Dave, you don't Defibrillate someone having a heart attack (Myocardial Infarction) ; you defibrillate someone having certain forms of cardiac arrest.
Actually, you don't defibrillate someone having cardiac arrest. Cardiac arrest means literally no cardiac electrical activity. In medical terms, we call it asystole. In lay terms, it would be "flat-lining". Defbrillating someone in asystole will accomplish nothing.
The point of defibrillation is to override a lethal rhythm, allowing the heart's natural pacemaker to restart. The rhythm you would defibrillate would be ventricular fibrillation or v-fib. That's the big one everyone is worried about, and it's the one that kills the most people by far. There are other rhythms that get defibirillated, such as pulseless ventricular tachycardia, torsades de pointes, and even some atrial dysrhythmias, although the atrial dysrhythmia shocks are syncronized to occur on a specific point of the cardiac electrical cycle so we don't make the patient go into an even worse rhythm.
As a point to the video, Dave made note of the Joules going from 100 to 120 to 150 (or something like that). The concept here is that the first shock is at the lowest Joule. Following that is 120 seconds of CPR, followed by the AED analyzing the rhythm again. If the AED determines a shock is warranted, it will step up to the middle Joule because the lower Joule did not work. Then, 120 seconds of CPR and the AED will analyze and, if warranted, shock using the highest Joule. Any further shocks will be at the highest Joule. Each manufacturer of biphasic defibirillators uses or can use different Joule setting depending on what they get certified with. It is not important for a user to remember the exact Joule setting, because each machine may be different.
Monophasic defibrillators were all the same and used 200J, 300J, and 360J. These have been mostly phased out, although you will still find monophasic defibirillators in older and less advanced healthcare settings. These monophasic defibrillators used more Joules because they were less effective.
For anyone worried that they need to understand any of this stuff to use an AED: Your concerns are unwarranted. The AED talks to you. You open it and it will tell you to apply the pads and how/where to do it. It will tell you to press the anaylyze button. It will tell you to start chest compressions. You don't need to know anything to use an AED, and you might save a life.