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  • About a year ago, I read about this powder

  • You could add to super muddy water like this, and then you stir it up and five minutes later

  • the mud has separated from the pure clean drinkable water. And as a man of science

  • I see this and it feels like nothing short of magic. I only make 12 videos a year

  • so I am really picky about what topics I will cover and even though I usually just focus on using science and engineering to make

  • to make totally ridiculous things

  • (Motors whirring)

  • (Glass shattering)

  • (Kids screaming)

  • At least once a year, I try to make the case

  • that these same science and engineering principles

  • are also being used to actually change

  • the world for the better. For example last year

  • I met with Madhu Prakash from Stanford who was disappointed to realize the typical microscope and centrifuge to diagnose malaria

  • cost tens of thousands of dollars and needs to be plugged in.

  • So he invented a paper microscope and a paper centrifuge that cost 68 cents

  • that can diagnose malaria and require no electricity.

  • So today we're gonna find out how this was invented

  • How the heck it works and how it's being used to help people all around the world

  • But first to demonstrate this isn't some kind of smoke and mirrors trick

  • I located the nastiest water I could find near my house and met up with some intrepid field scientists. So today

  • I'm joined by my friends Cole, Kaden, Rainy and Max I promised them they could be in a video

  • But I didn't tell them which one or what we'd be doing. And here's the deal guys. We need to go into that pond

  • That's all gross and nasty and fill it up with muddy water. Can you do that?

  • [Excited music]

  • Do you guys think this would be good to drink this? No. What would you guys give me if I take a sip of this

  • umm

  • 20 bucks. 20 bucks? Okay, we're not gonna do anything to this one, but I'm gonna do something to this one

  • So then we can compare the two. Okay, so I'm gonna take a little bit of this powder

  • I'm gonna put it in here you guys see this and then we're gonna take turns shaking it for like five minutes, okay

  • (Chill music)

  • ew

  • Let's see what happens

  • It looks better

  • Okay, I'm gonna put my thumb at the water level so you know I'm not tricking you guys okay

  • Eww

  • (Water swishing)

  • It's some high quality H2O right there. All right, where's my 20 bucks Rainy?

  • Mommy [laughter]

  • Chances are if you're watching this video you have essentially an endless supply of clean water at

  • The pull of a lever. And because this is so easy, we tend to forget just how critical water is for us

  • You can live three weeks without food but only a few days without water and it's not just us from plants to ants to bacteria,

  • anything that is biological and living needs water to survive

  • It sounds crazy but there are no exceptions to this rule because of this when NASA is looking for evidence of life outside our planet

  • We first start by looking for evidence of water given all that

  • It's a total bummer that nearly 1 billion people around the world don't have access to clean drinking water.

  • Today, drinking contaminated water causes more deaths than HIV, AIDS, and malaria combined

  • And so that's why the powder in this packet is a really big deal

  • It was invented by a guy named Philip Souter

  • He's a laundry scientist at Procter & Gamble who was originally trying to figure out a way to separate dirt from used laundry water and I want

  • To be clear here. They are not sponsoring this video in any way

  • I just think what they're doing is really awesome and they deserve some credit

  • So I was actually able to track Philip down and he told me all about how it works

  • So essentially as three processes there's coagulation then the next phase is flocculation

  • And then the last piece is the disinfection. You start with clean water like this

  • But now it's all brown because it's filled with lots of dirt particles, parasites, and bacteria.

  • So you dump the powder in the water and as Phil explained, the coagulant part of the powder goes to work first

  • It's basically seed crystals that are positively

  • charged and because the dirt in the water is negatively charged, these seed crystals act like dirt magnets. These dirt magnets grow until they're each

  • about a millimeter in size.

  • The next part of the powder to activate is the flocculent,

  • which is a polymer which you can think about as having huge long arms that wrap up all the little

  • dirt magnet clumps and now they form bigger chunks as large as a centimeter. These chunks now are so big

  • They're just slightly more dense than the water, which means they sink to the bottom.

  • and finally, the chlorine is released and it goes to work on killing the

  • 99.9999% of

  • All the really tiny viruses and bacteria that are left in the water that didn't get wrapped up and sink to the bottom

  • so now you're just left with safe drinking water at the top. This isn't just some PR stunt for P&G since

  • 2004, millions of people in over 90 countries have used these packets and they've saved untold thousands upon thousands of lives.

  • In fact, they've cleaned enough water to fill a swimming pool

  • that is the typical five feet deep by 15 feet across only the length would need to stretch all the way across the United States,

  • over 13 times.

  • These packets cost them pennies to make which they sell at a loss and that feels like the right thing to do, but it brings

  • up the question:

  • Is there a case to be made beyond altruism where it's in the best

  • interest of the rich countries to help out the poor countries? To answer this question

  • I wanted to speak with someone in the technology sector who had some experience in this kind of thing

  • And he's a bit of an obscure up-and-comer named Bill Gates

  • But first I had to do a little bit of research in order to get myself up to Seattle

  • [excited music]

  • When I arrived they told me I was free to make myself at home while I waited for him to show up,

  • so I did what any rational person would do given the circumstances, I made the richest man on planet earth some pizza rolls.

  • Hi.

  • Good to meet you. Yeah, thanks for doing this. They gave me free reign of your kitchen and as a token of hospitality,

  • I whipped up a batch of pizza rolls. Oh wow.

  • I'll try it. It's not what I normally eat.

  • Its really hot, actually. They're kind of like lava in the middle. Not bad.

  • They're ok right?

  • A little bit of cardboard. What do you got here? This is plan B because I wasn't expecting you to actually eat one of those.

  • Dick's burgers. Love dick's.

  • It's a Seattle phenomena. Truth be told I actually knew this after seeing a picture of him on reddit.

  • He's standing line by himself to buy one of their hamburgers for less than two bucks.

  • Hate to disappoint you there's no Dick's burgers in here. Okay. We have some liquid refreshment

  • That's pretty dark looking.

  • So I took out the powder and explained to him how it worked and then I set up the bottles, and here's where we stood

  • after a minute or two. Looks like we're making some progress on the top there.

  • I'd rather eat these than that so far.

  • Why should we care about developing nations?

  • Well the amount of resource that rich countries spend in helping poor countries is pretty small.

  • It's well less than 1% of their budget.

  • I defend that because that money is so impactful. You're saving lives for less than

  • $1,000 per life saved. If you help the country lift itself up then countries like Indonesia, Vietnam, India

  • get successful enough, they grow their economy. So they no longer need aid. They graduate. Okay. Look at this

  • It's amazing the way that is small,

  • Isn't it crazy? amount of this thing

  • It's like magic and I like his answer that basically teaching a man to fish is better than just giving a man a fish.

  • What about the extreme case of a person who's just super

  • self-absorbed who might think I just don't care if a poor country has a fish or not, It doesn't affect my daily life.

  • I asked what he would say to that person.

  • The benefits are strong even if the pure humanitarian empathetic part

  • isn't the key reason. So then bill told me two main reasons we should try and help developing nations

  • even from a selfish standpoint. The first is for our own safety.

  • If a poor country receives aid,

  • it fosters education and economic opportunity,

  • which makes it more stable and there's a less of a reason for people to become desperate,

  • which is a breeding ground for radical ideologies and terrorism.

  • All America's top generals agree that foreign aid creates stability, which reduces the need for military spending and makes the world a safer place.

  • Additionally, Bill told me there's the issue of diseases. When the next pandemic comes, there's a good chance

  • it will be far worse than Ebola and it will spread quickly into the rich countries.

  • There's a huge benefit to us in helping these developing nations get their health systems to the point where they can detect and treat bad

  • stuff before it has the chance to go global. The second selfish reason for helping

  • developing nations that we discuss together was for our own prosperity.

  • After World War II, we think hey, do we care about Japan?

  • Well, hey then Japan, you know Sony and Toyota they're making good products. Yeah, let's not forget Nintendo.

  • It's a win-win situation, you know where we want

  • Japan to do well and make great products and you know, they're buying Boeing Jets, Microsoft software

  • and so having "hypothetically"

  • hopefully

  • The idea that other countries doing well, it's not a zero-sum thing

  • where okay if they do well, that means that it's it's bad for us.

  • Basically, we needed to get the Japanese back to a point where their brains could benefit the world again as quickly as possible.

  • Otherwise, it's a waste of human capital and the world never knows Super Mario Brothers.

  • Which raises an interesting point if you ask people who is the most intelligent person to ever live, you get various answers like these:

  • Albert Einstein

  • Einstein

  • Albert Einstein

  • Einstein

  • Albert Einstein

  • Mark Rober

  • Did I tell you to say that?

  • [Nods] What, you-! But the fact is with 100 billion people to have ever lived on planet Earth,

  • it's a statistical certainty that Albert Einstein wasn't the most intelligent human. It was some random person

  • you've never heard of probably born a long time ago who spent most of their daily energy

  • just trying to survive. That's why these packets are a huge deal when you have nearly 1 billion people spending their time

  • just trying to find clean water every day, that's a huge waste of untapped brainpower.

  • Now these packets and other aid efforts like them allow parents to stay healthy and gives them time to provide for their families.

  • Which gives their kids the opportunity to get educated which in turn creates more opportunities for the following generation

  • and so eventually, over time, the entire world starts reaping the benefit

  • from the contribution of this previously untapped human capital.

  • In this way some massive breakthrough in solar technology,

  • or maybe the cure to cancer or HIV might come from a poor country who is just a developing nation today.

  • And I find that to be incredibly inspiring and a worthy goal.

  • I want to thank Bill and Melinda Gates for partnering with me on this video. They just released the brand-new Gates annual letter.

  • I will leave a link to it in the video description.

  • It's a great read if you want to learn how life has, and will continue to improve for the world's poorest. Plus, you get to

  • be inspired by people who have just made it their life's mission to make the world a better place.

  • You know I get to learn a lot

  • you know, I'm gonna be working on these diseases the rest of my life. Bill Gates, living legend, eater of pizza rolls.

  • - Yeah, not bad. - That was fantastic. Thanks so much, bro.

  • Now we drink.

  • [calm music]

About a year ago, I read about this powder

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淫乱沼の水を飲む(世界を救うために (Drinking Nasty Swamp Water (to save the world))

  • 37 2
    Yifan Liu に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
動画の中の単語