字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント This is a United States one-dollar bill. It's just over a tenth of a millimetre thick. So, what if you had a million of them? One million US dollars stacked up into the sky? How tall would that stack be? Well, I mean, first of all, it would fall over. So let's say instead that you put that stack on its side. One after the other after the other, lined up. Not edge to edge, but just stacked up. How long would that stack be? Well, it'd be about the length of a US football field or a UK football pitch. So, that's the distance that I'm gonna walk, right now. And as we go, have a think about just how much money that is. We passed $10,000 within my first couple of steps back there, and that's more money than the average annual wage in a lot of the world. Now, there's a money clock on-screen, tied to the GPS in this camera, so the numbers should be about right as we go. A lot of folks have created visualisations of the difference between a million and a billion. Humphrey Yang on TikTok did a great one with grains of rice, and Wren at Corridor Digital did this spectacular visual effects demonstration. but where I think those visualisations fall down is that they rely on volume. They rely on three-dimensional stuff, and that's just not something that the human brain is particularly good at. It's just not intuitive that if you multiply the height, width, and depth of a cube by ten, then the volume increases by a thousand. Yes, mathematically obvious if you know the formula, but intuitively, it's just not that easy to actually understand. If you really want to understand the difference between a million and a billion, then you need something one-dimensional. You need distance. So, I am gonna drive the length of one billion dollars. It doesn't feel like it should take that long, right? After all, I walked to a million dollars in a minute or so. How long could it take to get to a billion when you've got a car and some fast roads? Okay. Dashcam in. Seatbelt on. Let's drive to a billion dollars. Oops. Head east towards Cook Road. Head west towards Cook Road. Turn left onto Cook Road. In a quarter of a mile, turn right onto Ripple Road. Turn right onto Ripple Road, A1306 and use the left lane to take the A13 slip road. Use the left lane to take the A13 slip road. Continue on A13 for six miles. In a quarter of a mile, use the second from the left lane to take the M25 slip road to M11, M1. Use the second from the left lane to take the M25 slip road, then use the right lane to keep right. Use the right lane to keep right. In 400 feet, at Mar Dyke Interchange, take the third exit. Exit the roundabout. In half a mile, continue onto A282. Continue onto A282 for five miles. In a quarter of a mile, use the second from the left lane to take the A2 slip road to M2, Canterbury. Use the second from the left lane to take the A2 slip road. Continue onto A2 for half a mile. In a quarter of a mile, keep right at the fork. Keep right at the fork. Continue on A2 for 34 miles. In a quarter of a mile, continue onto Thanet Way. Continue on Thanet Way for 16 miles. In half a mile, at St Nicholas Roundabout, take the second exit onto Canterbury Road/A28. Exit the roundabout onto Canterbury Road. Continue on Canterbury Road for two miles. In 1000 feet, at the roundabout, take the second exit and stay on Canterbury Road, A28. In a quarter of a mile, turn left onto Domneva Road. Turn left onto Domneva Road. In 1000 feet, turn right onto Westgate Bay Avenue. Turn right. Continue straight. In 1000 feet, turn left onto Old Boundary Road. Turn left onto Old Boundary Road, then your destination will be on the left. Your destination is on the left. Ten thousand dollars, the sort of money that's more than the average annual wage in a lot of the world. That was a couple of steps. A million dollars, life-changing sums of money for almost everyone, except a lucky few. Well, that took a minute to walk. But a billion? Well, that takes more than an hour to drive. And what if you wanted to go to a trillion? If you wanted to go to a trillion dollars, well then, the distance of that would take a 787 -- at cruising speed -- five days. The words may sound very similar... but that's the difference between a million, a billion, and a trillion.
B1 中級 A Million Dollars vs A Billion Dollars, Visualized: A Road Trip 8 0 林宜悉 に公開 2022 年 02 月 23 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語