David L. Jones | |||||||
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Personal information | |||||||
Nationality | Australian | ||||||
Occupation | Video blogger | ||||||
Website | www | ||||||
YouTube information | |||||||
Also known as | Dave Jones "The Crazy Aussie Bloke" | ||||||
Channel | |||||||
Years active | 2009–present | ||||||
Genre | Video blog | ||||||
Subscribers | 915,000 subscribers [1] (24 August 2023) | ||||||
Total views | 197+ million views [1] (24 August 2023) | ||||||
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David L. Jones is an Australian video blogger. [2] [3] He is the founder and host of EEVBlog [4] (Electronics Engineering Video Blog), a blog and YouTube channel targeting electronics engineers, hobbyists, hackers, and makers. [2] [5] His content has been described as a combination of "in-depth equipment reviews and crazy antics". [2]
Before becoming a full-time blogger, Jones worked on FPGA boards for the EDA company Altium. [6]
According to Jones, he began publishing electronic design project plans in electronics DIY magazines like Electronics Australia in the 1980s. [2] In recent years,[ when? ] several of his project articles appeared in Silicon Chip . [7]
Jones is also the founder and co-host of The Amp Hour, [4] an electronics engineering radio show and podcast.
Jones' EEVBlog YouTube channel was created on 4 April 2009. [8] [2] The channel features in-depth equipment reviews and electronics commentaries. [2] Jones has posted over 1000 episodes.
In a mid-2015 video, Jones disputed the claims of an unreleased battery life extender called Batteriser (later called Batteroo Boost after a lawsuit by Energizer). Batteroo, the company behind the product, disputed the arguments put forth by Jones and others, and published a number of demonstration videos in response. [9] In the wake of Jones' video about Batteriser, his video was "disliked" by a torrent of IP addresses located in Vietnam. [10] Other bloggers with related videos experienced similar activity from addresses in Vietnam. The bloggers involved have suspected that either a click farm in Vietnam was engaged to harm the reputations of those attacking the claims about the product, or that a single computer with many fake or stolen YouTube accounts utilized proxied IP addresses to cover its tracks. [11] Due to the anonymous nature of the attacks, it remains unknown who was responsible. [12]
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EEV or EeV may refer to:
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I started by taking stuff apart and trying to figure out how they worked.
...received hundreds of dislikes on his 30 August video debunking a product called Batteriser, which claims to greatly extend the life of alkaline batteries.
Dave Jones' EEVblog, came under attack after having published a series of videos debunking a product claiming to vastly extend the life of alkaline batteries.
Neither can one blame Batteriser, whatever one thinks of the circumstantial evidence...