Glimpses of How it's made, 6 Minute Manufacturing
ptorrone writes "We (MAKE Magazine) have released a free 35 minute film for download - "Glimpses of How it's made" - a tour of how many things in our world are made, each segment is 6 minutes (hence the full name "Six-Minute Manufacturing Glimpses of How it's made"). Learn about, get inspired, and see how stuff is made: LectroSonics (wireless microphones), Rose's Southwest Papers (paper converting), Accurate Custom (Injection Molding), Mega Corp. (water haulage equipment), Earthstone International (recycled glass abrasives), Butterman Tool (tool and die), Eclipse Aviation (small jet aircraft), Optical Insights (optical equipment). Downloads and more info."
Only 6 minutes? Is that long enough to really see how this stuff is made? I suppose it is just supposed to be a snapshot so...
Bradley Holt
This reminds me of sitting glued to the family TV as a child when my favorite children's show would run segments like this. Loved it, watching how all the machines in the factory worked.
That, and tinkering with BASIC on my Spectravideo 738 MSX machine.
This sounds great!
I think the length is fine, and nice that they packaged up a few into one...
Things can be made quickly?? Wake the president. This is important.
I'm not sure of the wisdom of the site owners in posting a direct link to a 166MB file on Slashdot... Why don't people just use bittorrent for distribution of files like this?
It's a fascinating video though, conveniently formatted for ipods with video.
You may remember me from such instructional videos as "Mothballing Your Battleship" and "Dig Your Own Grave and Save!"
quote from the site: This film is high quality, 166 MB M4V and will play on video iPods, as well as any PC/Mac with the latest version of QuickTime.
I'm not sure of the wisdom of the site owners in posting a 166MB file onto Slashdot... Why don't people just use bittorrent for distributing content like this? A mirror (a 100MB quicktime movie) is available, though, at http://downloads.oreilly.com/make/howitismade.mov
A fascinating file though, conveniently formated for the ipod with video.
This is like the show How It's Made on the Discovery Channel:
& TZ=0
http://www.exn.ca/ontv/series.asp?series=43701526
Mirror of the video
Hosting 20G hd, 1Tb bw! ssh $7.95
I can't help it. This slashdot-story seems dangerously near a commercial for MAKE Magazine. How did it slip through?
Or you could just use VLC or MPlayer on any system that those support.
8 processes. 6 minutes each. 35 minutes.
Apologies for the duplicate post - Internet Explorer froze up and I hadn't realized that the original comment went through.
In Canada on the discovery channel we have a "how it's made" series that shows how things are manufactured in about the span of 6-8 minutes. ... welcome to 2001
Tom
Someday, I'll have a real sig.
A 35 minute film broken up into 6 minute segments? Interesting.
It's good that we have an online museum like this because we in the U.S. will need to remember how to manufacture again once China floats the Renminbi.
Alan: Well last week, we showed you how to become a gynecologist. And this week on "How to Do It" we're going to show you how to play the flute, how to split an atom, how to construct a box girder bridge, how to irrigate the Sahara Desert and make vast new areas of land cultivatable, but first, here's Jackie to tell you all how to rid the world of all known diseases.
Jackie: Hello, Alan.
Alan: Hello, Jackie.
Jackie: Well, first of all, become a doctor and discover a marvellous cure for something, and then, when the medical profession really starts to take notice of you, you can jolly well tell them what to do and make sure they get everything right so there'll never be any diseases ever again.
Noel: Great, great, Alan. Well, next week we'll be showing you how black and white people can live together in peace and harmony, and Alan will be over in Moscow showing us how to reconcile the Russians and the Chinese. So until next week, cheerio!
All: Bye!
Lump lingered last in line for brains, and the ones she got were sorta rotten and insane.
Obviously this falls into the same category as the 42 minute hour.
Anyone know how long it takes other manufacturers to make their jet airplanes?
When are all these paleolithic types going to recognize that loss of manufacturing is progress to a services economy -- that deficits don't matter and that there is a Santa Claus?
Seastead this.
Doesnt anyone else watch the "How its made" show on the science channel?p ?series=103469&gid=0&channel=SCI
m an/survivorman.html
http://science.discovery.com/
http://science.discovery.com/tvlistings/series.js
"How its made" and "Survivorman" are two of the coolest shows on TV, you have GOT TO watch survivorman if you have not seen it yet. It rocks.
http://science.discovery.com/convergence/survivor
-- Given enough time and money, Microsoft will eventualy invent UNIX.
Discovery Canada (and Canal Z in french) show How it's Made.
There is nothing to download, you can't purchase them on DVD either but maybe they are available somewhere on bittorent.
At 3 subjects per 24 minutes you get an entire 8 minutes (not 6!) dedicated to a specific topic.
Too bad Discovery US doesn't pick it up. Their loss!
"In Canada on the discovery channel we have a "how it's made" series that shows how things are manufactured in about the span of 6-8 minutes. ... welcome to 2001"
How are babies made?
...how babies are made is especially interesting, but it's only 30 seconds.
Hahaha, high quality on video ipod. That's oxymoronic. Perhaps looks good on video iPod, and perhaps looks ok on anything else (like a desktop), but my views of high quality are closer to 720p/1080i (which would of course be an unrealistic download).
In undeveloped countries, the consumer controls the market. In capitalist America, the market controls you.
http://69.56.247.237/download/howitismade.m4v
I bet the music on this is nowhere NEAR as good/crap as the music on How It's Made. Even the announcer on Discovery has commented about it once or twice.
Pushing 100mb/s which is my max. Probably best to hold off this one during the initial rush till Tues
Did some interesting documentories that I saw on PBS, probably done in the 70's. No narration, just let the images speak for themselves (and therefore, in theory, no language barriers). The one I am thinking about was about a slaughter house. It was very graphic and covered everything from the judas goat leading the sheep into the killing pens to chopping up the shanks and extracting the brains. It almost turned me into a vegetarian. But it was a good view of what a meat processing plant does.
putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
how about people use the coral mirror of your direct link?
i smade.m4v
http://69.56.247.237.nyud.net:8090/download/howit
You can't coral big files like this I don't think:
"Because of bandwidth overuse, we temporarily capped off Coral to disallow transfers of files greater than 50 MB. "
Maybe this has changed or the implementation no longer implements this limit?
yup, you're right. Pity.
From the FAQ:
"Because of bandwidth overuse, we temporarily capped off Coral to disallow transfers of files greater than 50 MB."
Perhaps this has changed though, otherwise you just bump over to the server again.
Stanford University hosts another cool free site with manufacturing videos, entitled "How Everyday Things Are Made"
http://manufacturing.stanford.edu/
Here is the site's description:
"If you've ever wondered how things are made - products like candy, cars, airplanes, or bottles - or if you've been interested in manufacturing processes, like forging, casting, or injection molding, then you've come to the right place."
The videos play using Flash; some are longer than others. Since the videos are donated (they aren't made by Stanford) some of them spew a bit of propaganda, but overall they are excellent.
...would consist of very dark messy room with an unwashed dude eating pizza and scratching his bollocks...
But hey who doesn't like to watch other people work :)
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
So, if it is in 6 minute segments, and is 35 minutes long, what happened to the last minute/what do they do with the extra 5 minutes?
We raise our slide-rules high.
candy
why I have to download it? why not use a page like google video with flash? oh gosh.
I despise quicktime. Installing that beast is nearly as bad as real-player.
TT
http://static.thepiratebay.org/downloadtorrent/342 4743.torrent/Glimpses_of_How_it__s_made.3424743.TP B.torrent
Mmmm...Christmas Crack
Lump lingered last in line for brains, and the ones she got were sorta rotten and insane.
Just a FYI as a past owner of a similar type of business: take an average wage of $10 / hr and double it for all employee / employment related costs and a 6 minute part means that they can make ANYTHING (within reason for complexity) for about $2. They are trying to show (too subtle marketing in my opinion) that they can compete as a global player with China and India.
It IS possible.
Way to go guys!!!
Interested parties should note that the original M4V is of decent quality, however the MOV that people are referring to is not nearly as good. If you care about video quality, grab the original file (Quicktime will play it if you call it mp4).
A.
...bringing you cynical quips since 1998
A 1080p video would probably be something you would stream. It's only unrealistic due to the upstream bandwidth requirements to distribute such massive files.
'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
Was I the only one that read the title and pictured John Cleese as the host?