- 23 hours ago
فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
📚
LearningTranscript
00:00Join us for the second episode in a row
00:10The father of nuclear physics and the father of electromagnetism
00:15Ernest Rudderford and Michael Vardy in a historic showdown
00:20Before I start the episode, I just want to know if the father of nuclear physics and the father of electromagnetism bother you in any way whatsoever?
00:26No, I'm fine.
00:27No, no, no, never
00:28I just feel it's a bit of an insult, like comparing the father of nuclear physics to the father of electromagnetism.
00:33No, no, it's okay, it's okay
00:35No, no, no, no, it's not a problem at all.
00:37Let's get into the topic of the episode.
00:39Today's question is: Do physical quantities belong to humanity?
00:43Or that
00:44Yuba
00:45What they created will talk to us about the subject and tell us about Tesla, his electrical engineer.
00:48Are you making a mistake about Tesla again?
00:49Oh, Tesla, he's an engineer!
00:51And what is its engineering?
00:52This is the most difficult of them all in Egypt
00:53This is someone who reinvented the wheel
00:55Why waste time like this?
00:56The wheel was the first invention of civilization.
00:58It's not staying with me.
00:59The episode is about Tesla, not about Gokh.
01:00His developer
01:02It's a literal recycling of the wheel concept.
01:05This has happened several times throughout history.
01:07The first thing humans discovered was that they could tame animals
01:10They put a wheel on them
01:12So the cart remained
01:13And the first thing he discovered was the energy of water.
01:15Put a wheel in it
01:16So the stream remained
01:17The first thing that steam was discovered
01:19He moved the wheel
01:20So the mechanical engine remained
01:22Did it come about electricity?
01:24If Tesla hadn't invented the developer
01:25Someone else would have invented it.
01:26This does not diminish Tesla's achievement.
01:28This does not negate
01:29This magnetic field is not his.
01:30Not his father's
01:31So that he could name it after himself.
01:32What did he see, you coward?
01:33In the name of the element, one hundred four
01:35In the periodic table
01:37This periodic table, I think, is from a different program.
01:40Razor Fordium
01:41Razor Fordium
01:43One of the later elements in the periodic table
01:45Honestly, this is a miracle unique in the league.
01:47You signed it, it landed
01:48And this is an element
01:50It means a material that we hold in our hands.
01:52A substance from nature
01:53The one we are guests of
01:54And their names
01:55Rutherford
01:56My country, my name is three, the best
01:58That's all.
02:00She appeared and obeyed
02:01Even if the travel is unpleasant
02:03Because there is no subject named after him
02:05Why don't we say you're selfish?
02:07I don't want my name to be mixed with yours.
02:09prejudiced
02:10Biased
02:11Sudoscience
02:12Sudocrem
02:13Vimto, one tray
02:14We can go back to Nikolatella
02:23Dear viewers, peace and blessings of God be upon you.
02:24Welcome to a new episode
02:26From the Al-Daheeh program
02:27Dear viewer
02:28At the beginning of 1880
02:30The world was experiencing a technological boom
02:32In all areas of life
02:33The reason for this boom is the Industrial Revolution.
02:35Industrial Revolution
02:36It was caused by the emergence of devices
02:38Useful inventions
02:39With a shock and very quickly
02:41Electrical supplies store every day
02:43New merchandise is being released
02:44For example
02:441876
02:45Alexander Geranbell
02:47He is registering a patent for the telephone.
02:49A year later
02:501877
02:51Thomas Edison records
02:52Phonograph patent
02:54This is my dear
02:55Abu al-Grammaphone
02:56And I find Spotify
02:57In 1880
02:58John Mill
02:59He invents the modern earthquake detection device.
03:01A year later
03:02Alexander Bell
03:03He takes another patent
03:05Equivalent detection device
03:06Many inventions
03:07And many offers
03:08Dear viewer, before the Industrial Revolution
03:10Her bridal trousseau was not stiff.
03:11You could have surpassed Bevin
03:13After the Industrial Revolution
03:13The devices appeared
03:14Device updates
03:15Entertainment devices
03:16And it remains flawed, we will sign off on it.
03:18The Industrial Revolution
03:19Everyone was racing
03:20In order to come up with new inventions
03:21Fisher's name
03:22His inventions spread among the people
03:24Next, he started selling and making a profit.
03:25He works on a TikTok account
03:26Amazon links are being added
03:27Therefore, it was the custom of inventors at that time
03:29If they send agents for them
03:31In order to sell their inventions and products
03:33In Europe
03:34One of these agents was in the house of Bushkash
03:36He was an agent for Continental Edison.
03:38In Paris
03:39Bushkash too, my dear
03:40Jarhambal's agent
03:41The person responsible for establishing the Boda Past telephone exchange
03:44At this time, my dear
03:45Tesla worked at the Central Telegraph Office.
03:48Government official
03:49He can gain very good experience there
03:51In the design of electrical circuits
03:53And when the work at Central Buddha Past started
03:55And the phones are ringing, ringing
03:57Jeephosh Kashain Tesla
03:58As a technician, I am raising awareness about electricity.
04:01But when he discovered how clever this man was
04:03He's a genius at his job
04:05He said to him, "Hey Zamin, you're in a similar situation."
04:06Your interest in Buddha Bast is eliminated
04:07And then we'll go to Paris and work together.
04:09And we feed them sweets and roses
04:11We will benefit from Edso's incandescent lighting system.
04:14And something really nice that you'll love: Tesla's year
04:15And indeed, my dear Tesla, he traveled to Paris.
04:17He continued to acquire engineering knowledge and experience
04:20Especially in the dynamo and electric motor industry
04:23But what's meant, my dear, is that he doesn't read about engines, he imagines them.
04:26No, that's just my country's dream.
04:28Hadz an
04:28Toto was on the couch, with his sleeves rolled up, and got into the machine.
04:30The problems and defects of the devices are obvious to him, and they are being manufactured.
04:33Therefore, his knowledge and understanding of the details remained blind.
04:36This practical experience helped him more in the process of thinking and imagining.
04:40The one who was still preserving it until now
04:41He usually still practices it
04:43He was always thinking about how to make his imaginary engine, the one in his head, work.
04:46It turns into a truth-telling statement
04:48In fact, Tesla had reached a certain conclusion.
04:50Uncle, this imaginary developer
04:52The conviction that the developer imagines in his mind
04:54It's not possible for him to work as a continuous or direct pilot.
04:56He needs to contact a hesitant pilot.
04:58And I loved for one second
04:59You're talking about the persistent and hesitant pilot; they had companions
05:02Who are these people?
05:02These, my dear, are the two types of electric aircraft.
05:04Don't worry about them right now.
05:05The details of the explanation will come in due time.
05:06The important thing is to know that this continuous pilot
05:08He was the helper at that time
05:10Everyone is continuing to use continuous pilot
05:12The hesitant pilot remained a source of reluctance for some to use him.
05:15Tesla, over time we'll start to see that he was trying to push them a little
05:19They cheered, "Come on, pilot! Come on, pilot! You're awesome!"
05:21Describe yourselves, come on!
05:23Go down to the gym, put on some cologne and look cool
05:26The women who will love you
05:27This, my dear, is the most comprehensive explanation you'll ever hear about electric aircraft.
05:30There is no reduction
05:31And forced if there wasn't someone strong enough to use the hesitant pilot
05:33Any electrical needs at this time
05:35However, Tesla believed the exact opposite.
05:37But he saw that this hesitant electric pilot was the solution.
05:40But he hadn't yet solved the puzzle completely.
05:43Tesla's time working in Paris wasn't long.
05:45Because one of Edson's feeders there noticed his gaze
05:48His storytelling is strong, and he possesses impressive engineering skills.
05:50No matter what he says to him, no
05:50You're not there, are you?
05:51You could go to Thomas Edison in America and work for him.
05:54Tesla, my dear, every time he went somewhere, he discovered his genius and they sent him somewhere even better.
05:58He really couldn't rely on the place
05:59This man, my dear, wrote a letter of recommendation addressed to Thomas Edison, in which he told him
06:03I know two great men, and you are one of them.
06:05The other one is the handsome young man standing in front of you.
06:07Before you do that, my dear Tesla, travel to America
06:09He was hired by Edison Machine Works
06:12Tesla worked on building electrical facilities in New York City.
06:16Electricity in the cities was still relatively new, my dear.
06:18And the people are now broke and their job is to install meters.
06:20Tesla also worked on the design of a number of Thomas Edison's devices.
06:23The one who was working with the direct pilot
06:25As I told you a little while ago
06:26Tesla was dying in the hesitant pilot, as he meant
06:28So he went to Edison and tried to suggest to him the use of the hesitant pilot.
06:32However, Edison completely rejected all of Tesla's ideas.
06:35Stay focused on your work and stay connected with the live stream.
06:37Don't go along with the hesitant one
06:39One of them says to him, "O Abu Hamid"
06:40So how do you convince Tesla with logic?
06:41Be honest, my dear
06:42He said to him, "Okay."
06:42I've never seen anything, Abu Hamid
06:43He gave up so easily.
06:44Oh, my dear
06:45At that time, Tesla was still a young and inexperienced engineer.
06:47Edison was a great businessman and a great hacker.
06:49We are talking here about Thomas Edison in his prime.
06:51In his season
06:52The important thing is that Tesla considered this situation and tied the donkey where it would return, which is difficult.
06:55Then another incident occurred between Tesla and Edison.
06:58Tell him to quit his job completely.
06:59Tesla says Edison offered him fifty thousand dollars
07:02Which is nine hundred thousand dollars in today's money.
07:04What did Abu Hamid ask for in return for this money? What did he write?
07:06What?
07:07I'm not from the investigation, the man who's the direct pilot, he is
07:09That's the truth, my dear
07:09This money is in opposition to Edison and Tesla, if he could
07:12It's working on some difficult improvements.
07:14And it breathes on the engine and generator of the direct pilot
07:17Tesla says he kept this issue in mind.
07:20And he was able to work on it day and night
07:22In order to be able to overcome these improvements
07:24And the action of Hazizi was able to bring Edison such a brilliant new invention
07:27He is working on this project.
07:28Important, Hazizi finished his work and was full of enthusiasm, optimism, and joy.
07:32What Thomas Edison tells him
07:34Go ahead, Mr. President, with this job.
07:35Where is my masturbation?
07:36$50,000, Rice
07:38We want to choose now and see the glory
07:39Edison asked him what exactly his $50,000 was for.
07:41Do you remember what you told me?
07:43Work on this project and make improvements.
07:44And you have $50,000 in return
07:46Edison kept it for him
07:46Hey'D and Soviets
07:48Oh my God, this is an American sponsorship deal!
07:49Is it because every time
08:03This means that Loja suffers from a title for Nikola Tesla's journey
08:05During this period of his life
08:06Late before 19
08:08Our strength will be innovation and perseverance.
08:10Immigrant from his country to America
08:12No with cœlm
08:13No image
08:14Not a single need
08:14All his tricks
08:15Shawateh Maaref
08:16And the fundamental sciences in his brain and the practical experience he witnessed with his blindness in the field of electricity
08:19And of course he knows how to imagine a little and make things up out of thin air.
08:22His only capital is his mind and imagination.
08:24And during his time working with Thomas Edison
08:26Tesla suggested he was developing an arc lighting system.
08:29Or what is called the Arc Light
08:30For example, Edison wasn't very interested in that.
08:32After Tesla left the company
08:34Tesla, with the help of a lawyer, testified to Moel Serne
08:36He designs and patents a new lighting system in his name.
08:40At that point, he enters into a partnership with two businessmen.
08:42He traded his patent with them for shares in their new company.
08:46Tesla Electric Light Anti-Manufacturing
08:48Aziz Al-Suwaidi Cables outlet
08:49Soon they started working and secured a contract with the state of New Jersey.
08:53Indeed, Tesla was able to obtain several patents during that time.
08:56Despite these signs of success, my dear
08:57However, Tesla wanted to revisit his ideas for hesitant pilot engines.
09:01And I think they should invest in it.
09:04We want to replace this hesitant pilot with Edison's direct pilot.
09:07Let me tell you that Tesla's partners weren't very convinced by this hesitant pilot idea.
09:11Edison, who is Edison, means he's telling you to work directly.
09:13However, Tesla remained steadfast in his dream.
09:15I want to work with the reluctant pilot
09:16In 1886, Tesla's partners decided to leave him and start another company without him.
09:22They'll abandon him, my dear, and the company, and leave him bankrupt.
09:25If Muhammad is with you, tell him not to worry.
09:27Because I am confident in his intelligence, genius, and imagination, which will bring him back and help him stand again.
09:31Enough with the invention phrases he's been using for years!
09:33This tells you, my dear, that Tesla's invention is only useful in certain fields.
09:37Because he gave it up to the company in exchange for shares
09:39The stock and the company lost.
09:41Therefore, at that time his family was nothing
09:43He no longer has any source of income.
09:45Here, dear Tesla, he was forced to do any job just to survive.
09:49To the point that at one point a trench digger was employed, working and digging in the ground for two dollars a day
09:55Tesla later commented on this period, saying it was the worst time of his life.
09:59Fadel Hassiz Tesla suffered from extreme poverty until 1887 when his fortunes changed completely and he met two remarkable individuals.
10:08They are Alfred Brown and Charles Peake
10:10Like anyone who sees Tesla, a pen recognizes his genius and appreciates his capabilities.
10:14Both men financially supported Tesla's inventions and worked together to establish Tesla Electric in 1887.
10:20Because of this new company, life became more pleasant for Nikola Tesla, and money started flowing in his hands again.
10:25He decided to exploit the faith of his partners and new innovators in his ingenious inventions, believing he was operating a new laboratory.
10:30He was able to develop and experiment with new engines and electrical devices.
10:34The one who dreamed of implementing it
10:35And indeed, my dear friend, I tell you about Sa'il's news.
10:37In 1888, Nikola Tesla realized he was fulfilling his long-held dream.
10:41The first hidden engine is being developed
10:43He works as a reluctant pilot
10:46Tesla showcased the engine and successfully tested it; this is from the American Institute of Electrical Engineers.
10:51At Columbia University in New York
10:52The well-known organization is IEEE
10:54IEEE, my dear, is one of its most important competitions.
10:56She is responsible for three-quarters of Egypt's events
10:58Text of the speeches of Egyptian engineers
11:01How can my dear country love him after five years at university?
11:03The engineer from my dear country will be in the army for three years.
11:05Then the girl, whom God has blessed with grandchildren, will come to him and distribute gifts to them.
11:09Muhammad, this is a nice story and a nice affliction.
11:11And I'm happy to make you happy, Nicolatis
11:13But I don't know how to make things simpler with you.
11:14Because I lack engineering knowledge
11:16Which unfortunately was not explained thoroughly and completely.
11:20And I disagree with this program because it's not just a storytelling program.
11:22And I am taking from you what I need in this program
11:24Science simplifies things, and there's poison in honey.
11:25I don't know science and I don't know honey.
11:27That's enough, my dear, you've moved me.
11:29I'm going outside now with my apple.
11:31And I have an explanation of the difference between a reluctance pilot and a direct pilot.
11:35May God grant you success.
11:36I'm telling you, my dear, I won't hide from you that I was eager to explain from the very beginning of the episode.
11:39But I was hesitant
11:41To understand the great achievement that Nikola Tesla was able to accomplish
11:44We need a broader historical perspective and context regarding the issue of electricity.
11:48And they need help in answering the question, which might be due to their poverty.
11:51Why did everyone reject this hesitant pilot?
11:53What's the difference between the new Tesla developer and the developer who was already working on Direct Pilot?
11:57Let me tell you
11:57In the early days of electricity, the standard or recognized method was the use of DC.
12:01Or Direct Current
12:02Direct pilot
12:04A direct pilot is a pilot that flows steadily and in one direction along the electrical circuit.
12:09This is most likely due to the work of the world's first electrical scientists.
12:12Specifically in the United States of America
12:14Who is like whom?
12:15Thomas Ederson's costume
12:16These, my dear, are the ones who started the dragon, Ederson.
12:18As you know, which program for earning a million dollars is available on your computer?
12:21He was the one who developed the first electric light bulb in the world.
12:24In the late 1870s
12:25From that point on, talk began to emerge about electricity production and distribution systems for cities.
12:30So that companies and households can use this great invention
12:32And with the spit
12:33A.M. Ederson inaugurated the first power plant in New York
12:371882
12:39The direct pilot system was the first system to be developed and implemented on a large scale.
12:43Especially since the process of studying and distributing it was not a complicated process.
12:47Why? Because the pilot flies in one direct direction.
12:50However, the direct pilot was a very big celebration.
12:53It is very difficult to convert to high voltage in order to transmit over long distances.
12:57And at the same time, it's difficult for it to turn into a reduced effort.
13:00So that the houses can be distributed and people can use them.
13:03In simple terms, my dear, it can't be both.
13:05And in order to create a central station, you need to reach many places, some quite far away.
13:10I need something more dynamic than that.
13:13It needs a strong pilot to strike long distances.
13:16The moment it gets close to the houses, it starts to become weak.
13:18So that when you enter the house, you don't electrocute people or burn out appliances.
13:21I understand this is a simple explanation, like that.
13:23My dear, what a huge photograph!
13:24It needs high pressure and a water jet.
13:27So that you can travel long distances
13:28It covers a large residential area
13:30But at the same time, this flow needs to be something.
13:33Distribution time
13:34It's not possible to use the same water supply as the city's.
13:36Do you understand, my dear?
13:37I know you definitely don't understand
13:38And in short, if you're not an engineer
13:39But I mean, it's Perodh B
13:40So, my dear, that was the problem with the live stream.
13:41If he treats me strongly and treats me weakly
13:43That's why, my friend, the DC or Direct Current system
13:46Which is the direct pilot
13:47Just so you know all the names
13:48It was very expensive, and it was enough for him and the night.
13:51Okay, let me tell you
13:52Direct pilot devices
13:53Electric motor costume
13:54It needed commutators
13:56To reverse the pilot's direction
13:57Each half roll
13:58As we explained in the previous episode
13:59This caused problems such as a lack of efficiency.
14:02And the sparks that could be dangerous coming out of it
14:04Get bought
14:04He lived in a completely different world, all by himself.
14:07Let people wander off on their own.
14:09It focuses on solutions to problems faced by direct pilots.
14:11He stepped back two lines and then... what did you say?
14:13Why did he even make it a direct pilot?
14:15Fadl
14:15Imagine the world if it were operated by a hesitant pilot.
14:18I wonder
14:18How will the devices function then?
14:20At that moment, in his imagination and in his opinion
14:21The flaws will be fewer
14:22And efficiency will be higher.
14:23Tesla believed that the hesitant pilot
14:25He was the solution to the problem.
14:26Of course, my dear
14:27When you know he's thinking about this
14:29Many people offered it
14:30As we saw
14:30Edison was the first of them
14:31But of course, Edison and the rest of the people
14:33Tesla's face was decisive and firm.
14:35He completely ignored his ideas.
14:36Hatch the word "dah"
14:37No, I'm not here.
14:37Mahatch
14:38His treatment and kindness
14:38No, Ahmed
14:39Oh, he's not even trying to find a solution to the problem.
14:40What a problem, my dear
14:41As you know
14:42Science has another side, and that side is business.
14:45When you come to me, you tell me
14:46I have a better and more efficient pilot.
14:49And I'm not just any ordinary person.
14:51I have stations
14:52I have contracts with cities
14:54I work with inventions bearing my name.
14:56I have his companies and employees whose food I need.
14:58His investments and golf matches
15:00My work, my household expenses, and my children's food
15:02Hi with the live electric pilot
15:04What you want to cut
15:06This is something
15:06The second need
15:07These ideas were old
15:08It was the tenth
15:09It was difficult for people to understand and accept it.
15:11Especially since Tesla is dear
15:12Sales wasn't good
15:14He lacked shrewdness and business acumen.
15:16Which was with the chosen ones of his time
15:18Edessa
15:18He didn't know how to sell himself and his inventions to people.
15:21But despite all the challenges
15:23Tesla with his intelligence
15:24He was able to solve the problem of the hesitant pilot.
15:26Honestly, before we delve into the engines of the hesitant pilot
15:29Let's remember
15:29What happens in the direct pilot engine?
15:33Khalidi will take you on a journey inside the direct pilot engine
15:35Or what is known as a continuous pilot engine
15:38Inside it is a fixed magnet in one place
15:40This forms the fixed outer part of the engine.
15:42Or what is known as the stater
15:43While inside there was a coil of wires
15:45This is the same thing that's going around
15:47It's a monster called a router
15:48or courses
15:50The interaction that occurs between the permanent magnetic field
15:52The one about the fixed part
15:53temporary magnetic field
15:56Output from the router
15:57Like the one who's looking
16:02Either the pilot's direction changes, or it reverses.
16:04By means of chemists
16:06What Tesla had imagined
16:07The magnetic field of this stationary stator can rotate
16:11I want to inhibit a swirling magnetic field.
16:12I'm Tamaghi, I'm fed up with you
16:13My dear, I want you to expand your imagination.
16:15I want you to be a Tesla
16:15Tesla is with me like this
16:16We actually take a magnet and place it between two electromagnets like this
16:20If the pilot were to run direct electricity through them in this way
16:22It will create a repulsive force on the magnet in the middle
16:24And you'll make him wrap
16:25The hesitant pilot is moving with a fluctuating coil.
16:28It means its workers go in and out and come back again inside the coil.
16:31Today we are assisting an electric pilot and a frequency of 60 Hz
16:35Which is going back and forth, back and forth, 60 times per second
16:39Of course, my dear, this bed is a bit big.
16:40Let's use 1 Hz as an easier option, my friend.
16:43Which is a pilot who changes direction once per second
16:46At zero seconds, this pilot will create poles on the electromagnet.
16:49Let the magnet in the middle rotate
16:51We will adjust the sizes of the pieces so that before the magnet completes its rotation and settles
16:56The second one is complete
16:56Therefore, the pilot's direction was reversed.
16:59Therefore, the poles were also reversed.
17:02Therefore, the magnet returns to repel the new electromagnetic poles of the second
17:07The rotation continues, and before it stops, we've entered the third second.
17:10The pilot then reversed for the third time.
17:13And here the magnet continues its rotation, and so on and so forth and so forth
17:16Of course, my dear, this is a very simplified and condensed version of the details.
17:19But this is Tesla's basic idea from afar.
17:22Oh, this is Rasouda, Muhammad, all this from afar
17:23But if it's completed soon
17:24Tesla, my dear, when he came up with this idea
17:26Imagine a couple or two bears of electromagnets
17:29Around the rotor
17:30So that the force of repulsion between them is great and strong
17:33Tesla's new invention caused a huge stir
17:36First advantage of Tesla's developer over the Direct Pilot developer
17:39It is that he completely dispensed with the commutator part.
17:41The one who was next to Kon and the source of the dangerous spark
17:44It was also a cause of energy waste through heat.
17:47This is something that reduces the competence of any developer in general.
17:50This new design makes the developer very suitable for industrial and commercial applications.
17:54Diamond Protection from it
17:55Sufficiency is a very important need.
17:57This is a feature, my dear, of this ingenious invention.
17:59And also because the commutators disappeared
18:01The developer needs the data that was happening in the live flight.
18:05For the direct pilot developer
18:06What did you have with you?
18:07Conch is looking for a spark
18:08So it heats up
18:09Therefore, it needs to be a siyana
18:10This is my dear
18:10He didn't just mention the developer's operating costs
18:13But it also increased the engine's virtual lifespan.
18:15Come on then
18:16I bought the reluctant pilot, my dear
18:17And it's not
18:18Let me tell you the third advantage of an AC developer over a DC developer.
18:21The pilot is the hesitant pilot.
18:23DC is the direct pilot
18:24Direct
18:25The third advantage is that the hesitant pilot generates higher torque.
18:29The same quantity as the electric pilot
18:30This is of course different from its ability to operate at a different voltage.
18:33With a different electrical quality, meaning
18:35It was made more user-friendly and practical than a DC developer.
18:37Because you can now use the developer with different power sources.
18:41When you look at the direct pilot systems that Edison developed
18:44You'll find that it was very profitable in densely populated areas.
18:48Because the cost of setting up direct pilot stations is so large
18:51So we built a central station, a fair area with many residents, and we fed them.
18:54The new Tesla engine remains with all its features.
18:56He was more efficient than the direct pilot in the distribution phase.
18:59Especially distribution over long distances
19:02Because it can be easily transferred with the effort of a worker
19:04You are only doing this to increase the effort of the direct pilot.
19:07You'll be increasing transportation costs exorbitantly.
19:09But first, my dear, because if you don't understand, I'll simplify it for you.
19:12We are dealing with two types of electric pilots
19:14A type called the direct pilot was started in the world due to certain circumstances.
19:18And it contains money, investments, and companies.
19:20And everyone is working on trying to solve his problems, his flaws, and his annoying habits.
19:24Suddenly, a person appeared with a new system.
19:26He'll tell you, "I'm not going to fix what has problems."
19:34So, my dear, if they came and took over the world, my monkey would have invested in a certain form of electric pilot.
19:40It was only natural that Atos and the people working on Direct Pilot couldn't stand Tesla.
19:44And they can't stand anything with the multi-flying ad-pocket
19:47There was no one in the middle of all countries except George Westinghouse.
19:50This is my dear friend, the owner of Westinghouse Electric Company.
19:52This guy Tesla succeeded in drawing attention to multi-pilot technology.
19:56Especially since he had already started promoting this system.
19:58He negotiated with Tesla to work with him and together produce the multi-pilot engine on the Scale model.
20:03And Nouri is selling the dreamer that's in our heads
20:04In contrast, Hedi Tesla is worth sixty thousand dollars.
20:09Uncle Tesla's cash, not the American Zar
20:10And also shares in the company of the same value
20:13And a profit margin of two and a half dollars for every power horse they produce
20:17They hired a consultant at his Pittsburgh firm for $2,000 a month.
20:23Rejoice, mother, your son has been circumcised by the multi-pilot
20:26Does he tell you, my dear, that Westinghouse's generous support for the multi-pilot
20:30Tesla's ideas and Adelson's fierce support for the direct pilot idea, into which he had invested money.
20:35I will come here and you
20:36The stage is now ready to host what is known as the war of airplanes.
20:42The economic and technological superiority of the multi-pilot over the direct pilot
20:47My dear, it was a great danger to Thomas Edelson and his inventions.
20:49All his ideas were based on the premise that direct piloting is the future, folks.
20:53And we're supposed to spread out among the people and create devices
20:56Direct pilot production and distribution stations
20:58We will bring electricity to every home in America.
21:00It will all light up
21:01Why is America so focused on the Maturik? It will be a blessing for its people.
21:04But, my dear friend, the multi-pilot was a last-minute surprise.
21:07How could Adelson, my friend, decide, with the sensibility of a businessman and not a scientist, to give charity to the hesitant pilot?
21:12And so begins a PR campaign to discredit the reluctant pilot throughout America.
21:17I can see it carefully; the lightbulb is spinning around it, and there are many circuits, and it's moving along a bare wire.
21:20Ah, Edelson is starting to convince people that a hesitant pilot is dangerous and deadly.
21:24They can't allow this filth to enter their homes.
21:26Edelson toured the entire United States to demonstrate to the public the dangers of a hesitant pilot.
21:32Behind the scenes, there are brief images of animals being electrocuted to death by the hesitant pilot.
21:38The problem lies in the pilot type, not the electrical system.
21:41My dear friend, one time he was electrocuted to make him blunt his words
21:44When he knew that New York was looking for a faster and more humane way to hang and execute people
21:50He said, "This is an opportunity that came right to me."
21:52So that people may follow them, folks, with the hesitant pilot
21:54A deadly weapon and your killer was killed in it. Don't bring the criminal
21:56And in 1890, murderer William Kemmler became the first person to be executed by electrocution.
22:03And the one who was working with a generator from a hesitant pilot
22:06It is said
22:08Edilson is the one who made it up himself.
22:09Look, my dear, bite my heart or my liver, but don't bite my bread.
22:14You'll run away from my pilot, I'll electrocute you with your pilot.
22:16I'm saying everyone who makes a living
22:17That's why Fodel Thomas Edelson included in his campaign against the reluctant pilot
22:20In parallel, Westinghouse and Vesla completed
22:23They traveled all over America to present their new invention.
22:26He wants to tell them that this is a deadly invention.
22:28And these people are telling them that this is the future and salvation.
22:31This is better
22:31Fodel, my dear, the matter continues like this.
22:33Until the decisive moment arrived
22:35The scene that will bring an end to this conflict
22:37The decisive battle will take place at the Chicago World's Fair.
22:401893
22:41Who will get the electricity contract for this huge exhibition?
22:44The exhibition where America will celebrate the 400th anniversary of Columbus's arrival.
22:49Four hundred years have passed since the discovery of America
22:51Oh, four hundred years, count them, by God!
22:53The event is huge, the turnout is large, and there will be a lot of money involved.
22:56Therefore, everyone was lying in wait to find out.
22:58Who will win the tender?
22:59The electricity will be purified; the exhibition will choose it, and that will be the future.
23:02This is what's coming, this is what will succeed
23:03And here, my dear, let's show you the movie The Karan Towers
23:05Intaxl in 2017 and Alfonso Gomez Rejon leaves
23:08It received a rating of 6.5 on IMDb.
23:10Its age rating is PG-13
23:12Its duration is one hour and two, and it's called "Warbhindia Baltrit".
23:14Two workers gave the boy a gift, and he was enlightened for the first time in an inspiring way.
23:18A brilliant scene that worries the director of photography, the lighting director, the camera crew, and the lighting technicians.
23:22Abu Hamid, please, we're now snorkeling the film on its side.
23:25And we want to know who will actually light up the exhibition
23:27Year, my dear, that was another scene where Breden Cumberbatch was involved.
23:29Oh Abu Hamid, I beg you, we want to know who lost
23:31Who won this conflict, Tesla or Edison?
23:33Let me shock you, my dear, and tell you that the company that won the bid was Westinghouse and Tesla.
23:38God is great, those who did some electricity and demonstrations impressed the audience.
23:42My dear, this exhibition is inspired by the iconic Fairwheel of the amusement park's beloved artist.
23:47Tesla was telling the whole world, "You see all this trouble around you, I dealt with it with a hesitant pilot."
23:52The one who killed was killed, and the criminals are executed by electrocution because electricity kills.
23:55But we can make great inventions with the hesitant pilot
23:59The exhibition, my dear, was a complete success, and the hesitant pilot proved his worth with success.
24:04Hence, we can consider the dazzling display of the reciprocating pilot system
24:07What everyone present at the Chicago exhibition witnessed
24:09It is the crucial point in the war of aircraft
24:11Tesla and Westinghouse deservedly won it
24:13And then the two of them won their second historic contract
24:16To build generators for a new hydroelectric power station at Niagara Falls
24:21Here, my dear, the dream of Nikolai, the child who tried out little wheels on a river 30 years ago, comes true.
24:26And the fantasy in his mind turned into a tangible reality
24:29Indeed, in 1896 Tesla's power plant began
24:32Power is supplied via a reciprocating pilot to the city of Buffalo in New York.
24:36Which was 26 millimeters away
24:38Here, Tesla's invention and imaginative genius become the standard for the electrical power industry worldwide.
24:43It truly deserves that the instrument for measuring the magnetic field is named after him.
24:47On the other hand, Westinghouse's sales grew rapidly.
24:50From $800,000 to approximately $5 million in just three years
24:54With sales booming and demand increasing, Westinghouse found itself forced
24:57The size of businesses and factories is increasing.
24:59He will pay $1.2 million out of his own pocket.
25:01He borrowed heavily from banks.
25:03My dear, that was the mistake that most likely led to his downfall.
25:06Because financial panic ensued due to suspicions
25:08Bankruptcy of a bank called Bering Brothers
25:10Late 1990
25:11This is of course worrying the depositors; they all went to the bank.
25:13I want my money.
25:14This resulted in what is known as Burn-on-Bank.
25:16Here, the banks said about the currency
25:17Well, I lent this money to people so I could earn you interest on it.
25:21The banks were forced to demand their money from the borrowers.
25:23Who is Ba?
25:24He was at the top of these borrowers and indebted to the very stones of the earth
25:27The banks' demand for their loan caused significant financial distress for Westinghouse.
25:33Westinghouse ordered him to sit with Tesla.
25:35He told him, "I am in a restaurant where circumstances can be controlled."
25:37We are waiving our financial liabilities towards you
25:40We were counted by power horse, word for word
25:42In the future, we'll owe you billions.
25:45Indeed, my dear
25:46Westinghouse could only afford to pay $216,000 for Tesla.
25:50Oh Abu Hamid, this is a very harsh thing
25:52Do you know anyone who wants to absolve themselves of their obligations towards me?
25:54And I'll take the $216,000 and spend it myself.
25:57I am Abu Hamid, and I think I can support myself with some money.
25:59Tesla, my dear, will take this money in exchange for the rights to use his invention.
26:03For the reciprocating aircraft engine
26:04The fact is that Tesla was respectful and compliant and didn't cause any problems with Westinghouse.
26:07He relieved him of all his obligations towards him.
26:09Because he was deeply disgusted by the man who believed in him.
26:12And his lies, along with some of the air warfare against Edison, are a character.
26:14Westinghouse was Tesla's weapon that enabled him to defeat Edison.
26:18And from here Tesla packed his clothes and set off for New York
26:21So that the final chapter of his life could begin
26:23He transformed himself into a laboratory in New York.
26:24He was able to invent technologies such as neon lighting.
26:26And the bladeless turbines, which are Tesla turbines
26:29He contributed to the development of X-Ray
26:30And he created a control space for some
26:32remote
26:32Those who showed off to people while he was controlling a vehicle, visiting each other
26:35What year? 1898
26:37And this, my dear, is the heart of journalism.
26:39What is this? What is this?
26:39The man who was steering the boat was the same one who stood outside.
26:41With this magic
26:42But let me tell you that Nikola Tesla's most important inventions
26:44The Tesla file or TeslaCoin
26:46The device known as the flashing spark
26:48The Tesla is pictured next to him in one of his most famous photos.
26:50This is a very essential device for modern wireless communication systems.
26:54Indeed, Tesla had begun to imagine and plan
26:56To use its file to transmit radio signals
26:59But tragically and unexpectedly, a fire broke out in his laboratory in 1895.
27:03This fire destroyed many of Tesla's research notes.
27:06Many of his inventions and sayings
27:08Despite this major setback that plunged him into a state of severe depression
27:11Tesla has reached the point where he can electrocute himself to feel better
27:14After a while, dear Tesla began to calm down and his depression lessened.
27:16He rented a new laboratory to continue his research.
27:19Unfortunately, the fire incident was not Tesla's only misfortune.
27:22In 1896, Guglielmo and Marconi, the young Italian inventors, built the Radio Basics device.
27:27And he was able to obtain a patent for me in England.
27:29Despite Marconi's skepticism about the range in which the radio could operate
27:32Marconi estimated that he was transmitting radio signals across the English Channel
27:36Using devices similar to Tesla's
27:38For example, the Tesla coil, Tesla coil
27:40Tesla himself was a candidate for a radio patent in America.
27:44He actually took it in 1900
27:45That's why Marconi's application for a radio patent was rejected in America several times.
27:49However, Marconi's company flourished in Europe.
27:51This was because the English upper class supported Marconi and his company.
27:55With their rings and their money
27:56Because after the successful demonstrations of the invention of the radio
27:59Marconi's stock price is skyrocketing.
28:01One of the successful demonstrations of the invention of the radio
28:03The first transatlantic radio broadcast was in 1901.
28:06According to him, Marconi gained international fame and acclaim
28:09Of course, Tesla will be available at that time.
28:10He was sitting in Sun and didn't care about anything.
28:13Because Marconi couldn't bring this up in America
28:15Because the radio patent
28:17Register under the name Tesla
28:18One of the engineers who was working with Tesla at that time tells him
28:21It seems Marconi jumped on him.
28:23Tesla responded confidently and his family
28:25Marconi is a hardworking young man who continues his work.
28:27He uses 17 private patents, the rest
28:30Of course, my dear, Tesla's confidence and composure are suddenly shattered.
28:34And all the fan blades that were on his heart stopped.
28:37Why didn't he write American patents?
28:39He reversed his decision
28:40Marconi patented the radio in 1904
28:44Oh God, not black?
28:45Oh, young women, the stars of the Alf FM are there
28:47My dear Tesla, he didn't have any money.
28:49It is enough that he raises his voice and fears the courts.
28:51He was bankrupt because of a chicken with a tail that swore an oath to the Creator.
28:53But Tesla was furious with her, Abu Hamad.
28:55Because, my dear Marconi, he won the Nobel Prize in Physics
28:59For his contributions to the development of radio communications
29:02My dear friend
29:04What's this, Tesla?
29:04no
29:05I had all of this in my drawer.
29:06For Job FM, Nagham FM, Azraa Al-Tamania
29:09It was all in the drawer
29:10The middle crack in the middle of the Arabs was about his statement
29:12Hasaballah, we will do it, and Ken in every Swede knows something.
29:15Tesla ordered a move and filed an appeal against the patent office's decision.
29:19Although she really didn't have enough money for this legal process
29:22And let me tell you, my dear, the case remained pending in court.
29:25Until Tesla and Marconi died
29:27And tell me, my dear, how long will the court's term be?
29:291943
29:31During the time of Aziz, when Tesla lived
29:33This car, my dear, was a real Tesla hit.
29:35And he disrupted what had been his contribution to his great professional career.
29:38The last few decades have all been characterized by Tesla
29:40With large and ambitious engineering projects
29:42The one who kept imagining, building, and experiencing it in his imagination
29:45It was also characterized by significant financial difficulties.
29:47That's why from 1901 to 1907
29:50Tesla has entered into a new partnership with investor JPMorgan.
29:53Founder of the famous bank
29:54To make it together the biggest project ever
29:56Universal wireless power system
29:58This ambitious project involved the construction of a pressure tower.
30:00Next to Tesla's lab on Longa Island
30:02So that he can broadcast or cut off electricity wirelessly
30:05Not Morkin took the lead in inventing the radio.
30:07And it kept sending wireless radio signals.
30:09If I were to transmit electricity wirelessly
30:11I'll make electricity Wi-Fi before there's even Wi-Fi.
30:14Of course, my dear, it's something amazing and very impressive.
30:16But it seemed very expensive
30:18Imagine what a huge and expensive project like this would be like
30:20He hasn't seen any tangible results over the course of my seven years.
30:23Unfortunately, it was only natural that Morgan would withdraw its investments from Tesla.
30:26And they leave two large videos
30:27These financial pressures wiped out any money Tesla had saved for the future.
30:30He was forced to prefer moving between hotels
30:32Because of his unpaid and increasing bills
30:34Besides, of course, the hotels that were being rented
30:36Because people at the hotel were complaining about it
30:38People were complaining about the smell of the pigeons Tesla kept.
30:40Tesla lived among pigeons, so he was convicted of murder.
30:43When a glimmer of hope appeared in 1934
30:45When Westinghouse contacted Tesla after many years
30:48He decided to pay him a monthly salary and cover Auto's rent at the New Yorker Hotel.
30:52In response to Tesla's work with him
30:54However, my dear friend, Tesla's health deteriorated after an Arab incident in 1937.
31:00Although he survived the crash, Tesla suffered broken ribs.
31:04I have not fully recovered from it.
31:05In 1943, at the age of eighty-six
31:08From imagination, creativity, and scientific and engineering contributions
31:11Tesla was found dead and alone in the courtyard of the New Yorker Hotel.
31:16After he suffered a heart attack
31:18Tesla, my dear, was far ahead of his time.
31:20And I see beyond what people see and understand.
31:22To this day, we still hear a buzzing sound and see movements by its hesitant pilot every day.
31:28Today, the hesitant pilot is the one who runs the world, from the devices that fill our homes.
31:32Up to the point of industries that are the backbone of countries' economies
31:34Tesla's design didn't just consist of a few coils, hesitant aircraft, and engines.
31:38The innovations Tesla made are at the heart of the wireless technologies that connect us.
31:42Our voices travel through the air so we can hear each other.
31:45This is an important and unforgettable part of the legacy left by Nikola Tesla.
31:48But at a certain moment in his life
31:50His imagination was the source of his distinction and genius.
31:52The weapon was turned against him.
31:54This remained one of the reasons for his unhappiness and depression.
31:56Tesla's imagination in the later stages of his life
31:58He began to let him down after he had gained money, scientific glory, and historical fame.
32:02Nikola's vision of Tesla towers that will wirelessly deliver electricity to the entire world
32:06Unfortunately, as you know and have seen around you
32:08These weren't accurate fantasies about the reality of the model we could live in.
32:11Our phones keep charging while they're in our pockets.
32:13Electricity exists all around us in the air without wires to walk through it.
32:15All of this was closer to science fiction than science.
32:18Current observers say that Tesla Tower would never have worked, of course.
32:21It would never have transferred energy in the way Tesla had envisioned.
32:24This is because Tesla hadn't accounted for the energy loss that would occur during its transfer.
32:27He didn't really understand the nature of the radio.
32:29He thought she would be able to carry much more energy than she was capable of.
32:32Despite this, Tesla remained confined to individual attempts.
32:35To break into the field of wireless waves and communications
32:38And with the failure of one attempt after another
32:41Tesla's image has been transformed from that of a genius ahead of his time.
32:43The one who was able to change the world at one time
32:45For an old man surrounded by fantastical things
32:47The hotel is being kicked out and the investors aren't responding to it.
32:50And yet, my dear, Tesla's dreams have not come true
32:52But no one can deny that the idea itself was inspiring.
32:55Because Sept might come later
32:56Any development that occurred after that, Tesla deserves credit for.
32:59With wireless technologies such as Wi-Fi and Bluetooth
33:01Wireless charging devices and others
33:04Many of the things we take for granted and as if they exist
33:07It was once a simple idea conceived by Nikola Tesla
33:11That's it, my dear, finally, and finally, don't forget to look at the previous accident.
33:13Watch the next incident and forget to check the sources we subscribe to on YouTube.