genmon 11 hours ago

Fellow fan of the Namid Desert waterhole here!

As it happens, I made this wrapper for it

https://waterhole.genmon.partykit.dev

This single-serving waterhole:

- makes the YouTube stream fill the browser for an Immersive Experience(TM)

- shows how many people are watching in real-time

- provides ephemeral chat with other people present

I know at least one team at an unnamed big tech co who would all have it open on their second screens for shared ambience + chat...

(If anybody from YouTube is reading, I have a ton of idea about how ambient live steams are the Next Big Thing and how to lean into that.)

  • bookofjoe 10 hours ago
    • mckeed 7 hours ago

      Seems like YT is mostly focusing on the interaction between streamer and audience (which makes sense because streaming is big with young ppl rn).

      I understand "ambient streams" to be more like a setting for a group chat or chat room, where you're interacting with friends or strangers only, there's no focus on a single creator/streamer. Like hanging out at an interesting location instead of a featureless room.

  • xnx 6 hours ago

    > I have a ton of idea about how ambient live streams are the Next Big Thing and how to lean into that.)

    Are you me?

    It's crazy that these giant screens spend most of their time as black rectangles when they could be windows to the world (with very tasteful/quiet/no-motion advertisements).

    Happy to pitch to Netflix, Roku, or other streaming services and/or TV manufacturers. :-)

    • BLKNSLVR 2 hours ago

      Advertisements?

      When this thread is about a live stream showing wild animals and raw nature, your thought processes goes to advertisements?

      I hope you're being incredibly sarcastic, otherwise... Just yuck.

      Unless we're advertising for the majesty of nature, for whom there are no entities that would pay (big bucks at least).

    • Gud 5 hours ago

      I’d rather have my blank screens than ads.

rcfox 9 hours ago

Just following the chat for a few minutes, people posted links to a couple of other locations:

Okaukuejo waterhole in Etosha National Park: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeMUdOPFcXI (at the time of posting, a herd of elephants are enjoying the water)

Kalahari Desert: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ME0dPuBtzug

  • tcgv 7 hours ago

    The elephants wandered off, and now a bunch of giraffes are drinking from the pond. Some of them even spread their legs wide to keep their feet from getting wet. Very relaxing to watch.

    • arbuge 5 hours ago

      I got 2 rhinos on my very first visit. Extremely cool.

    • thaumasiotes 2 hours ago

      > Some of them even spread their legs wide to keep their feet from getting wet.

      I always interpreted the spreadeagle pose of a drinking giraffe to be a way of bringing their head closer to the ground. Do they sometimes not do that?

alexpotato 12 hours ago

I love that YouTube lets you jump back up to 12 hours on live streams so that you can see what happened recently/overnight etc.

basilikum 12 hours ago

The Namib is also home to this rather strange but extremely adapted plant: Welwitschia – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welwitschia

  • reaperducer 11 hours ago

    People tend to think that deserts are lifeless wastes to be readily exploited because who cares, right?

    If you've ever actually lived in or explored a desert, you quickly learn that they are full of life. More than most urban landscapes.

    • rafram 8 hours ago

      The Mojave Desert has some of the most beautiful life (plants and animals both) that I've ever seen. I think the lack of a green canopy just misleads people - it looks like a sea of yellow-brown in a satellite image, and even in person, you have to look closely to see the life. But that just makes it more special IMO.

    • seclorum_wien 11 hours ago

      Can confirm, have ventured all over the deserts of my homeland, and every time I do, I am filled with awe at the temerity of life on the brink of hardship.

      It is a spiritually rewarding activity to look out over a landscape, be still for a while, and notice the absolute abundance of life, as robust as ever.

      Even in the dustiest Earth voids, there are colours and growth. It pays to look for it.

    • sandworm101 5 hours ago

      They are empty places. The biomass per square area is a pittance compared to any other habitat. Water is life. Places with less water have less life. Not all places are equal.

      • reaperducer 2 hours ago

        Places with less water have less life.

        This is only true if every piece of life requires the exact same amount of water. Which is false. Your argument easily falls down simply by noting that a river has less life than a rain forest.

    • IncreasePosts 7 hours ago

      The word "Namib" means "place where there is nothing" in Khoekhoegowab, spoken by the people who live right next to the desert and assuredly explored it.

      • thaumasiotes 2 hours ago

        Where are you getting the gloss? Wiktionary has a definition "wasteland", but also derives it etymologically from a verb meaning "walk". Is there an element that means "nothing"?

Havoc 12 hours ago

This also works well for safari lodges. They worked out you can just put a pond there and elephants etc will come while guests are having breakfast. Reliably present fresh water in a dry area = animals

seclorum_wien 11 hours ago

In my opinion this is one of the most productive uses of the Internet.

It can really help to have this running on some spare screen while trapped in the deep, deep depths of cubicle hell.

Even the wind is soothing.

Another great Namibian destination is the "Ocean Conservation Namibia" channel, where one can witness the rescue of ocean life (mostly mammals, i.e. seals) from the plastic trash of humanity.

https://www.youtube.com/@OceanConservationNamibia

This has been a constantly soothing device in my life for a few years. There is something so cathartic about seeing the little pups being chased down to have their bindings removed.

curiosity42 10 hours ago

Closest to a religious experience I could have had. Thanks!

neom 8 hours ago

bookofjoe is one of my fav hn community members, didn't realize he had a blog - unsurprised to find it's fantastic. Thanks for being great, Joe! :)

https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=bookofjoe

  • bookofjoe 9 minutes ago

    Hey, thanks! Very kind of you. Full story re: bookofjoe blog:

    1) I started it on Typepad in 2002 and it continued with multiple posts 365 days/year until September 30, 2025, when Typepad shut down after 30 days notice.

    Sporadic archives here: https://web.archive.org/web/20020915000000*/bookofjoe.com

    2) After Typepad gave notice, I explored various options (Ghost/Squarespace/WordPress/Wix/Medium/Substack/Blogger) but all but Blogger were too complicated for my TechnoDolt©®™ capabilities, thus I moved to Blogger in early September (https://bookofjoe2.blogspot.com/2025/09/im-shocked-not.html) and have become settled in there, now posting (as I did for years on Typepad) 3 times daily (8am/12noon/4pm) 7 days a week.

_def 9 hours ago

How does this kind of watering hole work? It doesn't look like it's just a hole where rain ends up

  • burkaman 9 hours ago

    This one is artificial and is kept full by a solar-powered well system (according to the stream description).

danielfalbo 10 hours ago

Do you know when you look for a restaurant on google maps and you see a "Popular times" map of people density throughout the day + live updates like "Less busy than usual"? Would be fun to build such a thing for this

johnny_canuck 9 hours ago

Does anyone know what type of camera the stream uses? Or recommendations of an outdoor camera/microphone that could accomplish the same thing? I'd love to do this sort of thing in our rural backyard

  • pamelafox 8 hours ago

    I'd like to know as well, so that I can set up a caterpillar cam.

  • bookofjoe 9 hours ago

    Ask the moderators in the Comments section

munificent 8 hours ago

I've been feeling so pessimistic about software and the Internet lately and this is an excellent reminder of how magical and enriching it can be.

  • whism 7 hours ago

    Hi, we’ve never met but I dig the energy you put into your work that I’ve seen (books, dart etc). An idea I’ve had, but not brought to fruition, is that of using SmallTalk to produce a document of some kind — that is, the result of the work would be a portable executable image that could be read and interacted with and so on :)

    • munificent 3 hours ago

      Sort of like a self-extracting archive. Do it! :D

arkensaw 11 hours ago

how often does it rain there? I seem to have joined the feed just as a shower started

  • armadsen 8 hours ago

    The rainy season is during the summer (Northern Hemisphere's winter). Outside of those months it doesn't rain very often! I've spent two winters (June-August) in Namibia and can't recall much, if any rain. But now that we're approaching summer there, I imagine there's a little more rain. The Namib desert (which is a small percentage of Namibia, to be clear) is one of, if not the, driest deserts in the world.

  • astral_drama 9 hours ago

    Same

    It made me think of The Who - Love, Reign O’er Me.

      Only love can bring the rain
      That makes you yearn to the sky
      Only love can bring the rain
      That falls like tears from on high
  • nvahalik 10 hours ago

    Same. What are the odds?

namib 8 hours ago

Nice to see this. I live in Swakopmund, not too far from the Namib Desert.

ch4s3 9 hours ago

A barn like in Philly used to put this up on their TV at night if there wasn’t a game on and it was really popular. It was always cool to see large animals show up.

  • ch4s3 8 hours ago

    That should say bar.

buildbot 8 hours ago

Oh this is really soothing - and my cat is really intrigued by all the bird and other noises!

Edit/warning - Wow the thunder is loud!

billnad 8 hours ago

Reminds me of Africam. Back in the day my kids were very young and we would check it out every morning to see if we could see animals live at the watering holes, probably back around 2005-2008 or so?

escapecharacter 7 hours ago

I've been following this stream since I discovered it as my post-NYE activity around 4 am at the beginning of 2024. It's been a joy since then.

CapsAdmin 5 hours ago

I dunno why but it felt a weird to see rock pigeons outside of a city. (2025-10-17 17:00~)

matthew-craig 10 hours ago

Interestingly, I see that the watering hole is available on Google street view: 24°04'29.7"S 15°53'14.7"E

Giorgi 5 hours ago

>It is powered by solar-panels and the data is sent via Wireless signal over 35km of dunes to the nearest service provider. Initially a live stream was sent to a website and changed to YouTube in June 2021. A microphone was installed in August 2021 to enhanced the experience watching the game. The camera was replaced in December 2021.

I am more interested in how all this is technically achieved.

natestester2 8 hours ago

This is awesome!! thank you so much!!

tamimio 10 hours ago

Speaking of Namib Desert, yesterday I was in a nature museum and saw the Namib beetle, the fog collector beetle!

https://imgur.com/a/UbIefte

I love nature, and I am seriously thinking of changing careers completely away from technology and getting into a nature-related field, or at least something to use my technology background but spend most of the day with animals and in nature. I just don't know the whats and hows of that change yet. I would definitely take a job even if it's not paying that much in that direction if I found one in a heartbeat!

  • dustrider 9 hours ago

    Fun thing about these beetles is they do their territory call by knocking their abdomen against rocks or hard surfaces making a distinct TokTok sound.

    As kids we used to have great fun knocking rocks together around sunset to get them to call back. Kinda like beetle bird calls.

DyslexicAtheist 12 hours ago

awesome, would be nice to stream this to a screen on the wall in my home office ... even with low volume sound. project for the weekend :)

  • genmon 10 hours ago

    I have regularly done just that! a projector on a big wall, and a portal to the namib desert... 100% recommend

    see my other post with the full-viewport waterhole, that was what I used to get rid of YouTube chrome.

  • gfna 11 hours ago

    We did this in a project where, due to reasons, we used a windowless, dull, claustrophobic meeting room for 6 months. Every now and then our daily was interrupted by the sight of an elephant on the screen

  • bookofjoe 11 hours ago

    I had exactly this thought looking at this camera's feed. Put it on a huge screen in a classroom BUT only turn it on as a reward. Otherwise no one would ever get anything done.

  • forinti 10 hours ago

    How about time shifted so you are at the same time of day as the video? That would be nice.

  • reaperducer 11 hours ago

    would be nice to stream this to a screen on the wall in my home office

    I once toured an elementary school in one country that was "twinned" with another elementary school in another country.

    One of the classrooms (4th grade, maybe?) had one wall that was entirely a projection from a camera set up in a classroom of the other school. The other school had the opposite setup.

    The effect was of one large classroom, though the projected one was naturally a little dimmer, fuzzier, and de-saturated. But I was told that even though there was no audio link between them, the children of the different classrooms got to know each other on sight, and formed social bonds.

nxor 11 hours ago

Less youtube is my next big thing. My screen time is too high.

  • fishstamp82 11 hours ago

    I had this problem for a long time, the only thing that worked was installing an ad on that removes recommendations. The only thing I use youtube for today is intentionally following ASL (starcraft broodwar) in korea.

    The ad-on makes the home screen completely white/empty, meaning I just get reminded constantly ohh, yeah I am not supposed to use youtube unless there is something particular I want to watch.

    • darthcircuit 10 hours ago

      You can do this without addons. I turned off recommendations and history, so I get nothing in my feed and YouTube wont even give me a queue of shorts to scroll through. I have to be very intentional on YouTube now and it has cut my usage down a ton.

      • ekropotin 39 minutes ago

        It’s very surprising that YT even have this option, as it’s not really in Google’s best interests to allow people to unhook themselves.

      • nullwarp 10 hours ago

        I have had this set for a while now and anytime I see someone elses youtube page I am horrified.

        Probably the first setting I would recommend for anyone to enable.

      • sionisrecur 7 hours ago

        I guess that only works if you are logged in?

      • Jhsto 10 hours ago

        Where you do this?

    • RobKohr 9 hours ago

      I use "Code Injector" extension which is available for firefox and chrome. You can add custom javascript and css to any page. I usually inspect the page, find the classes or ids of the elements I want to get rid of, and do a display:none on them.

      • lukan 3 hours ago

        Yes, the easy custom solution for any site, if you know a little js and html.

    • dj_gitmo 10 hours ago

      I'm in the exact same boat. I spend too much time on YT and only thing I really want it for is ASL. I'll probably try the plugin.