Internet Days in Stockholm, 2018.. The Kurzgesagt YouTube channel was created on 10 July 2013 (with their first video coming out on 12 July 2013), shortly after the founder, Philipp Dettmer, graduated from Munich University of Applied Sciences. [10]
Stevens partnered with YouTube Red (now YouTube Premium) to create and host Mind Field, which premiered in January 2017 through YouTube's paid streaming service on the Vsauce channel (all episodes have since been made available for free to non-premium subscribers, however there is some bonus content that requires a subscription to watch). Each ...
CelebrityNetWorth creates web pages that list a celebrity's name, a short biography, and estimates of net worth and salary. The site claims to calculate net worth based on "a proprietary algorithm" based on publicly available information, although, according to The New York Times, there are no computer scientists in their employment. [4]
Jameel Sadik "Jim" Al-Khalili (Arabic: جميل صادق الخليلي; born 20 September 1962 [4]) is an Iraqi-British theoretical physicist and science populariser. He is professor of theoretical physics and chair in the public engagement in science at the University of Surrey.
The channel was launched as an "original channel", which meant that YouTube funded the channel. [3] [4] The show's initial grant was projected to expire in 2014, and in response, on September 12, 2013, SciShow joined the viewer-funding site Subbable, created in part by Green. [5] [6] In 2014, the channel landed a national advertisement deal ...