Unintentional ASMR 🖥️ Inventor of World's First RAM Chip (Computer History)

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  • Опубліковано 25 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 522

  • @boyaintright5858
    @boyaintright5858 4 роки тому +606

    Inventing the first RAM chip must've made for some nice memories.

  • @vsf_dave811
    @vsf_dave811 4 роки тому +553

    The fact that the human race has been able to extract raw elements from the earth and discover the way to transform them create a machine like a computer will never fail to amaze me

    • @nicholaspaul924
      @nicholaspaul924 3 роки тому +36

      It’s pretty much modern day alchemy

    • @Gatuqui
      @Gatuqui 3 роки тому +17

      Same feelings bro. The way our creation has evolved makes it even more amazing.

    • @-lord1754
      @-lord1754 2 роки тому +6

      @@nicholaspaul924 You just blew my mind

    • @AImighty
      @AImighty 2 роки тому +6

      Aliens helped us

    • @nicholaspaul924
      @nicholaspaul924 2 роки тому

      @@-lord1754 👬

  • @visoriannull832
    @visoriannull832 5 років тому +986

    Breaking news: local madmen make metal think

  • @TrollingVeteran
    @TrollingVeteran 6 років тому +1380

    Mad respect to Hilda.

  • @AlexaBosse
    @AlexaBosse 6 років тому +647

    this just reminds me of a warm day during class in high school an unair-conditioned room, listening to the teacher drone and staring sleepily out the window but not missing a word. I loved those classes, and I loved those droning teachers because their voices calmed me and it felt like I could relax and learn at the same time

  • @SchweppesLemonIsGodTier
    @SchweppesLemonIsGodTier 6 років тому +380

    The way he speaks with such calmness and certainty and how he doesn't stumble upon his words, you can really tell this man is intelligent.

    • @Jourmand1r
      @Jourmand1r 6 років тому +55

      you should see Elon Musk talk.
      Social skills dont correlate to intelligence.

    • @alxwv6499
      @alxwv6499 5 років тому +23

      Both statements are true

    • @lightwishatnight
      @lightwishatnight 5 років тому +33

      @@Jourmand1r having proper diction has nothing to do with "social skills" nor is what Schweppes lemon was referring to. The person in the video has a deterministic way of thought in which he consciously and orderly choose each word and shared it with the camera verbally. Such a rare trait these days indeed.

    • @Jourmand1r
      @Jourmand1r 5 років тому +5

      Get a greencard fatass

    • @a.y.8294
      @a.y.8294 5 років тому +3

      Arc can’t you tell he’s reading off a queue card or something. He’s always looking just above the camera and you can see his eyes going left and right like he’s reading.

  • @SwissTanuki
    @SwissTanuki 6 років тому +235

    My first Computer had 24mb ram. Now it's 8Gb. This was one of the man who made it possible. I thank you good Sir. Also what a nice voice.

    • @deanroddey2881
      @deanroddey2881 6 років тому +4

      Mine had 256K

    • @mr.battle20
      @mr.battle20 6 років тому +7

      My first PC was a 386 with 2mb ram. Those were the days.

    • @deanroddey2881
      @deanroddey2881 6 років тому +3

      Of course some folks would laugh at my 256K, because they had Apple IIs or Commodores and such, with 64K or even less. But really the IBM PC was the first serious contender, which wasn't a hobbyist product, so a lot of folks started there. Or, actually, a lot of folks like me started with those first clones. Compaq, Edge, and others started doing clones that were a lot more affordable.
      I remember going to the local computer store and buying a book, from IBM, that had all of the original PC BIOS code in it, with documentation. I learned a lot from that, though it was seriously spaghetti code due to the memory limitations. I think that the original PC BIOS was in 8K or something like that?
      I got an Edge clone, and really splurged for 256K and TWO 5.5" floppies. Of course back then, there was no 'system drive'. You booted DOS off a floppy and the OS was in memory and never had to go back to disk, so you could pull out the boot disk and use the floppy for application purposes. These days the OS makes enormous and on-going use of the hard drive.
      I remember when this first started happening on PCs, in the OS/2 days. It used to really drive me crazy because before that the hard drive never operated unless your program asked it to. So it was a bad thing if it started doing something when you didn't think it should be.
      Later on I got a massive 10MB hard drive for it, which was like, I'll never fill this up.

    • @spacecowboy2k
      @spacecowboy2k 6 років тому +4

      My first PC was a DEC (Digital Equipment Corporation) VAXmate... 8mhz 80286, 1mb ram. I played Zork and Hitchhikers' Guide To The Galaxy on it, and I catalogued my baseball cards :D

    • @cynaptic115
      @cynaptic115 5 років тому

      My current pc has 64gb of ddr4 3200mhz... what am I doing with my life

  • @Stothrythm
    @Stothrythm 4 роки тому +58

    "Hey Hilda, what d'ya do at work today?"
    "Oh not much, just knitted this weird copper wire thing for the MIT guys, I don't even think they know my last name to be honest..."

    • @billybobthornton8122
      @billybobthornton8122 2 роки тому +1

      Underrated

    • @zacharygentry3465
      @zacharygentry3465 2 роки тому +2

      Without Hilda computers would not exist.

    • @BlueyH-wk4kb
      @BlueyH-wk4kb Рік тому +1

      @@zacharygentry3465 That's why I now refer to computers as 'Hildatrons'

    • @yougetagoldstar
      @yougetagoldstar 10 місяців тому

      My goodness, so people truly not know the difference between men and women? If it wasn't for men there would be no woman technician. Who manufactured the wired? Who told the woman what to do? Who invented the concept? Laid out the plans? Built the facility in which the compupter was built? Who paved the roads on which she walked to get to the facility? And so on and so on. If you were joking about your comment, then okay, but if you truly believe that Hilda would even be able to conceive of a computer without men, then you need a lesson on the difference between men and women.

    • @arcadenoah993
      @arcadenoah993 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@@yougetagoldstarIf It was't for women, men would not exist

  • @BrickBike
    @BrickBike 6 років тому +343

    Sweet! After the zombie apocalypse I'm going to knit me a computer.

  • @jeffmarsh1513
    @jeffmarsh1513 6 років тому +280

    It is hilarious to me that 90% of us (myself included) don't understand the electronic processes of a machine even as elementary as this, and they have progressed extremely exponentially farther than this

    • @emarskineel
      @emarskineel 6 років тому +43

      @@logenmattsen nothing to be ashamed about. This is the culmination of countless geniuses' life's work

    • @CalvinHikes
      @CalvinHikes 5 років тому +3

      Yep. Modern computing technology is a completely abstract concept to me.

    • @CsykKrit
      @CsykKrit 5 років тому +8

      Don't feel bad, there's people who don't understand internal combustion engine or how DNA works. Not everyone can know everything.

    • @rorythomson3439
      @rorythomson3439 5 років тому +2

      Closer to 99% I suspect, and of course myself included.

    • @a.y.8294
      @a.y.8294 5 років тому +3

      Extremely exponentially is a lot. Id only pick one next time

  • @TaterChip91
    @TaterChip91 4 роки тому +41

    "At the time, all the computers in the world were hand made. And I think there were approximately 6 computers in the whole world. "
    I'm laying on my bed and I count more than 6 computers in this room alone.

    • @WaningLoon
      @WaningLoon 11 місяців тому

      how? 2 phones 2 consoles 1 pc and 1 laptop?

    • @KaygeeFromNanotrasen
      @KaygeeFromNanotrasen 7 місяців тому

      ​@@WaningLoonclocks? Thermostats?

    • @WaningLoon
      @WaningLoon 7 місяців тому

      @@KaygeeFromNanotrasen who in the world is counting a clock as a computer -.-

    • @KaygeeFromNanotrasen
      @KaygeeFromNanotrasen 7 місяців тому

      @@WaningLoon I mean, technically it is lol

  • @BestUnintentionalASMR
    @BestUnintentionalASMR  6 років тому +181

    The topic might not seem all too intriguing, but I very much enjoyed this guy's voice (Dr. Bernard Widrow), and also found the Computer History quite interesting (considering 60 years ago computers looked like this). Thanks to the user who recommended this piece, and thanks for watching!

    • @Wildboy789789
      @Wildboy789789 6 років тому +25

      Best Unintentional ASMR , man this is cool, it really makes me appreciate my PC, they never could have imagined a graphics card... and here I sit with a 3000$ glass box with rainbow LEDs playing a video game that is basically shooting millions of lines of binary per second, translated thru lines of code, while also reading code for 3d shapes animations sound... I mean it's crazy, my computer chips literally in the blink of an eye do more work than a skyscraper full of people with pen and paper would do in a day... imagine the heat, the speed, a flash of lightning thru the chips and millions of equations done... it's like a damn Lamborghini engine in my pinky nail

    • @VerdensDejligste
      @VerdensDejligste 6 років тому

      By the way, check out ua-cam.com/video/dIcd365RZrU/v-deo.html

    • @BestUnintentionalASMR
      @BestUnintentionalASMR  6 років тому +1

      @VerdensDejigste thanks! wish I would understand Danish!

    • @TheSeedform
      @TheSeedform 6 років тому +6

      Wildboy789789 it is amazing. I wonder what it'll be like 50 years from now

    • @michaelroper4237
      @michaelroper4237 6 років тому +6

      its more than intriguing, its fascinating, thank you

  • @rwdplz1
    @rwdplz1 6 років тому +53

    "IBM was making some pretty crude computers..." SAVAGE!

  • @bgrace94
    @bgrace94 6 років тому +1004

    You can tell by his voice and cadence that this man has killed many people.

    • @dekudude8888
      @dekudude8888 6 років тому +269

      A stone cold serial killer....His gimmick is explaining the history of computers before bashing your head in with the memory plane

    • @LoganLawhead
      @LoganLawhead 6 років тому +54

      All by hand

    • @yaboiguzma393
      @yaboiguzma393 6 років тому +67

      He sucks the memory out of their heads

    • @blackbeard0074
      @blackbeard0074 6 років тому +2

      bgrace94 huh?

    • @RZAJW
      @RZAJW 6 років тому +4

      Lol

  • @Gourgandise
    @Gourgandise 6 років тому +282

    It's too interesting for me to fall asleep XD

  • @davet9820
    @davet9820 6 років тому +676

    But can it run Doom

    • @zaydengestures1797
      @zaydengestures1797 6 років тому +14

      Probably not, dude. Lmao.

    • @ASMRRetro
      @ASMRRetro 6 років тому +29

      Dave T, Maybe not Doom. But Wolfenstein 3D for sure

    • @davidmcdonough6818
      @davidmcdonough6818 6 років тому +5

      What about minesweeper

    • @hellishcyberdemon7112
      @hellishcyberdemon7112 6 років тому +4

      @@ASMRRetro you both are dumb this kind of computer is way older than 1992

    • @hannah7351
      @hannah7351 6 років тому +22

      Zayden Gestures r/wooosh

  • @TheFireflyGuy
    @TheFireflyGuy Місяць тому +1

    For anyone wondering - Bernard Widrow is still with us today at the fantastic age of 94. He was born in 1929. The work he’s discussing here occurred 60-70 years ago.

  • @K_i_t_t_y84
    @K_i_t_t_y84 6 років тому +72

    Fascinating story and calming voice! Thank you!

  • @fortazerty
    @fortazerty 6 років тому +54

    Without this man we wouldnt be even watching this , thank you!

    • @coff8115
      @coff8115 6 років тому +15

      You could say that about any man you're currently watching

    • @GREYday59
      @GREYday59 6 років тому +3

      coff81 god damnnn

  • @iambiggus
    @iambiggus 4 роки тому +6

    Her name was Hilda G. Carpenter.

  • @Kyntteri
    @Kyntteri 4 роки тому +43

    Then: Can we make this RAM more reliable?
    Now: Can we make this RAM more RGB?

  • @glowy.
    @glowy. 6 років тому +282

    Finally a channel that isn't some girl whispering in my fucking ear. I remember ASMR before it became a thing to make channels about, had to find it the hard way by searching up boring videos like this one. Can't believe ive become an ASMR hipster...

    • @d5uncr
      @d5uncr 6 років тому +3

      Check out Jason Bowen's painting channel.

    • @chriscrocvlogs
      @chriscrocvlogs 6 років тому +2

      Frivolous Fox comes to mind ...

    • @guccimalcs
      @guccimalcs 6 років тому +38

      For real. Now it’s just a bunch of thots chewing into their ear shaped binaural mics and going “tingles tingles tingles tingles tingles”

    • @chriscrocvlogs
      @chriscrocvlogs 6 років тому +11

      Gucci Malcs oh god I know . Too true. It’s like it’s a hobby all these girls have to just cake themselves in makeup and pout and play with a microphone. Annoying

    • @DavidB-rx3km
      @DavidB-rx3km 6 років тому +1

      I used to go to Soothetube blog! I detest intentional ASMR, and I’m a proud ASMR hipster.

  • @Jourmand1r
    @Jourmand1r 6 років тому +28

    the way this guy talks is hypnotic

  • @jopezu
    @jopezu 6 років тому +152

    joe pera’s grandpa.

    • @lunabear
      @lunabear 6 років тому +18

      YES came looking for this comment

    • @ETC.PODCASTERS
      @ETC.PODCASTERS 6 років тому +6

      How is this not #1 comment

  • @beachcomber4141
    @beachcomber4141 6 років тому +41

    Hilda!!! I bet she knew how important her metal knitting was to the future of mankind.

    • @acidset
      @acidset 4 роки тому

      Bet, or she wouldn't have liked it one bit doing 4096 of those.

  • @mattjindrak
    @mattjindrak 5 років тому +9

    I don't understand how anything works. How things get saved to memory. How images and sounds get recorded. It's magic.

  • @CharlemagnePalace
    @CharlemagnePalace 6 років тому +16

    The irony of someone on the 'Edison' channel having their technology stolen is thick.

    • @bobinthewest8559
      @bobinthewest8559 5 років тому +3

      Corvus Morve...
      You mean Edison, the good business man who tried his darnedest to keep the world using DC electricity? That Edison?

  • @neoqueto
    @neoqueto 6 років тому +1

    Thank you so much for uploading my video request!!! It seriously deserves to be noticed as an ASMR video.

  • @phil1pd
    @phil1pd 5 років тому +2

    Thank you for all your contributions in science and technology.

  • @zacharybrown2413
    @zacharybrown2413 3 роки тому +1

    When you're grandpa is the one you call to help you with your pc instead of the other way around....

  • @diegosposetti2861
    @diegosposetti2861 2 роки тому

    Wow man, the type of the channel's content it's very rare, and incredible the idea.

  • @MārtiņšKadiķis
    @MārtiņšKadiķis 10 місяців тому +1

    How tough is Hilda? She knits RAMS.

  • @SadBulldog
    @SadBulldog 6 років тому +25

    so *soothing..*

  • @RPKGameVids
    @RPKGameVids 6 років тому +3

    I remember seeing this video a really long time ago on the original channel, great ASMR!

  • @Helloyousilverdevil
    @Helloyousilverdevil 4 роки тому +1

    Forgot this was supposed to be ASMR, this is just genuinely an incredibly interesting tech video.

  • @HKXXXX
    @HKXXXX 6 років тому +24

    That's how I fall asleep in class

    • @j5892000
      @j5892000 6 років тому

      Same. I had a teacher like this . Relaxed me so much I stpoef staying awak in his class. I failed the class of course

  • @alexdurst6180
    @alexdurst6180 4 роки тому +4

    Even down to this basic level I still don’t understand how this works

  • @spudhead169
    @spudhead169 4 роки тому +2

    That thing looks to be about an inch thick. To get the same amount of RAM that's in the laptop I'm using to type this, you'd need a tower of these things about as high as the orbit of the ISS..

  • @UncleJimboo
    @UncleJimboo 4 роки тому +3

    2:35 ugh that cable management

  • @LittleEddie1
    @LittleEddie1 3 роки тому

    It's amazing how we as humans can create digital worlds and store digital data using elements and materials. Magnificent minds and creations.

  • @briansavage932
    @briansavage932 5 років тому +21

    Is this Joe Pera's dad?

  • @ArturoGarzaID
    @ArturoGarzaID 5 років тому +1

    "Hey what are you guys doing today?" "Oh we're just going to build some computer chips and microprocessors, no big deal."

  • @arlequin7002
    @arlequin7002 6 років тому

    Amazing how something so simple laid down the fundamentals of human technology

  • @kohinarec6580
    @kohinarec6580 5 років тому +3

    Modern computers are wonderful machines.
    The old ones are mythical.

  • @legoguney
    @legoguney 6 років тому +6

    “This could take up half a building,, the other half would be air conditioning.” Wow I love this guy XD

  • @TheVampirePredator
    @TheVampirePredator 5 років тому +1

    Half of the building was the computer and the other half was the air conditioning. In other words, they built the computer first and then built the building around it.

  • @ButeoAlbonotatus
    @ButeoAlbonotatus 6 років тому

    This is quite interesting tech history. He does a good job of explaining the technological advances in terms of speed increase and physical size reduction in a comprehensive way.

  • @kyro-jaxxsonofkosmos23
    @kyro-jaxxsonofkosmos23 Рік тому

    Computers get invented: “We can do really fast math now!”
    Me using a computer today: “I hate math homework, gonna play video games instead”

  • @JacquesBarrett
    @JacquesBarrett 4 роки тому

    That soft guitar bed is amazing. Some real Neuromancer shit.

  • @serenatsukino999
    @serenatsukino999 4 роки тому

    This is so interesting. I love soaking up stuff like this!

  • @no1pittfan753
    @no1pittfan753 6 років тому +17

    2:14 I think he forgot to zip his pants before the Interview

    • @GozUnlimited
      @GozUnlimited 5 років тому +29

      He did that on purpose to allow for random access

    • @Fortnitekid1427-o5k
      @Fortnitekid1427-o5k 5 років тому

      I can’t unsee it

    • @Fortnitekid1427-o5k
      @Fortnitekid1427-o5k 5 років тому +1

      GozUnlimited ahahahahhahahah

    • @adamboyd5190
      @adamboyd5190 5 років тому +2

      Lol too funny! Hey! He's so smart thinking of much more important things than trifling matters of zippers.

    • @peterjensen6844
      @peterjensen6844 4 роки тому +2

      @@GozUnlimited massively underrated comment

  • @TheVampirePredator
    @TheVampirePredator 5 років тому +1

    2:24 Left side is the mother of all fire hazards.

  • @bacarlson991
    @bacarlson991 6 років тому

    What a great story, love this guy's voice and his story telling ability. He should do audiobooks.

  • @Refulgent_Rascal
    @Refulgent_Rascal 4 роки тому

    Thanks to this man we can today watch this video on a computer.

  • @vincering6967
    @vincering6967 2 роки тому

    That’s actually really cool and impressive. Quite a lot of talent

  • @Misterkill800
    @Misterkill800 4 роки тому

    This is nuts. I want to learn more of this computer.

  • @Bingbangboompowwham
    @Bingbangboompowwham 2 роки тому +1

    Okay, internet, you know what we have to do: locate Hilda and honor her memory

    • @ThornReaper
      @ThornReaper 2 роки тому +2

      Hilda G Carpenter, an MIT technician. She died in 2013. There's a zine dedicated to her memory and work.
      It's called Hilda Wove all Those Wires.

    • @eddieafterburner
      @eddieafterburner 9 місяців тому

      Pun intended?

    • @Bingbangboompowwham
      @Bingbangboompowwham 9 місяців тому

      @@eddieafterburner woah

  • @holymountaingadget
    @holymountaingadget 5 років тому +1

    A future chapter in this story is detailed in a great book called The Soul of a New Machine (Kidder). About a decade or so after this, a group of folks from DEC leave to form a company called Data General and they compete with DEC - as well as another rival group within Data General - to capture the 32-bit machine market. Highly recommended read but no mention of Hilda, unfortunately.

  • @randomuploadsism
    @randomuploadsism 6 років тому +22

    Hilda sent me

  • @tc9634
    @tc9634 2 роки тому +1

    I hope Hilda was on the patent and got some of the money

  • @bowie5668
    @bowie5668 5 років тому +14

    *wats the wecomended amount of dedicated wam*

  • @samluke8121
    @samluke8121 5 років тому +2

    One of the most important figures in the development of computer memory is unknown apart from a first name. I really appreciate this mans testimony and credentials however,I wonder why IBM received the government contract when they weren't really in the same industry?

  • @zwarst
    @zwarst 3 роки тому

    Back in those days they had a dedicated " Press any key" button of wood with glow worms to illuminate the keys..

  • @davidd6383
    @davidd6383 5 років тому +6

    I wonder if, when this interview went public, he got into any trouble for stealing that memory plane?

  • @Bingbangboompowwham
    @Bingbangboompowwham 6 років тому +1

    Your civilization has entered the modern era @ 7:23

  • @timothy790110
    @timothy790110 5 років тому

    Some people are fucking amazing. This guy.

  • @natepolidoro4565
    @natepolidoro4565 3 роки тому

    Wow, didn't know President Truman was into computers.

  • @davidmoore3983
    @davidmoore3983 6 років тому

    I was in the servo trackwriter business (STW) - this is historical and fascinating

  • @TheHilariousGoldenChariot
    @TheHilariousGoldenChariot 3 місяці тому

    Being a computer engineering student I was too interested to get sleepy 😂

  • @myroseaccount
    @myroseaccount 6 років тому +3

    This is actually a very important story. The US taxpayer PAYS for the research for memory storage research at MIT and then hands it over to IBM. Public subsidy and Private Profit.

  • @thanetitan4246
    @thanetitan4246 5 років тому

    You defined our Future !!
    Thank you !!

  • @imjustacup9751
    @imjustacup9751 6 років тому +2

    Digital!! Haven't heard that name in a long long time!

  • @who_cares848
    @who_cares848 6 років тому +1

    I'm trying to fall asleep but this is interesting and shit.

  • @St3v3nCo
    @St3v3nCo 6 років тому

    This is really nice to listen too, its calming and interesting

  • @drfunybone4652
    @drfunybone4652 4 роки тому

    This man is Google Chrome's favorite person (and/or food source) in the world

  • @chickenfarmer321
    @chickenfarmer321 4 роки тому +1

    Nerd idea: Can this be replicated with modern methods to be superfast but high bandwidth for today's stuff?

  • @wizzair_offical
    @wizzair_offical 6 років тому +9

    It’s nice of Samsung for still using this type of memory in their phones, very retro

    • @msf5681
      @msf5681 5 років тому +3

      Did you know Samsung just made the screens for the iphoneX?

    • @UrineDeity
      @UrineDeity 4 роки тому

      @@msf5681 apple is pathetic let's not even go there

  • @TheRockBoS
    @TheRockBoS 6 років тому +1

    What a soothing voice he has.

  • @randy7068
    @randy7068 5 років тому

    He sheds your brain with his memory plane.

  • @morbid1.
    @morbid1. 2 роки тому

    4096 hand made bits... this is awesome

  • @HimothyOHooligan
    @HimothyOHooligan 4 роки тому

    This guy is also responsible for the LMS algorithm which is the basis for most Acoustic Echo Cancelers.

  • @business_pear
    @business_pear 3 місяці тому

    Fun fact: DEC was bought out by Compaq, which merged with HP in 2002. Meanwhile, IBM is still its own company after all these years.

  • @masterklaw4527
    @masterklaw4527 6 років тому +1

    As a gamer and computer building hobbyist, I salute you, Dr. Widrow. Semper Fi.

    • @juicejxmar5702
      @juicejxmar5702 6 років тому +1

      "As a gamer" lmfao

    • @masterklaw4527
      @masterklaw4527 2 роки тому

      @@juicejxmar5702 Games need RAM. This wonderful man helped make it possible.

  • @rkje112
    @rkje112 5 років тому

    That memory got us to the moon.......hand programmed. Crazy sht

  • @zakadams762
    @zakadams762 6 років тому

    This is really cool!

  • @blip1
    @blip1 3 роки тому +1

    Search "Sage System" and watch the computer history video on that. It's a little over an hour long and discusses where the whirlwind computer went with the U.S. military

  • @allyourcode
    @allyourcode 5 років тому +1

    If you would like to see a piece of core memory, there is one on display in the Intel Museum, which is located at Intel's headquarters in Santa Clara, California.

  • @torpedohippo8493
    @torpedohippo8493 4 роки тому

    The control system for the saturn rocket used this :-) smarter every day has an interesting video about it

  • @justinhenryhaynes
    @justinhenryhaynes 4 місяці тому

    6:05 “that was the excuse for building the computer.” Spoken like a true technologist and engineer. The Cold War was just an excuse to build a better computer.

  • @Nyllet1221
    @Nyllet1221 6 років тому +3

    im so hyped for quantum computers. if the development of quantum computers progresses at the same rate that "regular" computers did maybe we will have them in like 20-30 years if not sooner.

  • @-kattya-
    @-kattya- 6 років тому

    This was amazing! No tingles or asmr experience, but this topic is very interesting

  • @jessicaschildkraut-peled8673
    @jessicaschildkraut-peled8673 6 років тому +1

    I actually found this very interesting and relaxing, some respect to hilda though

  • @qwasd0r
    @qwasd0r 6 років тому

    The Whirlwind computer was used for Airforce pilot training and simulation, I think.

  • @vimalvijayagovind
    @vimalvijayagovind 6 років тому +3

    Old man would never have thought that people would be watching his video for getting triggers instead of wisdom :)

  • @Fortnitekid1427-o5k
    @Fortnitekid1427-o5k 5 років тому

    Educational! I love it!

  • @Penguinssss
    @Penguinssss 6 років тому

    Now when we fall asleep in class we can just blame it on Asmr

  • @hudthestud6758
    @hudthestud6758 4 роки тому +3

    His voice kind of sounds like Jim Morrison’s.

  • @April_a26
    @April_a26 5 років тому +2

    I respect this man more than any god.

  • @bobwolenski5720
    @bobwolenski5720 4 роки тому

    He could have played Dan Akroyd in the blues bros..."go talk to Bob"

  • @wiilover07
    @wiilover07 6 років тому

    That is awesome!!