Glimpses of How it's made, 6 Minute Manufacturing 98
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."
6 Minutes (Score:2)
Re:6 Minutes (Score:1, Offtopic)
You'd be surprised. Many manufacturing processes are quite fast. That's why they can turn out thousands of widgets, sprockets, and cogs each day. Most of the time is usually spent in things like heating or rolling, processes where you don't need to record the entire thing to video. These are usually pipelined in such a way that the time taken has little to no impact on producing a widget per minute.
Of course, there are still some proce
Re:6 Minutes (Score:2)
LOL. The question was not, "Is that long enough to make this stuff?" but "is that long enough to really see...?"
Re:6 Minutes (Score:1)
I've seen a few different numbers (probably for different models, I expect), but modern auto assembly lines spit out entire cars in less than one minute each.
Or to look at it another way - You have 525,600 minutes per year (assuming 24/7). If you hope to manufacture one million of something per year (like, say, a modern video game console), you better have a way to make two per
Re:6 Minutes (Score:1, Insightful)
See:
http://www.assemblymag.com/CDA/ArticleInformation
The industry average is 26.4 hours per car!!
Re:6 Minutes (Score:1, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:6 Minutes (Score:1)
So yes, virtually all mass-produced products take well under six minutes to put together."
There's a teeny difference between "one car per minute" and "one minute per car." The former invokes thoughts of Henry Ford. The latter, of The Flash.
Re:6 Minutes (Score:2, Funny)
Factories are dull to work in, why would they be any less dull to watch?
Re:6 Minutes (Score:2)
with a video they can lead you through the (often reasonablly interesting) process spending only enough time looking at each section to see whats going on. discovery (at least here in the uk) have been doing shows like this under the name (how its made) for ages.
Re:6 Minutes (Score:2)
It's still incredibly boring. Seeing bits of machinery moving round and round loses its novelty after about 7 seconds.
discovery (at least here in the uk) have been doing shows like this under the name (how its made) for ages.
That's the one I'm talking about. It's a perfect cur
Re:6 Minutes (Score:2)
Cool (Score:2)
That, and tinkering with BASIC on my Spectravideo 738 MSX machine.
Re:Cool (Score:1)
Re:Cool (Score:2)
The host for the show us Norwegians watched back then was a woman, Vibeke Sæther, whom I know many a young boy had a crush on.
Re:Cool (Score:2)
Re:Cool (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Cool (Score:1)
Watch "glas" by Bert Haanstra (Score:2)
But hey who doesn't like to watch other people work :)
166 MB file... somebody torrent it quick! (Score:4, Insightful)
It's a fascinating video though, conveniently formatted for ipods with video.
Hi, I'm Troy McClure ... (Score:5, Funny)
M4V format, requires Quicktime to view on PC/Mac (Score:2, Interesting)
VLC or MPlayer (Score:2)
Re:M4V format, requires Quicktime to view on PC/Ma (Score:2)
Re:M4V format, requires Quicktime to view on PC/Ma (Score:2)
Re:M4V format, requires Quicktime to view on PC/Ma (Score:1)
Someone please seed torrent (Score:4, Informative)
A fascinating file though, conveniently formated for the ipod with video.
Apologies for dupe (Score:1)
Re:Apologies for dupe (Score:2)
Look everyone, an Internet Explorer user! Quick, gimmie the clue-stick!
Re:Apologies for dupe (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Apologies for dupe (Score:1)
Leaks!? A leak is what your faucet does. When I look and see Firefox's memory allocation well over 300mb, the image of a breaking dam comes to mind. Mozilla's little finger plugging Dutchboy is dead, drowned by a digital tsunami.
Re:Apologies for dupe (Score:2, Insightful)
How It's Made on Discovery Channel (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.exn.ca/ontv/series.asp?series=43701526
Re:How It's Made on Discovery Channel (Score:2)
Here's the show's web site [howitismade.net]
It's my 5 year-old's favourite non-animated show.
Re:How It's Made on Discovery Channel (Score:2)
It's probably only available in Canada, but it's a pretty interesting show.
It looks like most of the manufacturers featured are from Quebec and Lynn Herzeg performs multiple roles in the production.
Here's the crappy, Flash-only page [howitismade.net].
Re:How It's Made on Discovery Channel (Score:2)
Well, you've proven me wrong then. I just assumed that Canadian-produced Discovery shows were not widely available in the USA. I think they tried to capitalize on a "big name" by hiring a Canadian celebrity to do narration, Mark Tewksbury.
The program is about technology, not media personalities, and Herzeg does a great job.
Re:How It's Made on Discovery Channel (Score:2)
Yay! His delivery was the voice equivalent of Keanu Reeves' acting, which is to say, like plywood. Lynn's voice has also been erased: a new narrator is replacing both of them. Alas, he's not a lot better than Mark. He sounds like he's asleep.
Anyway, they're just redubbing the same script so the horrible puns and bizarre Canada-only words remain. The episode where they show the assembly of a common PC (a P3 iirc, sh
Re:How It's Made on Discovery Channel (Score:2)
I always thought that Lynn's voice lent a certain amount of credibility to it all, since she was also apparently actually involved in the details and research.
The first time I checked the promised "how computers are made" description on Videotron's text explanation, I knew it would be bad.
All the amazingly high-speed machines that are featured seem to have rotation as the key motion.
Thank God for whoever invented the wheel!
Re:How It's Made on Discovery Channel (Score:2)
Coral to the rescue (Score:3, Informative)
Mirror of the video [nyud.net]
Coral has 50MB limit (Score:2)
"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.
Um (Score:5, Informative)
Tom
Re:Um (Score:2)
Also, I seem to remember them not just from Dutch TV, but for some reason also off the German telly (Der Sendung mit Der Maus, IIRC).
Re:Um (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Um (Score:2)
I think the parent post was an attempt at a plus 1 funny mod (or maybe is confusing TLC with Discovery?).
Re:Um (Score:2)
Re:Um (Score:2)
Re:Um (Score:2)
The Music (Score:2)
Re:Um (Score:2)
It was kind of like the Mythbusters, in that it always ended in destructing the topic of investigation using explosions and fireworks.
Re:Um (Score:2)
The series was a masterpiece. And I have to say, it's available on DVD now too.
35/6 (Score:3, Funny)
made for TV (Score:1)
Because we need a museum (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Because we need a museum (Score:3, Funny)
How to do it... (Score:4, Funny)
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!
RE: -1 Flamebait (Score:1)
That's one jet airplane I won't be flying in (Score:1)
Re:That's one jet airplane I won't be flying in (Score:1)
Re:That's one jet airplane I won't be flying in (Score:1)
Re:That's one jet airplane I won't be flying in (Score:1)
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/223741_air
Paleolithic nonsense... (Score:3, Funny)
When are all these paleolithic types going to recognize that loss of manufacturing is progress to a services economy [google.com] -- that deficits don't matter [google.com] and that there is a Santa Claus?
Show on Science Channel (Score:2, Informative)
http://science.discovery.com/ [discovery.com]
http://science.discovery.com/tvlistings/series.jsp ?series=103469&gid=0&channel=SCI [discovery.com]
"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/survivorm an/survivorman.html [discovery.com]
How it's Made (Score:2)
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!
Re:How it's Made (Score:1, Informative)
I hear the one of .... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I hear the one of .... (Score:2)
Maybe I'm wrong, but isn't that short by about 9 months?
Baby != fetus != embryo
Direct Mirror (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Direct Mirror - pushing 100mb/s (Score:1)
Re:Direct Mirror - pushing 100mb/s (Score:1)
http://69.56.247.237.nyud.net:8090/download/howit
Re:Direct Mirror - pushing 100mb/s (Score:1)
"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?
Re:Direct Mirror - pushing 100mb/s (Score:1)
Encyclopedia Britannica (Score:2)
Re:Encyclopedia Britannica (Score:2)
It's called "Task of Blood" and it pretty disturbing in places.
It's out there in torrent form, if you look hard enough.
Another site with manufacturing videos (Score:3, Informative)
http://manufacturing.stanford.edu/ [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.
A 6 minute video of OSS software manufacturing... (Score:2)
6*x=35 ??? (Score:1)
mmm (Score:1)
6 Minutes = $2 per Part (Score:1)
It IS possible.
Way to go guys!!!
Video Quality (Score:2)
A.
How you do it... (Score:1)