Added: 4 years ago
From: amanshad
Views: 38,817
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  • sometimes, after a long and lonely friday afternoon, i like to come home, get into the bathtub and cover my body in hundreds of bread boards while listening to the soothing voice of our professor explaining how to use them properly.

  • you are a good woman

  • xD this sounded so homo 1:50

  • a very good tut

  • lol as I was watching I realized this video was every thing i was looking for and I kept reminding myself I needed to say thanks after watching but I can see every one else had the same idea. but any way thank you this video was very helpful. the only thing I don't understand is what are the black and blue things for?, connecting 3 rows together ?

  • It's probably been said a dozen times, but I feel it must be iterated again "thank you very much", if that sounds too watered down from the amount of times it's been said... Thank you kindly then! Hahaha

  • Very helpful. Many thanks.

  • secret track at 9:35

  • hidden track at 9:35

  • Many thanks for making this easy to understand!

  • Thank you so much.

  • Thank you so much for this. I learned a lot.

  • bread not involved !!!!!XD

  • I really appreciate this video. Thank-you for posting it.

  • Thanks great tutorial!!

  • great job thank you so much!!!!!!!!

  • Thanks for the upload that's exactly what I needed.

    You can learn so much on Youtube

  • very soothing voice. thx

  • dz z a gr8 wrk....thank u so much

  • Great tutorial!!

  • thankx...........

  • Thanks for this video! The comment at the very end after the fade-out made me giggle.

  • pls anyone..help..i need a full image and components name of gizmo circuid\t plssssss..and also flip flop,full adder,half adder,nor,xnor,xor,nand,and..p­lss share..plsss

  • Great video ! Very informative , being that I am a noob, like the ending. 1 question whats in the bread board that connects everything. Or how does power flow through the board, is it wired on the inside? Thanks

  • hay..thts nice....

  • ace job denise ! how come the one lamp was dimmer than the other one ?  nice video ! SUBSCRI---BEeeeeeee ! lol

  • This is because the lights were wired in series. If the author would have connected each light individually, or in parallel, the light's brightness would remain the same. What happens, is that when you connect lights together, the resistance grows, and makes it harder for electricity to flow, thusfore making the lamp dimmer.

  • oohhhhhhh ! gotcha tyler9613 ! thanks ! so in series the resistance grows down the line ? and in parallel the resistance is evenly distributed?

  • @sbmrunning

    In series, for each additional resistor, the resistance doubles. In parallel, the resistance is cut in half for each additional resistor.

  • @tyler9613

    Almost but not exactly.

    Say you have two equal resistors in parallel and you add another. You will not half the resistance again, but you will only reduce it to 3/4. Same in series.

  • This was really helpful! Thank you so much :)

  • Good video. It is an intro to breadboards so she is speaking in an into manner. The point was well conveyed but I would have delved into jumpers (to connect nodes) and maybe re-identified what a series and parallel circuits were. Again good video and funny ending. Remember if you don't use it you lose it. :o)

  • yes, i need to know which ones are series and which ones are parallel

  • "this weird little black thingy".... people watching this arent in diapers anymore.

  • I agree with you, man. This "professor" is terrible at getting her point across.

  • yeah, denise is usually right.

    seriously though that woman was hilarious.

    helpful video though.

  • Thank you! You saved me for this Physics lab!

  • excellent work!

  • great vid though 5/5

  • this is dum but what a variable resister and integrated circuit?

  • sharpandpointy123 I have not been into electronics for that long, but a variable resistor is a component that allows you to control the amount of resistance in a circuit, sometimes in the form of a knob, similar to the volume knob on your stereo or the tone control on an electric guitar. And an Integrated Circuit (IC) is a single component that houses many components such as resistors, capacitors, transistors, diodes etc, making it much easier to build complex circuits and saves on space.

  • thanks. it was quite helpful

  • AH!!-the "Bread board "needs NO soldering?-means you can "reuse "it time and time again?

    Steve.

  • right

  • Yes, you can reuse the breadboard. It's more of a temporary, reusable thing that allows you to connect components and make a circuit without soldering which is great! The PC (at 1:00) gets soldered and is single use.

  • yes

  • wow very informative thank you very much!

  • thx i finally understand

  • totally make sence thx

  • Thank you for the intro to breadboards, i went to lab today and the teacher assumed everybody had used them before, not me though. Wish i had seen this before going in.

  • printed circuit boards are fiberglass not plastic.

  • thank you this was extremely helpfull

  • thanks so much!ur my hero!haha

  • Yeah uhh my teacher is really bad at teaching this stuff to us..this helped me so damn much.

  • exactly to the point. bravo

  • i can't see what your doing

  • 5 stars, thanks for the video it helped

  • its hard at first, but once you get it, it seems like its the easiest thing in the world

  • Thx without video help i wouldve never understood how it works

  • That was really good, I want to start learning electronics and have no idea where to start, you explain it really well and would love to see a series of increasingly complex circuits and having them explaind e.g. how to use correct voltage, resistors etc, that would be great. Thanks again.

  • This is a great video!!! very helpful.

  • I've been trying to figure out how they work for years, and have never found an easy to comprehend explenation, this was just what I needed, thanks.

  • Thanks for posting this, I'm a computer science major and I'm taking this Digital Systems Design course that requires the use of breadboards in our labs. I've never used a breadboard before in my life, so again thank you very much; your video was very helpful.

  • Nice Job.Thanks For Sharing Your Knowledge.

    My 5 Stars to U.

    Post On Metacafe And Make Some Money,Just a Thought.

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