@tuhieu52: #CapCut

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Wednesday 17 June 2026 15:16:12 GMT
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ccholus
ccholus :
မိုက်တယ်ရှင့်သီချင်းလေးကကြိုက်တယ်ရှင့်👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
2026-06-18 13:45:08
1
user1202765373168
檔欸唉 :
เพลงนีเพราะมาก
2026-06-18 16:27:12
0
aungkyaw13122
🍺?? 𝓐?𝓷𝓰 𝓴?𝓪𝔀 𝓞𝓸 🍻? :
song name ??
2026-06-18 13:47:00
0
ko.boy32
😔အပယ်ခံဘဝပါကွား😔 :
😁😁😁
2026-06-18 14:58:00
0
saw.htay.htay6
Saw Htay Htay :
song name?
2026-06-18 10:40:52
0
garty.pol
Garty Pol :
အယ်
2026-06-18 02:29:38
1
bay.lay508
😘Bay lay😍 :
😳အင်း'''''သွားကြမယ်လေ'''''''လိုက်လည်မယ်လေ😳😳😳💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚
2026-06-18 05:08:30
0
user07833551
Myo Naing Aung :
မဂ်လာဆောင်တုန်းကအချိန်လေးသတိရမီတယ်ဒီသိီချင်းလေးကြားရင်
2026-06-18 03:20:17
1
thazinphyu6396
Z&P :
hi
2026-06-18 08:55:18
0
e_m_o_t214
စန်မြန်း :
အမြဲအားပေးနေပါတယ်ရှင့် 🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍
2026-06-17 16:50:58
0
user457558819
Thant Zin Tun :
ပြန်တင်မယ်နော် bro
2026-06-18 13:24:23
0
smiledevil0
ᴍʀܔ𝘬ꪊ𝘳ꪖ𝓲ヅ :
တျဝၐဝတတဟ
2026-06-18 09:17:31
0
soe.moe.thu319
soe moe thu :
🥰🥰🥰 အယ်
2026-06-17 21:13:55
0
pearlgem83
Pyae's :
😂ဟုှုန်ထားမယ်
2026-06-17 15:35:13
0
kgs58101
🌺🌺🌺အညာသားကြီး🌺🌺🌺 :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-18 10:44:49
1
nanteieiphyu3
Nant Ei Ei Phyu :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-18 17:43:17
0
phue.pyae.pyae.tha
Designer Phue Pyae Pyae Thaw :
😂😂😂
2026-06-18 14:10:07
0
shwegyii29
Shwe Gyi :
🌹🌹🌹
2026-06-18 15:11:29
0
snow.khin14
Snow Khin :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-18 15:05:56
0
myaminaung35
Soe Aung :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-18 16:49:36
0
shwe.lin.aung94
🥀မောင် ငမဲ🥀😎😎 :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-18 15:11:48
0
soehtetnaing337
ဧရာဝတီးတိုင်းသားလေး😊😊 :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-18 13:49:45
0
roronoa.zoro5101
Myo myo :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-17 15:20:03
0
To see more videos from user @tuhieu52, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Why do viruses look like robots? Once you discount the AI-generated, misleading videos, viruses really ARE way more robot-like than humans! And the reason they look so weirdly mechanical comes down to scale and complexity. At human size, biology is squishy. Muscles, skin, organs — it feels like nature is sculpting with clay. But viruses are built at the molecular scale, where you don’t have soft, flexible materials to freely mold into any shape. You have proteins. And proteins are more like LEGO pieces (although actually still more flexible) Each one has a specific shape. Specific sticky spots. Specific angles where it can connect to other pieces. So instead of sculpting a smooth blob, evolution builds viruses by snapping together repeated molecular parts. That’s why many virus shells form geometric shapes, like an icosahedron, like a 20-sided protein soccer ball. It’s a strong, efficient container made from the same pieces repeated over and over. For bacteriophages, the design gets even more robotic-looking. The head stores the genetic material. The tail acts like a molecular syringe. And the little leg-like fibers are not legs for walking (or swimming, as shown in the video).They’re more like landing gear and molecular sensors, helping the virus recognize the right bacterial target. No brain. No circuits. No tiny pilot inside. Technically not even considered “alive.” Just simple building blocks, clicking together into a structure that happens to look engineered. Because at that scale, biology doesn’t look like an animal. It looks like architecture. Or maybe more accurately: Nature didn’t sculpt these things. It assembled them. 📚 Check out the study at DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2025.03.027  #creatorsearchinsights #biology #Science #LearnOnTikTok #TikTokLearningCampaign
Why do viruses look like robots? Once you discount the AI-generated, misleading videos, viruses really ARE way more robot-like than humans! And the reason they look so weirdly mechanical comes down to scale and complexity. At human size, biology is squishy. Muscles, skin, organs — it feels like nature is sculpting with clay. But viruses are built at the molecular scale, where you don’t have soft, flexible materials to freely mold into any shape. You have proteins. And proteins are more like LEGO pieces (although actually still more flexible) Each one has a specific shape. Specific sticky spots. Specific angles where it can connect to other pieces. So instead of sculpting a smooth blob, evolution builds viruses by snapping together repeated molecular parts. That’s why many virus shells form geometric shapes, like an icosahedron, like a 20-sided protein soccer ball. It’s a strong, efficient container made from the same pieces repeated over and over. For bacteriophages, the design gets even more robotic-looking. The head stores the genetic material. The tail acts like a molecular syringe. And the little leg-like fibers are not legs for walking (or swimming, as shown in the video).They’re more like landing gear and molecular sensors, helping the virus recognize the right bacterial target. No brain. No circuits. No tiny pilot inside. Technically not even considered “alive.” Just simple building blocks, clicking together into a structure that happens to look engineered. Because at that scale, biology doesn’t look like an animal. It looks like architecture. Or maybe more accurately: Nature didn’t sculpt these things. It assembled them. 📚 Check out the study at DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2025.03.027 #creatorsearchinsights #biology #Science #LearnOnTikTok #TikTokLearningCampaign

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