How Tech Works | Ex-Engineer
20 posts

How Tech Works | Ex-Engineer
@HowTechWorksX
Ex-engineer tearing apart tech to show you HOW it actually works 🛠️⚡️ No hype. No BS. Just facts.
Katılım Nisan 2024
10 Takip Edilen187 Takipçiler

POV: It’s 2AM, you swore “one more episode” 4 episodes ago… and now you’re questioning every life choice you’ve ever made 😭
Who else is guilty? RT if this is you tonight 📷
#Relatable #NightOwls #SendHelp
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@Ukrainene Don't interfere in Turkey's affairs. We'll sort out our problems among ourselves.
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When it comes to the Kurds, if you were to add up the total Kurdish population in both Iran and Turkey, they would outnumber the Turks in Turkey and the Persians in Iran. Furthermore, Kurdish civilization is thousands of years older than that of the Turks. In the same way, the Persians established their civilization and history on the bedrock of Kurdish history.

CNN@CNN
Everyone is watching to see whether Kurdish fighters will launch a ground offensive into western Iran. So, who are the Kurds? Read more: cnn.it/3OONlCd
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Over a thousand years ago, Chinese inventors discovered how to turn bamboo into paper. They soaked bamboo in water for months until it softened into pulp, then mashed and boiled it into fine fibers.
The mixture was spread onto screens, drained, and left to dry under the sun ,becoming thin, smooth sheets of paper.
It was a game-changer. That simple process carried ideas, stories, and knowledge across centuries ,shaping civilization itself.
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Mathematics isn’t just an academic subject; it’s the operating system of the modern world. It is the invisible engine that powers everything from your pocket-sized GPS to the financial markets and every encrypted message you send.
It is the core language of logic and structure that fuels cutting-edge technology. Calculus provides the tools to accurately model and predict motion, from satellites to sports cars. Algebra translates complex real-world decisions into solvable equations.
And Geometry is the blueprint for architecture, designing everything from the simple lines of a home to the complex curves of modern city skylines.
The power of math is also found in the patterns of nature and security. The Fibonacci sequence organizes petals and pinecones, fractals describe the jagged beauty of a coastline, and large prime numbers form the impenetrable shield that guards your personal data online.
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We all feel the urge to push the pedal a little harder when we’re running late, believing it’ll save a ton of time. But here’s the physics kicker: speeding really doesn’t save you much time at all, especially on shorter trips. It’s the Time-Saving Bias at work, making you think you gain more minutes than you actually do. The math is non-linear—increasing your speed by 10 mph from 40 mph saves a lot more time than going from 80 mph to 90 mph. Once you’re already going fast, each extra MPH gives you diminishing returns. On an average commute, you might only save a few minutes, which can be instantly nullified by one red light, traffic, or, you know, a costly ticket. The small reward is absolutely not worth the huge increase in risk. Slow down and enjoy the drive!
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@kakarPathan_ @grok find a wird that begins with t and end with t
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It looks simple — just a small metal plate at the bottom of the door.
But in an emergency, it can withstand thousands of pounds of force, making it almost impossible for anyone to break in.
The Nightlock Lockdown device was designed to protect school children and staff during lockdowns.
Teachers can activate it in seconds — no special training, no complicated setup.
In a world where every second matters, sometimes the smallest tech makes the biggest difference.
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This blew my mind.
With one button, the seat glides out, lowers itself, and lifts you back into the car — smoothly, safely, and without you moving a muscle.
For elderly passengers, people with mobility challenges, or anyone recovering from an injury, this isn’t just a cool feature…
It’s freedom.
Smart tech isn’t always about speed or power — sometimes, it’s about making life simpler for the people who need it most.
#SmartTech #MobilityTech #AssistiveTech #TechForGood #InnovationDaily #FutureMobility #TechnologyExplained #Innovation
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See that little bar under the back of a truck?
It looks pointless,but it’s a life-saving invention called a Mansfield bar.
Before it became mandatory, rear-end collisions with semi-trucks were often fatal. Smaller cars would slide under the trailer, causing catastrophic injuries.
After actress Jayne Mansfield died in a 1967 underride crash, these bars became mandatory on U.S. trucks in 1968.
Now, they quietly save thousands of lives every single year,without most drivers ever realizing it.
#RoadSafety #InnovationDaily #SmartTech #TechForGood #DidYouKnow #FutureTech #EngineeringMagic
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Vein scanning technology is a relatively new innovation in medicine. It non-invasively shows a fpatient’s veins and bloodflow. That allows doctors to spot any problems in advance, and speed up treatment.
#technologyexplained #medtech #healthinnovation #veinscanner #infraredtech #futureofmedicine #innovationdaily #didyouknow #interestingfactsdaily
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These machines are beasts — they can place 200,000 components an hour. And here’s the kicker: factories in the US and China often use the exact same equipment.
So if the factories look alike and work at the same speed, why are products from China usually cheaper?
Because over there, everything is built around the factory. The chip makers, packaging plants, and suppliers are all in the same region. That means shorter transport, fewer delays, and lower costs.
On top of that, Chinese exporters get tax rebates, labor is still cheaper, and they run massive production volumes that spread costs across millions of units.
Turns out, it’s not about the tech. It’s about the supply chain and economy
#technologyexplained #manufacturingfacts #ChinaTech #supplychainsecrets #engineeringmagic #electronicsassembly #futuretech #didyouknow #interestingfactsdaily
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Luxury leather repair is an art most people never get to see up close.
For high-end cars, designer bags, and exclusive furniture, specialists use microscopic sanding, precision heat treatments, and custom-blended dyes to restore damaged leather to factory-new condition.
Even deep cuts, burns, and cracks disappear completely, no seams, no patches, no traces. That’s why a single repair can cost up to $3,000. You’re paying for invisible craftsmanship, not just fixing a tear.
#technologyexplained #leatherrepair #luxurytech #luxuryrepairs #beforeandafter #satisfyingvideos #craftsmanship #innovationdaily #didyouknow #interestingfactsdaily
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Back in 2010, Jaguar teamed up with Williams F1 to build something wild,the C‑X75. This hybrid supercar didn’t just go fast. It roared like an actual jaguar.
Every time you pushed the pedal, the engine,notably the electric-micro gas turbine combo,didn’t just hum; it growled in a way that reminded you of a big cat springing into action. This wasn’t a special effect,it was baked into the design. The noise matched the car’s looks and heritage, straight from a sci‑fi dream. 
Jaguar showed this prowling beast off at the 2010 Paris Motor Show. It turned heads not just for its speed,hybrid power, under‑three‑second 0‑60, and 220 mph top-end,but because it sounded alive. 
Sadly, it never made it to production. Only a handful of prototypes exist. But the legend lives on,through its growl, its looks, and the idea that a car could feel like an animal in motion.
#technologyexplained #supercar #JaguarCX75 #automotiveinnovation #bioinspiredtech #conceptcar #futuretech #didyouknow #engineeringmagic #landroverfamily #interestingfact
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YouTuber and ex-NASA engineer Mark Rober set up a wild test: Tesla on autopilot versus a car with LiDAR. The scenario? A fake wall painted to look like the road straight ahead.
Tesla? It plowed right through. Absolutely no braking.
The LiDAR-equipped car? Came to a full stop.
In Rober’s words: “Tesla’s camera system would absolutely smash through a fake wall without even a slight tap on the brakes.”  
The test wasn’t all glitter, though. It prompted controversy,some viewers questioned the video’s authenticity, suspecting hidden sponsorship by LiDAR tech like Luminar. Rober released raw footage to push back.
Tesla’s system is built on cameras and neural networks, meant to mimic how humans drive. But that means it sees what it thinks it sees—not always what’s real. When the table was turned, LiDAR’s brute-look geometry called the bluff.
Long story short? In a world where painted walls can fool smart cameras, maybe it’s time to ask how Telematics really see the road.
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China’s luxury EV maker Nio is making headlines with its flagship ET9, and the suspension test says it all.
The ET9 uses SkyRide active suspension powered by ClearMotion. Tiny electrohydraulic actuators adjust the wheels hundreds of times per second, canceling out bumps before you even feel them. It doesn’t just react to the road — it predicts it.
BMW and Audi rely on advanced setups too, like Audi’s predictive electromechanical suspension, which scans the road ahead and preps for uneven surfaces. But compared to Nio’s precision, the difference is obvious.
During a recent demo in Shanghai, the ET9 floated over potholes, curbs, and speed bumps as if they weren’t even there. It’s a glimpse into how Chinese EV makers are quietly redefining what luxury feels like.
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Manchester engineers turned real mushrooms into a live orchestra 🍄📷
Tiny sensors on the caps catch natural bio-electric pulses → converted LIVE into MIDI → robotic arms play drums, violins, xylophones.
Not sci-fi. Actual fungi making music.
#BioTech #HowTechWorks
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