this guy just gained 20k subscribers in like a day, i guess the algorithm decided to bless him cause that segmented displays video has almost 900k views now
Great video! You have really good production. Everything from the music, cinematography, and your voice makes the experience really wonderful. I really look forward to your future videos! Please keep making them!
Agreed! I only recently found this channel and I'm absolutely loving it. It's so unique, interesting, calming, and fun. I love knowing how things work and this channel makes it feel effortless and enjoyable! Even Posy's accent and voice is a bonus, and if it wasn't for such engaging topics I could fall asleep to it :D I'm definitely go through and watch all this channel's videos while I work.
My alarm clock for the past 15 years has been a simple LCD clock, specifically a westclox 47539. It is always on and only takes 2 AAAs every 3 years. It never misses an alarm and will beat the reliability of a phone or plug in clock. If I didn’t use the alarm or backlight button I’m sure it would last 10 years easily
This is genuinely the first time I have understood how polarizers work even after having watched multiple videos specifically on it. Thank you so much for the explanation. That demo you did while holding the light actually worked perfectly for me. Awesome stuff
Oh man, I was shocked when find out that even music was created by yourself. Your videos deliver highest possible level of satisfaction. Your videos is a truly piece of artwork.
I actually remember pimping my calculators like that in middle school, inverted, and the tape trick I discovered accidentally when taping some bits of colored plastic together for the colors. my magnum opus had every other digit inverted on one of those big display calculators you could get at the drug store with a backlight.
I was so engrossed in the 20th century-ness on display in this video I started to marvel at the colour LCDs at the end and wondered how that could even work... while staring at my LCD monitor with billions of colours displayed.
Please do make more videos. I love your production style. The detail, the explanations, the graphics, and the music are all fantastic! Truly a hidden gem of youtube.
Your videos and sense of what is interesting are incredible. I don’t know of many people who could make these things interesting much less lastingly interesting.
I just discovered your channel Your filming skills are off the charts The production quality is insane Your narration is perfect (as a non native english speaker too, I can still understand you very well) I hope you'll have way more subscribers and views someday, you really deserve it
I have a video of my iPhone 7 activating the LCD in my kitchen scale when I woke the phone up. Always found it odd but interesting... now its clear. Great video!
Great video! Well explained, great props and lighting, and of course amazing music. Please keep making them! I don't understand why you don't have more views!
Excellent video! The first field effect watch, the Gruen Teletime, was first offered for sale in the fall of 1972 in the USA. The first Teletime FE displays were by Ilisco, produced well into 1973 then replaced by a more reliable display by Beckman.
@@PosyMusic An excellent book in case you've not seen it. www.amazon.com/Mr-Liquid-Crystal-Fergason-Invented/dp/0997335777/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=mr+liquid+crystal&qid=1586392065&sr=8-1
Yo brotha, I still can't believe how underrated your channel is, you consistently blow our minds in just the perfect way by matching it with the perfect tune. I love it
Oh man, how the time has gone by. I swear you head only around 6 or 7 thousand subs last year when I left my comment. Now look at you, 213 thousand! I'm so happy for you, Posy! The love is well and truly deserved.
7:10 WHAT??! my computer screen is just an advanced version of a calculator screen? And you just taught me how modern displays work without me realizing!?? Awesome.
0:38 I got exact same watch roughly 9 years ago, and yes, battery still works today! I always wondered how this long battery life is achieved, so it's nice to know the magic!
Last night this channel had 7k subscribers. Now it has 8k. 1k increase in less than 12 hours. I'm really happy more people are getting to see these awesome videos....
I noticed that static electricity could activate LCD elements when I was a wee lad, messing with LCD screens I had removed from cheap calculators and watches whilst watching TV. If The LCD got close to the CRT, I could select different segments with my finger along the edge of the LCD panel. Neat stuff!
Amazing, in 5 days from 5k subs to 80k, up to the 100k, imagine that, 1 week and going from 5k to your silver play button, well deserved, amazing content
2:00 I think polarizers work exactly the opposite way. Light wants to move electrons (along the axis of oscillation) if it hits something. Between two parallel bars, electrons cannot move, so the light passes through without doing anything. Perpendicular to that, electrons can move (inside the bars, up and down), so the light will be absorbed.
1 light is not electrons .2 your theory is also a bit wrong. Because if you take two polarized filters and turn them at right angle to each other so as to block all light then place a third filter in front of them and turn it to a right angle the light will then pass through. Very spooky. How can all light be blocked then be unblocked by a third filter? Come up with an answer and you will get the physics prize of the day.
@@michaelshultz2540 1. You are correct, but I never stated that "light is electrons". 2. My theory has nothing to do with the stuff you wrote, why should it be wrong? And for your answer: it is quite easy 1. A photon has some polarization before hitting the first filter. When hitting the filter, it has two options: 1. get absorbed, 2. pass through and adjust the polarization according to the filter. If the 2nd filter is at 90° (in relation to the first one), the photon will also hit the second filter at 90° and will be absorbed everytime -> no light passes. 2. (You are wrong, if you put the 3rd filter "in front" of two filters that already cancel all the light, the combination will also cancel all the light.) What you mean is: Put the 3rd filter between the two filters, so you have 45° between 1&2 and 2&3. Then (cos(45°)^2)^2=25% of the light will pass through. I do not need a physics price, I already have a physics degree, very spooky indeed. Also: before you comment, read wikipedia or google: "wire-grid polarizer". It even has images, so you dont need to actually read.
2:22 - fun fact: if you add a third polarizer to this configuration (perpendicular polarizers), it will stop blocking light and then allow some of it through. Quantum. edit: third polarizer should be diagonal.
8:16 I also have a Novation Impulse and I absolutely hate the display! Thank you, now I have a little bit of insight into why it sucks. Also, thank you for everything else. I am in love with your channel. Groete van Suid Afrika.
8:45 WOW I was absolutely shocked to see a model of weather station that I had for three years in this video! And that's a much more clear image than I could ever take of mine. No matter what I did, there was always some loss of legibility towards the top or bottom of the screen whenever I took a picture of it.
Posy - my guess on the multi colour dot matrix displays are that each pixel in the display gets applied a particular voltage to activate the twist of the TN a certain amount only. Instead of 100% VCC, it is an analogue scale voltage applied depending on the desired colour. This partial twist rotates the light a certain amount, yielding the desired colour. You can see these colour changes in this video when you rotate the films.
I actually never knew anything about the physics behind lcds. I thought they were simple and had nothing in specialty. This channel has the ability to make an entire dictionary for a grain of sand
RCA Labs sold off TN LCD to Japan because in the 60s, management was obsessed with colour CRT and had sunk cost into it. The symmetric LCD modes like MVA and FFS(IPS) were developed by Fujitsu and Hitachi. Active matrix LCD displays are truly an invention of Japan and Korea. If you are in a store and are can't tell whether a turned off monitor is TN or not, place your phone's light against the screen. The entire screen should light up dimly, because TN is transmissive at zero voltage. MVA and FFS are black at zero voltage.
there is one more odd type of lit LCD, not mentioned here. i've only ever seen it on the polar FT1 heart rate watch. it looks like a normal LCD, with a blue-ish tint to the black segments. but when side-lit by the yellow LED, the segments themselves "reflect" the light, and seem to glow.
UA-cam recommended me your mouse cursor video. After that I clicked on your channel and binge watched, which is how I ended up here. I am not trying to brag or anything, but I think I single handedly pushed your magical youtube algorithm score through the roof. I know, but no problem. But you can buy me coffee once you become a multi million dollar youtube channel.
This is one of the most underrated channels on youtube
Very true
Really.
Agree
this guy just gained 20k subscribers in like a day, i guess the algorithm decided to bless him cause that segmented displays video has almost 900k views now
This channel is like technology connections but narrated by a Dutch(?) person
Great video! You have really good production. Everything from the music, cinematography, and your voice makes the experience really wonderful. I really look forward to your future videos! Please keep making them!
Thank you :)
True 😊
Stel je voor dat je in het dagelijks leven ook zo klinkt 🤔 Imagine if you sound amazing like this in daily life. Groeten uit Nederland!
Agreed! I only recently found this channel and I'm absolutely loving it. It's so unique, interesting, calming, and fun. I love knowing how things work and this channel makes it feel effortless and enjoyable! Even Posy's accent and voice is a bonus, and if it wasn't for such engaging topics I could fall asleep to it :D I'm definitely go through and watch all this channel's videos while I work.
@@PosyMusic ²¹¹¹½2²
My alarm clock for the past 15 years has been a simple LCD clock, specifically a westclox 47539. It is always on and only takes 2 AAAs every 3 years. It never misses an alarm and will beat the reliability of a phone or plug in clock. If I didn’t use the alarm or backlight button I’m sure it would last 10 years easily
This is genuinely the first time I have understood how polarizers work even after having watched multiple videos specifically on it. Thank you so much for the explanation. That demo you did while holding the light actually worked perfectly for me. Awesome stuff
Oh man, I was shocked when find out that even music was created by yourself. Your videos deliver highest possible level of satisfaction. Your videos is a truly piece of artwork.
I actually remember pimping my calculators like that in middle school, inverted, and the tape trick I discovered accidentally when taping some bits of colored plastic together for the colors.
my magnum opus had every other digit inverted on one of those big display calculators you could get at the drug store with a backlight.
damn im doing thst with my calculator
I was so engrossed in the 20th century-ness on display in this video I started to marvel at the colour LCDs at the end and wondered how that could even work... while staring at my LCD monitor with billions of colours displayed.
Please do make more videos. I love your production style.
The detail, the explanations, the graphics, and the music are all fantastic!
Truly a hidden gem of youtube.
4:51 e paper mono lcd
Your videos and sense of what is interesting are incredible. I don’t know of many people who could make these things interesting much less lastingly interesting.
#mediatama_
°sctv :
I just discovered your channel
Your filming skills are off the charts
The production quality is insane
Your narration is perfect (as a non native english speaker too, I can still understand you very well)
I hope you'll have way more subscribers and views someday, you really deserve it
+1
I have a video of my iPhone 7 activating the LCD in my kitchen scale when I woke the phone up. Always found it odd but interesting... now its clear. Great video!
Great video! Well explained, great props and lighting, and of course amazing music. Please keep making them! I don't understand why you don't have more views!
Thank you :)
for some reason that cyan back light is the most mesmerizing type of glow to me specifically because of growing up when watches started using them.
Excellent video! The first field effect watch, the Gruen Teletime, was first offered for sale in the fall of 1972 in the USA. The first Teletime FE displays were by Ilisco, produced well into 1973 then replaced by a more reliable display by Beckman.
Thank you :) I actually wasn't really aware of another naming 'field effect', that's why I never mentioned that in the video..
@@PosyMusic An excellent book in case you've not seen it. www.amazon.com/Mr-Liquid-Crystal-Fergason-Invented/dp/0997335777/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=mr+liquid+crystal&qid=1586392065&sr=8-1
Bro literally achieved dark mode on a calculator
He also made rgb gaming calculator
This guy can make even the simplest look super interesting. 😄
With as much effort put into your videos, it's surprising how underrated you are. More people need to see this!
Amazing explanation of TN LCDs! I never understood them before this.
Yo brotha, I still can't believe how underrated your channel is, you consistently blow our minds in just the perfect way by matching it with the perfect tune. I love it
That tape machine with the LCD on the tape window is a really cool touch! I'm surprised it wasn't done more, in fact.
How the hell does this video only have 80k views!? The production on this is AAA documentary quality.
Oh man, how the time has gone by. I swear you head only around 6 or 7 thousand subs last year when I left my comment.
Now look at you, 213 thousand! I'm so happy for you, Posy! The love is well and truly deserved.
Thank you! :)
This video is incredibly well made
Your channel is bound to blow up (in a good way)
It took 2 years, but I think it's finally happening
@@KingNast yup mans hit the algorithm, enjoy the ride up bro u deserve it
I'm loving your videos so much, don't stop!
Thanks :)
7:10 WHAT??! my computer screen is just an advanced version of a calculator screen? And you just taught me how modern displays work without me realizing!?? Awesome.
Your explanation of the polarization of light was very elegant. Also loved the demonstration with the calculator!!
Yesss! You did it again!
Keep making videos (and music of couse).
After watching this pretty series, I came to appreciate TN LCD displays more and bought myself a Casio watch.
I have no idea what you are telling me in the video, I just zoned out over the production style, amazing
0:38 I got exact same watch roughly 9 years ago, and yes, battery still works today!
I always wondered how this long battery life is achieved, so it's nice to know the magic!
Amazing video! I love your videos and I never really understood how these displays work.
This channel is just so pure and I love it!
Last night this channel had 7k subscribers.
Now it has 8k.
1k increase in less than 12 hours.
I'm really happy more people are getting to see these awesome videos....
In 17 hours he now has 14k from when you wrote the comment
@@machy8515 Two days later, and he's at 55.2K! He has been chosen by the algorithm. It's a great channel, he deserves it!
This channel is amazing, tha amount of work put into videos and everything. It's just too underrated.
Your channel is so underrated and so educational too, keep up the great work!
I noticed that static electricity could activate LCD elements when I was a wee lad, messing with LCD screens I had removed from cheap calculators and watches whilst watching TV. If The LCD got close to the CRT, I could select different segments with my finger along the edge of the LCD panel. Neat stuff!
I just realized why this feels so normal, your voice, the sounds and B-roll all look like something from "how it's made" or something
Seriously one of the best youtube vidoes ive seen. Amazingly interesting content mixed with insane videography 🙏🙏❤️
Your video production style is so unique and pleasant to watch.
I'm hooked on your documentaries!
insanely good explanations of complex stuff without compromising to the point of metaphor
petje af bro
yoooo this was super interesting and fun!
this channel def gonna skyrocket
i appreciate you so much cheap lcd screen on my old unused calculator, this science is amazing
Amazing, in 5 days from 5k subs to 80k, up to the 100k, imagine that, 1 week and going from 5k to your silver play button, well deserved, amazing content
New favourite channel that I must binge
That “wow” was iconic
Posy even giving Next Video teasers. You are the spiritual successor to How It's Made.
2:00 I think polarizers work exactly the opposite way. Light wants to move electrons (along the axis of oscillation) if it hits something. Between two parallel bars, electrons cannot move, so the light passes through without doing anything. Perpendicular to that, electrons can move (inside the bars, up and down), so the light will be absorbed.
1 light is not electrons .2 your theory is also a bit wrong. Because if you take two polarized filters and turn them at right angle to each other so as to block all light then place a third filter in front of them and turn it to a right angle the light will then pass through. Very spooky. How can all light be blocked then be unblocked by a third filter? Come up with an answer and you will get the physics prize of the day.
@@michaelshultz2540
1. You are correct, but I never stated that "light is electrons".
2. My theory has nothing to do with the stuff you wrote, why should it be wrong?
And for your answer: it is quite easy
1. A photon has some polarization before hitting the first filter. When hitting the filter, it has two options: 1. get absorbed, 2. pass through and adjust the polarization according to the filter. If the 2nd filter is at 90° (in relation to the first one), the photon will also hit the second filter at 90° and will be absorbed everytime -> no light passes.
2. (You are wrong, if you put the 3rd filter "in front" of two filters that already cancel all the light, the combination will also cancel all the light.) What you mean is: Put the 3rd filter between the two filters, so you have 45° between 1&2 and 2&3. Then (cos(45°)^2)^2=25% of the light will pass through.
I do not need a physics price, I already have a physics degree, very spooky indeed.
Also: before you comment, read wikipedia or google: "wire-grid polarizer". It even has images, so you dont need to actually read.
@@MarsCorporations Well played!
Keen On Keys-vibes. (I like it.)
2:22 - fun fact: if you add a third polarizer to this configuration (perpendicular polarizers), it will stop blocking light and then allow some of it through. Quantum.
edit: third polarizer should be diagonal.
Very well-made video. Even though I was never interested in this kind of technology, the way you presented it made me to want to learn about it
The narration is immaculate
i like this documentary-style video and narration
8:16 I also have a Novation Impulse and I absolutely hate the display! Thank you, now I have a little bit of insight into why it sucks. Also, thank you for everything else. I am in love with your channel. Groete van Suid Afrika.
8:45 WOW I was absolutely shocked to see a model of weather station that I had for three years in this video! And that's a much more clear image than I could ever take of mine. No matter what I did, there was always some loss of legibility towards the top or bottom of the screen whenever I took a picture of it.
Wonderful video, thank you for making it. I'm glad I subscribed after seeing your cursor video.
I absolutely LOVE your sketches
How come you only have 27k subscribers? This is so amazing! Subscribed!
4 days ago he only had 7K, and now 55.2K It's blowing up!
7:20 that is a pretty beautiful and exact chroma key
Posy - my guess on the multi colour dot matrix displays are that each pixel in the display gets applied a particular voltage to activate the twist of the TN a certain amount only. Instead of 100% VCC, it is an analogue scale voltage applied depending on the desired colour. This partial twist rotates the light a certain amount, yielding the desired colour. You can see these colour changes in this video when you rotate the films.
I was born in January 16th, 1993. What a coincidence. So glad I found your channel
your vids have a different kinda vibe man, awesome music 👌
Yooo the rainbow colours at 6:45 look awesome, I would love to have a clock like that
thanks for the colorful view, blessings!!
THIS IS THE BEST VIDEO I SAW EVER ABOUT LCDS ! ( i just started moddign Casios :D
I actually never knew anything about the physics behind lcds. I thought they were simple and had nothing in specialty.
This channel has the ability to make an entire dictionary for a grain of sand
THIS CHANNEL IS TOO UNDERRATED !!!!!!!!!!
I used to have a lot of casio clocks when I was a kid, idk why I stoped using them, they are really useful
RCA Labs sold off TN LCD to Japan because in the 60s, management was obsessed with colour CRT and had sunk cost into it. The symmetric LCD modes like MVA and FFS(IPS) were developed by Fujitsu and Hitachi. Active matrix LCD displays are truly an invention of Japan and Korea. If you are in a store and are can't tell whether a turned off monitor is TN or not, place your phone's light against the screen. The entire screen should light up dimly, because TN is transmissive at zero voltage. MVA and FFS are black at zero voltage.
Another fantastic video! Keep em coming.
Thank you
Great stuff, excelling production!
I'm in love with your music.
I definitely cringed at some of those Tetяis placements LOL
So, you make videos for your music.
Like apple made hardware for the software.
I love your album "LCD".
Your YT life is about to change. Mooi man, zoveel subs in no time...
Can't wait for your next vid. Fantastic work!!!
UA-cam gave me the best recommend video
Learned a lot from your video 😀
I clicked on this for math, 10/10 pleasantly surprised
I love these LCD videos
The best channel i ever seen
0:37 - Casio FTW! Exceeding the claimed battery life is just what they do
So cool ! Nice video. Shame youtube for the bad quality of your macro shots. Anyway, i'm playing with some scotch tape now,... awesome...
That demonstration using long exposure was clever. Too bad it's hard to do long exposure with eyeballs.
Een van mijn favoriete videos op internet Posy, het doet mijn technische hart heel goed.
Groetjes van een 23 jarige mede Nederlander ;)
there is one more odd type of lit LCD, not mentioned here. i've only ever seen it on the polar FT1 heart rate watch.
it looks like a normal LCD, with a blue-ish tint to the black segments. but when side-lit by the yellow LED, the segments themselves "reflect" the light, and seem to glow.
Also used in casio fx 991 es plus and 82es plus calculator
Bro, just found your channel today. Fantastic stuff!
UA-cam recommended me your mouse cursor video. After that I clicked on your channel and binge watched, which is how I ended up here. I am not trying to brag or anything, but I think I single handedly pushed your magical youtube algorithm score through the roof. I know, but no problem. But you can buy me coffee once you become a multi million dollar youtube channel.
Nice LCD displays, can be taught by Perci the Bandicoot.
@7:52 "yo brother" 😂😂😂
Very good education video. Thanks for explaining.
Supafun!
I've been thinking about this for many years!
oh! CTC! Its CLATRONIC. I had cassette player made by CTC back in 1995
this also explains how much power we consume compared to those times
These videos are so great
Holy shit! This channel is awesome!
Goeie batterij en een goeie video. Groeton uit Nederland!
Wow. Exelent. Gonna show this to Kashkanov, he experiment with displays btw.
Some example: ua-cam.com/video/XiAWYUZLJ1s/v-deo.html
the long exposure was a good idea imo
That exceeded my expectations.
the music reminds me too much the 1992 Orbital ''blue album'' which is wonderful but it distracts me from the video
to reflect on my childhood ;)