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Jem from Bang Goes The Theory is back, this time with a pair of “Spiderman” gloves constructed from reasonably cheap materials that he hopes will allow him to scale an aluminum clad building....
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One can't help but think that this young man would be better off devoting the time that he spent honing his axe-cube technique to his studies, but boys will be boys....
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A dynamic presentation made by Nobel Prize winning chemist, Dr. Kary Mullis sums up a breakthrough new treatment for killer infections in less than five minutes....
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A team of super-nerds at Waterloo Labs accomplished something very cool, they built a system to play Half Life on a makeshift computer screen using a real gun....
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A small study by a team of doctors at the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London has shed light on a brain pathway abnormality that occurs among psychopaths....
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The Shinoda Laboratory at Japan's prestigious Tokyo University has been experimenting with touchable holography....
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Bang Goes the Theory’s Dr. Yan Wong shows how, through the power of physics, a piece of newspaper can become a single-use frying pan....
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William Kamkwamba, now twenty, was a teenager when he designed and built his own windmill from looking at pictures in a book. In this video he describes how people first thought him crazy, until they saw it power a radio. William lived in rural Malawi and when his parents...
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In this video, the BBC’s Jem Stansfield test fires a vortex cannon that uses an acetylene and oxygen fueled explosion to fire an extremely powerful blast of air across a lake. Stansfield attacks three targets: houses of straw, sticks and bricks, with some spectacular results....