YouTube — 2026-07-12#

Watch First#

If you only have time for one video today, AI竟与100年前电力革命如此相似? by 美投讲美股 offers a brilliant historical lens on the current AI boom. By comparing today’s AI adoption to how legacy factories stubbornly struggled to integrate electricity a century ago, it makes a compelling case that corporate organizational restructuring—not just the technology itself—is the true bottleneck for unlocking massive productivity gains.

Highlights by Theme#

News & Business#

In global politics, The Wall Street Journal’s What Lindsey Graham Meant to Donald Trump provides a sharp retrospective on the late senator’s hawkish, neoconservative worldview and his complex, transactional influence over the former president. On the defense front, CNBC International explores the modernization of Middle Eastern warfare in How War Tested the UAE’s Homegrown Defense Tech, noting how the local startup EDGE successfully deployed geo-fencing and drones to intercept threats. Finally, shifting to the business of modern media, CNBC goes behind the scenes of the creator economy in The YouTube gurus engineering viral videos, revealing the highly-paid strategists who treat the algorithm like a science to guarantee massive viewership.

Learning & Ideas#

The most provocative argument in this batch comes from a TED Talk arguing that The best classroom upgrade might be less tech, which warns that blindly handing AI to students causes cognitive offloading and destroys their capacity for sustained attention. For history buffs, the Chinese-language channel LIFEANO CLUB offers a fantastic, wide-ranging Q&A in 【限免】袁Sir翻牌:日本和尚怎么变成上下班制的?#lifeano翻牌 260705, explaining everything from why Japanese monks were allowed to marry during the Meiji Restoration to the succession drama following the Qing Dynasty’s Tongzhi Emperor. If you need a hard science refresher, Khan Academy’s deep dive into Motion as a function of time: Resistive force example (part 2) elegantly breaks down the calculus behind terminal velocity and drag force with clear, step-by-step exponential graphing.

Tech & AI#

In a fascinating collision of haute couture and experimental science, The New York Times showcases a designer’s attempt to bring particle physics to the runway in Iris van Herpen Reaches for the Stars. While her ambitious dress—designed to form organic patterns using cryogenically frozen plasma and a particle accelerator—didn’t perfectly execute during the show, it remains a mind-blowing, highly original experiment in wearable tech.

Everything Else#

For lighter cultural viewing, GQ Taiwan dropped a few excellent shorts, including a quick historical look at the messy reality of medieval medicine in 以前真的有水蛭療法?, which explains how bloodletting with leeches often just left patients dangerously weakened. They also featured a charming, brief interview with the creator of NPR Music’s iconic concert series in 千萬訂閱頻道 @nprmusic 《Tiny Desk》創始人, revealing the funny truth that the legendary venue is literally just a desk in a loud, open-plan office.


Categories: Youtube