Bro knows more about mechanical engineering before entering college than most mechanical engineering graduates.
@Lefachie9 ай бұрын
This guy is cracked out of his mind.
@quinnkortbus537510 ай бұрын
FTC performance alone was spectacular! Best of luck from a fellow roboticist 💪
@tttimster21328 ай бұрын
Awesome job, I remember our team being proud to go to state championships, worlds is huge!Congrats on your achievements and your ability to stay humble!
@stefantaga615110 ай бұрын
I met you at Worlds , I was part of team Ro2D2 ,those are some amazing projects. I am so happy you got in , good luck in all your future endeavours!!!
@zekernz10194 ай бұрын
hey you think you can help me with some shit?
@russiancybercheck10 ай бұрын
Hi. I really admire you guys. No matter how many videos like this I watch I admire the work you guys have done. Your engineering is top notch.
@spencerco573210 ай бұрын
See you at MIT!!
@Mr-NM10 ай бұрын
I’m literally making a buzzer system right now! So awesome seeing this video pop up
@ianthehunter353210 ай бұрын
remember; they are always listening
@shaneschulte74359 ай бұрын
Very impressive, you have a very bright future young man 👏👏
@danielwang53669 ай бұрын
lol I’ve seen your “Thank You, JHU LCSR” sign walking past the Da Vinci machine on campus
@rajat061010 ай бұрын
super cool! all the best!
@-es2bf9 ай бұрын
how can people afford this in high school...
@Edgeinx9 ай бұрын
rich supportive parents
@qwersher53409 ай бұрын
@@Edgeinx yeah not to take away from this dudes (incredible) achievements, but money and support from parents goes a long way in stuff like this.
@AstroThomasPratt4 ай бұрын
@@Edgeinx fr
@danmckstwexkrpfe4 ай бұрын
If you do a lot of googling you usually find that the parents of mit grads have technical skills of their own.
@jamess.24913 ай бұрын
@@danmckstwexkrpfe or also went to MIT lmao. So many of my classmates were under immense pressure from their parents. Lots of mental breakdowns in banana.
@im_so_bored_rn2 ай бұрын
congrats on gettting in
@sanjithtamballa9 ай бұрын
This is amazing congrats!
@MSuss989 ай бұрын
My high school didnt even have a computer science class
@qawa2205Ай бұрын
yea fr i feel like i was at a massive disadvantage
@sebastianochoa538510 ай бұрын
welcome :D - '27 and former 9527 guy
@tanhnguyen20259 ай бұрын
I wanna be like you and strive to make incredible things that you've made one day in the future. but im completely new to electrical physics so i wanna know more about how u learn physics and eventually apply them to build these stuff from the onset of your career. I would really appreciate that ! Thank u
@TheThemeParkTyconist9 ай бұрын
Glad you're interested! I learned most things through the internet - KZbin, DigiKey, etc. have fantastic guides on electrical engineering. I also did an internship over the summer pertaining to E&M. Finally, if your school offers AP Physics, particularly Electricity and Magnetism, you can take those classes to get a start.
@tanhnguyen20259 ай бұрын
thank you @@TheThemeParkTyconist
@MayankXOR4 ай бұрын
@@TheThemeParkTyconist Everyone says but never provide any sources. Just KZbin. Amidst millions of videos, can you expect a newbie fallin onto some actual helpful resources? Im just askin for some precise sources.
@TheThemeParkTyconist4 ай бұрын
@@MayankXOR It's hard to pin down precise sources that I learned this from, but a few things I found useful was Carl Bugeja's channel, BPS.space's series on designing the Blip and Blop boards, and the Art of Electronics by Paul Horowitz. There's also enough stuff on the internet that if you just search "electronics tutorial" you should be able to pick up quite a few things.
@PiefacePete464 ай бұрын
Well done... glad it worked. 😊
@getgudcyber9249 ай бұрын
YOU BUILT YOUR OWN PROTOCOL?????
@ryanshulman2019 ай бұрын
fire stuff. mech e kid?
@apoorvumang9 ай бұрын
Guys he's going there to teach not learn
@colekeller9 ай бұрын
Legend
@user__009479 ай бұрын
Hey brother ! Super inspiring stuff. Would be you be able to recommend a pathway to building complex projects like this ?
@user-xj6jh5ms5u9 ай бұрын
Kids like this usually come out naturally, there might not be a pathway.. find things bursting in your mind that you want to make, gather resources especially to convince parents that it worth doing & gain their support, do it and never give up.
@MayankXOR4 ай бұрын
@@user-xj6jh5ms5u didnt help at all
@kabir_dot_exe4 ай бұрын
Filthy Frank (good ending)
@bedisonlyforsleeping122710 ай бұрын
Hey how old are you? Would appreciate an answer
@moritzknp9 ай бұрын
Impressive
@Zooom889 ай бұрын
all this just to get you're application denied lmao
@joytimmermans4 ай бұрын
is the wireless buzzers a open source project that is available somewhere?
@TheThemeParkTyconist4 ай бұрын
The buzzer is kinda not very polished, so I don't want to release it to be open source. However, if you just want to see the stuff like code, CAD, and circuit design, they're all available on my github account (github.com/Epicotch/Wireless-Buzzers/tree/master )
@srivatsasrinivas62778 ай бұрын
What is the point of even going to engineering school? In a just system you should be getting on the job training at Boston Dynamics starting next year. Most of my engineering friends forgot all the theory by senior year anyways
@enya_yurself2 ай бұрын
now how am i supposed to get into mit if im not this good
@qawa2205Ай бұрын
you arent
@GPDreamer9 ай бұрын
Wow, have fun in school! Don't do drugs
@yoursfithfully0475 ай бұрын
How do you maintain the enthusiasm to continue
@TheThemeParkTyconist5 ай бұрын
The most important thing is to know when to take a break. Almost none of my projects were all done in one sitting - instead, when things got hard or I started losing interest, I took short, measured breaks to avoid burnout. I did this fairly often, so that I didn't have to take a long break that would hinder my motivation to return to the project.
@milkandhenny9 ай бұрын
Cool
@honzacz17813 ай бұрын
how old are you?
@tabbycat97932 ай бұрын
yoo newT.exe??? equilub? cracked beat up as first mountain to qual rip bruh.
@MKUMBRA9 ай бұрын
nerd
@Ben-ki2in9 ай бұрын
Cool. But why 2028?
@grape029 ай бұрын
because he will be class of 2028 in college
@1110-k7d10 ай бұрын
What was your gpa , sat....etc?
@wuke248810 ай бұрын
lowkey doesn't matter if he can do this much insane stuff
@hispantrapmusic3014 ай бұрын
@@wuke2488I don’t understand why y’all think he did everything by himself. I mean if my parents were engineering and helped me and do the project who’s gonna say I didn’t do it? So I think SAT and GPA is important
@wuke24884 ай бұрын
@@hispantrapmusic301 What you hating for lol. His projects are very doable by himself and with the curiosity he has. While they are important, SAT is a greater measure of studying than intelligence and GPA can get overinflated at many schools. For elite institutions like MIT, what you do that isn't quantified by grades and numbers is more valued than anything.
@hispantrapmusic3014 ай бұрын
@@wuke2488 idk but you know lol. That's funny. I'm not hating I'm asking a question, how do an admission officer know if he did by himself. Rich people have paid for SAT scores etc.. So how do I know this guy did it by himself. Studying is easy and people still choose to cheat. I'm not downplaying what he did is js asking. You can't be sure. Not hating cause I had never had the opportunity to go there and I'm not from the states either
@wuke24884 ай бұрын
@@hispantrapmusic301 Oh ok, it makes sense since your not from the states. You are right though, you can't be sure. That's why MIT does these maker videos to give applicants a shot at proving they know what they're talking about and showcasing themselves instead of bragging with words on a paper. And mostly, admission officers have to rely on the honors system that applicants have done the things they said, unless they are outlandish claims like sending a rover to Jupiter. At the end of the day, admissions in the US is such a gamble and a lottery. There are so many qualified applicants for not enough top spots so luck is also a big factor. The admissions game is just not fair from all aspects and that's sadly just the way it is.
@japanboy314158 ай бұрын
Must be nice to have wealthy parents… when i was in HS i had to work everyday to support my family. Our school couldnt even afford anything like this and barely had any ap classes. Congrats though. Glad to say i work in tech now and workiny with others who went to universities like MIT, stanford etc while i went to a humble state school
@cja123454 ай бұрын
Yes for me, I had to work ever since I turned 17. Even during college I worked not only to pay for myself but had to send money to help my parents with the bills. I guess some people are just lucky but this guy is also very smart. Smarter than me by a lot tbh.
@AT-in9ldАй бұрын
This comment shows you have a victim mindset
@Uddipa_Pal10 ай бұрын
these are awesome!!!! Congrats on getting in, you deserve it . RA applicant of class 2028 here, can we talk outside KZbin? are you on LinkedIn?