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Tag 'Future'
98 videos
See all tags
17:51
2 059 350
Thoughts on humanity, fame and love
"
I
sell
dreams
,
and
I
peddle
love
to
millions
of
people
,
"
says
Shah
Rukh
Khan
,
Bollywood
's
biggest
star
.
In
this
charming
,
funny
talk
,
Khan
traces
the
arc
of
his
life
,
showcases
a
few
of
his
famous
dance
moves
and
shares
hard
-
earned
wisdom
from
a
life
spent
in
the
spotlight
.
09:58
733 979
Aimee Mullins and her 12 pairs of legs
Athlete
,
actor
and
activist
Aimee
Mullins
talks
about
her
prosthetic
legs
--
she
's
got
a
dozen
amazing
pairs
--
and
the
superpowers
they
grant
her
:
speed
,
beauty
,
an
extra
6
inches
of
height
..
.
Quite
simply
,
she
redefines
what
the
body
can
be
.
23:31
581 394
A roadmap to end aging
Cambridge
researcher
Aubrey
de
Grey
argues
that
aging
is
merely
a
disease
--
and
a
curable
one
at
that
.
Humans
age
in
seven
basic
ways
,
he
says
,
all
of
which
can
be
averted
.
18:11
308 524
Is this our final century?
Speaking
as
both
an
astronomer
and
"
a
concerned
member
of
the
human
race
,
"
Sir
Martin
Rees
examines
our
planet
and
its
future
from
a
cosmic
perspective
.
He
urges
action
to
prevent
dark
consequences
from
our
scientific
and
technological
development
.
23:41
244 693
The accelerating power of technology
Inventor
,
entrepreneur
and
visionary
Ray
Kurzweil
explains
in
abundant
,
grounded
detail
why
,
by
the
2020s
,
we
will
have
reverse
-
engineered
the
human
brain
and
nanobots
will
be
operating
your
consciousness
.
14:10
190 008
A robot that runs and swims like a salamander
Roboticist
Auke
Ijspeert
designs
biorobots
,
machines
modeled
after
real
animals
that
are
capable
of
handling
complex
terrain
and
would
appear
at
home
in
the
pages
of
a
sci
-
fi
novel
.
The
process
of
creating
these
robots
leads
to
better
automata
that
can
be
used
for
fieldwork
,
service
,
and
search
and
rescue
.
But
these
robots
don't
just
mimic
the
natural
world
—
they
[ . . . ]
17:40
184 498
Scott McCloud on comics
In
this
unmissable
look
at
the
magic
of
comics
,
Scott
McCloud
bends
the
presentation
format
into
a
cartoon
-
like
experience
,
where
colorful
diversions
whiz
through
childhood
fascinations
and
imagined
futures
that
our
eyes
can
hear
and
touch
.
19:34
177 260
Kevin Kelly on the next 5,000 days of the web
At
the
2007
EG
conference
,
Kevin
Kelly
shares
a
fun
stat
:
The
World
Wide
Web
,
as
we
know
it
,
is
only
5,000
days
old
.
Now
,
Kelly
asks
,
how
can
we
predict
what
's
coming
in
the
next
5,000
days
?
19:25
147 272
A vision of crimes in the future
The
world
is
becoming
increasingly
open
,
and
that
has
implications
both
bright
and
dangerous
.
Marc
Goodman
paints
a
portrait
of
a
grave
future
,
in
which
technology
's
rapid
development
could
allow
crime
to
take
a
turn
for
the
worse
.
19:19
138 277
Uber's plan to get more people into fewer cars
Uber
didn't
start
out
with
grand
ambitions
to
cut
congestion
and
pollution
.
But
as
the
company
took
off
,
co
-
founder
Travis
Kalanick
wondered
if
there
was
a
way
to
get
people
using
Uber
along
the
same
routes
to
share
rides
,
reducing
costs
and
carbon
footprint
along
the
way
.
The
result
:
uberPOOL
,
the
company
's
carpooling
service
,
which
in
its
first
eight
months
took
7.9
[ . . . ]
14:28
136 551
Can we build AI without losing control over it?
Scared
of
superintelligent
AI
?
You
should
be
,
says
neuroscientist
and
philosopher
Sam
Harris
—
and
not
just
in
some
theoretical
way
.
We
're
going
to
build
superhuman
machines
,
says
Harris
,
but
we
haven't
yet
grappled
with
the
problems
associated
with
creating
something
that
may
treat
us
the
way
we
treat
ants
.
17:52
133 744
Why the only future worth building includes everyone
A
single
individual
is
enough
for
hope
to
exist
,
and
that
individual
can
be
you
,
says
His
Holiness
Pope
Francis
in
this
searing
TED
Talk
delivered
directly
from
Vatican
City
.
In
a
hopeful
message
to
people
of
all
faiths
,
to
those
who
have
power
as
well
as
those
who
don't
,
the
spiritual
leader
provides
illuminating
commentary
on
the
world
as
we
currently
find
it
and
[ . . . ]
17:58
129 684
Transition to a world without oil
Rob
Hopkins
reminds
us
that
the
oil
our
world
depends
on
is
steadily
running
out
.
He
proposes
a
unique
solution
to
this
problem
--
the
Transition
response
,
where
we
prepare
ourselves
for
life
without
oil
and
sacrifice
our
luxuries
to
build
systems
and
communities
that
are
completely
independent
of
fossil
fuels
.
15:55
117 619
This computer will grow your food in the future
What
if
we
could
grow
delicious
,
nutrient
-
dense
food
,
indoors
anywhere
in
the
world
?
Caleb
Harper
,
director
of
the
Open
Agriculture
Initiative
at
the
MIT
Media
Lab
,
wants
to
change
the
food
system
by
connecting
growers
with
technology
.
Get
to
know
Harper
's
"
food
computers
"
and
catch
a
glimpse
of
what
the
future
of
farming
might
look
like
.
05:54
116 380
Let's not use Mars as a backup planet
Stellar
astronomer
and
TED
Senior
Fellow
Lucianne
Walkowicz
works
on
NASA
's
Kepler
mission
,
searching
for
places
in
the
universe
that
could
support
life
.
So
it
's
worth
a
listen
when
she
asks
us
to
think
carefully
about
Mars
.
In
this
short
talk
,
she
suggests
that
we
stop
dreaming
of
Mars
as
a
place
that
we
'll
eventually
move
to
when
we
've
messed
up
Earth
,
and
to
start
[ . . . ]
18:32
114 724
How the Internet will (one day) transform government
The
open
-
source
world
has
learned
to
deal
with
a
flood
of
new
,
oftentimes
divergent
,
ideas
using
hosting
services
like
GitHub
--
so
why
can’t
governments
?
In
this
rousing
talk
Clay
Shirky
shows
how
democracies
can
take
a
lesson
from
the
Internet
,
to
be
not
just
transparent
but
also
to
draw
on
the
knowledge
of
all
their
citizens
.
08:23
110 855
We are all cyborgs now
Technology
is
evolving
us
,
says
Amber
Case
,
as
we
become
a
screen
-
staring
,
button
-
clicking
new
version
of
homo
sapiens
.
We
now
rely
on
"
external
brains
"
(
cell
phones
and
computers
)
to
communicate
,
remember
,
even
live
out
secondary
lives
.
But
will
these
machines
ultimately
connect
or
conquer
us
?
Case
offers
surprising
insight
into
our
cyborg
selves
.
06:56
105 335
Can we prevent the end of the world?
A
post
-
apocalyptic
Earth
,
emptied
of
humans
,
seems
like
the
stuff
of
science
fiction
TV
and
movies
.
But
in
this
short
,
surprising
talk
,
Lord
Martin
Rees
asks
us
to
think
about
our
real
existential
risks
—
natural
and
human
-
made
threats
that
could
wipe
out
humanity
.
As
a
concerned
member
of
the
human
race
,
he
asks
:
What
’s
the
worst
thing
that
could
possibly
happen
?
11:55
103 790
Buildings that blend nature and city
A
skyscraper
that
channels
the
breeze
...
a
building
that
creates
community
around
a
hearth
..
.
Jeanne
Gang
uses
architecture
to
build
relationships
.
In
this
engaging
tour
of
her
work
,
Gang
invites
us
into
buildings
large
and
small
,
from
a
surprising
local
community
center
to
a
landmark
Chicago
skyscraper
.
"
Through
architecture
,
we
can
do
much
more
than
create
[ . . . ]
15:45
102 873
The US needs paid family leave — for the sake of its future
We
need
women
to
work
,
and
we
need
working
women
to
have
babies
.
So
why
is
America
one
of
the
only
countries
in
the
world
that
offers
no
national
paid
leave
to
new
working
mothers
?
In
this
incisive
talk
,
Jessica
Shortall
makes
the
impassioned
case
that
the
reality
of
new
working
motherhood
in
America
is
both
hidden
and
horrible
:
millions
of
women
,
every
year
,
are
[ . . . ]
03:15
102 838
David Byrne sings "(Nothing But) Flowers"
David
Byrne
sings
the
Talking
Heads
'
1988
hit
,
"
(
Nothing
But
)
Flowers
.
"
He
's
accompanied
by
Thomas
Dolby
and
string
quartet
Ethel
,
who
made
up
the
TED2010
house
band
.
13:42
102 473
3 ways to plan for the (very) long term
We
increasingly
make
decisions
based
on
short
-
term
goals
and
gains
—
an
approach
that
makes
the
future
more
uncertain
and
less
safe
.
How
can
we
learn
to
think
about
and
plan
for
a
better
future
in
the
long
term
...
like
,
grandchildren
-
scale
long
term
?
Ari
Wallach
shares
three
tactics
for
thinking
beyond
the
immediate
.
11:03
89 087
A delightful way to teach kids about computers
Computer
code
is
the
next
universal
language
,
and
its
syntax
will
be
limited
only
by
the
imaginations
of
the
next
generation
of
programmers.
Linda
Liukas
is
helping
to
educate
problem
-
solving
kids
,
encouraging
them
to
see
computers
not
as
mechanical
,
boring
and
complicated
but
as
colorful
,
expressive
machines
meant
to
be
tinkered
with
.
In
this
talk
,
she
invites
us
to
[ . . . ]
11:26
86 279
This virtual lab will revolutionize science class
Virtual
reality
is
no
longer
part
of
some
distant
future
,
and
it
's
not
just
for
gaming
and
entertainment
anymore
.
Michael
Bodekaer
wants
to
use
it
to
make
quality
education
more
accessible
.
In
this
refreshing
talk
,
he
demos
an
idea
that
could
revolutionize
the
way
we
teach
science
in
schools
.
16:41
85 099
Brilliant designs to fit more people in every city
How
can
we
fit
more
people
into
cities
without
overcrowding
?
Kent
Larson
shows
off
folding
cars
,
quick
-
change
apartments
and
other
innovations
that
could
make
the
city
of
the
future
work
a
lot
like
a
small
village
of
the
past
.
17:50
84 436
Four principles for the open world
The
recent
generations
have
been
bathed
in
connecting
technology
from
birth
,
says
futurist
Don
Tapscott
,
and
as
a
result
the
world
is
transforming
into
one
that
is
far
more
open
and
transparent
.
In
this
inspiring
talk
,
he
lists
the
four
core
principles
that
show
how
this
open
world
can
be
a
far
better
place
.
13:47
84 025
What time is it on Mars?
Nagin
Cox
is
a
first
-
generation
Martian
.
As
a
spacecraft
engineer
at
NASA
's
Jet
Propulsion
Laboratory
,
Cox
works
on
the
team
that
manages
the
United
States
'
rovers
on
Mars
.
But
working
a
9
-
to
-
5
on
another
planet
—
whose
day
is
40
minutes
longer
than
Earth
's
—
has
particular
,
often
comical
challenges
.
10:09
81 893
Eric Giler demos wireless electricity
Eric
Giler
wants
to
untangle
our
wired
lives
with
cable
-
free
electric
power
.
Here
,
he
covers
what
this
sci
-
fi
tech
offers
,
and
demos
MIT
's
breakthrough
version
,
WiTricity
--
a
near
-
to
-
market
invention
that
may
soon
recharge
your
cell
phone
,
car
,
pacemaker
.
19:42
79 974
It's time to question bio-engineering
At
TEDxPeachtree
,
bioethicist
Paul
Root
Wolpe
describes
an
astonishing
series
of
recent
bio
-
engineering
experiments
,
from
glowing
dogs
to
mice
that
grow
human
ears
.
He
asks
:
Isn't
it
time
to
set
some
ground
rules
?
12:38
71 907
A sci-fi vision of love from a 318-year-old hologram
Science
fiction
writer
Monica
Byrne
imagines
rich
worlds
populated
with
characters
who
defy
our
racial
,
social
and
gender
stereotypes
.
In
this
performance
,
Byrne
appears
as
a
hologram
named
Pilar
,
transmitting
a
story
of
love
and
loss
back
to
us
from
a
near
future
when
humans
have
colonized
the
universe
.
"
It
's
always
funny
what
you
think
the
future
is
going
to
be
like
[ . . . ]
10:01
71 007
The bio-future of joint replacement
Arthritis
and
injury
grind
down
millions
of
joints
,
but
few
get
the
best
remedy
--
real
biological
tissue
.
Kevin
Stone
shows
a
treatment
that
could
sidestep
the
high
costs
and
donor
shortfall
of
human
-
to
-
human
transplants
with
a
novel
use
of
animal
tissue
.
07:05
70 702
This scientist makes ears out of apples
TED
Fellow
Andrew
Pelling
is
a
biohacker
,
and
nature
is
his
hardware
.
His
favorite
materials
are
the
simplest
ones
(
and
oftentimes
he
finds
them
in
the
garbage
)
.
Building
on
the
cellulose
structure
that
gives
an
apple
its
shape
,
he
"
grows
"
lifelike
human
ears
,
pioneering
a
process
that
might
someday
be
used
to
repair
body
parts
safely
and
cheaply
.
And
he
has
some
even
[ . . . ]
08:32
69 040
George Dyson on Project Orion
Author
George
Dyson
spins
the
story
of
Project
Orion
,
a
massive
,
nuclear
-
powered
spacecraft
that
could
have
taken
us
to
Saturn
in
five
years
.
His
insider
’s
perspective
and
a
secret
cache
of
documents
bring
an
Atomic
Age
dream
to
life
.
10:10
66 540
Dive into an ocean photographer's world
Somersaulting
manta
rays
,
dashing
dolphins
,
swarming
schools
of
fish
and
munching
sharks
inhabit
a
world
beneath
the
ocean
's
surface
that
few
get
a
chance
to
see
.
Conservation
photographer
Thomas
Peschak
visits
incredible
seascapes
around
the
world
,
and
his
photos
reveal
these
hidden
ecosystems
.
"
You
can't
love
something
and
become
a
champion
for
it
if
you
don't
know
[ . . . ]
19:10
65 697
Back to the future (of 1994)
From
deep
in
the
TED
archive
,
Danny
Hillis
outlines
an
intriguing
theory
of
how
and
why
technological
change
seems
to
be
accelerating
,
by
linking
it
to
the
very
evolution
of
life
itself
.
The
presentation
techniques
he
uses
may
look
dated
,
but
the
ideas
are
as
relevant
as
ever
.
09:38
64 154
Navigating our global future
As
globalization
and
technological
advances
bring
us
hurtling
towards
a
new
integrated
future
,
Ian
Goldin
warns
that
not
all
people
may
benefit
equally
.
But
,
he
says
,
if
we
can
recognize
this
danger
,
we
might
yet
realize
the
possibility
of
improved
life
for
everyone
.
16:42
57 858
Stewart Brand proclaims 4 environmental 'heresies'
The
man
who
helped
usher
in
the
environmental
movement
in
the
1960s
and
'
70s
has
been
rethinking
his
positions
on
cities
,
nuclear
power
,
genetic
modification
and
geo
-
engineering
.
This
talk
at
the
US
State
Department
is
a
foretaste
of
his
major
new
book
,
sure
to
provoke
widespread
debate
.
10:47
57 295
The future race car -- 150mph, and no driver
Autonomous
cars
are
coming
--
and
they
’re
going
to
drive
better
than
you
.
Chris
Gerdes
reveals
how
he
and
his
team
are
developing
robotic
race
cars
that
can
drive
at
150
mph
while
avoiding
every
possible
accident
.
And
yet
,
in
studying
the
brainwaves
of
professional
racing
drivers
,
Gerdes
says
he
has
gained
a
new
appreciation
for
the
instincts
of
professional
drivers
.
[ . . . ]
11:55
54 223
A forgotten Space Age technology could change how we grow food
We
're
heading
for
a
world
population
of
10
billion
people
—
but
what
will
we
all
eat
?
Lisa
Dyson
rediscovered
an
idea
developed
by
NASA
in
the
1960s
for
deep
-
space
travel
,
and
it
could
be
a
key
to
reinventing
how
we
grow
food
.
20:39
52 561
How technology evolves
Tech
enthusiast
Kevin
Kelly
asks
"
What
does
technology
want
?
"
and
discovers
that
its
movement
toward
ubiquity
and
complexity
is
much
like
the
evolution
of
life
.
14:58
51 838
How better tech could protect us from distraction
How
often
does
technology
interrupt
us
from
what
we
really
mean
to
be
doing
?
At
work
and
at
play
,
we
spend
a
startling
amount
of
time
distracted
by
pings
and
pop
-
ups
—
instead
of
helping
us
spend
our
time
well
,
it
often
feels
like
our
tech
is
stealing
it
away
from
us
.
Design
thinker
Tristan
Harris
offers
thoughtful
new
ideas
for
technology
that
creates
more
meaningful
[ . . . ]
06:03
47 335
Good news in the fight against pancreatic cancer
Anyone
who
has
lost
a
loved
one
to
pancreatic
cancer
knows
the
devastating
speed
with
which
it
can
affect
an
otherwise
healthy
person
.
TED
Fellow
and
biomedical
entrepreneur
Laura
Indolfi
is
developing
a
revolutionary
way
to
treat
this
complex
and
lethal
disease
:
a
drug
delivery
device
that
acts
as
a
cage
at
the
site
of
a
tumor
,
preventing
it
from
spreading
and
[ . . . ]
16:18
45 922
Mae Jemison on teaching arts and sciences together
Mae
Jemison
is
an
astronaut
,
a
doctor
,
an
art
collector
,
a
dancer
..
.
Telling
stories
from
her
own
education
and
from
her
time
in
space
,
she
calls
on
educators
to
teach
both
the
arts
and
sciences
,
both
intuition
and
logic
,
as
one
--
to
create
bold
thinkers
.
18:39
43 983
Liz Coleman's call to reinvent liberal arts education
Bennington
president
Liz
Coleman
delivers
a
call
-
to
-
arms
for
radical
reform
in
higher
education
.
Bucking
the
trend
to
push
students
toward
increasingly
narrow
areas
of
study
,
she
proposes
a
truly
cross
-
disciplinary
education
--
one
that
dynamically
combines
all
areas
of
study
to
address
the
great
problems
of
our
day
.
25:23
43 121
Nicholas Negroponte, in 1984, makes 5 predictions
With
surprising
accuracy
,
Nicholas
Negroponte
predicts
what
will
happen
with
CD
-
ROMs
,
web
interfaces
,
service
kiosks
,
the
touchscreen
interface
of
the
iPhone
and
his
own
One
Laptop
per
Child
project
.
07:10
40 225
Why open a school? To close a prison
Our
kids
are
our
future
,
and
it
's
crucial
they
believe
it
themselves
.
That
's
why
Nadia
Lopez
opened
an
academic
oasis
in
Brownsville
,
Brooklyn
,
one
of
the
most
underserved
and
violent
neighborhoods
in
New
York
—
because
she
believes
in
every
child
's
brilliance
and
capabilities
.
In
this
short
,
energizing
talk
,
the
founding
principal
of
Mott
Hall
Bridges
Academy
(
and
a
[ . . . ]
14:54
40 195
Yann Arthus-Bertrand captures fragile Earth in wide-angle
In
this
image
-
filled
talk
,
Yann
Arthus
-
Bertrand
displays
his
three
most
recent
projects
on
humanity
and
our
habitat
--
stunning
aerial
photographs
in
his
series
"
The
Earth
From
Above
,
"
personal
interviews
from
around
the
globe
featured
in
his
web
project
"
6
billion
Others
,
"
and
his
soon
-
to
-
be
-
released
movie
,
"
Home
,
"
which
documents
human
impact
on
the
environment
[ . . . ]
06:28
39 532
High-altitude wind energy from kites!
In
this
brief
talk
,
Saul
Griffith
unveils
the
invention
his
new
company
Makani
Power
has
been
working
on
:
giant
kite
turbines
that
create
surprising
amounts
of
clean
,
renewable
energy
.
06:34
37 484
Why we're storing billions of seeds
In
this
brief
talk
from
TED
U
2009
,
Jonathan
Drori
encourages
us
to
save
biodiversity
--
one
seed
at
a
time
.
Reminding
us
that
plants
support
human
life
,
he
shares
the
vision
of
the
Millennium
Seed
Bank
,
which
has
stored
over
3
billion
seeds
to
date
from
dwindling
yet
essential
plant
species
.
14:49
35 948
Robert Neuwirth on our "shadow cities"
Robert
Neuwirth
,
author
of
"
Shadow
Cities
,
"
finds
the
world
’s
squatter
sites
--
where
a
billion
people
now
make
their
homes
--
to
be
thriving
centers
of
ingenuity
and
innovation
.
He
takes
us
on
a
tour
.
05:24
34 629
And now, the real news
How
many
of
today
's
headlines
will
matter
in
100
years
?
1000
?
Kirk
Citron
's
"
Long
News
"
project
collects
stories
that
not
only
matter
today
,
but
will
resonate
for
decades
--
even
centuries
--
to
come
.
At
TED2010
,
he
highlights
recent
headlines
with
the
potential
to
shape
our
future
.
05:02
32 410
Stewart Brand on squatter cities
Rural
villages
worldwide
are
being
deserted
,
as
billions
of
people
flock
to
cities
to
live
in
teeming
squatter
camps
and
slums
.
Stewart
Brand
says
this
is
a
good
thing
.
Why
?
It
’ll
take
you
3
minutes
to
find
out
.
14:56
29 352
Who would the rest of the world vote for in your country's election?
Wish
you
could
vote
in
another
country
's
election
?
Simon
Anholt
unveils
the
Global
Vote
,
an
online
platform
that
lets
anybody
,
anywhere
in
the
world
,
"
vote
"
in
the
election
of
any
country
on
earth
(
with
surprising
results
)
.
23:23
24 792
Stewart Brand on the Long Now
Stewart
Brand
works
on
the
Clock
of
the
Long
Now
,
a
timepiece
that
counts
down
the
next
10,000
years
.
It
's
a
beautiful
project
that
asks
us
to
think
about
the
far
,
far
future
.
Here
,
he
discusses
a
tricky
side
problem
with
the
Clock
:
Where
can
we
put
it
?
09:05
23 074
10 young Indian artists to watch
Collector
Ravin
Agrawal
delivers
a
glowing
introduction
to
10
of
India
's
most
exciting
young
contemporary
artists
.
Working
in
a
variety
of
media
,
each
draws
on
their
local
culture
for
inspiration
.
15:20
18 077
Don't fear intelligent machines. Work with them
We
must
face
our
fears
if
we
want
to
get
the
most
out
of
technology
—
and
we
must
conquer
those
fears
if
we
want
to
get
the
best
out
of
humanity
,
says
Garry
Kasparov
.
One
of
the
greatest
chess
players
in
history
,
Kasparov
lost
a
memorable
match
to
IBM
supercomputer
Deep
Blue
in
1997
.
Now
he
shares
his
vision
for
a
future
where
intelligent
machines
help
us
turn
our
[ . . . ]
18:38
13 665
The refugee crisis is a test of our character
Sixty
-
five
million
people
were
displaced
from
their
homes
by
conflict
and
disaster
in
2016
.
It
's
not
just
a
crisis
;
it
's
a
test
of
who
we
are
and
what
we
stand
for
,
says
David
Miliband
—
and
each
of
us
has
a
personal
responsibility
to
help
solve
it
.
In
this
must
-
watch
talk
,
Miliband
gives
us
specific
,
tangible
ways
to
help
refugees
and
turn
empathy
and
altruism
into
[ . . . ]
12:43
12 267
Teach girls bravery, not perfection
We
're
raising
our
girls
to
be
perfect
,
and
we
're
raising
our
boys
to
be
brave
,
says
Reshma
Saujani
,
the
founder
of
Girls
Who
Code
.
Saujani
has
taken
up
the
charge
to
socialize
young
girls
to
take
risks
and
learn
to
program
—
two
skills
they
need
to
move
society
forward
.
To
truly
innovate
,
we
cannot
leave
behind
half
of
our
population
,
she
says
.
"
I
need
each
of
you
to
[ . . . ]
11:40
9 041
Meet the dazzling flying machines of the future
When
you
hear
the
word
"
drone
,
"
you
probably
think
of
something
either
very
useful
or
very
scary
.
But
could
they
have
aesthetic
value
?
Autonomous
systems
expert
Raffaello
D'Andrea
develops
flying
machines
,
and
his
latest
projects
are
pushing
the
boundaries
of
autonomous
flight
—
from
a
flying
wing
that
can
hover
and
recover
from
disturbance
to
an
eight
-
propeller
craft
[ . . . ]
17:27
8 734
Why Brexit happened — and what to do next
We
are
embarrassingly
unaware
of
how
divided
our
societies
are
,
and
Brexit
grew
out
of
a
deep
,
unexamined
divide
between
those
that
fear
globalization
and
those
that
embrace
it
,
says
social
scientist
Alexander
Betts
.
How
do
we
now
address
that
fear
as
well
as
growing
disillusionment
with
the
political
establishment
,
while
refusing
to
give
in
to
xenophobia
and
[ . . . ]
09:15
6 789
How to grow a forest in your backyard
Forests
don't
have
to
be
far
-
flung
nature
reserves
,
isolated
from
human
life
.
Instead
,
we
can
grow
them
right
where
we
are
—
even
in
cities
.
Eco
-
entrepreneur
and
TED
Fellow
Shubhendu
Sharma
grows
ultra
-
dense
,
biodiverse
mini
-
forests
of
native
species
in
urban
areas
by
engineering
soil
,
microbes
and
biomass
to
kickstart
natural
growth
processes
.
Follow
along
as
he
[ . . . ]
15:01
4 269
How the blockchain will radically transform the economy
Say
hello
to
the
decentralized
economy
—
the
blockchain
is
about
to
change
everything
.
In
this
lucid
explainer
of
the
complex
(
and
confusing
)
technology
,
Bettina
Warburg
describes
how
the
blockchain
will
eliminate
the
need
for
centralized
institutions
like
banks
or
governments
to
facilitate
trade
,
evolving
age
-
old
models
of
commerce
and
finance
into
something
far
more
[ . . . ]
16:45
2 409
Global priorities bigger than climate change
Given
$50
billion
to
spend
,
which
would
you
solve
first
,
AIDS
or
global
warming
?
Danish
political
scientist
Bjorn
Lomborg
comes
up
with
surprising
answers
.
12:18
2 218
Your words may predict your future mental health
Can
the
way
you
speak
and
write
today
predict
your
future
mental
state
,
even
the
onset
of
psychosis
?
In
this
fascinating
talk
,
neuroscientist
Mariano
Sigman
reflects
on
ancient
Greece
and
the
origins
of
introspection
to
investigate
how
our
words
hint
at
our
inner
lives
and
details
a
word
-
mapping
algorithm
that
could
predict
the
development
of
schizophrenia
.
"
We
may
be
[ . . . ]
12:29
2 170
Gene editing can now change an entire species — forever
CRISPR
gene
drives
allow
scientists
to
change
sequences
of
DNA
and
guarantee
that
the
resulting
edited
genetic
trait
is
inherited
by
future
generations
,
opening
up
the
possibility
of
altering
entire
species
forever
.
More
than
anything
,
the
technology
has
led
to
questions
:
How
will
this
new
power
affect
humanity
?
What
are
we
going
to
use
it
to
change
?
Are
we
gods
now
?
[ . . . ]
17:38
1 974
How computers are learning to be creative
We
're
on
the
edge
of
a
new
frontier
in
art
and
creativity
—
and
it
's
not
human
.
Blaise
Agüera
y
Arcas
,
principal
scientist
at
Google
,
works
with
deep
neural
networks
for
machine
perception
and
distributed
learning
.
In
this
captivating
demo
,
he
shows
how
neural
nets
trained
to
recognize
images
can
be
run
in
reverse
,
to
generate
them
.
The
results
:
spectacular
,
[ . . . ]
09:32
1 106
Governments don't understand cyber warfare. We need hackers
The
Internet
has
transformed
the
front
lines
of
war
,
and
it
's
leaving
governments
behind
.
As
security
analyst
Rodrigo
Bijou
shows
,
modern
conflict
is
being
waged
online
between
non
-
state
groups
,
activists
and
private
corporations
,
and
the
digital
landscape
is
proving
to
be
fertile
ground
for
the
recruitment
and
radicalization
of
terrorists
.
Meanwhile
,
draconian
[ . . . ]
04:28
1 094
The jobs we'll lose to machines — and the ones we won't
Machine
learning
isn't
just
for
simple
tasks
like
assessing
credit
risk
and
sorting
mail
anymore
—
today
,
it
's
capable
of
far
more
complex
applications
,
like
grading
essays
and
diagnosing
diseases
.
With
these
advances
comes
an
uneasy
question
:
Will
a
robot
do
your
job
in
the
future
?
09:33
990
How new technology helps blind people explore the world
How
can
technology
help
improve
our
quality
of
life
?
How
can
we
navigate
the
world
without
using
the
sense
of
vision
?
Inventor
and
IBM
Fellow
Chieko
Asakawa
,
who
's
been
blind
since
the
age
of
fourteen
,
is
working
on
answering
these
questions
.
In
a
charming
demo
,
she
shows
off
some
new
technology
that
's
helping
blind
people
explore
the
world
ever
more
independently
...
[ . . . ]
10:24
914
Don't fear superintelligent AI
New
tech
spawns
new
anxieties
,
says
scientist
and
philosopher
Grady
Booch
,
but
we
don't
need
to
be
afraid
an
all
-
powerful
,
unfeeling
AI
.
Booch
allays
our
worst
(
sci
-
fi
induced
)
fears
about
superintelligent
computers
by
explaining
how
we
'll
teach
,
not
program
,
them
to
share
our
human
values
.
Rather
than
worry
about
an
unlikely
existential
threat
,
he
urges
us
to
[ . . . ]
11:54
887
Why we need gender-neutral bathrooms
There
are
a
few
things
that
we
all
need
:
fresh
air
,
water
,
food
,
shelter
,
love
...
and
a
safe
place
to
pee
.
For
trans
people
who
don't
fit
neatly
into
the
gender
binary
,
public
restrooms
are
a
major
source
of
anxiety
and
the
place
where
they
are
most
likely
to
be
questioned
or
harassed
.
In
this
poetically
rhythmic
talk
,
Ivan
Coyote
grapples
with
complex
and
intensely
[ . . . ]
15:49
852
What will humans look like in 100 years?
We
can
evolve
bacteria
,
plants
and
animals
—
futurist
Juan
Enriquez
asks
:
Is
it
ethical
to
evolve
the
human
body
?
In
a
visionary
talk
that
ranges
from
medieval
prosthetics
to
present
day
neuroengineering
and
genetics
,
Enriquez
sorts
out
the
ethics
associated
with
evolving
humans
and
imagines
the
ways
we
'll
have
to
transform
our
own
bodies
if
we
hope
to
explore
and
[ . . . ]
14:58
813
How to build a business that lasts 100 years
If
you
want
to
build
a
business
that
lasts
,
there
may
be
no
better
place
to
look
for
inspiration
than
your
own
immune
system
.
Join
strategist
Martin
Reeves
as
he
shares
startling
statistics
about
shrinking
corporate
life
spans
and
explains
how
executives
can
apply
six
principles
from
living
organisms
to
build
resilient
businesses
that
flourish
in
the
face
of
change
.
16:00
674
How architecture helped music evolve
As
his
career
grew
,
David
Byrne
went
from
playing
CBGB
to
Carnegie
Hall
.
He
asks
:
Does
the
venue
make
the
music
?
From
outdoor
drumming
to
Wagnerian
operas
to
arena
rock
,
he
explores
how
context
has
pushed
musical
innovation
.
13:46
624
What a planet needs to sustain life
"
Venus
is
too
hot
,
Mars
is
too
cold
,
and
Earth
is
just
right
,
"
says
planetary
scientist
Dave
Brain
.
But
why
?
In
this
pleasantly
humorous
talk
,
Brain
explores
the
fascinating
science
behind
what
it
takes
for
a
planet
to
host
life
—
and
why
humanity
may
just
be
in
the
right
place
at
the
right
time
when
it
comes
to
the
timeline
of
life
-
sustaining
planets
.
13:18
616
3 reasons why we can win the fight against poverty
Half
of
the
world
's
poorest
people
have
something
in
common
:
they
're
small
farmers
.
In
this
eye
-
opening
talk
,
activist
Andrew
Youn
shows
how
his
group
,
One
Acre
Fund
,
is
helping
these
farmers
lift
themselves
out
of
poverty
by
delivering
to
them
life
-
sustaining
farm
services
that
are
already
in
use
all
over
the
world
.
Enter
this
talk
believing
we
'll
never
be
able
to
[ . . . ]
05:29
550
How we'll find life on other planets
Astronomer
Aomawa
Shields
searches
for
clues
that
life
might
exist
elsewhere
in
the
universe
by
examining
the
atmospheres
of
distant
exoplanets
.
When
she
isn't
exploring
the
heavens
,
the
classically
trained
actor
(
and
TED
Fellow
)
looks
for
ways
to
engage
young
women
in
the
sciences
using
theater
,
writing
and
visual
art
.
"
Maybe
one
day
they
'll
join
the
ranks
of
[ . . . ]
13:48
382
How AI can bring on a second Industrial Revolution
"
The
actual
path
of
a
raindrop
as
it
goes
down
the
valley
is
unpredictable
,
but
the
general
direction
is
inevitable
,
"
says
digital
visionary
Kevin
Kelly
—
and
technology
is
much
the
same
,
driven
by
patterns
that
are
surprising
but
inevitable
.
Over
the
next
20
years
,
he
says
,
our
penchant
for
making
things
smarter
and
smarter
will
have
a
profound
impact
on
nearly
[ . . . ]
13:46
365
The untapped genius that could change science for the better
Jedidah
Isler
dreamt
of
becoming
an
astrophysicist
since
she
was
a
young
girl
,
but
the
odds
were
against
her
:
At
that
time
,
only
18
black
women
in
the
United
States
had
ever
earned
a
PhD
in
a
physics
-
related
discipline
.
In
this
personal
talk
,
she
shares
the
story
of
how
she
became
the
first
black
woman
to
earn
a
PhD
in
astrophysics
from
Yale
—
and
her
deep
belief
in
[ . . . ]
15:04
364
Every piece of art you've ever wanted to see — up close and searchable
What
does
a
cultural
Big
Bang
look
like
?
For
Amit
Sood
,
director
of
Google
's
Cultural
Institute
and
Art
Project
,
it
's
an
online
platform
where
anyone
can
explore
the
world
's
greatest
collections
of
art
and
artifacts
in
vivid
,
lifelike
detail
.
Join
Sood
and
Google
artist
in
residence
Cyril
Diagne
in
a
mind
-
bending
demo
of
experiments
from
the
Cultural
Institute
and
[ . . . ]
12:31
321
New nanotech to detect cancer early
What
if
every
home
had
an
early
-
warning
cancer
detection
system
?
Researcher
Joshua
Smith
is
developing
a
nanobiotechnology
"
cancer
alarm
"
that
scans
for
traces
of
disease
in
the
form
of
special
biomarkers
called
exosomes
.
In
this
forward
-
thinking
talk
,
he
shares
his
dream
for
how
we
might
revolutionize
cancer
detection
and
,
ultimately
,
save
lives
.
09:26
281
Shape-shifting tech will change work as we know it
What
will
the
world
look
like
when
we
move
beyond
the
keyboard
and
mouse
?
Interaction
designer
Sean
Follmer
is
building
a
future
with
machines
that
bring
information
to
life
under
your
fingers
as
you
work
with
it
.
In
this
talk
,
check
out
prototypes
for
a
3D
shape
-
shifting
table
,
a
phone
that
turns
into
a
wristband
,
a
deformable
game
controller
and
more
that
may
change
[ . . . ]
09:57
252
What you need to know about CRISPR
Should
we
bring
back
the
wooly
mammoth
?
Or
edit
a
human
embryo
?
Or
wipe
out
an
entire
species
that
we
consider
harmful
?
The
genome
-
editing
technology
CRISPR
has
made
extraordinary
questions
like
these
legitimate
—
but
how
does
it
work
?
Scientist
and
community
lab
advocate
Ellen
Jorgensen
is
on
a
mission
to
explain
the
myths
and
realities
of
CRISPR
,
hype
-
free
,
to
the
[ . . . ]
09:38
251
How we'll fight the next deadly virus
When
Ebola
broke
out
in
March
2014
,
Pardis
Sabeti
and
her
team
got
to
work
sequencing
the
virus
's
genome
,
learning
how
it
mutated
and
spread
.
Sabeti
immediately
released
her
research
online
,
so
virus
trackers
and
scientists
from
around
the
world
could
join
in
the
urgent
fight
.
In
this
talk
,
she
shows
how
open
cooperation
was
key
to
halting
the
virus
...
and
to
[ . . . ]
09:40
182
The next step in nanotechnology
Every
year
the
silicon
computer
chip
shrinks
in
size
by
half
and
doubles
in
power
,
enabling
our
devices
to
become
more
mobile
and
accessible
.
But
what
happens
when
our
chips
can't
get
any
smaller
?
George
Tulevski
researches
the
unseen
and
untapped
world
of
nanomaterials
.
His
current
work
:
developing
chemical
processes
to
compel
billions
of
carbon
nanotubes
to
assemble
[ . . . ]
14:00
165
What you can do to prevent Alzheimer's
Alzheimer
's
doesn't
have
to
be
your
brain
's
destiny
,
says
neuroscientist
and
author
of
"
Still
Alice
,
"
Lisa
Genova
.
She
shares
the
latest
science
investigating
the
disease
—
and
some
promising
research
on
what
each
of
us
can
do
to
build
an
Alzheimer's
-
resistant
brain
.
14:22
147
A smarter, more precise way to think about public health
Sue
Desmond
-
Hellmann
is
using
precision
public
health
—
an
approach
that
incorporates
big
data
,
consumer
monitoring
,
gene
sequencing
and
other
innovative
tools
—
to
solve
the
world
's
most
difficult
medical
problems
.
It
's
already
helped
cut
HIV
transmission
from
mothers
to
babies
by
nearly
half
in
sub
-
Saharan
Africa
,
and
now
it
's
being
used
to
address
alarming
infant
[ . . . ]
16:21
145
The future of money
What
happens
when
the
way
we
buy
,
sell
and
pay
for
things
changes
,
perhaps
even
removing
the
need
for
banks
or
currency
exchange
bureaus
?
That
's
the
radical
promise
of
a
world
powered
by
cryptocurrencies
like
Bitcoin
and
Ethereum
.
We
're
not
there
yet
,
but
in
this
sparky
talk
,
digital
currency
researcher
Neha
Narula
describes
the
collective
fiction
of
money
—
and
[ . . . ]
09:37
98
How to exploit democracy
Hacking
,
fake
news
,
information
bubbles
...
all
these
and
more
have
become
part
of
the
vernacular
in
recent
years
.
But
as
cyberspace
analyst
Laura
Galante
describes
in
this
alarming
talk
,
the
real
target
of
anyone
looking
to
influence
geopolitics
is
dastardly
simple
:
it
's
you
.
13:42
67
Why gun violence can't be our new normal
It
doesn't
matter
whether
you
love
or
hate
guns
;
it
's
obvious
that
the
US
would
be
a
safer
place
if
there
weren't
thousands
of
them
sold
every
day
without
background
checks
.
Dan
Gross
,
president
of
the
Brady
Campaign
to
Prevent
Gun
Violence
,
makes
a
passionate
,
personal
appeal
for
something
that
more
than
90
percent
of
Americans
want
:
background
checks
for
all
gun
[ . . . ]
12:00
55
Why Earth may someday look like Mars
Every
minute
,
400
pounds
of
hydrogen
and
almost
7
pounds
of
helium
escape
from
Earth
's
atmosphere
into
outer
space
.
Astrophysicist
Anjali
Tripathi
studies
the
phenomenon
of
atmospheric
escape
,
and
in
this
fascinating
and
accessible
talk
,
she
considers
how
this
process
might
one
day
(
a
few
billion
years
from
now
)
turn
our
blue
planet
red
.
10:53
10
Art made of the air we breathe
Emily
Parsons
-
Lord
re
-
creates
air
from
distinct
moments
in
Earth
's
history
—
from
the
clean
,
fresh
-
tasting
air
of
the
Carboniferous
period
to
the
soda
-
water
air
of
the
Great
Dying
to
the
heavy
,
toxic
air
of
the
future
we
're
creating
.
By
turning
air
into
art
,
she
invites
us
to
know
the
invisible
world
around
us
.
Breathe
in
the
Earth
's
past
and
future
in
this
[ . . . ]
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