Over 51,000,000 YouTube channels exist.

99.8% of them are a waste of time.

Here are 10 channels that are GUARANTEED to entertain you AND make you smarter🧠:

1/ @theatlaspro

I had no idea that geography, geology, biology, and ecology could be so interesting

https://t.co/4fHdnY8ffU
2/ @TheCrashCourse

10 minutes lessons on any almost subject that you can think of

https://t.co/jXfo51WcpC
3/ @MarkRober

Former NASA engineer teaches science lessons through videos that will entertain the whole family

https://t.co/dBImT1ewgG
4/ @thephysicsgirl

Short videos that explain physics in a fun and easy-to-understand manner

https://t.co/F8DZmGyj9F
5/ @PolyMatters

A series of well-made documentaries about a wide variety of geopolitical topics

https://t.co/aUCIRqqkG1
6/ @RealLifeLore22

"Answers to questions that you've never asked."

https://t.co/SfGxNanHW8
7/ @RealEngYT

Wonderfully detailed videos on a variety of engineering constructions projects

https://t.co/OyBzGPF77n
8/ Practical Engineering

Short lessons on how the infrastructure that makes modern life possible works

https://t.co/K5h2AiyyLr
9/ @veritasium

Videos about science, education, and anything else the host Derek finds interesting

https://t.co/MDgt6QUfpL
10/ @wendoverpro

Mini documentaries on a wide range of interesting topics

https://t.co/tpAhSpu6RQ
BONUS:

@Brian_Stoffel_ & I teach new investors how to research companies from scratch and we share the most important investing & money lessons we've ever learned

https://t.co/wFMwTR292X
This is just a tiny sampling of the best YouTube content that I've come across...

I made a downloadable google sheet with links to ALL of the best channels I’ve found, broken down by category.

You can download a free copy of the full list here:

https://t.co/bGdXvsjKf3
Summary:

1: Atlas Pro
2: Crash Course
3: Mark Rober
4: Physics Girl
5: Poly Matter
6: RealLifeLore
7: Real Engineering
8: Practical Engineering
9: Veritasium
10: Wendover Productions

What channels do YOU love? Let me know below!

More from Brian Feroldi (🧠,📈)

More from All

@franciscodeasis https://t.co/OuQaBRFPu7
Unfortunately the "This work includes the identification of viral sequences in bat samples, and has resulted in the isolation of three bat SARS-related coronaviruses that are now used as reagents to test therapeutics and vaccines." were BEFORE the


chimeric infectious clone grants were there.https://t.co/DAArwFkz6v is in 2017, Rs4231.
https://t.co/UgXygDjYbW is in 2016, RsSHC014 and RsWIV16.
https://t.co/krO69CsJ94 is in 2013, RsWIV1. notice that this is before the beginning of the project

starting in 2016. Also remember that they told about only 3 isolates/live viruses. RsSHC014 is a live infectious clone that is just as alive as those other "Isolates".

P.D. somehow is able to use funds that he have yet recieved yet, and send results and sequences from late 2019 back in time into 2015,2013 and 2016!

https://t.co/4wC7k1Lh54 Ref 3: Why ALL your pangolin samples were PCR negative? to avoid deep sequencing and accidentally reveal Paguma Larvata and Oryctolagus Cuniculus?

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"I really want to break into Product Management"

make products.

"If only someone would tell me how I can get a startup to notice me."

Make Products.

"I guess it's impossible and I'll never break into the industry."

MAKE PRODUCTS.

Courtesy of @edbrisson's wonderful thread on breaking into comics –
https://t.co/TgNblNSCBj – here is why the same applies to Product Management, too.


There is no better way of learning the craft of product, or proving your potential to employers, than just doing it.

You do not need anybody's permission. We don't have diplomas, nor doctorates. We can barely agree on a single standard of what a Product Manager is supposed to do.

But – there is at least one blindingly obvious industry consensus – a Product Manager makes Products.

And they don't need to be kept at the exact right temperature, given endless resource, or carefully protected in order to do this.

They find their own way.