YouTuber Mehdi Sadaghdar shows how the pain caused by electricity varies according to frequency by hooking some electrodes up to his own tongue. No, seriously. CNET freelancer Danny Gallagher has ...
(CBS News) While we did a post on the subject just a bit ago, who can ever get enough of science? So let's take a look at two cases of science made cool, though with very different endings. Up first ...
His pain is our gain. This week’s electrifying How Success Happens guest is Mehdi Sadaghdar, the mastermind behind the wild, funny, educational and totally ridiculous YouTube channel ElectroBOOM. With ...
[Mehdi Sadaghdar] never lets little things like fire, shocks, or singed fingers get in the way of his projects. His latest is a tutorial on making a simple electroshock device. A stun weapon creates a ...
If you take too much electricity into the body it may result in death but an appearance of a challenging body trying to figure out how far you can endure by raising the voltage gradually, the American ...
"There is blood coming out of every hair hole!" Then he tries electrolysis, or as Mehdi understands it, something like a taser that zaps the hair dead. Er, call yourself an electrical engineer Mehdi?
Have you ever seen hilarious but painfully atrocious experiment videos by Iranian Canadian electrical engineer and YouTube personality Mehdi Sadaghdar? If not yet, you should definitely watch it now.
Occasionally — not occasionally enough, according to my kids — I visit a website that features raw, unedited, at times disturbing videos of events from around the world. Scenes of war, traffic ...
Do you have an old broken smartphone lying around the house somewhere? Then why not turn it into a robot? That's exactly what YouTuber Mehdi Sadaghdar did in a recent video, after his efforts to bring ...
Some people say that engineers are humourless, but if you're YouTube phenomenon Mehdi Sadaghdar, that's definitely not the case. Mehdi plays (I think it's an act) a bumbling EE with a penchant for ...