3:38
Silicon - Periodic Table of Videos
Silicon is a very abundant and important element. Videos about all the elements at www.per...
published: 15 Jul 2008
author: periodicvideos
Silicon - Periodic Table of Videos
Silicon is a very abundant and important element. Videos about all the elements at www.periodicvideos.com
published: 15 Jul 2008
views: 102352
8:54
How do they make Silicon Wafers and Computer Chips?
This shows how computer chips are made from silicon crystal, to wafer to chips. www.youtub...
published: 05 Mar 2008
author: cplai
How do they make Silicon Wafers and Computer Chips?
This shows how computer chips are made from silicon crystal, to wafer to chips. www.youtube.com is worth watching too. There used to be an episode of National Geographic documentary named "Naked Science" on youtube. It was about using synthetic diamond crystal in place of silicon as the chip substrate. Since diamond crystal can tolerate higher heat, a CPU can be over-clocked without the worry of a melt-down. If you like this video, you should also look up diamond based computer chips.
published: 05 Mar 2008
author: cplai
views: 373150
2:11
From Sand to Silicon: the Making of a Chip
This is how a microprocessor, the brain 'behind the magic' of your PC, is made. For more a...
published: 07 Nov 2009
author: channelintel
From Sand to Silicon: the Making of a Chip
This is how a microprocessor, the brain 'behind the magic' of your PC, is made. For more about process Intel employs in building the chips that power many of the world's computers, visit bit.ly
published: 07 Nov 2009
author: channelintel
views: 202877
6:01
Make Pure Silicon Dioxide
Here I show you how to make pure SiO2 powder using two relatively common chemicals. Sodium...
published: 19 Jun 2011
author: mrhomescientist
Make Pure Silicon Dioxide
Here I show you how to make pure SiO2 powder using two relatively common chemicals. Sodium silicate can be found as water glass, which has many uses including auto repair and sealant. Sodium bisulfate is sometimes used as pH down for pools, be sure to check the label to make sure it contains bisulfate. You could also get pure SiO2 by crushing up silica gel beads, but that might be difficult and the beads could have other additives that reduce purity. I'll be using the SiO2 I produced in my upcoming thermite compilation video.
published: 19 Jun 2011
author: mrhomescientist
views: 13525
2:29
Protheses mammaires naturelles_Natural_breast_augmentation by silicon gel implant_Dr BENADIBA
NATURAL BREAST AUGMENTATION IS POSSIBLE. Your surgeon need to find the good implant, good ...
published: 13 Nov 2010
author: warper2007
Protheses mammaires naturelles_Natural_breast_augmentation by silicon gel implant_Dr BENADIBA
NATURAL BREAST AUGMENTATION IS POSSIBLE. Your surgeon need to find the good implant, good size, the good way in your case. One implant for One women. More informations: www.prothese-sein.com. Augmentation mammaires par protheses en gel de silicone, un résultat naturel est possible.
published: 13 Nov 2010
author: warper2007
views: 9313
2:23
what is silicon
what is silicon Name Origin Latin silex, or silicis (meaning what were more generally term...
published: 20 Dec 2010
author: bbawor
what is silicon
what is silicon Name Origin Latin silex, or silicis (meaning what were more generally termed "the flints" or "hard rocks" during the Early Modern era where nowadays we would say "silica" or "silicates") "Silicon" in different languages. Sources Silicon is the second most abundant element and comprises 25.7% of the earth's crust (oxygen is first). Makes up major portion of clay, granite, feldspar, mica, asbestos, quartz (SiO2), and sand. Primary producers are Austria, Italy, India, South Africa, Australia, Canada, the USA and Brazil. Every year around 5000 tons of electronics grade silicon is produced.Abundance Universe: 700 ppm (by weight) Sun: 900 ppm (by weight) Carbonaceous meteorite: 1.4 x 105 ppm Earth's Crust: 2.771 x 105 ppm Seawater: Atlantic surface: 0.03 ppm Atlantic deep: 0.82 ppm Pacific surface: 0.03 ppm Pacific deep: 4.09 ppm Human: 260000 ppb by weight 58000 ppb by atoms Uses Used in glass as silicon dioxide (SiO2). It is used as a semiconductor to make microchips for electronics (like your computer). Silicon is also used in solar cells, tools, cement, LCDs, grease and oils. History Silicon (Latin silex, silicis for flint, flint's) was first identified by Antoine Lavoisier in 1787, and was later mistaken by Humphry Davy in 1800 for a compound. In 1811 Gay-Lussac and Thenard probably prepared impure amorphous silicon through the heating of potassium with silicon tetrafluoride. In 1824, Berzelius prepared amorphous silicon using approximately the same method ...
published: 20 Dec 2010
author: bbawor
views: 5784
1:22
Silicon Wafer Processing Animation
This video shows the steps involved in producing a silicon wafer. SVTI offers courses in I...
published: 18 Dec 2007
author: khosrow1
Silicon Wafer Processing Animation
This video shows the steps involved in producing a silicon wafer. SVTI offers courses in IC Layout, PCB Layout, Analog Design, Digital Design, RFIC and Signal Processing
published: 18 Dec 2007
author: khosrow1
views: 155974
62:45
Secret History of Silicon Valley
[Recorded: November 20, 2008] Today, Silicon Valley is known around the world as a fount o...
published: 04 Dec 2008
author: ComputerHistory
Secret History of Silicon Valley
[Recorded: November 20, 2008] Today, Silicon Valley is known around the world as a fount of technology innovation and development fueled by private venture capital and peopled by fabled entrepreneurs. But it wasn't always so. Unbeknownst to even seasoned inhabitants, today's Silicon Valley had its start in government secrecy and wartime urgency. In this lecture, renowned serial entrepreneur Steve Blank presents how the roots of Silicon Valley sprang not from the later development of the silicon semiconductor but instead from the earlier technology duel over the skies of Germany and secret efforts around (and over) the Soviet Union. World War II, the Cold War and one Stanford professor set the stage for the creation and explosive growth of entrepreneurship in Silicon Valley. The world was forever changed when the Defense Department, CIA and the National Security Agency acted like today's venture capitalists funding this first wave of entrepreneurship. Steve Blank shows how these groundbreaking early advances lead up to the high-octane, venture capital fueled Silicon Valley we know today.
published: 04 Dec 2008
author: ComputerHistory
views: 140824
10:17
GLOBALFOUNDRIES Sand to Silicon
...
published: 09 May 2012
author: globalfoundries
GLOBALFOUNDRIES Sand to Silicon
2:07
Pirates of Silicon Valley trailer
Pirates of Silicon Valley trailer...
published: 23 Jun 2006
author: Igziabeherljbp
Pirates of Silicon Valley trailer
56:31
The Secret History of Silicon Valley
Google Tech Talks December 18, 2007 How Stanford & the CIA/NSA Built the Valley We Know To...
published: 21 Dec 2007
author: GoogleTechTalks
The Secret History of Silicon Valley
Google Tech Talks December 18, 2007 How Stanford & the CIA/NSA Built the Valley We Know Today, presented by Steve Blank. How much does an average Googler know about the history of the place he/she works in - Silicon Valley? Come and test your knowledge. I have seen this talk and I assure you - even seasoned Silicon Valley veterans will find this story interesting. Silicon Valley entrepreneur Steve Blank will talk about how World War II set the stage for the creation and explosive growth of Silicon Valley, and the role of Frederick Terman and Stanford in working with government agencies (including the CIA and the National Security Agency) to set up companies in this area that sparked the creation of hundreds of other enterprises. Steve Blank spent nearly 30 years as founder and executive of high tech companies in Silicon Valley, most recently the enterprise software firm E.piphany. He has been involved in or co-founded eight Silicon Valley startups, ranging from semiconductors to video games, and personal computers to supercomputers. He teaches entrepreneurship at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business, Columbia University and Stanford's Graduate School of Engineering. This talk was hosted by Boris Debic
published: 21 Dec 2007
author: GoogleTechTalks
views: 212416
45:59
Pirates of Silicon Valley (Documentary)
A look at Silicon Valley in the early days as told by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, Bill Gate...
published: 13 Oct 2011
author: Valery Kvon
Pirates of Silicon Valley (Documentary)
A look at Silicon Valley in the early days as told by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer, Paul Allen, and other insiders from Apple, Microsoft, Intel, IBM, and Xerox. See how the personal computing revolution began. (from www.applerumortracker.com)
published: 13 Oct 2011
author: Valery Kvon
views: 102558
2:11
Sand to Silicon - the Making of a Chip (full screen)
This is how a microprocessor, the brain 'behind the magic' of your PC, is made. For more a...
published: 12 Nov 2009
author: channelintel
Sand to Silicon - the Making of a Chip (full screen)
This is how a microprocessor, the brain 'behind the magic' of your PC, is made. For more about process Intel employs in building the chips that power many of the world's computers, visit bit.ly
published: 12 Nov 2009
author: channelintel
views: 223240
0:22
Berlitz ad - Silicon
Campaign: Changes Agency: Grey Tel-Aviv Creative Director / Copywriter / Art Director: Sha...
published: 21 Jan 2008
author: shanigershi
Berlitz ad - Silicon
Campaign: Changes Agency: Grey Tel-Aviv Creative Director / Copywriter / Art Director: Shani Gershi Account Manager: Dani Brande Executive Creative Director: Yonatan Stirin Account Supervisor: Galia Bialer, Daphna Cherny Account Executive: Anita Psavko Agency Production: Rinat Keinan, Asaf Ronen Production: Muki Ben Hemo Post production: Broadcast Director: Regev Contes Photographer: Benji Cohen Editor: Oded Farber One Show Shortlist
published: 21 Jan 2008
author: shanigershi
views: 121500
Vimeo results:
8:41
Uppercut
“In Silicon Valley we have the highest concentration of aggressive people in the United St...
published: 06 Feb 2011
author: California is a place.
Uppercut
“In Silicon Valley we have the highest concentration of aggressive people in the United States. And it's a place where all life has been reduced to working in a cubicle and then after work going out to have a Merlot at the Fromage bar. I'm kind of looking for something a little more primitive, a little more basic, something that appeals to the essential nature of a man."
-- Gints K., Software Engineer & Founder, Gentlemen's Fight Club
A film by Drea Cooper & Zackary Canepari
4:18
Susanne Sundfør - White Foxes (Official video)
White Foxes" is the first single from Susanne Sundfør's new studio album "The Silicone Vei...
published: 22 Feb 2012
author: Susanne Sundfør
Susanne Sundfør - White Foxes (Official video)
White Foxes" is the first single from Susanne Sundfør's new studio album "The Silicone Veil" which is available now in Scandinavia and scheduled for release in the Rest of the World on 05.10.2012.
More info: www.thesiliconeveil.com
Buy/Stream "White Foxes":
iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/no/album/white-foxes-single/id498783552?uo=4
Spotify: http://open.spotify.com/artist/54KCNI7URCrG6yjQK3Ukow
WiMP: http://wimp.no/album/13460303
Follow Susanne online:
www.susannesundfor.com
www.facebook.com/susannesundfor
www.twitter.com/susannesundfor
www.youtube.com/susannesundfor
CAST & CREW
Director: Mats Udd
Cinematography: Johannes Helje
Producer: Andreas Emanuelsson
Production Company: Bob Film Sweden
Production Managers: Erik Skånmyr, Moa Rönnåsen
Editing: Anton Skott
Styling, Susanne Sundfør: Sofia Fredricks Sprung
Makeup: Anna Lindström
Set Decorator: Beatrice Strand
Assistant Set Decorator: Siri Ånnegård
SFX: Leo Thörn
Graphic Design, Props: Edvin Thungren
Assistant Camera: Anton Österlund
2nd Assistant Camera: Marlon Viking
Steadicam Operator: Néstor Salazar
Electrician: Theodore Ryan
Grading and Online: Ida Svenonius
Cast: Samuel Hall, Börje Lundberg, Jan Johansson, Patrick Clarke, Airiana Ileshaj, Christopher Eriksson
5:29
MAKE presents: The LED
Take a tour through the world of the light-emitting diode. Learn - who invented it, how t...
published: 19 Nov 2008
author: MAKE magazine
MAKE presents: The LED
Take a tour through the world of the light-emitting diode. Learn - who invented it, how to use it, and how to make your own.
Collin Cunningham: People are fascinated by light. I mean just glancing over at a display of flashing lights can grab my attention. Do you ever remember sitting around a campfire? Staring at the flames and just being totally transfixed, almost like if you're watching TV. It's comforting, and it can even by hypnotic. Recently, technology has made creating light a whole lot easier to do. For that, we have this little guy to thank. The light emitting diode, or LED for short.
LEDs have a lot of different uses, from a simple power on indicator to traffic signals. LEDs use about ten percent of the energy of a traditional light bulb, and they can last about thirty times longer. That makes them a pretty big hit with businesses looking to do large scale visual communication.
The first person to ever report the effects of a light emitting diode was researching another form of communication. In 1907, a man by the name of H. J. Round was researching radio waves for Marconi Labs. He was using a device called a cats whisker detector, which no, does not contain any cats or part of cats. Round was searching for a sweet spot on a crystal silicon carbide when he noticed something odd. Part of the crystal started to glow, it lit up a pale yellow, and that was an LED.
H. J. Round's crystal experiment was so cool and simple that I had to try it myself. So I got a piece of silicon carbide, then I hooked that up to the positive lead on my power supply. That's an alligator clip. I hooked a little sewing needle to the ground on my power supply. Then I began to search for light emitting zones.
I built my own sort of cats whisker detector in order to keep the needle in place on a particularly bright spot I found. Now I can sit back and enjoy the warm glow of a homemade LED anytime I choose, even though it's pretty dim, but it's still cool.
As far as we know, Round's research into light emitting crystals ended here, which is a shame because he was definitely on to something. But of course that's not the end of the story. Fifteen years later, in imperial Russia, a scientist and inventor named Oleg Vladmirovich Losev noticed that certain diodes in radios started to glow a bit when in use. Losev conducted a lot of heavy research and published his findings in several languages. But, sadly, they seem to have gone unnoticed. It wasn't until 1962, that a visible light emitting diode was made practical by Nick Holonyak working at General Electric. He's widely known as the father of the LED.
The technology that Holonyak brought to the public is remarkably similar to our crystal experiment. A thin metal wire connects one side of the circuit to a small piece of semi-conductive material on the other side. The LED's two leads are cut to different lengths to show you how it should be connected. The longer is called the anode, and that connects to positive. The shorter is the cathode, and that goes to negative. To power an LED, you can just use a simple coin cell. This is a CR2032. And just make sure the longer lead is on the positive side, which is wider and smoother, and negative is on the other. If you plan to use a battery, let's say a nine volt, you'll also need a resistor to limit the current so we don't burn out the LED. Connect negative to the cathode, the shorter lead, and we'll put a 470 ohm resistor between the positive battery and the anode. For more useful info, check out the LED Center, and there's a lot of great history at the LED Museum. For all types of project ideas, info, and inspiration head over to Makezine.com.
0:30
Flex Watches
FLEX Watches lifestyle.
www.FLEXwatches.com
Song: "Searchin" by Solar Heist
https://ww...
published: 11 Oct 2011
author: Flex Watches
Flex Watches
FLEX Watches lifestyle.
www.FLEXwatches.com
Song: "Searchin" by Solar Heist
https://www.facebook.com/solarheist
Youtube results:
1:58
Silicon Photonics Hardware Demo
Demonstration of the hardware and technical description of the 50G Silicon Photonics Link....
published: 26 Jul 2010
author: channelintel
Silicon Photonics Hardware Demo
Demonstration of the hardware and technical description of the 50G Silicon Photonics Link.
published: 26 Jul 2010
author: channelintel
views: 98855
1:46
Shit Silicon Valley Says
written, filmed, and edited by Kate Imbach & Tom Conrad twitter.com & twitter.com...
published: 25 Jan 2012
author: kibb7711
Shit Silicon Valley Says
written, filmed, and edited by Kate Imbach & Tom Conrad twitter.com & twitter.com
published: 25 Jan 2012
author: kibb7711
views: 1596917
4:30
Eiffel 65 - Silicon World
Song: Silicon World Artist: Eiffel 65 Album: Europop...
published: 20 Nov 2007
author: priestofpain
Eiffel 65 - Silicon World
Song: Silicon World Artist: Eiffel 65 Album: Europop
published: 20 Nov 2007
author: priestofpain
views: 420335