Wow it’s crazy how you can know all of this as a high schooler. I just graduated with a degree in ME and this was all stuff I learned in college. Awesome job, you’ll have an awesome career
His school had a mathematics and computer science track and allowed him to intern with an AI/Robotics company because the school has a history of teaching and graduating STEM. Nothing like the schools we had to attend lol.
Congratulations on your acceptance!! I got deferred from MIT early, but seeing your projects and result makes me happy for you. You really deserve it :D
Thank you for the kind words! I wish you luck on your college applications - I saw your art, and it's super cool!! (I come NO where close D:). Good Luck on RD - I hope you get in!
This is absurd... Not to make this sound wrong, the work you've done is amazing. But at this rate the only thing you'll gain from the degree at MIT is the certificate. No wonder these universities rank so high, when all there students are vastly overqualified.
Cry harder buddy because you weren't strong enough to make your dreams a reality. Wake up. Shitting on people trying to reach their dreams is just making you look bad.
@@theviolenceenjoyer Look, the only scam here is the cost of university. If anything, it should be free or much less expensive, as it is in the rest of the world. An ABET accredited degree that's the foot in the door for 99% of engineering roles? A chance to grow your professional network and do co-ops/internships and secure a role right out the door? Opportunities for higher education? Yeah, you need school for that. You've made a pretty shallow assessment, there. It's not just learning. It's the everything else that makes it happen. Pricewise, yes, it's a scam. But that's a bigger issue.
@@Prince_Sharming im starting Bsc EE this mid year with absolutely fuckall knowledge in electronics, seeing these sorts of comment makes me feel at ease, thank you (and yes I should prob stop watching these sorts of video before i feel descouraged to major this field)
@@KB-gy5gg Well first off, best of luck to you in EE. It's a beautiful field; I've always felt that my EE friends were wizards. That being said, I would try to not take something like this video as dis-encouragement, but instead as encouragement. There's nothing holding you back from doing something like this or even better.
This is what happens when you come from a great family, great neighborhood, great schools, etc. Its clear you had a fruitful upbringing and only a select few have the motivation and drive to learn what you did at such an early age. You have a quite a bright future ahead of you, I can tell you that.
@@anon_148 It's clear from their uploads that they're not. Notice how generalising about the character of people based on their skin colour lead you to a provably wrong conclusion. They really oughta have a word for this kind of thing so you can avoid it in future.
@@wungus-bongo Yea, I think you misunderstood what I said totally. I really don't think I know more than anyone else, but I can say with certainty he has the motivation to do great things and he will be successful at whatever he does end up doing.
This is awesome. I don't understand a thing, but I can experience your passion through your work. Lovely to see how you are so motivated to grow and I thank the UA-cam algorithm for showing me this, it gave me a big confidence boost!
Hi Sean, Your maker portfolio is incredible. I spent 12 years at MIT and hope you enjoy your time there. Make sure you leave time aside to work on your own projects and the self-education you are clearly already doing.
This randomly popped up on my recommendations. Congratulations dude, this is an achievement and you earned it. You're really good at explaining a complicated process. Good luck on your future endeavors!
Super dope man you explain this breadth of ECE in a very well construed manner at a young age super nice to see. I made a drone this year in a makerspace internship at my university and the design / engineering process is super rewarding and gratifying but super difficult and time consuming
Hey sean CONGRATS on your acceptance, I would love to see more about the rasberry pi drone you built, Im a biologist and chemist and never really had a interest growing up in robotics and coding but you def have sparked something in me, would love to see more abotu that drone man !
Wow dude you’re super talented. I’m close to graduating with a bachelor’s in Mechanical Engineering and I still fell stupid af. I blame my lack of hands-on participation as I never got the chance to work the type of stuff shown in the video. Anyways I’m proud of you and you for a bright future ahead of you.
This is literally the knowledge that I gained from college as an EE major that just graduated last May. It's incredible how much you've accomplished on your own and honestly this is enough to land you a job as a junior engineer anywhere lmao. Hope to see you work in Boston Dynamics with me if I get accepted but ik you def will haha
@@Lorium. i wanna do these things but dont have the resources to. I live where the maker scene is generally dead and there is no public places that offer the use of the more expensive gear. I did consider asking my dad since he is a investor into a EV charger company where he might know someone through that that can set me up. I did get a tour of Rolls Royce norway dep. by a relative that is a manager there, great work they do with electric duct fans
@@Lorium. i do want to work as an engineer for Kongsberg defense&aerospace as they will need more employees in the years to come and to me it seems so interesting to work there
I never did this in high school, I never would've even dreamed of being able to do something like this a few years later in the present day. This is just so impressive and mind-boggling. I'm kinda glad I got rejected from MIT because I don't think I could stay somewhere where everyone around me is at this god-level of wizardry. Congrats though!
I’m a college electrical engineering student, and while I wills say the embedded code stuff and PCB is familiar, but other than that I myself could not do all of that… Major props and CONGRATS on your “admittance” into MIT!!!
Congrats on your acceptance man! This popped up in my recommended and I’m glad I clicked on this haha, quite impressive stuff you’ve got going on here! Was wondering if you’d be willing to share your stats, however I understand if you wouldn’t like to. Anyways congrats again and best of luck on your future endeavors :)
Seems like you’ve got a pretty clear head for this stuff. Looking forward to seeing your contributions to technology in the future! Think outside the box, sure, but think about linking disciplines that are barely connected by anyone yet and I’m sure you’ll have a hit.
I don't know why was this video recommended to me, I'm not interested in robotics but I'm terribly happy for you, looks like you love what you're doing and you're also good at it! Great job man.
As a senior college engineering student who has never accomplished close to this I am astonished, bravo. Glad to see in the comments im not the only one phew
This is really impressive. I’m about to graduate college with an EE degree and the only part of this robot that I could build is probably the PCBs and some of the lower level sensor code. The fact that you were able to build the entire robot shows me that you will go very far in life. By the way, did you end up getting accepted?
This is where i want to get to. i already know programming really well, 3D modeling fairly well, and some pcb design, but i need to learn electronics and i need to learn more math theory stuff. Hope i can one day get here and then go further
Nice video, and cool projects! The datasheet for the AS5600 seems to imply that the hysteresis can be disabled over I2C using the HYST bits in the CONF register, or that you could directly read the RAW_ANGLE register over I2C instead of using the analog/PWM output. If you already tried that, disregard me.
I don't know why I got this recommended but now I see that I am very dumb and lack a stupid amount of knowledge. Congrats on getting accepted and good luck.
Man, this is call to action for me, as someone who's struggling with motivation to study. Turns out I've been comparing things the wrong way. YT and Social Media being useful once in a while
Hello, this is great! Can you help with learning resources for the quad robot? (Preferably the one you used in particular) thanks. Congrats in advance 👏🏽
When I watch those videos, I ask myself what they can learn in uni. It seems like there is no point in paying so much money. It inspires me to keep learning :)
Awesome , this is so inspiring. Wow! Could you please tell me how did you start and how I should start? I am very interested. Maybe upload video talking about this?!? Besides, awesome job!
what was your experience before making in the summer of covid? that's pretty impressive to do all that in the span of like 2 years. my senior design class we made a spider bot that can walk and shoot a grapple. that took all damn semester and didn't do half the stuff you described lol. luckily i work for a utility and don't need to know anything about that stuff now
It's depressing knowing there are people this smart out there -- and at the same time this young. I'd wish you good luck in life but you probably won't need it. I promise you I'm not one of the dislikes on this video.
The world needs more and more talented Engineers liek you, who work technically to create better products, the ones that others can't do even they are rich.
How do you learn all these amazing stuff? Can you please also make a video what did you learn to create this quad robot and also from where did you learn it. Please share your resources with us mere mortals as well man. Phenomenal work Brother ❤️
Hey, this is really cool. I wanted to ask specifically about how you learnt the hardware/electronics part. I think most people can nowadays pick up programming via online material and books. But how did you become good with hardware? Was it purely self study through books and online videos? Because i dont think they go into these topics in high school.
This is absolutely mind-blowing to me, and wish you all the best at MIT! Just wondering, how did you originally get started programming and designing these machines?
I started out with some basic Arduino projects (stuff you can find online) and then just started doing my own stuff. I typically had only a very rough idea of how to make my projects work going into them... you figure everything out as you go, and I think you learn a lot more and faster that way. It's just a matter of being motivated!
Hey Sean. I am amazed by your projects. There is one think i would like to know. How do you learn these kind of hard stuff ? What is the methodology or resources etc. I mean if i decide to this kind of things, how should i advance ?
Wow it’s crazy how you can know all of this as a high schooler. I just graduated with a degree in ME and this was all stuff I learned in college. Awesome job, you’ll have an awesome career
Bro I was too busy thinking of new keywords to get different juicy videos to ever even CONSIDERING doing anything like this lmao
Wow it's crazy how i would have loved doing this in high school but i don't have rich parents
@@ictogon Reroll?
@@Hoppitot hmmmm nah it could be a LOT worse tbh
His school had a mathematics and computer science track and allowed him to intern with an AI/Robotics company because the school has a history of teaching and graduating STEM. Nothing like the schools we had to attend lol.
Congratulations on your acceptance!! I got deferred from MIT early, but seeing your projects and result makes me happy for you. You really deserve it :D
Thank you for the kind words! I wish you luck on your college applications - I saw your art, and it's super cool!! (I come NO where close D:). Good Luck on RD - I hope you get in!
@@seanboerhout Thanks so much!
@@seanboerhout Do u plan on doing more robotics and coding tutorials and practicals for this channel? Or just sharing your accomplishments?
This is absurd... Not to make this sound wrong, the work you've done is amazing. But at this rate the only thing you'll gain from the degree at MIT is the certificate. No wonder these universities rank so high, when all there students are vastly overqualified.
Prestige?
Spoken like a true under-acheiever
Cry harder buddy because you weren't strong enough to make your dreams a reality. Wake up. Shitting on people trying to reach their dreams is just making you look bad.
@@jinwoo78 nice attitude
@@Rctdcttecededtef I try.
I almost done with two engineering degrees and somehow you have accomplished more than I have. Good Job
SAME. 2 MSE degrees here and I couldn't do half this shit.
Thats the difference between teaching yourself and being taught by an institution. Youve been scammed.
@@theviolenceenjoyer Look, the only scam here is the cost of university. If anything, it should be free or much less expensive, as it is in the rest of the world.
An ABET accredited degree that's the foot in the door for 99% of engineering roles? A chance to grow your professional network and do co-ops/internships and secure a role right out the door? Opportunities for higher education? Yeah, you need school for that. You've made a pretty shallow assessment, there.
It's not just learning. It's the everything else that makes it happen. Pricewise, yes, it's a scam. But that's a bigger issue.
@@Prince_Sharming im starting Bsc EE this mid year with absolutely fuckall knowledge in electronics, seeing these sorts of comment makes me feel at ease, thank you (and yes I should prob stop watching these sorts of video before i feel descouraged to major this field)
@@KB-gy5gg Well first off, best of luck to you in EE. It's a beautiful field; I've always felt that my EE friends were wizards.
That being said, I would try to not take something like this video as dis-encouragement, but instead as encouragement. There's nothing holding you back from doing something like this or even better.
This is what happens when you come from a great family, great neighborhood, great schools, etc. Its clear you had a fruitful upbringing and only a select few have the motivation and drive to learn what you did at such an early age. You have a quite a bright future ahead of you, I can tell you that.
@@wungus-bongoit’s true tho. The privileged always have more to work with
Don't forget genetics/IQ
@@anon_148 People love excuses. Congrats to Sean the knowledge he gathered as a highschooler is just insane
@@anon_148 It's clear from their uploads that they're not. Notice how generalising about the character of people based on their skin colour lead you to a provably wrong conclusion. They really oughta have a word for this kind of thing so you can avoid it in future.
@@wungus-bongo Yea, I think you misunderstood what I said totally. I really don't think I know more than anyone else, but I can say with certainty he has the motivation to do great things and he will be successful at whatever he does end up doing.
This is awesome. I don't understand a thing, but I can experience your passion through your work. Lovely to see how you are so motivated to grow and I thank the UA-cam algorithm for showing me this, it gave me a big confidence boost!
Hi Sean, Your maker portfolio is incredible. I spent 12 years at MIT and hope you enjoy your time there. Make sure you leave time aside to work on your own projects and the self-education you are clearly already doing.
This randomly popped up on my recommendations. Congratulations dude, this is an achievement and you earned it. You're really good at explaining a complicated process. Good luck on your future endeavors!
This is sick. I'll be joining you at MIT next year and I just love seeing all these portfolios.
Super dope man you explain this breadth of ECE in a very well construed manner at a young age super nice to see. I made a drone this year in a makerspace internship at my university and the design / engineering process is super rewarding and gratifying but super difficult and time consuming
Hey sean CONGRATS on your acceptance, I would love to see more about the rasberry pi drone you built, Im a biologist and chemist and never really had a interest growing up in robotics and coding but you def have sparked something in me, would love to see more abotu that drone man !
looking forward to your career bro. Really impressive stuff
Wow dude you’re super talented. I’m close to graduating with a bachelor’s in Mechanical Engineering and I still fell stupid af. I blame my lack of hands-on participation as I never got the chance to work the type of stuff shown in the video.
Anyways I’m proud of you and you for a bright future ahead of you.
This is literally the knowledge that I gained from college as an EE major that just graduated last May. It's incredible how much you've accomplished on your own and honestly this is enough to land you a job as a junior engineer anywhere lmao. Hope to see you work in Boston Dynamics with me if I get accepted but ik you def will haha
hey how was it? did u see him there? genuinely curious
I am a master's student (final year) of electrical engineering. I have never done and never will do such a things. What a waste...
@@Lorium. i wanna do these things but dont have the resources to. I live where the maker scene is generally dead and there is no public places that offer the use of the more expensive gear. I did consider asking my dad since he is a investor into a EV charger company where he might know someone through that that can set me up. I did get a tour of Rolls Royce norway dep. by a relative that is a manager there, great work they do with electric duct fans
@@Lorium. i do want to work as an engineer for Kongsberg defense&aerospace as they will need more employees in the years to come and to me it seems so interesting to work there
@@Lorium. how is this a waste ?
Congratulations on your admittance and your journey at MIT. I don't know you but I'm happy for you!
I never did this in high school, I never would've even dreamed of being able to do something like this a few years later in the present day. This is just so impressive and mind-boggling. I'm kinda glad I got rejected from MIT because I don't think I could stay somewhere where everyone around me is at this god-level of wizardry. Congrats though!
This is impressive. Keep building useful solutions Sean, the world needs more people like you.
Bro, you're good. These are the skills I'm trying my best to improve 🥺
I’m a college electrical engineering student, and while I wills say the embedded code stuff and PCB is familiar, but other than that I myself could not do all of that… Major props and CONGRATS on your “admittance” into MIT!!!
This is amazing amazing work. Great job! Seems like you'll have a fascinating career!
I'm awed by this damn I'm in highschool in a computer science profile but I don't know where I could start learning things like these!
The definition of hard work! (and smarts too ;D) Well done! 👍
Congrats on your acceptance man! This popped up in my recommended and I’m glad I clicked on this haha, quite impressive stuff you’ve got going on here!
Was wondering if you’d be willing to share your stats, however I understand if you wouldn’t like to. Anyways congrats again and best of luck on your future endeavors :)
Fantastic work and great presentation!
Absolutely incredible stuff, GG's !
Absolutely insane. Wishing you the best.
Cool projects! Congrats on your acceptance.
Seems like you’ve got a pretty clear head for this stuff. Looking forward to seeing your contributions to technology in the future! Think outside the box, sure, but think about linking disciplines that are barely connected by anyone yet and I’m sure you’ll have a hit.
Wow! Very nice job. I hope you do great things in life!
your code implementation looks great, keep it up!
Go forward and do amazing things. Never stop learning.
Congratulations! Great job!
Loved reading this portfolio, glad you got accepted, you earned it.
man you are killing it. good freaking job.
Wow, this is really impressive. Great job!
I already graduated but I watch videos like these to get ideas for fun projects to do. These are so impressive.
Awesome portfolio!! Keep going!
The algorithm carried me here. Congrats on your acceptance man, wish you the best in your future.
I don't know why was this video recommended to me, I'm not interested in robotics but I'm terribly happy for you, looks like you love what you're doing and you're also good at it! Great job man.
Very cool work dude! Inspiriing.
Bro this is insanely cool!
Impressive stuff! Best of luck in your future :)
Color me impressed. Wishing you well for the future, young engineer.
So awesome, congrats!
As a senior college engineering student who has never accomplished close to this I am astonished, bravo. Glad to see in the comments im not the only one phew
Amazing work!
This is really impressive. I’m about to graduate college with an EE degree and the only part of this robot that I could build is probably the PCBs and some of the lower level sensor code. The fact that you were able to build the entire robot shows me that you will go very far in life. By the way, did you end up getting accepted?
Thanks for the kind words! I'm sure you could do most of it though... I probably just have a more time as a high schooler. Yeah, I was accepted.
Congrats bro you have accumulated college level skills before even starting!
This is where i want to get to. i already know programming really well, 3D modeling fairly well, and some pcb design, but i need to learn electronics and i need to learn more math theory stuff. Hope i can one day get here and then go further
Congrats on your acceptance! VSCode light theme though...
We will watch your career with great interest!
You probably didn't expect this to explode, but the ai thought you were worthy! Well done on the robotics!
you are an inspiration dude , keet the good work up and best of luck
Nice video, and cool projects! The datasheet for the AS5600 seems to imply that the hysteresis can be disabled over I2C using the HYST bits in the CONF register, or that you could directly read the RAW_ANGLE register over I2C instead of using the analog/PWM output. If you already tried that, disregard me.
Holy shit that's incredible!
you are an inspiration!
Congratulations, impressive!
Congratulations!
Really inspiring!!
what the fuck, this is some next level stuff, congrats man
I don't know why I got this recommended but now I see that I am very dumb and lack a stupid amount of knowledge. Congrats on getting accepted and good luck.
i love yt algo to bring me here you did a good job so far
I'm speechless. Lol. Congrats tho! You'd def enjoy your time in MIT!
I guess we now know who's going to be the future #1 in Mechanics and Robotics. Ready yourselves for this guys future company boys
That's awesome my dude
Great career ahead of you :)
my man just described most wholsome inventions in last 20 seconds what a legend
Great work
Really cool stuff 🎉
You’re not too bad yourself man lol
ye bro this jus got reccomended to me you def are gonna make it bro
Also is that miramar lake in the vid lmaoo
Man, this is call to action for me, as someone who's struggling with motivation to study. Turns out I've been comparing things the wrong way. YT and Social Media being useful once in a while
That's so cool!
I'm much impressed
I was half-way through until I realized that you are applying to MIT...dude you are amazing! I majored in ME but can't build shit
Hello, this is great! Can you help with learning resources for the quad robot? (Preferably the one you used in particular) thanks.
Congrats in advance 👏🏽
This is awesome
Awesome Brother
Congrats on your acceptance!
When I watch those videos, I ask myself what they can learn in uni. It seems like there is no point in paying so much money.
It inspires me to keep learning :)
Although I’m not nearly as intelligent as you, I aspire to be as motivated in my work as you are. Good stuff dude
Great job
Anything inverse kinematics really is just so freaking cool to watch
yes
Awesome , this is so inspiring. Wow! Could you please tell me how did you start and how I should start? I am very interested. Maybe upload video talking about this?!? Besides, awesome job!
what was your experience before making in the summer of covid? that's pretty impressive to do all that in the span of like 2 years. my senior design class we made a spider bot that can walk and shoot a grapple. that took all damn semester and didn't do half the stuff you described lol. luckily i work for a utility and don't need to know anything about that stuff now
I listened like I could correct you on something even tough I didn't understand a thing
I wish my high school had a real computer science course when I went, they taught Word and Powerpoint and had no connections for internships anywhere.
It's depressing knowing there are people this smart out there -- and at the same time this young. I'd wish you good luck in life but you probably won't need it. I promise you I'm not one of the dislikes on this video.
Amazing work and congrats! Can you give some pointers on how you learned all this? person projects, school clubs or something else?
Would love to know also
The world needs more and more talented Engineers liek you, who work technically to create better products, the ones that others can't do even they are rich.
Wow at this age you are so productive
How do you learn all these amazing stuff? Can you please also make a video what did you learn to create this quad robot and also from where did you learn it. Please share your resources with us mere mortals as well man. Phenomenal work Brother ❤️
Fantastic.
Amazing 🤩 instant subscribe
All you have to do it train it in a reinforcement learning gym, and you are good to go. No need to join MIT.
Hey, this is really cool. I wanted to ask specifically about how you learnt the hardware/electronics part. I think most people can nowadays pick up programming via online material and books. But how did you become good with hardware? Was it purely self study through books and online videos? Because i dont think they go into these topics in high school.
Dude you are a beast
This is absolutely mind-blowing to me, and wish you all the best at MIT! Just wondering, how did you originally get started programming and designing these machines?
I started out with some basic Arduino projects (stuff you can find online) and then just started doing my own stuff. I typically had only a very rough idea of how to make my projects work going into them... you figure everything out as you go, and I think you learn a lot more and faster that way. It's just a matter of being motivated!
Hey Sean. I am amazed by your projects. There is one think i would like to know. How do you learn these kind of hard stuff ? What is the methodology or resources etc. I mean if i decide to this kind of things, how should i advance ?
Keep going and doing what you love and learning. Don't waste your time on bullshit and distractions!
Daaaaaaaaaaaamn son, thats all i have, DAMMNNN, Keep the hard work bro