2024 and this is the third time I am watching the full interview. Still learning new things!
@PeeTree-bx6lpКүн бұрын
I love this video. It just hurts that I cry cause I slave away building stuff just as complicated but can't afford food while people get to stand around without a worry in the world. Me i don't know how I'm gonna make it another year.
@billhamilton23662 күн бұрын
This is the second time I've watched this video. Luke is a very humble guy with a genius ability. He is a few years older than me but miles smarter in so many ways. Quit biting your finger nails Destin.
@RichardDavis-wk3tx2 күн бұрын
10:37 Jesse Plemons cameo
@ryhol54173 күн бұрын
So cool! I’ll never get sick of hearing these guys’ stories. Keep getting them. The welding and metal working guys probably have a lot of good experiences
@Diesel08073 күн бұрын
And we still cant do it lol...what a strokefest
@_MaxHeadroom_3 күн бұрын
I just noticed that this occurs when you tear one of those pop ice/otter pops off from the bunch in the dark
@Qrul4 күн бұрын
Loved this!
@billleslie22515 күн бұрын
That video and photo was amazing.
@idostreamz50527 күн бұрын
proper smart guy
@yngve66407 күн бұрын
Hi from Norway🙂 You and Mr. Luke Talley made this an awesome interesting historical learning tour of the Saturn V program. Mr. Talley is such a pleasant guy to hear this history from. His knowledge and memory from his own participation, and everything he has learned and picked up about the programs from the start and up until today, is a goldmine of cool data. Thanks for this video, it gave me so much new interesting facts about the Moon rockets.
@clearstar758 күн бұрын
Amazing man and program. I was born in 1957 and lived this stuff as much as was possible with 3 TV channels and hard copy material available to the public. Thanks to both of you for this outstanding video. So many details provided by Mr Talley that were unknown to me. I hope you realize what an important video you have and make sure it gets saved for future generations.
@Carnac3118 күн бұрын
I just received my order over here in Europe and I have to say it was extremely well packaged (without actually creating way too much trash).
@robertweeks42408 күн бұрын
enjoying smarter II looking forward to SMARTER III
@user-tt3kb3oq7x8 күн бұрын
WoW
@msgic08088 күн бұрын
내면 소통 책을 보고 왔습니다 사용한 투명(?)한 액체가 궁금합니다
@rinyotsu2.09 күн бұрын
Framed and hung! Thank you so much for making the photo available!
@Ben-wl3el9 күн бұрын
Wow! Thank you!
@-Mike9 күн бұрын
Luke, most knowledgeable, least amused / impressed. Maybe he is over nerds bc he is simply brilliant.
@BinariusDigiton9 күн бұрын
WOW! Thank you both for the experience shared in this video. What a treasure to be able to get a first hand, in depth transfer of knowledge from history to today. Mr. Talley gave us so many answers to the little 'Hmm, I wonder...' questions that aren't big enough to be included in most retrospectives on the topic (and that not many who aren't in engineering would appreciate anyways). Destin truly blessed us by spending quality time with Luke. Given Destin's own background, he was able to get so much more from Luke by asking pertinent questions at the right places. I have added this video to my playlist of 'must preserve' videos. I got so much value from it, and will get even more value every time I watch it again in the future. Thank you gentlemen. This was great!
@70dreadnought10 күн бұрын
So much good information, too bad its continually interrupted by the 'smarter everyday' guy proving he isn't.
@Mvcrash10 күн бұрын
Got the photo. Wife loved it as well, thanks.
@cydniedonat763510 күн бұрын
I would love to meet Mr. Luke Tally. I watched this with my husband, who actually got to be at one of the Saturn take offs. My husband was and still is astounded by the 'Earth moving under his feet' and his whole body feeling the immense power of this rocket. Mr. Tally is wonderful and fascinating. Listening to him, I felt I, as a woman, especially could listen to him talk about this for days. We have watched this episode 4 times and learned something new each time. Wow, thank you! ❤
@PyroRob6910 күн бұрын
Surprised Linus didn't know anything about this memory. It has been around since the 50's. All of the ground support and guidance checkout for the Titans were all relay logic. It was older than this basic silicon technology. It was later replaced using an IBM 286 to do all of the ground support. Linus stands on the shoulders of giants, and he doesn't even know it.
@sulfur3206611 күн бұрын
Amazing just amazing 😢
@samm92811 күн бұрын
That was cheap propaganda back in the days .. they can barely make to the space station with ULA rocket now days, even that is leaking helium .. THEY NEVER WENT TO THE MOON .. what a joke
@thegrumpyoldmechanic62456 күн бұрын
Sez you, a random crank on the internet. The January 30,1970 issue of Science alone has 144 papers on the data and samples from the Apollo 11 moon landing. They were written by more than 800 experts including Harold Urey, Eugene Shoemaker, Luis Walter Alvarez and Raymond Davis Jr. That you have no idea who those people were and what their research was disqualifies you from participation in this conversation.
@maxfan15915 күн бұрын
"THEY NEVER WENT TO THE MOON .. what a joke" The thousands of scientists who've studied the ~380 kilograms of Apollo moon rocks for the last 50 years would disagree with you. They *know* those rocks can't be from Earth.
@silverssonyoutube843811 күн бұрын
Just wait till someone figures out molecular teleportation 3d printing using quantum technology. When bob lazar said the ships were made in one piece with all the equipment impregnated into it at the same time .
@craigiedema170711 күн бұрын
I've watched this twice now. Luke is a seriously smart person.
@handynomad154812 күн бұрын
Just received both of the metal prints in the mail today, the timelapse 2024 eclipse AND the 2017 ISS solar transit. They look awesome. Thank you so much for making them available. How can I share a photo of their new home?
@customknife112 күн бұрын
This video made me cry. Thank you.
@joemcweeney754512 күн бұрын
Very cool process, amazing technology!
@THE-X-Force14 күн бұрын
This video should be submitted to the Library of Congress for preservation.
@Scramblerkidd14 күн бұрын
As a kid back in the 1960s. Every time their was a launch my nose was glued to the ol black&white CRT. Those were great times
@justavoice576314 күн бұрын
LIARES!!!
@justavoice576314 күн бұрын
LOL!
@alfadasfire14 күн бұрын
Now almost 6 years later, how far are you with the 50 yard challenge?
@bigasianLA15 күн бұрын
5 engines. Vs 32 engines 🤔
@sitaattiviiva15 күн бұрын
This was super interesting video! I've visited Kamerastore three times: today to pick up a camera from the 30's, last Friday to pick up some paper and two weeks ago to pick up some light seal foam - and bought the t-shirt right up. I live 15 minutes walk away. This video really opened my eyes to what they are doing in there. Full respect. Plus they live on the right side of the best city in the world, TAMPERE! Easy to shoot on film here with companies like Photostella and Kamerastore answering the needs.
@michiganjack133717 күн бұрын
I used to develop film for small business in Huntsville in 2002-2003 and honestly it just made me happy to see actual film being used. Truly makes me long for those days, it may have been my favorite job ever.
@markmartin957717 күн бұрын
This video is incredible. Luke is a national treasure. Brilliant guy and makes the principles behind the engineering so understandable for a layman like me. Thank you so much for putting this out there.
@Jakiita117 күн бұрын
its funny how when you say "you", you dont mean them literally buying the camera but they always correct you that its the company xD Its interesting how language across the world and the way a non maternal language speaker interprets things
@m.w.450817 күн бұрын
"Standing on the shoulders of giants." Never has a truer word been spoken in the case of all current space programmes. The technical limitations that these guys were working within truly demanded them to pioneer and implement a new process for every single tiny step of this mission. Nothing that the likes of Boeing, SpaceX etc. are doing today would be even marginally possible had it not been for the leg work that these legends did back in the day.
@thatstoodeep475817 күн бұрын
He died April 18th 2024
@jsadamcik18 күн бұрын
I would pay for an extended interview with Luke Talley. On not just his Apollo work but also on his other projects. It would be a real shame for his story to be lost to history.
@assistantto00718 күн бұрын
Sneaky... Hiding detailed views of the connections between the SM, the CM and the LEM... From what I gather, the hatches aren't large enough to allow an astronaut wearing a spacesuit to pass between them...
@maxfan159116 күн бұрын
"Sneaky...Hiding detailed views of the connections between the SM, the CM and the LEM..." There's plenty of information about how they were connected. What would you like to know? "From what I gather, the hatches aren't large enough to allow an astronaut wearing a spacesuit to pass between them..." The docking tunnel was 30 inches in diameter. That's quite wide enough for a man to pass through, whether in space suit or not. The lunar module hatch was 32 inches square, just big enough for the astronauts to pass through. We have photos of Buzz Aldrin *in* the hatch, and video of the Apollo 17 astronauts practicing passing through the hatch in a Vomit Comet plane. What wasn't possible was passing through the docking tunnel while in space suit and with the back pack on. However that wasn't intended to occur on the mission: the backpacks were only intended to be worn for the moonwalks, so they were stored in the lunar module.
@alanhawk675518 күн бұрын
I have to tell you I really enjoyed this video as well as your others We visited there last year plan on going back space travel has always been a huge interest of mine since school I’m 66 now got to see Apollo 15 launch in person at employee distance because my Aunt worked at NASA at the time keep up the good work you’re never too old to learn Thanks again
@johnalmquist581319 күн бұрын
So awesome! But he says NERMALLY
@johnalmquist581319 күн бұрын
5:31
@richardofoz216719 күн бұрын
We've been lied to all this time. The moon is NOT green cheese after all. I guess all those thousands of dollars this program cost weren't wasted after all.
@richardofoz216719 күн бұрын
How many viewers today would have any idea who Alan Shepard was?
@DaisyFox-cv8vm20 күн бұрын
It's such a weird feeling as an experienced computer tech watching this video (in a good way) that everything they say, is right. They don't bend the truth, their marketing is basically non-existent. This is THE WAY to tailor a PC to the customers'needs. This is how it SHOULD BE done. That's professional quality control. I'm so glad, that after many "arguments" with customers on why did I do it this way or that way, or why I recommend choosing this or that specific component is also beeing confirmed by others in the industry. I'm so glad that this video is out there, so people can see behind the scenes of computer systems engineering.