87 episodes

An audio version of the Asianometry YouTube channel. Maybe it will be more in the future. www.asianometry.com

The Asianometry Podcast Jon

    • Education

An audio version of the Asianometry YouTube channel. Maybe it will be more in the future. www.asianometry.com

    The Rise and Reign of Japanese VCRs

    The Rise and Reign of Japanese VCRs

    Americans invented the video magnetic tape recorder.



    But it was the Japanese who brought it to the masses as the VCR.



    Throughout the 1980s, virtually every home VCR sold in America was made in Japan. Even the ones sold by American brands like RCA.



    How did Japan come to dominate a device they didn’t create? Today, we are going to look at the rise and reign of Japanese VCRs.

    • 31 min
    Brazil Tried to Protect Its Computer Industry

    Brazil Tried to Protect Its Computer Industry

    In the 1980s, Brazil had a large domestic computer industry.



    Dozens of Brazilian-owned companies - employing tens of thousands of Brazilians - producing tens of thousands of Brazilian PCs.



    In the 1970s, a small set of Brazilian government bureaucrats recognized the growing importance of the computer industry. And in a bold move, they reserved the most exciting part of that market exclusively for Brazilian firms.



    These protections helped develop an industry ... but only for so long. In this video, we are going to review the Brazilian computer industry.

    • 23 min
    The Extreme Engineering of ASML’s EUV Light Source

    The Extreme Engineering of ASML’s EUV Light Source

    After 20+ years of development, extreme ultraviolet lithography has become a commercial reality. As I write these words, multi-million dollar machines from ASML use EUV light to create impossibly small patterns in wafers. 

    This technological magic requires a powerful heart inside of it. And indeed, there is an amazing system driving ASML's $150 million lithography machine: The EUV Light Source. 

    In this video, we are going to look at the lasers firing pulses at tin droplets to create the powerful, 13.5 nanometer wavelength light for our latest, greatest microprocessors. 

    • 17 min
    Running Neural Networks on Meshes of Light

    Running Neural Networks on Meshes of Light

    I want to thank Alex Sludds of MIT for his help on this video: https://alexsludds.github.io/

    • 13 min
    The Amazing, Humble Silicon Wafer

    The Amazing, Humble Silicon Wafer

    Silicon is probably the single most studied element on earth. Over the past seventy years, people have researched more ways to cut it, etch it, grind it, clean it, crystallize it, polish it than almost anything else. 

    Engineers have done amazing things to turn this plentiful shiny rock into the century’s most impactful piece of technology. And the wafer industry needs some love for those achievements. 

    So in this video, we are going to talk about the decades of research and stunning engineering that have gone into creating today’s cutting-edge semiconductor wafers. 

    • 18 min
    How Nvidia Won AI

    How Nvidia Won AI

    When we last left Nvidia, the company had emerged victorious in the brutal graphics card Battle Royale throughout the 1990s. 
    Very impressive. But as the company entered the 2000s, they embarked on a journey to do more. Moving towards an entirely new kind of microprocessor - and the multi-billion dollar market it would unlock.   
    In this video, we are going to look at how Nvidia turned the humble graphics card into a platform that dominates one of tech’s most important fields: Artificial Intelligence. 

    • 18 min

Top Podcasts In Education

Haddini Aşan Yaşam Rehberi
Podbee Media
6 Minute English
BBC Radio
Kendine İyi Davran
Beyhan Budak
The English We Speak
BBC Radio
Yoldayız Geliyor Musun?
Ece Targıt Günşiray
Podcastlendiniz
Fatmanur Öz