it &apos;s this pyramid .
through the mother of milk .
it involved that two , three , up to 400 times of separation of malware that had been allowed .
often it is it on the water that we &apos;ve clocked .
what do you do when you have such a sub-break in the river ?
stephen palin &apos;s bi : the trace of knitile
they were under my level .
but we didn &apos;t realize that at the time , that we needed a third , because the neck was not curkable if the horse was supposed to walk .
now we &apos;d like to visualize joey .
and mikey can move with his fingers &apos;s tail , on the right to the left and from the top of the other hand .
mikey brett -- craig , leo joaquin and i .
in winter you sleep a lot . you enjoy the family life at the home .
while a global philanthropic industry is emerging , and that &apos;s what &apos;s happening now , you should see what &apos;s going on , you know , the efforts to throw these ancient conditions over the pile , so that philanthropy is open and large and rapid view .
well , not all of these attempts to be good from love , working well .
they write a confirbling competition , a price , can get talent and money for the hardest tasks to speed , and speed the solution .
so this is that our capacity to provide us our problems , not with our ability to create them , step step .
and i watch something that i think might be described as a kind of democratization of familiarity .
so it starts working on every morning .
but that could be played in school , even in a hospital .
and if you think about it , this has been held in our whole culture , even in our cities .
maybe they were running around for a long time , and they wanted to just walk home .
it &apos;s another of these categories that might not be so much competition .
but yet neuroscientists have identified certain patterns that allow us to take very important things out of it .
the car begins starts to break out -- a false maneuver to contemplate and no change in the mental load .
brenda palmber was done to help the prescription in the society , and to keep it from a way .
they &apos;ve believed a guaranteed economic computation calculation , and the government of l.a. believe that the aspmatic of the asphalt is going to save more energy to the trees and other more energy cost than they had to spend their budget labor .
but on the backside of the t-shirt they were given me , &quot; save the threatening to branded . &quot;
a problem : waste management and unemployment .
and we want to move the systems so for people to open doors that were previously tax restrictions and should be part of the taxpayers .
he grew up in the rasvalley valley , and he escaped the lygers and all the way worse time , and he provided me and my siblings and my siblings and my truly stable home , and also a whole bunch of other people who went wrong .
and i got married there .
when i was about six years old , i went with my mom and my brother , and i was buying shoes .
and for the sake of america , i went even to nashville , tennessee , where people were perpetrating about the unclear sign of the southern state .
these are that i refer as the horizontal identities , because the contact with respect is a horizontal experience .
his mother told me the story , when she came home -- and he went to visit the local university -- she said , &quot; i saw his car that you always saw on the parking lot . &quot;
and i asked her , &quot; do you take something ?
this is listening to that , if you make a cure -- that your desire is for us is that we can stop someday , and a stranger who can love your love behind our face . &quot;
i decided to become a parent while i was working on this project .
because , which jumped to me was the thought of disease .
he was a wise man . he said something like , &quot; well , that &apos;s fine , but you cut very well in the math class . &quot;
if you look at the photo , you see that they &apos;re stacked .
and these kids have their laptops . but it was exactly what inspired us , plus the impact of joe and others . we launched the project , &quot; a laptop per child . &quot;
think about it -- because there &apos;s other people like bill gates who said , &quot; man , you &apos;ve got a real computer . &quot;
you don &apos;t call your network , like verify or string . you build a life network .
and there were 45 degrees , i mean , it wasn &apos;t what you call as a cool experience , and the previous countries -- i call them a breakthrough , because in none of these summer -- there was a big difference to get an appointment with the head of a government .
inspire your friends to give one and get one .
a few years ago , i read an article from the new york timessh-journalist , michael poller , where he claimed that if we grow a little bit of our own food , one of the best things we can do for the environment .
but we call it a girl &amp; amp ; e in heimarwork , or study and develop it themselves .
brita riley : a garden in my apartment
you see , we have spent over the recent past , except for short times , more than being recorded , so the state of education .
so let me explain this idea .
that is not a republican want to be controlled with more than 200,000 dollars a year .
they &apos;re still a terrible group of people , i assure you , but today , they form something on their inpartisan , and they also see an incredibly glamorous field of potential results .
each time we stood on top of the other days .
and from that moment , in my age , i started thinking differently about the things .
and that &apos;s not something thinking , but something , it &apos;s true .
when i first looked at it , i thought , no , there &apos;s no beauty .
i watch faces .
it &apos;s given to understand by information in front of understanding .
that &apos;s just what &apos;s extraordinary in our physical scale .
massimo tamina ini .
this is a beautiful water bottle -- some of you guys know it -- ross lovegrove , the designer .
tell me , think of the first flash , it was something quick ? yes , that &apos;s what they thought .
the knowledge bubble that &apos;s around the room , the stuff that costs nothing , because this knowledge is free -- nails we , where are we coming from ?
but forward , now -- that &apos;s not the end of the song , so we &apos;re only beginning .
you know , the ceremonies , the ceremonies , to celebrate , these lyrical caps , that the education path -- especially the higher education path -- is turning us in noble and better human beings .
anyway , everybody , we think of it .
we connect ahead , we combined , we &apos;re repeating .
but if you &apos;re a middle-aged star in september , you &apos;re going to refer to a suburban transit platform to celebrate the tsubicle where you have to read poetry that honor the moon , and the fragility of life that we should remember .
so you go to an orthodox jewish community every friday in a van .
and this is art .
now we think of religions , in organized religions .
if you &apos;re a collaborative involved in something , something a lot of people come together , there are things for them in religion .
how many people here would say that religion is important for them ?
i &apos;ve tried to solict a framework , and i hope that people can just merge it .
so this graph shows that 96 percent of the universe in this stood exploration is unknown or unknown or not good understood .
and what the russians are doing is building these detectors , and they can see about a kilometer deep below the surface to see these flash light bulb .
but it &apos;s a special organibility .
because it &apos;s so cold , it &apos;s all in this hut as you left it , with the refreshed of the last meal you had cooking there .
the balloon goes is filled with helium from the left , and the fabric goes to the center where a sentence is connected to a parachute , and then it &apos;s connected to the trails .
one is in the boston public library .
the next question is : what do you get for this ?
this is a moment before he was out of the parking , and that he did the local accounting competition .
we &apos;ve gone out very quickly , to put one of our books on him , and saw that you can read with 200 points per diagonal books on him .
but it turns out that elevation is pretty hard , and it doesn &apos;t cost .
and we &apos;re putting together slowly from the square levels of grinding work on their hands .
it doesn &apos;t put no sense .
is that right ? let &apos;s look at the northern tv and find it .
we go ahead .
they &apos;re going to win muleene vitality and energy .
so the next time are going to be faced with something that &apos;s unexpected and uncertain , then you think it might be just a gift .
two years ago , a group of 20 euopon-microbiologists were published an article about opisthokonta -- a super family that connects the wildlife and fungi .
when you look at the mycelium , you &apos;ll see that it &apos;s largely branching .
so prototaxites , now , was about 1m .
these are the same extension that keep together the carbs .
this is my wife dusty with a mushroom called fomitopomalis -- agarkon .
and after that &apos;s mixing it , we &apos;ve done it with the mix , and it &apos;s done against h5n1 have done , and we &apos;ve reached a case of vote that &apos;s higher than 1,000 .
it &apos;s about 200,000 species .
so we build carbon banks on the planet , we regenerate soils .
well , you have to be a little bit more concrete if you want to build .
at the day , when i went into the biosphere , i was surrounded by a completely different atmosphere , which could not tell others in the world , except me , and seven more people .
we were just going to travel around the biosphere .
after the two years , we were happy when we came out . because , in fact , you can say something happened to be a pretty &quot; huah , &quot; if one of the oxygen runs , you go to work , and that &apos;s the life is failing system , that &apos;s a bad defeat .
in biosphere 2 , i completely understood that i have an enormous impact on my biosphere every day , and that she had a influence on me on me , on my body , right .
i was there , because i was a model for the mangrove of a carbon program program .
it &apos;s a certain kind of aesthetics .
we also connect to it .
doctors and medicine didn &apos;t lead anything out .
and we &apos;re trying to do this possibility of city to city , to make each living people in our own country , even in the world .
and that means there &apos;s hope .
no one had asked this question before .
for example , a triangle , like this one of an input aircraft , is not a recipe for flying a flight , but a reminder of important things that are forgotten or be missing if you don &apos;t check them .
even the rabbits are currently pit crews now .
in some cases , most of them in the last year , this flu has caused by a new virus , or a new discovered , called an israeli &quot; virus virus .
it &apos;s also a different part of this community , the interstate beekeepers , the ones who are asking a living state of bees .
they &apos;ve got breakfast there , and they become their failures , all there , and it &apos;s great , and i really recommend it to pursue time because it &apos;s a pretty distinctive experience of america .
32 species since 1950 were not identified in the state or found .
and i think when we make it more connection , then we can generate the resources and interests ourselves to solve these problems .
but you can also have a great community of immigrants in a town or a building , these beekeepers who -- this is in paris , where these beekeepers live .
but it can also sound like that .
and now , now i &apos;m standing here in rotterdam , a beautiful city , on a big stage , and tell you what about whistling .
oh , oh yeah .
plants are not a living . that &apos;s the point .
and this is a living organism that has a mass of at least 2,000 tons .
it &apos;s interesting because this sleep mechanism is perfectly preserved .
well , this is a root scene that is growing against a stella of notation .
we have the animaloids -- the normal robot , inspired by animals , the insekcoirs and so on .
she &apos;s filmed with a hidden camera .
the train goes right now into the third station of the line of the line .
i looked at the whole facade -- there were a total of 70 windows -- and i knew what i had to do .
it &apos;s the best book of grinding in new york city .
but the one camera man that you never missed it was the one who was just on a blank band in front of the camera department of best buy his tape , put his band into one of her cameras , and did it .
but i think it &apos;s also a totally valable way of living in place in place and seeing &quot; frogging &quot; with 200 others in the grand central terminal , cooking as ghosts through the new york public library .
the idea is still in the beginning , but looks like this .
look at that looking at this sweet animal and ask yourself -- who &apos;s making it ?
you might say it &apos;s about the retrodesign of religions .
it &apos;s like a coin . it &apos;s not -- it doesn &apos;t matter .
this picture i pulled out of the net -- the burd on the left-hand side , is really an important part of that picture .
now , this is not intelligent design -- not by francis crick .
yesterday , for biological scales .
marspeople would be amazed about it .
they &apos;re from &quot; life with visions . &quot;
you &apos;ve just heard this guy .
&quot; if there &apos;s no god we would have all accidents , the result of an astronomical little possibility in the universe .
now rick warren uses scientific expressions and scientific glscapes and information in a very interesting context .
it &apos;s a very clever frontier of religions .
i wish that meme would die .
he says , this is your solution , thank you very much . the next request .
music and now the same piece of music you have 98 percent of the data forgotten .
it &apos;s fun to make sound .
protect our ears ? but sure .
within minutes , it &apos;s pretty easy for adults and for teenagers .
i don &apos;t care that crayers are made for the writing .
every time the hula-homage wheels touched their bodies , an contact between two parts of bike tape , and you hear a tone , always again while it leaves it .
we should all be working on the world .
a big discussion began to start barri-powered , and we were delighted about it .
but the universe isn &apos;t a silent movie , because the universe isn &apos;t miserable .
what einstein didn &apos;t know was , if you take the sun , and a ball of six miles in diameter , if you take a couple of millions of soil in six miles , you would bring a black hole , the light of that density , that light that light would never escape , it would be a black shadows of black .
now we &apos;re now the earth altogether , up to about 30 miles , and see how they &apos;re moving on a perfect orbit around the black hole .
space is moving together , and it expands , while it comes out of these black holes , and the universe into the universe .
more like this , thing , thing .
these two black holes accumulate together and become one over billions of years .
it &apos;s literally the term of noise .
i was waiting for the wind , and then went to the canvas , and so art came up .
and just recently , we &apos;ve begun to work with the men that live in so-called supermax plants .
and at the same time , we struggle in another battle .
i found the issue of iranian women tremendously interesting , in the sense that the women of iran , historically , was primarily the political change .
this film also talks about the iranian people and asks to go back to her story , and look back to themselves before they were characterized in the way we looked at how we looked like music , in the intellectual life we had .
and they &apos;ve been proved .
and that size , this size should be in a self poet , not in terms of money , not in terms of power that you practice , not practice , not in relation to any status that you have social , but focus on a self .
compassion doesn &apos;t have a certain form .
you can &apos;t be part of the wholeness and still .
they learn swimming through swimming .
daybraanda saraswati refer to the songs of personal development , and he &apos;s doing compassion , and he accompanied us on every stage of self , helpless , helpless to keep the terrible .
and the first look at the intuition , but when you actually think about it perspective , it really makes sense .
then we went to turn , we went to the runt brooder , and again , he got it again .
when the khan academy -- i quit my job , and we became a really organization -- we don &apos;t do that for profit -- the question is , how do we bring all the next to the next level ?
on the bike stay , drop out of the bicycle .
these kids don &apos;t use textbooks , they don &apos;t get a one-by-the-class teacher .
and finally , you can see that they were able to achieve 10 in a series .
but this is all a system .
sk : it &apos;s two fifth classes and two seventh classes .
and yes , they can actually start to be able to be able to be able to be able to be able to be mentoring .
and she said , &quot; people in architectural clothing , in the veil , the stairs , go .
she could not control them .
i meet a lot of old people who are hearing -- or vision .
he once saw a man in the bathcoat , who recognized a whistling .
so , not very sesame street , but she always said again , &quot; why mit ? &quot; she said , &quot; kermit the frog means nothing .
and you &apos;re waiting for his girlfriend .
facial neurons are discovered in 1970 .
so this thing has to be done known as well in patients , under the public .
oliver sacks : how many hallucinations about our psyches .
i spend a lot of my work in the dark , i &apos;m used to it .
they use it to find food , attract partners , as defense against anderers .
it has a snake star for passenger .
and i think it &apos;s a crab that releases its bioluminescent chemicals .
it &apos;s going to come back .
and i want to start from the end of the first telescope of the world to look at the moon .
but i want to talk about a aspect of dna research , and that &apos;s the physical appearance of dna .
and we &apos;re taking forward , we &apos;re zooming out , zoom out , through a nuclear pore , which is to convert access to access the dna , which is called a nucleus .
we &apos;re focusing on the red region -- i &apos;ve got it red , and it &apos;s the interface between the dynamic tile and the chromosomes .
now , you discover these things is a pleasant incentive of science .
it was established by distant ancestor that inhabited the world , and will never be extinct .
progress comes through ideas that govern electricity and hard work , whereas math reasoning as useful , or not not .
when the thelate is harvested yet thin , with care , you can see the hard work for the world .
e.ha o. wilson : lessons for young scientists
and then another communication technology was allowed to bring new media media , the print engine was invented , and within decades , millions of people learned and writing .
so the game playing the game . there are two actors . you &apos;ve never played the game before , you won &apos;t play the game . you know each other , and you know , you &apos;re even in separate rooms .
and finally , in neurophysiologic measurements , people who drew the muunds of economic play , they showed their brains in the rewards of their brains .
in el salvaline ador undertook both parties that were pulled back from the civil war , they &apos;ve been doing steps that were proven to have a strategy of the prisoner &apos;s dilemma .
for example , we took a few days after the accident in haiti , we showed the previous conference pictures of the air .
okay , guys are you there ?
this was curtis wong , worldwide telescope .
it shows that we &apos;re interested in getting a target , peak .
and afterwards , we asked them , &quot; do you want to build another one ? &quot; well , for $ 240 , $ 2.10 , and at some point , at some time , people don &apos;t go . it . it &apos;s not worth for me . &quot;
and by the way , we should notice that this activity had no significant difference .
i can &apos;t tell you who , but it was a big company in seattle .
that was the task .
it turns out that it was almost like the shredder condition .
they found that it doesn &apos;t involve enough effort .
or do think , &quot; i love this origami and everybody else will love it ? &quot;
imagine you don &apos;t have any children , and one day you went to the park and you met some children , and they &apos;re just like their children .
i think , by going to be in situations where people need to decide how much effort to themselves is how much effort , attention , or connection , or they think on the workplace over the workplace , in the shower and so on . suddenly , suddenly , bert has to tell us more things .
the reason that the success over the american fires was not so far ago .
except that they had given the young girls &apos; name and girls in the girls .
afghanistan is one of the poorest countries in the world , and 70 percent of the population are illiterate .
in order to compensation of internal control , they try to control the outside world , especially most frequently the family , and unfortunately , this is all the traditional side , the relived site , aggressive side , the restrictive side of the cultural context of the cultural context .
this was our sign . it was done . we had 45 of them in the middle of kabul .
a hazara said to his adviser &apos;s office , &quot; if we had met a few years ago , we would be killed each other .
we don &apos;t need the oil . &quot;
so this is the united kingdom , and the population density in this country .
now we want to figure out why this is relevant , why is this relevant ?
they all deliver little energy per unit per area , and we have to accept that .
this is the average european car .
so here &apos;s a diagram that i created .
well , before the first sample , i saw a big future .
he was a young members of the pediatrician orchestra , in his home , barquisimeto .
spontaneous music sets music ative thoughts , and makes it a general good good .
a ugly pillar box on the kitchen table , which says , &quot; i &apos;m old and hires , &quot; doesn &apos;t bring it in a process .
wow , what a great day is , if we finally can do these things .
it looks like in terms of this y2k , all the lights , but nobody is at home . right ?
with my own health problems , i &apos;ve done drug therapies , and many times times in this hospital , once in the hospital .
we need to do that for our personal health model .
and most of the time we can make two interventions , the drug mix rules .
no matter who pay for it , we &apos;re trying to attract better directly to keep care differently , and the home , the patients , the family members and the caregivers than part of the coordinating healthcare teams and use existing trends in a radically different way .
today , 250,000 individual viruses will show up .
cybercriminals also have also have the gangsters in the dashboard , ads that govern business data to manage the spread of their malware .
there are also very boring programs .
we really need to fix that .
a little bit of search , and here &apos;s our cybercriminal .
okay ? you can see a list of wland-net .
so notice , notice technology is changing with an amazing speed , and that 250,000 technologies are changing very rapidly changing .
i was not very good at reading things .
you all know the story , yes ?
that was not bad .
that was amazing .
&quot; you can call that a dinosaur , but look at the velociraptor : that &apos;s cool . &quot;
and so there &apos;s obviously all sorts of money is done .
and he agreed .
and frankly , when i think , if kfc founder colonel would be suspicious about being able to recruit with a filter piece .
this is based on food questions , in accelerating rates , and many more factors that make us feel pretty good about what &apos;s actually consumed by people .
it &apos;s primarily in the developmental growth work , either non-lack infrastructure , refrigeration , cleaning boxes , or even simple obshs : these food are waste before they &apos;re leaving the fields .
pastaken , who are too small for supermarket standards , tomatoes on teneriffa , orange in florida , bananas in the trash , in the trash , land in the trash . this is the waste of a gang plankton in ecuador .
it &apos;s a living organism , i cut a piece , put it in a vasis , and it just held another two weeks .
of course , the best way to spread a secret to somebody to say is not to talk about it .
this is from her book .
yeah , i &apos;m in depressed , and i want to call it over by amazonis so i call the mars map and click the button , and there &apos;s my route .
anybody can actually make a namess change .
there are no jovians .
so , reality , now comes something important .
that &apos;s not a good picture .
again , this is sierra leone .
i know that many of you are scared , but that was my intention .
there are so many complex relations here that i won &apos;t go to that , because you would say , &quot; hey , go back to the fluchomeland . &quot;
i &apos;ve found other pairs . all of them are symmetry , even if , unlike the main diagram , the symmetry of symmetry .
in a legendary talk , comedian charles fleireiyed a hilarious amare to an alhonored ted tedtalk : measuring geometry , numbers , graphs and radio art also , design the unique theory of everything -- the theory of &quot; moleeds .
i guess it would be 40 miles thick .
so there &apos;s -- i &apos;m sure you &apos;ve read a lot about concern about cyberattacks , and defense against them .
nobody knows what the internet is at the moment , because it &apos;s different than an hour before .
yet , this incident revealed the growing fear of the western world in terms of the digital human weapons .
in three years ago , the united states and france said they were now investing in military organizing to defend their computer interfaces .
just in this week in a paper that came out at the 26th period of 2010 , in the new york times , that the official of the national attacks , the official attack was interrogated by the case that america was attacked that america was attacked by cyberattacks .
there were many stories around the sea , particularly negative .
or that murinly . all the little particles in the water look like it would be in all the way .
it can change its body into a large , terrible back-up fish .
with a person , individuals can tell stories .
and a lot of that ends up in the sea , which is a good story , again , if you can do a few characters in it -- especially if they can &apos;t be done , like these two .
it becomes a near-death experience for sherman .
somebody is doing the light .
in two fourmonths of months , i didn &apos;t even see a dozen people .
good morning , ladies and gentlemen .
there &apos;s something that you call the squares of a number , what you know is that you take a number and multiply with itself .
if i show you , you call a three-digit number .
now they can all can leave you all time . i won &apos;t hedge you , but i &apos;m trying to find the right answer .
seven , and yours : seven .
if you think you know it , raise your hand .
audience : may , right ? november ?
it was esg , and it was wolkig .
i take 57,000 to the square , plus 683 squared , plus 57,000 times 683 times two .
i hope that math is fun for you . thank you .
so don &apos;t go back and read my dissertation .
i hope all your eyes start too nuts .
shortly after a moment , i found another picture that she had , an image of me .
i spoke about one year ago with some teachers about these things .
i was ready and thought , &quot; oh boy , &quot; i wanted to measure the powerful thing here and measure the speed of light .
to measure the wavelength , i just need to measure the distance from here , a complete wave , up to here .
the cop &apos;s chasing me with a rifle .
and i wonder , why am i here ?
so first of course , i &apos;ve been collecting my 40 layers of crowd-sourcing sourcing with partners like mutopo and joelto .
look at the coffee table -- it grows into the height , and you find 10 people .
the bottom is , it &apos;s deeper than gender differences .
and that allows these two creatures to try and explore what &apos;s possible .
it &apos;s got no reason , and that &apos;s what &apos;s so awesome to play .
for example , for example , for example , you should be allowed to dive , shouting , shouting , to be messy and through these emotional regulation and other social effects through -- to develop cognitive , emotional and physical ways -- is the fraction of that .
i &apos;m sorry , sorry that i don &apos;t have a playful person , but it allows to mobility what exercises the actual play with play .
human trust is generated human beings is built by play signals .
in summer , in summer , hard work was going to do in the name of the hot .
the wearable meeting .
and you can see that there &apos;s actually that .
so , if you look at this thing in the dining room , you feel that it &apos;s a plate of nachos , and only when you try it , you try , you know that poster , you can mess .
hc : so , when miraculous saudi in southern seas , we have these other feendust dust that we put on the water in the water tube , and it , and it turns out to convert them from sweet .
and now we see news changes the world &apos;s picture of americans .
and if you think americans are just not interested , they would be wrong with it .
i write software . and i do it .
the idea is that in a kind of magical light .
how could they react to see the fact of being able to see or lobby .
so i &apos;m going to show you a video of an older version that takes just a minute . okay .
of course , in hollywood all the time .
one of the things you &apos;re trying to notice is blood -- that you see a massive difference of blood contrast .
nathan wolfe : these species , yes yes . and there &apos;s a lot more more genes in these animals .
in 1998 , we launched my mentors burke and the mpopo-ngole ngole only in central africa to work with jaelike , in this part of the world .
this was our lab before .
it wasn long ago , a long time ago , the discovery of unknown organisms was first was discovered .
it &apos;s this parts of moments in real time in real time that leads to a greater connected feeling in people , despite distances and in real time .
we &apos;ve got a twitter call a twitter program .
horrible talk so far ! &quot;
there were not many of them . and they weren &apos;t just to find foreign books .
and years later , i thought that when i left nigeria to study in the united states .
but what &apos;s going on it is so important to tell you about the beginning to the beginning of a tradition , stories of africa in the west . a tradition of sub-saharan africa than a place of bad , changes from darkness , from people who are the words of grandiosen , rudyard kivisions , half child . &quot;
the palestinian poet of the outmade writes to write that the easiest way to dislearn a people , to tell his story and start with &quot; two . &quot;
there &apos;s also other stories that are not acting by disasters , and it &apos;s very important , even just important to talk about them .
what if my roommate knew my roommate was going to know about my great , ambitious nonsense hair that just opened their own business ?
and in a while , today , that sometimes seem to seem scary or confusing , let &apos;s make sure of the almost happy authority of experts that can seem to be aware of what we can do and what can &apos;t .
they make things make mistakes every day -- mistakes that come from unmindable .
to encourage you to encourage is a rebel idea , because it &apos;s against our instincts , which are comprised of our instincts , to surround us with opinions and phrases that we think are true , or by which we want you to be true .
and these are a lot of people .
he underwrote every line with his name , he checked all the boxes , sending them up where he believes they belong .
my heart needs to be in my heart that i need to survive when alzheimer &apos;s disease .
how do you get customers to stand up mass for this new technology at the manufacturer ?
we &apos;ve done : what happens when the battery isn &apos;t in the car .
in europe , where gravity , where we &apos;re controlled , it means that price is 60 to 60 .
renaute said a word and a half billion dollars invested to build nine different types of different types that we &apos;ll be able to put on the market , which is going to the market . reduce mass numbers : 100,000 cars in the first year .
secondly , we chose the san francisco bay area , where the mayor of san francisco , gavin &apos;s newvin , all the civil leaders of the other community had a .
in other words , if we kill ourselves , we go back to a new .
in india you don &apos;t understand where the problem is because most indian people are dancing every times two or three gallons .
it comes out the same .
and people said , &quot; we need time to make that happen .
don &apos;t get deceive is not new .
the standard of creational creationists -- there &apos;s only one , you all have reduced to this , talking about the logic of logic .
as i see it , is not only science is destroying for religion , religion , the religion that religion is destroying for science .
in the rest , i &apos;m usually not very proud of being brieing , but that comparison has to be .
the higher as your own intelligence or the higher the educational level , the more likely it is religious . &quot;
should be a critical mass , a sudden acceleration of attacks .
and not to do not to do it .
should you be one of them , and , of course , there are many of you not , but should i be able to stop them , please come up and talk and talk them , and should you be rich , think about ways that you can move .
all of the ignoring the fact that in the world , in the world , in the world , is a different supercomputer , seti @ heim .
so all of this is creating the creation of content , relevant and momentous expression .
you have to hire them so they put a lot of time in time .
because in this context , we see a battle about how hard or easy to be able to do -- to make the industrial information economy , or the evolution of a new production model , and that changes how we see the world and how we tell the world .
so , if you &apos;re talking about this corrupt africa -- corruption , always corruption -- i want you to know that the people and government in some countries are trying to struggle to fight against , and there &apos;s some achievement as well .
because if you &apos;re not in nigeria , they &apos;re not even in africa .
but there &apos;s a big market out there , and people don &apos;t know at all -- or they don &apos;t want to know .
it &apos;s increasing potential and private sector .
and , you know , there &apos;s a neighborhood effect : if you have a sequence of the continent , it looks like it &apos;s affected by the whole continent .
but a lot of course , a lot of these entrepreneurs have the capital to expand , because none of our countries believe what to do , what to do , is nobody is thinking about a functioning market .
are we more safe today ?
so vaccines actually work .
and also also , even live water birds for all of us known strands of influenza .
now , what does that mean ?
these are mostly hidden before the immune system .
so here &apos;s a weird thought .
will we get fast enough to respond before millions of die ?
and the power of europe , so we could have been able to do our supply of flu , and continue to make them available , but to get back to that , which was michael specter , who didn &apos;t want to do that anti-vaccine people .
they &apos;re constantly improving their lives , and in some few times , the government help .
this is the cheetah generation , and the rescue africa is on the shoulders of these cheeks .
there are people who think they need to do more money in the bowl , more help to do in the bowl that holes have .
i let me through .
the modern sector is the communicators of the elites .
without this consent , the chief can &apos;t leave the chief laws , and unless , and if it doesn &apos;t naturally emulate , it &apos;s removed .
kanzi , salagaga -- they were all there .
it &apos;s not just the informal sector .
i like to hear what you &apos;re thinking about ; i like to see what you &apos;re going to link to you , and i like to learn , i like to learn two things .
there &apos;s a whole bunch of companies that make this kind of personalization .
but that &apos;s not what &apos;s going on .
thank you , chris . it &apos;s really an honor to stand at that stage twice . thank you very much .
i told it exactly how i was talking to you about it . tipper and i went myself to myself , shoney &apos;s , cheap family restaurant , and the man -- everybody laughed .
but it also drives us very efficiently from the right path .
invest too , invest . you &apos;ve talked about it .
i like to think of climate crisis &quot; better as &quot; climate disaster , &quot; but again , i need help from people who know about branded .
and then biodegrading are dying eruptions at some places in large quantities .
i don &apos;t know what to do with this whole stuff .
yet , as many people have said , a lot of trial is going to happen , to get the precursor to subprints .
they were not recovered .
but they accumulate in the gulf and the broaching around the atlantic .
for the seed supply with respect -- hundreds of miles copper , all of the copper of overfishing , there &apos;s a neighboring in which has no booms .
that &apos;s certainly one thing that we &apos;re doing .
well , in the halls , when we lived in the halls , we ended up in , as soon as we needed energy , and we still do that .
it doesn &apos;t make any more energy than i add , but it doesn &apos;t matter pretty cool stuff .
i have bracky eyes . they like blue or gray .
in the &apos; 70s and the 1980s , a team of scientists made all 73,000 connections between the neuron .
we &apos;re increasing a factor bigger than 100,000 , to get resolution , so that we can see the branches of neurons at the same time .
you laugh , but , you know , this book changed my life .
and indeed , i am making new hope today .
what do you see in this picture ?
it &apos;s not just because of course , they don &apos;t look like this .
i don &apos;t know . i &apos;m going to put it in a scientific way of questioning them .
we &apos;ve spent a long time thinking about why , and only before we have a long time ago , we &apos;re always to realize that kind of unexpected struggle , then it changes our understanding of how things work .
ks : so , we &apos;ve shown the concept before a few people &apos;s day , and they asked us , when does it comes to trade ?
ks : well , the interesting thing about this is that you don &apos;t have to be an engineer to estimate why a 10-foot pole fits into your pocket , so interesting .
it &apos;s completely transparent , smell , atomic .
if you look at the thoughts on something , if you put that stripes together -- like a little basket -- then you a formal lawer , and then you could put it into stuff like that : so that you could make a cny ceiling ceiling that would keep around the table around the table , and you wouldn &apos;t read it on a black-day .
his company really did a survey in the country around the country to learn how to control the air when they respond to an emergency .
it &apos;s a really escape .
of course , what &apos;s in foie gras ?
it doesn &apos;t look like anybody who beat french judge to win his foie gras .
so i talked .
there are coetary and all kinds of different , accessible .
he made them bleaching , took the seeds , and they planted them all over his 12 acres .
&#91; clapping &#93; and the wild geese come back .
it was incredible .
we took ourselves on a last tour over the farm , and he showed me the wild pepper , and the wildlife plants plants plants that he could take on his yard .
insult to history .
that &apos;s the story of foie gras .
listen , as janine benyus , one of my favorite car stereo and dener within this issue , says , &quot; listen to nature . &quot;
and to shift from the old fires , to change two great stories about oil and electricity that are both of the two fifth of fossil fuel in the air .
our fuel cost for mobility is about three fifth of cars .
you can skip it down . it &apos;s tougher than the titanium .
the trucks and planes can use realistic hydrogen or advanced biofuels .
so our descendants of our descendants from 2010 , over two fifth state of the empire state building , through recompassing by the six-and-a-half thousand windows in the superwindows that fills light , but heat .
and germany now has more solar workers than america &apos;s steel workers .
in america , our aging , dirty and unsafe energy systems are replaced by 2050 .
so if only like one of these results , and you can support the new invention of the fire without having to be able to do and have to have to be the most important thing .
it was a more active struggle , because in bihar , the corrupt state of india was also the corrupt state of india , the civil themselves , instead of serving the poor that could have not been able to have no firm if their children hadn &apos;t having to school .
the second key feature is open help .
but in many parts of the earth , governments are not interested to open up , or to serve the poor , and this is a way that the system want to change .
and i don &apos;t know why i &apos;m here , but -- you might know the nightmare , i &apos;m going to be honored , you &apos;ll get the opera house and then knocking one , &quot; you must sing ! &quot;
but if you go back to the level of animal , there &apos;s things to explore .
that &apos;s our poetry . this is our wonderful story .
the higher you are , the more important you will for civilization .
but if you take a magnifying glass , like this line , is this line , you know , it &apos;s a bag , ack , ack , ack . so .
so i say that . i &apos;m saying that because , i &apos;ll repeat it , not from a good reason to not one of our beautiful fruit , our civilization .
foreign politics , you can understand , if you look at rachel maddow or something , but -- i want to talk about young people and structure .
does you understand that ? &quot;
i &apos;ll tell you , you &apos;re not dead . &quot;
and we &apos;ll read you . &quot;
then i switched to geology , &quot; rocks for sporting maons . &quot; that &apos;s easy .
they hired big expectations on all the cousins and the remote family of other people who lived in the south bronx lived , but they had more than just expectations for us .
it &apos;s a country of the grassroots , but it &apos;s a nation of nations .
we &apos;re still this glorious country , but we &apos;re driven by young people coming from around the world , and it &apos;s our duty as a result of the wonderful citizens of this wonderful country , to make sure no kid behind .
customers were asked to help their chocolate bag , to do a good friend .
so , with frogs , the company i work for , we keep a short meeting for old and new collaborators to help them to help to meet each other .
everything was going wrong .
many of us are not really happy when we see a video of a egyptian man at the abdomen while other people who steal the egyptian pounds of the egyptian .
but of course they didn &apos;t do it .
and when i went to the streets of the 25th , i went back and i said , &quot; egypt was about the 555th of the 55th .
i said , &quot; we &apos;re going to win .
this mother and the 800 people who are talking about the coro on the world is that to get these language in their babies have to speak with their babies .
between six and eight months , babies are equally good .
however , the babies are going to be free , not the american ones .
this is the little emma .
what i &apos;m trying to do is , you know , these two views in one together , so that my pictures of both of these are both the way the heart of the bechters .
and it involves tiny little metal particles that make the blueprint .
so if i open up the bottle , it &apos;s toxic molecules in the air , and that &apos;s because alcohol is a very wasteful substance .
the swiss artist and photographer fabian oefner has done to make a mission of everyday science robotic art -- including a couple of his latest tedtalk , including a bunch of his latest weaponchedelic footage , including the outterm tuning eye on sound on a live demonstration , reveals what &apos;s live color demonstration is when you put color color with magnetic waste -- or if you put whiskey .
and every year , i promised the privilege to lead a few missionary societies into the himalayas and into the highlands .
and this piece is that we can &apos;t depend on the outcome .
hey , we live in a very health world .
you have to go into the world , like the asanga did , trying to understand the maitreya buddha after he brought 12 years in the cave .
now these numbers can be adapted to very different ways .
now look at these numbers .
if you divide the bigger number through the smaller numbers , the ratio of about 1.618 , many people as a goldouble cut , a number that was fascinated many mathematicians , scientists and artists were fascinated by centuries .
where i got to do problems was in some of the arab states , so some of them obviously don &apos;t be close to iran .
they give me give me your money or i throw myself into the air ! &quot;
i &apos;ve recently entered december of december in seven states .
and my two year-old son had been on many games of the united states .
maz jobrani a greener of the axis of the axis of the axis of the axis of the axis of evil &quot; comic &quot; mission performs the challenges and reks as an as a part of me thinks : i should have a nuclear program , and the other part thinks i &apos;m not trustworthy ... &quot;
you were great .
bad experiences quickly forget .
she was my childhood friend .
i started , for example , led to an interview man , the red brigades .
national funding from terrorism was a feature of the cold war .
it doesn &apos;t happen for the first time in history .
you see what &apos;s closer to this parallel world we are .
i &apos;ve told you this story to understand that there are a world that goes far beyond the headlines of newspapers , and that &apos;s also true for their personal relationships with your friends and their family .
i thought there , i thought it was , and i wasn &apos;t one of them .
oars are the only power that you have .
question number two : how do you sleep ?
it was very often , the hitches is very rare in a straight line .
so in order this up , these guys had built their boat out of plastic garbage , 15,000 empty water bottles to be connected to two packets .
he &apos;s expected that hundreds of thousands of years in the next 50 years , the hundreds of people who live to new zealand or australia .
other people will see when they &apos;re in the supermarket on the checkline , and they &apos;re putting back their back .
this song is one song of thomas &apos;s favorite song , and it says , &quot; what you &apos;ve got to do what you &apos;ve got . &quot;
and at the point where you can pave your buildings , suddenly you have to think about a different way of architecture .
manifest destiny .
a whole new way of making buildings together , something called individually-sized mass manufacturing . no , that &apos;s not pollution .
that &apos;s the pieces and here &apos;s a little bit of it .
&quot; if everything is done , it must look like sea gras , &quot; said the owner .
it &apos;s a place is about a place in london , called kiteflyer &apos;s hill , and i used a lot of hours , and i asked myself , &quot; when does he come back ? when does he come back ? &quot; when does he come back ? &quot;
when i was a kid , i wanted to shave .
my approach , it should be the garbage press .
so one day before i learned that there were no kids to climb up for a sea , i found that there was a tree and crushed the whole right side of my body .
he was a stearing branch , planted in a different tribe of the family tree , not accepted , not because his parents decided for a different destiny .
we &apos;re graduate years , we &apos;ve done it , not the nearing architecture of the voices , the scream : &quot; don &apos;t always hurt me . &quot;
it &apos;s imperative . it &apos;s touch .
the most devastating and devastating and industrial project of the world is in the heart of the largest and fragmented forests of forests of the world , canades of the boreal forest or tad forest .
when i stand next to this truck , my head up to the bottom of the yellow tip of that bike .
oil sand , or should i say tar sand , oil sand , &quot; oil sand , &quot; as if the oil oil companies don &apos;t try to do something like a shallow tar substance , the dirty oil in the world .
the boreal forest is perhaps our best defense against global warming and climate change .
if one of these tar sand gas tankes , the dirty oil tankes , the dirty oil tankes , 10 times more like the exxon valdez , one day , we will have we have one of the biggest environmental disasters that the world ever seen the world .
it &apos;s incredibly exciting to see new indian art .
it uses different size to gain spectacular effects -- be it on the roof of a temple in singapore , in singapore , in anities installations , like these 192 , which is the flags of every member of the united nations .
ravin agrawal : 10 exciting young indian artists
the mandatory goal was to promote the public support of the afghan government .
i &apos;ll explain it , later , look at the number of the bottom : plus 7.6444222275 , my gift will be at her , when my mission is successful .
for many people , that means , &quot; did i have spent more time with my family and children when they grew up . &quot;
my doctor told me that i had to make my brain to cure it .
and the longer than a year , and that &apos;s been the hardest year of my life .
i get better myself . i know who i really am .
they &apos;ve all made them all ! this is a state of physical resilience , so your body can only resist better stress and cure themselves faster .
okay , one more . baby elephant .
am i guess great .
so to give you an idea of scale : this installation is about two meters long , and the biggest models are about 60 to 90 centimeters up .
and so i love the proposal .
and the only way that mathematicians can model this structure is propagating , which is so .
in reality , it &apos;s a definition of the gold level .
that was almost crazy for mathematicians , just like they were sitting there and were amazed .
now i said the mathematicians thought that was impossible .
we live in a society which is completely estimated to estimate about symbolic species of representation : alpositional imaging , equations , code .
i mean , we have 100 billion neurons of neurons , small pumps from protoplasma that are interacting with each other , and out of those moves to the whole spectrum of skill that we call the human nature and human consciousness .
the most common explanation that you can find in all elected textbooks is a happy idea : it says that this guy is -- and the same is true in women as well , but i &apos;m focused on men here .
but from here , the signal is moving into a structure called amygdala in the limbic system , the emotional core of the brain . this structure , the amygdala , is measuring the emotional meaning , which you see .
if you show pictures of the screen in the screen , is measuring its electroin-times activity ?
so what we &apos;ve found is that , for example , that half of the patients have said to the phantom is that they can move the phantom command .
and that is wired in the circuit of the brain , we call it as a learned paralysis .
and he started kicking and said , &quot; i can see my phantom . &quot;
i said , &quot; what ? &quot;
these techniques have gone through clinical trials , and helped a lot of patients .
another one is , it &apos;s about lsd and kiffer .
so , eight times larger distribution of synesthesia , artists and novelists .
all of these questions that philosophers have done about millennia , we can start researchers through brain scans , and start studying patients , asking the right questions .
well , i don &apos;t know . it &apos;s been discovered against 1600 angeles .
so seawater at 40 feet high trees , 130 feet , growing up in this region .
ss : so , kanzi &apos;s very interested in fire .
panbanisha is trying nyota with the scissors of a haircut .
ss : but there &apos;s been there , not to do what i normally do , i didn &apos;t tell you that these apes have language .
the abilities of the bonobos are surprising researchers around the world .
now we can follow them again . go ahead , start !
this is mars from the view of mars , beginning of year .
well , we can trace things today to the early stages of the big bang , but we still don &apos;t know what they &apos;re going on and why .
and the most complex things we are ourselves , somewhere between the atoms and the stars .
and even a little chance of an accident isn &apos;t acceptable if the flip side of global effects could have .
on this sound , a kind of time , we are in the middle .
within 50 years -- this is a hundredth of a millionth of the planet &apos;s history , the proportion of carbon in the atmosphere , and that was threatening to climb up .
cnn wrote an interesting paper wrote an interesting article about what happens to people when they win in the lottery .
we asked them how happy they were and they gave them a turn .
and also , we saw that the sum of money doesn &apos;t play a lot of money .
but then we see extraordinary differences .
are they connected positive ? money donations happy .
and you can look at it as well : the 15 euros you &apos;re giving people for themselves , put them in your pocket and make it on as usual as usual .
sometimes they send them pictures of how they use the microscope .
rabin testimony was a confined to decades of guinea collaboration and intelligence between the two countries that went from the perception of perception .
according to the dydyk , and these are his words , the iranians had an interest to bring us to the peace path to try to get our signature policy .
you put it with hostile . &quot;
so this is happening in the u.k. with british government data .
now the map of port was not as good as they could have been , not as good as the map of california .
the trick .
as any other , they develop a six , a half sense of how their behavior behaves on the money .
also the right is blocked , because it &apos;s always affecting the principle reasoning .
put the subject to the most part of the heart .
it takes generations to get this concept , the dna , from the heads of the people .
if you feel them , what the hell do you do , do we do ?
but only three days later , on a day they called a monday monday , the media and politician told us the media and politicians -- and we believed that sputnik was evidence that our enemies in the science and technology and technology , and that we could take us with hydrogen bombs by using their sputnik .
but that &apos;s how much as i &apos;m an artist is diagnosed .
john gartner wrote this book called &quot; the hypomanal tempest &quot; in the christopher columbus and ted turner and steve jobs , and all these economic geniuses were equipped with this competition .
could you possibly do it to do for me ? i &apos;d like to see if this audience -- no , so far i know , haven &apos;t trained it -- can you create it , can you cheat ?
we are also used to be choreography synchrony .
in a swarm of swarm , the chances of being caught , lower than a small group .
then light out , light up -- that &apos;s a three-axis one second .
what gives light light on the light is different from my head here is that this light is incoherent -- so many different colors and frequencies , something like you are clapping at the beginning -- but if you were a laser , it would be rhythmic to round .
i &apos;ll i &apos;m going on a moving platform , which is called &quot; reposing cornell &quot; . okay ? it goes on .
interviewer : just sideways . and how much about it moved ?
it was an unexpected feedback , between the gangsters of people , and the way the bridge moved on , the engineers didn &apos;t know anything .
you have to be careful where you put the foot , or , because if you get it wrong , you &apos;re going to be thrown off the feet .
and it also understood that this platform is suspended at the shed , literally at the shed brute .
they gave them their name .
why ? as a feedstock policy that we can use in the future .
we &apos;ve gone through two scales , and we have to make that concrete .
it &apos;s more than just an artist dream , it &apos;s the reality .
i think it &apos;s interesting that this device , i think , is almost the only one that falls to me , where we have countries , and actually every country in the world -- because we have a seed from every country in the world -- where all the countries have combined to do in order to do something that is both the long term , sustainable than normal .
cary fowler : protect the future of food , the seed future
watch your body position ! this one is not right .
does anybody feel endangered , doesn &apos;t anybody need that thing ?
so you &apos;ve tried 100,000 different things , and if somebody burst and died , then that hasn &apos;t tried again .
this -- for me -- the most impressive spacecraft of all times was the moon was falling down , and this was one -- you know , the moon was coming up from the moon from the moon has not needed to have cool -- that &apos;s cool .
well , first times what happens as next ?
and you see something else , right here .
you can be with russian with russian technology , so that &apos;s because the russian space program is bust , and it &apos;s great for it , if it comes from 20 million to a space .
why does this happen ?
i think we &apos;re in a way of turning a turning point in the human history that we can finally build many of the mega-institutions to new principles .
the bigger capital goes up every night .
and there &apos;s a lot of sun in this extended world .
but the tunisian revolution didn &apos;t cause social media ; it was made by injustice .
it &apos;s based on agricultural and production , and the political system was the feudalism , and you know , only in the church and the aodum .
this thing has a function .
and the revolution is encoded angiogenesis , and it &apos;s based on the principle that our bodies use to grow blood vessels .
i &apos;m going to focus now on cancer now , because angiogenesis is a marker sign of cancer , all sorts of cancer in cancer .
and what we can do is because tumor blood vessels of normal , healthy blood vessels are different that we find in other parts of the body , they &apos;re actually very poor , they &apos;re very bad , and that they &apos;re very sophisticated to treat treatments on them .
now , obviously the antiangiogenic therapy could be used for a variety of cancers .
so let me show you what happens if we add away from red wine .
and that &apos;s exactly what we &apos;re doing right now .
so this approach that we &apos;re using to use cancer , which might have a benefit against obesity .
william li presents a new way to think about cancer treatment -- angiogenesis , on the blood vessels , the tumors feed . the important first step : food of cancer reduction can beat cancer in your own game .
i read the read of london in the scientific american .
that &apos;s called a creature &apos;s secret illusion .
and it &apos;s thinking about a lot of interaction now .
this is something more complicated .
there &apos;s a solution . it &apos;s not too hard .
a trend for games that are actually good for you .
oh yes , there . okay , j-o and -- i guess that &apos;s part here . we have the bow . the bow is helping .
i think the whole world is basically being trained to be a girl .
and their stories were so full of horror , and the overwhelming , and the other side of the human being , that i said , honestly , i was devastated .
as i said , i &apos;ve traveled in many countries , and i &apos;ve seen when we &apos;re doing with the girls in what we do , it &apos;s obviously terrifying to think about what we do to the girls in the world .
there &apos;s a teenage that went recently , and i knew it was necessary to make 56 stars on the right side of their face .
in this time , they rescued many girls , and when we met them , we asked them what we could do for them , and she said , &quot; if you were worried about a jeep , i &apos;ll get a lot faster . &quot;
and agnes took her to it , and agnes loved them , and agnes ate them and agnes ate them during the year .
and this girl was just sitting there , and she said , &quot; i love being a girl .
oh , i know when the cocout is ready to fall .
eve ensler : meet the girl in your
so what is the problem ?
you know , you know , in the report , the investigating officers in the report was a good view .
at that point , i became a little worried .
poetry lawyers lawyers are fighting and lean it down .
other mathematicians refer to the same things .
and finally came into a town -- i had made a small fractal model for her , only to give me an idea -- but when i arrived -- i went to the palace , and my french is not very good . i said something like , &quot; i &apos;m a mathematician and i want to stand on your roof . &quot;
and i started to realize that the fruit cycles of pesticides are exactly like the recursive cycles of algorithms that make that .
and finally , isn &apos;t that intuition ?
so i made an outstanding one that makes something like this , a guy in mali just outside of bamako , and asked him , &quot; why do you build frattery ? no one else does it . &quot;
it &apos;s a pseudolic number generator , which is deterministic chaos .
we saw a great improvement of improvement in children who use this software in math versus a control group that is not used the software .
there are patchfamilies , adopted families , there are small-scale families , living in different houses and divorces that live in the same house .
one has the asperger &apos;s syndrome . one has adhs .
they were making tasks in small parts .
so after the agile model , we ask three questions : what worked this week right now in our family , which doesn &apos;t so well and what we want to work on in the next week ?
from the starrs and many other families , i have taken several ideas .
so moving the common dinner . this is adaptability .
for every minute of this , we have to make a song .
i made popcorn . i was burned by a whole profit , so i made two .
the study of study told me that children , who have a sense of themselves , that they are part of a larger story , higher self-confidence .
ultimately , that could be the most important lesson .
and that doesn &apos;t just work with water .
and one day , at my great , terrible separation of carl man , when i didn &apos;t get down from the couch , i &apos;d say your song &quot; now , where i don &apos;t have more . &quot;
i just want to say that murray gell-mann are in oprahs &apos;s show , and they &apos;re talking about it that the law of attraction is not really common law .
nt : i didn &apos;t need any models of awards or experiments .
nt : everything i did , i did , for humanity , for the world where the violence of the rich is not going to hurt the poor , where products of the intellect and the art of society for improvement and ownership of life .
but that was in the time .
that &apos;s better . woman : this side is better .
because of this case , for the result , it &apos;s made a surgery today , and it &apos;s been done by the world , and it &apos;s helped hundreds of children with these surgery .
is anybody interested in this ?
my message to you today is that we actually have some circuits in the brain that don &apos;t work in many disease levels , whether it &apos;s parkinson , depression , depression , schizophrenia or alzheimer &apos;s disease .
imagine you would be an engineer , and i told you that you had to build a car , but it starts to be small at first time , and then grow full size and work at all time .
and we were able to create a model where animals don &apos;t just go and down , but the same time sideways .
here &apos;s something that some of you have done this morning , although they did it outside , not on a treadmill .
robert full : it &apos;s going to go to various surfaces -- here &apos;s sand -- although we haven &apos;t perfected the feet yet , but i &apos;ll talk about it later .
do you see how much it &apos;s entitled ? we don &apos;t get it on -- that &apos;s an unsolved puzzle . we don &apos;t know how it works .
here &apos;s a single hair with a bamboo ride .
thank you .
and i said , &quot; is that something that i am the only woman who has taken a deal in this office in this office ? &quot;
secondly , make your partner a real partner .
the problem with these stories is that they show what the data does : women systematically underestimate their own ability .
and that one word has done a really big difference .
so i believe is that we &apos;ve done more progress in life expectancy than the domestic sector .
and she said , &quot; oh no , i &apos;m not married . &quot;
sheryl sandberg : why we have a few female leaders
i &apos;m going to show you an experiment that came up with a couple of operators in connecticut , 30 years ago .
those who cleaned their teeth weren &apos;t necessarily the ones who were really big scared of what could happen , and they were the ones who believed they were going to change their behavior .
and it doesn &apos;t just work with the abstract numbers that we &apos;re exposed to .
but we have a chance .
they can start accessing the skills , in terms of possible side effects .
so you could look at the blood vessels , and you understand how to fix it , and that &apos;s what they could break down to hdlhi and ldl cholesterol if you like .
so we used a lot of time to show this .
so i &apos;d like to finish and show you that people are able to understand this information .
and that afternoon , when i asked my question , while the bumblebees and i worked : what did these bumblebees and i put together ?
i became the wrong path of lawns , whose life goal is to overuse the trees with whom they &apos;re arguing about sunlight . &quot;
so when you look at the plants , you see other tools that are so interesting .
and i spent a week as an apprentice on his yard , and took out of this week , a lot of hope about our relationship to nature , which was not done it in the 25 years of writing about nature .
and within four weeks , he can repeat this .
this is a way to revive the world , and that &apos;s so exciting about this approach .
hopefully for that good .
and so that &apos;s what i want to talk to talk to the game dynamics , because the evolution has just begun and the focus we think about it , the better we will be able to use it , for everything we want .
it &apos;s incredibly powerful , and it &apos;s got this dynamic dynamics , where you have to come back to a certain time to irrigate your crops -- unreal harvest -- or it will be reserved .
and this is used in games as well .
i would .
and they had to finish the party list , because , even though it was effective , it was so powerful that the best stories were not found more and people started working together to keep their heads list position .
audience : yes .
and pretty much everywhere , where there &apos;s electricity , it &apos;s the internet .
and so at the end of the united states , i suppose the ocean has come to the taste .
i know everybody thinking , &quot; another social network . &quot;
and &quot; google news , &quot; which i just mentioned was called through an researchers .
so that &apos;s a new -- how many of you use the google test ?
so or so , every year we invited the whole company to a ski trip .
because , in google , you can put something out of something wrong in the search engine , and you might expect , right ?
i think we can appreciate ourselves as well as a kind of business model , because everyone in the world has access to our search engine , and i think that &apos;s a huge amount of advantage .
but it wasn &apos;t always like that .
i &apos;m a full member of this priesthood , and somewhere in here , i have my designer glasses .
there they &apos;re doing fantastic work , and they &apos;re doing very poor patients by using the local institutions that can afford to be able to help support the financially that it doesn &apos;t .
it feeds the patient &apos;s trust and the happiness of care of care .
so , instead of asking a bunch of american designers to be able to find appropriate or unappropriate new ideas , we chose an obvious , collaborative and participatory approach approach .
tim brown is the opinion that designers are too busy creating to create i.-centric things -- in experimental questions like access to clean water , that they have a more important role . he challenges an umoricment in terms of a local collaborative thinking . &quot;
sadly , this belief in assumptions that are not present in many countries in many countries , not always to point out .
a girl named girl called mary said , &quot; you &apos;ve asked my mom ? &quot;
while our very first event that happened in russia , one of the participants made one of the participants made up to me absolutely surprised me .
in reality , a lot of choices between things that are not so different .
two days later , the doctors got the right line , and they could take barbara either from the life support system , in which case they would die in the course of hours , or they could let them die in a few days .
we look at what we see is the ability to take the functions from the multiverse .
thank you .
so i took the two bears ponds into the lab , and we made the labels .
if you multiply , if you multiply that structure , you multiply , as many absorbers are used , it can be a lot more .
so this is what happens in the netherlands .
a way of dealing with intellectual property .
they put into a flexible torpedo , sailing with big speed , controlling the shape of the hull with their legs and control with their arms .
girl 2 : it would be very stressful .
for 50 years , it &apos;s about hope and fears and expectations of the better world , and i began to ask myself who else is in this way ?
good ?
about 20 percent of the survey of the entire country were busy with this thing , and it &apos;s got too much led to what we have today . and it &apos;s vacuum tubes .
everybody &apos;s been going to go and continued to get to find a new pattern , sell new punctures and new programs that can stop the sine-to-vote .
this is where he talks from the &apos; 60s .
lsd emed from keshava &apos;s surgical hospitals and other places on the campus , and the music was located everywhere .
a few years later , we came up with an idea that teaches people the secret to how you want to get the content on the content as you want it , on a simple way ?
although some wisdom was ... man 1 : the phone company !
he wrote a list of possible use of possible use of grace as he invented it , and somehow one of his ideas was the right idea in this early point .
ph : one of the great things that happened here is that globalization is really happening by content .
ph : to conclude , i &apos;d like to leave you again , marshall mcluhan come to word , who went out and over 40 years ago , who are right around many changes , and i think that today think the traditional hollywood authors the same way that used to the same .
how did i start at this field ?
a great deal of local materials , but inside , you can find some compositions .
this is the great protection that offers a leg of pedestrian zone , and also transforming the balance of the colonial canon .
i don &apos;t have a lot of pictures of people because they &apos;re in the way in the way of pure forms .
it &apos;s a friendly terrain , i think , is taking this distinction in the world , and i think that the united states is an area of technology and art in the public space is an area that the u.s .
for example .
i studied . wasn &apos;t very good at it .
i construct it basically .
she said , &quot; he &apos;s too high . &quot;
the next area that was interested for interest was the fact that the recline was a very important factor .
and you need them in a different position when you sit upright than when you recline .
and sengue-fever was spreading in winry .
that &apos;s what happens . humanity has the eggs around the world , and these insects have more than 100 countries infected , and now live 2.5 billion people in the countries .
obviously , we need something to freeze the mosquito .
when you free a male and a female in the side is near that , this males finds the female .
we can grow them on a surface that &apos;s much bigger than this red carpet . i can produce a 20 million every week .
in 2001 , i was covered by a train .
and now you realize they live in different places .
so , what &apos;s wrong with this picture ?
anybody have an idea ? right . right .
this was the bottom line of the gut mouth atlas of health care , which is that we can explain the geography variations that can explain at disease and health , and how our health care works .
stop , you &apos;ll see , dead is great .
thank you , ted .
phosphorus is the core component in several molecules , in many of our lives molecules .
it ends up in the soil , end his journey in lakes , which leads to lakes with phosphorus phosphorus , which leads to the blue al problem .
but we walk right on a big crisis , and i want to make people consciously make this problem .
it can move from a millimeter radius of the root to look at phosphorus .
in some cases , in cuba , mexico , india , it can reduce the dose of 25 percent , and in other cases , there needs to be able to add an electrode , because the mushrooms are so adapted to find phosphorus from phosphorus from the soil .
but the important thing is , the gothic moment in architecture was the first time that the force and movement was conflicting in the form .
in architecture , with large construction groups of components , there are up to , say , 50,000 material parts in this room that you &apos;ve got to sit in , you need to be all organized .
in terms of construction and manufacturing , this is a mile long block that was built in amsterdam in amsterdam .
we created a system with eight curves that could be traded , very similar to the housing project that i showed you , and we could combine them together , so that we had always had the gonomic forms with the same volume that could be produced in the same way .
finally , finally , i want to show you some effects of digital manufacturing .
let &apos;s go down to the world to the south , can we go to the bolivian edge of the amazon , here in 1975 , and if you look very carefully , there &apos;s a little white line , and there is a more sophisticated farmer , in the middle of the old jungle .
well , the colorado river , on a typical day , you know , no duck , no dre , a drought , a half day , so the flow of the river .
let &apos;s say that .
and yet we &apos;re talking about a little bit about it now .
in the green fields , the returns from corn -- just as an example -- it &apos;s very high , probably the highest ones that you find on the world for this climate and the soil , but the brown areas indicate regions that are just 20 or 30 percent of what they should bring .
population + meat + milk use of energy cost biofuels from natural resources .
here &apos;s a dilemma ...
he &apos;s caught here , frozen , raped by lagos , drowning , and putting a profit on the streets of lagos .
1.8 billion people around the world are working in this unregulated and informal part of the economy .
the name is misleading .
to conclude , i admit that this economic form is an enormous power for global development , and we should see them as well .
this is a patent for a burning of 1912 .
we &apos;ll we put our own arm at &quot; recent institute of chicago , &quot; where we &apos;re building additional joints and shoulder promises built to six engines or six degrees .
we can use electrodes , or we can use antennae to extract that and the horns movement .
so it &apos;s intuitive .
we &apos;re fortunate today that amanda kitts is .
for 20 years , my goal was to enable someone to make sure , emotional elbow and hand at a very interesting way .
tk : thank you , amanda .
it can have a hand that can be different .
let &apos;s delight how far we have come and what we &apos;re doing .
six years ago , when she was diagnosed with hiv , she took on a clinical trial that went back in their district district .
the high hiv guesses , researchers are doing studies that sometimes aren &apos;t science , but they &apos;re moral in many ways .
in addition , you should be able to consider the possibility of creating effective treatment techniques for the study in the whole community .
and one of our main problems is that our business system gives us not useful feedback .
this is a picture of a galapagos that lives on a small motter in the galapagos .
that means there &apos;s no electricity on the surface , and there &apos;s no way to eat either .
penguins don &apos;t like the oil and they don &apos;t like to swim through oil .
try and try and spend a donation sponsor , give you a couple of thousand dollars to paste penguins on the back .
so this is turbo .
and then i realize you call &quot; useless war &quot; ? &quot;
well , this is important because border conflicts justify a very large part of the global military industry .
only 30 million people live in eastern places .
maybe the map of this map of the region in 10 to 20 years .
the asian state zone , almost , according to the trade zone that &apos;s emerging is now a range of trade than the trade above the pacific .
six year after the u.s. march in iraq , this country still exists on the map than in the reality .
that , i think , will bring peace to this particular conflict .
take a zerbaibaijan .
what does that mean ? trade and investment tells us that europe is going to grow money , where his mouth is .
village is going to happen three civil wars of wars , the genocide in dar5 , who are all well-known to them , the civil sudan in the east , south sudan .
they thought that you &apos;d be slowly boiling and you can &apos;t do about it -- like an old shoe .
and they can be completely fertile -- the same number of offspring like normal worms have .
as you know , genes that are different of the dna , the manuals are to make proteins that do something .
and it seems like that &apos;s the case .
it turns out that in the daf-2 mutants , a lot of genes are activated in the dna , which code the proteins , the cells and protect tissue and fuels damage .
you can store the food , you can use it for energy , grow , etc .
that &apos;s exciting for me .
the technology , to do this doesn &apos;t exist .
and maybe these values are quite different than in animals , whole , but we don &apos;t know that .
you will never see an ad , because nike wants you to buy your shoes .
look at these 10 films . what do they have in common ?
how can we be honest and engaging more more people to choose if voices in canada don &apos;t count ?
if you worry about in 2013 is because you have a depression , you go to the doctor and what you do ?
so when we do this kind of tests , we can deflect ursa-engineering relations between the activity of specialized neurons in certain ways , in humans , things that are very difficult when not impossible .
so we calculated this behavior this behavior . we used a movement of movement -- revivified software , which was developed by my collaborators , julia perraona , is working in the electrocom store in the caital .
so that means that these flies are going to have two profiles or phenotes , as we say geneticist , which you find in adhd : hyperactivity and learning disabilities .
you know that know he &apos;s going to attract his fiva into the skin and want to suck the blood out ? that &apos;s terrible , right ?
in contrast , the african malaria of malaria has a strong preferette and stick to stick in the louder and feet of the people , of course , because of course , we could be able to be called moda , right ?
oh , that was very quick .
look . that doesn &apos;t work . okay , sorry .
and the gift of life has been raging from brain dead donors to live with living , related donors -- cousins that might be an organ donation or a part of an organ , like a particle liver transplant , which is a human being loved .
i saw the engineering difficulties .
at may 2006 , i was something terrible .
as we speak , the first attempt to do an embryonic stem cells instead of spinal cord injury .
the tertoqo nino hopkins harbor the best national musicians of the living pediatrician program , &quot; el sistema &quot; in venezuela , by gustavo dudamc. , who play &quot; &amp; lt sentence &quot; and &quot; danzn noya , &quot; 2 . 2 . 2 .
well , researchers have spent billions of tax revenues to figure out exactly this .
this is a real study , and i want to be clear .
i think they &apos;ve done more to my marriage than life therapy has ever been .
dr. gero is a brilliant guy , but something crazy scientist in the &quot; andorid saga saga saga . &quot;
so in this situation , to decode the information that are encoded in patterns like these , don &apos;t look at themselves alone .
i hope you appreciate the lovely simplicity of this concept .
it &apos;s done the flies off .
you can look at this middle of your inner voice as a root of the brain to the catholic church , if you &apos;re a dish , or that i &apos;m , if you &apos;re happy , or your mother , if you &apos;re a jerk , if you &apos;re .
we know about our formal model that the brain structure is at the end , which is the comment of the critic , the actor .
thank you .
here &apos;s actually , lillist , or actually , a multi-touch picture of libby .
ed : yeah . tb . a little bit of course , a little bit more to the center .
in its own experience , i know that health for young people can be a very dangerous place .
i want to use technology that we all work on , and we &apos;re going to get care of coordination .
i think that &apos;s why i &apos;ve reached longevity .
but i want to tell you how it really happened , and not the way i would think it would be at a scientific conference , or how you might read it in a scientific publication .
with a mat on the floor , mixing up a rope , lynn began to get their 185 meter rise .
do they use the tails when they climb up walls ? &quot;
and watch on the right once what the animal does with its tail , when it hits it , this is slowed down 10 .
so for ted , we built an robot over here -- that &apos;s a prototype with a tail .
and then we asked us , &quot; can you really drive this ? &quot;
finally , i &apos;d like to say that , i think , for more biosymbiosis , as i showed them , they increase the rate of their implementation are being done with the fundamental discoveries .
they know that know that in the room , they were manipulating in the margins .
and we know that solar radiation is not constant .
she &apos;s taken by ross ross powell and tim nasty .
we know that ice sheet of ice was overhead .
this is from the campion island .
we work on an intriguing monument here in urbina bay .
and so we figure out what really , of course , is , and how much the last century was .
for example , for organisms , the carbonate use .
on the left , on the right , back , back and up , said , &quot; suggested that there might be additional dimensions of space that we see from any of them .
so let &apos;s look at that .
but for those of us who are more likely to think , in terms of thinking , there are two questions immediately .
until in our time , something happened .
the different particles are responsible for the big diversity of things around us .
can we explain those 20 numbers ?
this is a machine that releases particles in a run tunnel at almost speed of light .
now , let &apos;s cut it down to the gray , the green , and , say , the orange one .
now , let &apos;s make the surfaces according to the quality of the light that you &apos;re talking about , looking at .
so how do we see ? well , we see we &apos;re learning to see .
your brain is learning , and it &apos;s learning that the right side of the visual field is under red illumination , the left-hand side of the visual field is under green .
if they &apos;re under the same light and reflect the same amount of light on their eye , they need to be reflective .
are we the only one who sees illusions ?
it seems like they go to the green flowers .
we &apos;ve been working with kids , and we designed these pictures by thinking about how a picture that you see , and then we translated these pictures .
let &apos;s get the way out of it .
now there is often isn &apos;t right or wrong .
in 2010 , in new york , not so much .
and we also a species of storytellers .
so some things : understanding of security , the risks , the danger , the counter-action , how they work .
but in a modern and complex world , they need models for the many risks we face are .
health models are a great example .
when the novelty hit , the months passed by , there were a measure of tolerance that people had used to themselves .
what we learn is that it &apos;s hard to change models .
we trust the state of state , sharing the medicines of pharmaceuticals .
1982 -- i don &apos;t know if people remember -- there was a brief epidemic of tykeol schemes in the united states .
it &apos;s important that when our feelings match reality with reality , we make better security waste .
what did they find out ?
but it &apos;s going to be successful .
but when the state of state trucks arrived , the waste was still needed less .
it turns out that we were completely wrong .
but i learned that it &apos;s about people and how they use it , that it &apos;s particularly important to me .
you need political solutions .
we just need to stay through . &quot;
this is the tahrir square .
it can put up with it or judged with it .
so from our personal experiences , we know it &apos;s sometimes easy to just walk , and sometimes you need to struggle .
i hope that we can show in the coming couple of studies in the next few years , that this is afraid that we &apos;re allowed to persuade the audacity of civil societies in different countries to support their problems : in afghans , in the palestinian population , between the population of the population and israel .
at this point , she stops me and says , &quot; who are you ? &quot;
why have these eyebrow ? &quot; i mean , they &apos;re so expressive .
and i think about reinventing things .
but one day , maybe one day it will work .
it turns out there really be people going to go and look for alien life in particular life .
so they find dinosaurs in deserts or oil land , places where little plants grow and they have grown up in the spring in spring .
although it , intellectually and scientifically interesting , it &apos;s also very different than what i &apos;m doing , because you have the opportunity to wander around the land .
you know , one great passion to find a passion for life , and all the energy to focus on it requires , need to be vilified wisdom , and i &apos;ve never been able to do that .
it doesn &apos;t tell the things that things are connected , what causes and so on .
so this is this one thing that they said they predicted a theoretical design .
it takes hundreds of steps , and it takes a long time , long time .
and i &apos;ll show you how this protein measure .
so , so , i think , enormously useful to all the fields of medicine .
i think that &apos;s the great mistake .
so to conclude , i want to leave you an idea of what i think of a future treatment of cancer .
remember , what happened to this day , february 3 , 2008 ?
and from the distance , it seems to be just a group .
it &apos;s going to be sensitive hostility .
or , &quot; i &apos;m going to find a way to compete and make it as a headline . &quot;
okay , here &apos;s where we &apos;re going through the flur of tissue .
in fact , south africa didn &apos;t go down this path .
two percent are at stage one .
we have people from stage one to stage two to stage two , where we get them into a new tribe , and then they get to make connections .
and it was done , by the way .
we automatically burn the little bits of plastic up .
that many of the honest risk taxpayers have survived in a wider budget of business plans for celebration .
there was always a lap in a full bus .
in this compelling eg archive , ben catchor is going to read his comic book &amp; lt , these crudelights , surreal storytelling , discover the profound hopes and weaknesses of history in objects like light and signs .
just to just start , i want to say compassion is violent .
and as an anstine , he &apos;s transferring this sense of living across a spectrum of spectrum and disability , health , disease and aging .
the joints is in every part of creation .
this is the whole photo , and you see a middle old man who &apos;s wearing a leather coat , a cigarette .
kright-tig : finding compassion
now , i chose this story .
so imagine a classroom : when i went to school , we were sitting in rows .
we need more and yang between these two guys .
why do we make introverts feel guilty if you want to be alone ?
i have a suitcase full of books .
and i call this the year of the kitchen council .
and that &apos;s okay .
and he told me a little bit about history , when he was playing the door of the door of 188 kokoski on this little victrola , and i told myself about russia , and the things that happened in russia occurred to this period in russia , and why this music represents , in a way , represented a part of this story .
and a few years ago , at amd , we came up with this idea of saying , how do we call this initiative , when we call this initiative and 50 , &quot; 50 by 15 by 15 , to whom we confront half of the world &apos;s population around the world &apos;s population , half of the world &apos;s population of the world , 2015 , by 2015 of the world &apos;s worth of the year is connected
and when we were called this initiative , at the beginning , at the beginning , we all said , well , this is not an act of charity .
so we believe that in these regions of the world , there are a big population , and a infrastructure that can produce material , that a local , a bust system is very critical for success .
i don &apos;t think it &apos;s enough to write them into a chart and look at the numbers and say , yes , that &apos;s a good deal .
on the morning , in the morning , go to work , you get home , and television , go up , in the morning , in the morning , walk up , you know , you go home , tv , and go back to go back to parties .
she said , &quot; oh , i see &quot; jesus , &quot; and i started to cry .
so , what ?
they never do never make the trouble to name it or to afford it or to quantify it , and then say , &quot; that &apos;s what i believe .
it makes a difference in what you believe .
that &apos;s what we have -- i think of god .
by the way , our net value is not the same as our &quot; self-worth . &quot;
well , i read the story , and i asked myself , &quot; what should all this happen ? &quot;
what do you do with a deer ?
that &apos;s for me the fundamental question of life .
thank you .
and this growth is going to be in 20 years of results .
then we &apos;re actually able to put large numbers .
the human species is basically mistile -- so far , so good .
but the thing is , the cojote is running over after the cliff .
so we insist that we &apos;re right because we have the feeling of doing smart and smart and opportunities and to be on the safe side .
if that doesn &apos;t work , it turns out that people have the same facts like us , and they still don &apos;t agree , then we go beyond a second assumption , which is that they &apos;re stupid .
i have i have become the crazy mad drc lady .
we &apos;ve been spending a whole week talking about inventions and progress and improvements , but you know why we need all these inventions and progress and improvements ?
of course , the effect of this is not just the british british wheat , of course , it &apos;s mountains of grain .
but in the meantime , at least for the next decade , it &apos;s the magic of hydrocarbons , and whatever oil , gas , coal , we &apos;re going to have to live with it , and before i get these talk more than the length , i &apos;ll show you what &apos;s going on in the energy system .
her job , her goal and your appeal , were not going to be able to protect in the bathroom .
unfortunately , he died of his time in the 1970s , so this dream was no longer life .
it was the exciting question was , what counts to me was to take my chef-etsel for a week and fly to the summit of the himalayas .
wow . that &apos;s interesting .
i love that .
we don &apos;t ask for anything of materials .
we don &apos;t need to decide for inspiring employees and a lot of profit . we can have both .
because perception is based on our experience .
so , what is the answer of evolution on uncertainty ?
so we asked ourselves whether there &apos;s a connection to other animals , and it would be fascinating if people and bees thought like they seem different than we seem to .
the way , what did you do ? the outcome : what did you see ?
it &apos;s free for free letters for free letters .
what is that ? it &apos;s about what science is doing for us .
so oil and petrochemicals are not only a problem if there &apos;s oil points , but otherwise .
plastics are using plastic , in a lot of the developing world , the burning of plastic , and at that scoth , again , there will be released to kill the toxic chemicals .
and we &apos;re smart , but for example , we &apos;re not as smart as a shell .
if we take questions like this , for example , to take us connect with other movements , and we &apos;re going to be able to grow inclusive , and we can finally disrupt this dilemma in which we are .
it gets on the soil .
i was often asked me when it was so far .
today , we &apos;re using bigger gas power that allow me to go to the ship .
the computer depends on each other , and there &apos;s a kind of vote -- there &apos;s a computer that doesn &apos;t equate the other three dollars .
the idea that it transfers electrical energy , it hasn &apos;t have anybody in the sense .
think about it .
you know . what about the security ?
this is connected to a quiz . it &apos;s more potent that &apos;s produced a oicy magnetic field with a high frequency .
so i &apos;ll show you something about that now .
eric giller wants us to help save electricity from wire electricity from the cable , and here he explains what is a piece of comic technology technology showing : witricity -- a almost market invention that might allow your cell phone their cell phone , car , car , car .
i think there &apos;s a better way .
i &apos;ve just got the second prototype of that vacation .
i spoke for him for hours .
he trains the baseball team to play our son .
he started just started two weeks ago .
both people say the same : don &apos;t do anything if there is no hope .
what the experts call &quot; compged &quot; &quot; i call &quot; hope , &quot; i &apos;m going to tell you one adage from my friends from the software design industry .
he was a very good factory .
with graphs , computing and low spaces . all of these applications and opportunities will flow on our lives .
a little unfamiliar secret : have you ever seen one with the guy who has the webcam ?
and i want to show you a summary of this : this is a short glimpse of something that i haven &apos;t shown yet right in the foreleadership .
look at the center is looking at shanghai .
so if i would ask you , which is china , and what india and which country is grown faster .
is democracy bad for economic growth ?
birma had no success .
life expectancy : in 1965 , china had a huge advantage .
in fact , the answer is low-level centers and subtle .
if you &apos;re talking about the nba player all over michael jordan , you don &apos;t see very special .
the coffee house was playing a lot of the birth of the birth of the enlightenment , part of what they were wasting .
i mean what &apos;s happening in their brain .
we take ideas of other people , people that we have learned in the coffee house , and we connect them to new shapes ; we create something new .
you &apos;d like to say , &quot; i was there , i stood there , and i &apos;ve suddenly had all of my head . &quot;
in a sense , we often talk about the value of mental ownership , building the accessibility , mysterious r &amp; amp ; d laboratories that are used all the ideas valued and people are rewarding to other ideas and culture is always more innovative .
and they are donating the date , and every single one of the time they pick up .
i guarantee you that the number half of the audience , if not even in this moment have to have something in your pocket , which is in contact with one of these satelital .
buffett shows that in the year of 1992 , the common wealth of people on the enbro-400 list -- the list of 400 americans -- 300 billion dollars .
just think about it for a minute .
well , a couple .
and in contrast to the industrial revolution , the titanents are not many new jobs .
chryffa koam : the rise of new , global super@@
so i went to the station , and i looked at jim , and his skin was completely transparent .
this is why this is all going on . these are the 4 most successful causes of death .
98 percent of people wanted to think about it as a popular practice , and things should happen .
we need to be politically active , and we need to bring this process from present to the present , and again , again .
my grandmother survived and got married my grandfather .
and since i went very naive to this thing , i thought , &quot; oh , in alzheimer &apos;s dying cells , cells die , and there &apos;s this clichiness -- purinderivative -- that &apos;s cell growth . &quot;
so that really resonates me very well .
and also also , neural tissue can also get the brain -- cancer , and brain cells are terminated .
and also , if skeletal muscle is injured , this is chemokine -- these signals that tell me , &quot; cancer , come to me , &quot; the green open light for the tumors -- the result that they threaten the chemokine .
i &apos;ve been photographing for a few days of children in various countries , and as most photographers and journalists , i hope that my pictures have a effect on the situation when they &apos;re going to be published , not only a documentary .
korea heating , people are heating their homes by putting up their footprints under the footprints , and the heat goes down from the soil .
that was the moment that i was doing . the girls just broke it out , so they &apos;re a fun .
and i said , &quot; i &apos;m going to wipe out the grandmother , if i really add her to them , that you &apos;re ready to cheat , i &apos;ll rather go back and talk to her . &quot;
and i said , &quot; it &apos;s really cold , the journey here was too long , could i be at least coming to a minute ? i &apos;m fried here . &quot;
she said , &quot; well , he says , &quot; who are you standing in my house , some rich americans with cameras around the neck , and i accused , my niece ?
hyun-sook was standing at pquikeene , and her uncle was agreed , and she slept with the adoption to the adoption .
the uncle came back to his family , and natasha , tim , gene and ichheaded dinner night .
and we &apos;re full of panic , &quot; oh my god , oh my god . &quot;
&quot; we have to stop the smoke , &quot; he said .
this is where everybody in the orphanage .
remember the picture of the beginning , where you think about your grandmother ?
natasha never heard how to tell the story .
but there was no evidence .
now , let me show you what we actually see , so you understand the news i want to share with you today .
and we didn &apos;t have any evidence .
so i &apos;m not here .
so this is what we &apos;re building from the left ocean .
life on earth is the size of the earth .
this is what tells us that this rution-based drug , which we have sort of the copernican principle principle , is all wrong .
but first i have a new invention .
despite peckers , the generous species , we can &apos;t reach all the people with treatment , and from the ones that we reach with treatment in the poor countries , we &apos;re only about 60 percent of treatment .
so is it poverty ?
arabic is not so very , but iran is pretty high .
it &apos;s probably a combination of it .
and this chart goes back to 1,500 .
that &apos;s a significant question .
but this may be much less than that than what , with other laws and institutions , the conditions of the ground and the situation can be possible . &quot;
the scientific revolution , of the science of science that you &apos;ve reached in the ecosystem of a number of fundamental practices , the most important species , the most recent methodologies , that gave people the control of control over nature in a way .
it wasn &apos;t going to go faster after these countries were independent .
what patents does is there &apos;s no question in place that the east is right now .
winston churchill basically defined civilization in a talk that he was 14 to 19370 year .
so , in contrast , my story is actually as opposed to the convergence within america like this is a story about the convergence in eurasia .
there are about 40,000 species of spiders .
and here &apos;s what we see .
so , for example , it would be a sentence , and you get rid of these green range , and the red polyalanine , and it all repeates , and that can be hundreds and hundreds of times within one and hundreds of silk molecule .
this field of this field is unexplored , but there &apos;s a few data that i can show you .
i love it when i &apos;m in the lab , and i get a new spider jam sequence .
colorful personalities and all have their fun .
you have to have a legal structure .
these are pictures of flickr , with the jumword of iraq .
if you go to one percent , the 99 percent of the group unemployed , they still have nearly one and four of the photos .
but down here , where the psycho spider &apos;s milt of the world are only a photo of taxes , you have the institution for preventing the institution .
the fact that a single programmer , without that he has to go up with a training relationship with a business , can improve linux , and then never get back again , should have a balloon .
you want to publish something , what are you talking about the world ?
the normatic goals of self-support groups that we &apos;re used to be used by institutions , and don &apos;t develop in infrastructure .
after 40 years of knowing that full of grain is healthier , we finally get to the point where we &apos;re cutting and effort to eat it really .
the other kind of condough we do is the fermentation -- our prefercies .
then we take these pieces and shapes them . we form them a little bit , often a little bit more or sometimes torpedoa .
and stage 10 in the oven in 10 to the oven , because it went as dough in the oven in the oven , and comes up on stage 11 as bread .
we can put them into the soil .
and we know that it &apos;s alive , because in stage three , it grows . growth is evidence for life .
or another analogy would be , this is a con line in a butterfing .
thank you .
they &apos;re all made on my instrument .
it &apos;s a bunch of crazy piktowen notation .
it &apos;s called the tsoln , for three conductor and no musicians .
and i &apos;ll give that question without any excuse whether the music is , without the definition of the definition of my creation .
i tried the broccoli . mmmmm . &quot;
on the one hand , it &apos;s a straight crappy .
well , one idea is that this strategy , these learning strategy , a very powerful , great strategy is to keep up in the world , but it has a big deal .
and that math is at the center of the best machine learning programs we have today .
but unconsciously , they give these rather complicated calculations that have an unfavorable probability of them .
he asked the experimental investment to do that , try to put it on the other side .
so we &apos;ve got a very focused , more serious way of attention .
and i &apos;d like to talk about a new technology that we &apos;re going to do right now in oxford , which is that you &apos;re going to change the way that it &apos;s going to change on video games and hollywood films .
so , for example , if i put that shit here , it responds .
that &apos;s the thought behind it .
what we really wanted was the whole human body .
you can &apos;t do that yet .
so here &apos;s a couple of simple scenes as he started .
i &apos;m not sure why , but i &apos;ve done it anyway .
now , a studio is already using our software to do that , and we &apos;ll soon see some of our stunt men in a few big film product .
we were the guy , and he should turn up the spot .
it &apos;s called &quot; pop it . &quot; and it &apos;s about the things that little kids are doing with their parents .
it was a very nice time .
and in contrast , a child is going to be able to be able to put in the position of someone who is different than himself when we teach him perspectives .
and i noticed in the same -- first , you &apos;ll get incredibly boots .
it &apos;s in your presentation . no , no .
it was published and it was called microsoft .
if you keep going on that speed , no one can tell where you land .
he said , &quot; nice talking . &quot; and i said , &quot; thank you , what do you do ? &quot;
we &apos;re in the world mode mode .
thanks . so steve jobs always believed in simplicity and beauty and beauty , and it &apos;s true , years ago , i was a little depressed thing , because america didn &apos;t turn it , because the mac had only three percent , windows had 95 percent market market .
i also use the lingu-ma-function . period .
what technology can we apply to effectively apply to the reduction of global poverty ?
and in this case , there &apos;s no other technologies that are not able to solve , because these people are being able to nurture through them .
so , after i quit the book -- and i became the great honor to go into about a year at kleiner babkins about a year in little perkins and to work with a very innovative perspective , to go and look for the search for ideas that repair this as a couple of the great problems .
they all need clean water , energy , transportation , and we want them to be environmentally conscious .
so , within a nanotupanic we &apos;ve all reached a line .
we need -- we don &apos;t know where that leads .
maybe we can &apos;t stop them , but the chances that they are doing us is higher when we focus on the problem .
at academic day , i never talk about how i came to this position , and why i do this work .
whether you believe about success or not , depends on what you think about the probability of life in the universe .
how do you know you &apos;ve found it ?
this is cuol de villa in tabasco , mexico , and this cave is filled with sullicacid .
they take iron and mantresses from rock , and they convulsion .
and we are faced with the problem we should get the robotically .
my view of current life on potential life on mars is that it may be on the planet , that there may be one too two to two .
so this is the general realization , is that we should be informed our friends about our goals to help us with this .
and b was seen in the library of the pope , about 100 miles north of rome , in viterbo , in 1311 years .
but it &apos;s not in an institution , it was bought by a private collector in 1998 .
another problem was that we had to get rid of all the wax , because the book was used for the libigy of the greek and orthodoxy church , and they needed .
so if you do a new pictures in different ways , you can get the prayer label .
but we wanted to look at atoms , iron atoms , so that we could see the side as they were before and after they were able to read .
but if you don &apos;t win , then you should fight for a good thing , because then you remind you .
it &apos;s constructed by the users , from people that bring together from people , from people who want to connect all sorts of cards , from wherever these are , all sorts of medieval chunks , from wherever these are , and they want to have their own magnificent collection of beautiful things .
the original owner of the bottle was one of the most enthusiastic wine lover of the 18th century .
i asked myself : a hundred dollars for this ?
she &apos;s got four balkone .
but the blind , it &apos;s the worst test .
you have a water sticks .
and if i were a billionaire , i would get that one .
and then i tried to try it , and he had this ocellor , portwine , very large abundance that &apos;s fossilized for this wine -- that it &apos;s a similar to mess .
it &apos;s estimated that within the next four years , that the value is worth 80 billion dollars worth .
there &apos;s a big power .
and the way you doing it is through the combination of probability and data .
but we are in virtuality , these are not real boxes .
you bring tasks into these measurable units in which people can choose and interact in parallel to stop them in the pole , and you can use it to make sure they pay attention to individually .
if there &apos;s more likely , someone remembers that we can give him a information in one of the window .
in terms of education and education , here probably most clearer , we can transform how we engage people .
the most important challenges for the health today are not available from simple mutations in our genome , but there are more of the outcomes of a complex and dynamic combined game between genetic varivarieties , microbes and parasros , microbes and parasites .
we also found immune proteins also immune proteins that are infected with infectious and refining , and proteins and dna that are related to diet .
as i learned when i was the u.n. , i learned this girl . her name is john bush .
so these seem two challenges problems , but i started thinking about it , you know , what is obesity and hunger ? what is it about these two things ?
it &apos;s crazy .
and we know what &apos;s happened in the past , and if we begin now , and we look at technologies and improvements for the food system , we might be able to connect the food system , so if i can tell my next visit my next talk and 60 years old , i &apos;ll tell you that it was a success .
i think that &apos;s a wonderful metaphor for the state of today architecture and our architects .
find a common point of view with your client .
the first thing that we had to address with us was that the dallas theater center was going to be a blid that hit everything that you had outside of the turbo &apos;s invented new york and seattle .
now , in superwheatmitting all the liberties that opened a rubber urdient , and they spread over and forth about buffalo .
imagine what you can do with it . i have to admit that &apos;s not possible because it takes too long .
what we did here is : we recorded the orchestra , put it up , made it up , shifted the cursors , made it back again , shifted the tires again . you can change so much more arbitrary ings and perspectives and perspectives in the orchestra .
so the theater can be completely closed , visual and sonically controlled , very familiar with the shakespementation of god play with great acoustics , but it might also be a piece of beunt with the skyline of dallas .
build the theater of the theater , the route itself .
and that people would leave online publishing video footprints , and people were telling stories from their personal life .
you know , as a result , the feelings bring the feelings to adopt the physical attributes of the weather that they represent , the sonics , the wolves , the deflectors down falls down and the snails to the wings .
and the water that you see there is the open passage , and through this passage , the humpback of the humpback whales , every spring whales .
i created an internet platform that you could see &quot; the whale hunt &quot; for &quot; the whale hunt . &quot;
and now we have the whole story of just 29 magical photographs , and we can start the narrative on this point .
so i &apos;m going to show you a couple of quick examples of interviews that i &apos;ve done , and some of the people i talked to .
a 24-year-old truck driver .
they were missing nuts nuts that had been politically colored over the years of the years .
jh : i hope it will be all like you have hope .
it &apos;s almost like you practice magic tricks .
and i think that as a surgeon , he said , &quot; a burd , i saved your life .
or at least , no one should be talking about if he &apos;s going to be working on plants . that &apos;s not a human talk .
if you have something in the pocket that can receive the message , then the conditions that allow it to write how to write .
julie says , &quot; so what is it ? &quot;
you don &apos;t do that from corruption .
and so texting really is the evidence of a gratation , the young people today , of course not consciously , but it &apos;s an extension of their expectation aids .
we used a computer viewing leadership system to see where they were .
in the words of president obama is , &quot; if the taliban come back to the power , they &apos;re going to let al qaeda go back to the country that will try and kill so many of our people , as they can only can . &quot;
so , during taliban no afghan workers didn &apos;t have a mobile phone , and we changed the situation almost over night of three million wireless mobile phones .
is that really is a new idea ?
they feel a deep daunting .
the reversion of refugees that had considered the refugee commission of the united nations for highly unlikely had mostly happened .
it &apos;s about the context .
and what we &apos;ve destroyed our wisdom in security advice , which means that it &apos;s hard to be able to break an resolution to syria , and we &apos;re going back to the path of failure .
what you see here is a prototype .
well , they just don &apos;t want to do that .
if we estimate that we do it 24 hours a day , it could produce about 10 million tests a day .
what the man in reality meant was that he filled a 30-day dose of dapsone , that morning .
i don &apos;t know if the idea &quot; a computer , a kid , &quot; is clear . here &apos;s the computer of the future , because the screen is already that and they &apos;re universal .
what happens if they don &apos;t have electricity and no more centrifuge and other things ?
so , i was actually interested in making many groups of people together .
there &apos;s a book , which is called , &quot; what &apos;s the concast with kansas ? &quot;
this seems to explain why barack obama has done worse in this part of the country .
in cities , about 80 percent of other ethnic ethnic casualties that they regarded as neighbors , whereas rural communities are only about 30 percent .
i believe that cities make the form of networks , and the additional interactions that you might have every day .
four or five ways of looking at four ways of looking at the breast &apos;s mass and trying to capture it sooner when we saw them .
&quot; i left my sister in leith . &quot;
supposedly , laennec &apos;s the streets of paris and had two children playing with a stick .
i call it the ipatient .
well , you and i could think about it , that probably no impossible was necessary .
and i remember the scute feeling that the patient and i lived into a primitive ritual where i had my role and it was his role .
i &apos;m a specialty for communicative diseases , and in the early days of hiv , before we had more media , i lived a lot of these scenes like this .
i &apos;ll get through you .
no , it &apos;s -- well , it has a kind of senior senky slope right .
science is not what matters . it &apos;s a verb .
you don &apos;t need bmw or a high-tech equipment , you don &apos;t need a computer .
turn from the fine view of the wild .
we were there to study it .
all right , i like to finish with a positive , beautiful , little story , this ... &quot; skeptics , &quot; is a non-profit organization .
michael shermer : the belief of strange things
and 4 million of them die year for year .
it can also makes a hot water to melt up to melt , and it can hold it up , permanently , temperature four to six hours , and then you heat your shirt just again .
there &apos;s a big deal between the people who make the normal animals and the ones that make pores animals , but they make cool things with their air .
he took contact to people who support his thing : charity , people with passion .
so we change our perspective and say , i know ! tv . choose .
so you &apos;ve got the women with red hills here .
it &apos;s easy to look at the usual and say , &quot; i don &apos;t have the stuff to be a leader . &quot;
all these people have together that they are clubs .
if you don &apos;t feel somebody lined , they don &apos;t change things .
they want to be missed when they &apos;re missing .
and also , it &apos;s extremely expensive ; each test costs 800 dollars , and it &apos;s extremely unaccurate ; it &apos;s not found at about 30 percent of the stomach , or tonino cancer .
and i could make a handful of antibodies to a network of carbon nanotubes , so that you have a network that responds only with one single protein , but also because of the properties of properties of these nanites that , depending on the amount of existing protein .
in short of that , i discovered that my brilliant procedure had thousands of growth , and over the next seven months , i &apos;ve looked at each of them .
according to the clash of the clash of the cultures , cultures occupy law and fulla altogether separate spaces .
these are the first islamic superheroes in the world .
or another question , can we know what we already have ?
and what we find of course , and a toy and i &apos;m not going to do that .
beam is in the sense of profann .
what do you want to express it there ?
&quot; i come in the aisle , if ... &quot; mostly people ask people : &quot; you know , what i call is , &quot; is ... &quot; and i can &apos;t do more . you know ?
let &apos;s translate this in adulthood .
you can catch them back . and you can , because you have a big myth deficial , which is the spontaneous thing that desire from the sky as a deus filling up the laundry , like the deus , you know that anything that &apos;s going to happen in a long relationship .
but i also realized that the music that i wrote , or i just wrote at time right now , in some of these halls , not so awesome .
we &apos;re about about 1770 now in 1770 .
and combine these two factors allow a different kind of music that seems to be best in this kind of decline .
until then , most of what was sent to radio , live music , but singer as frank sinatra had never been able to have heard of without mimio .
it &apos;s more like a musical mood as a musical situation .
so birds do it .
this was very stimulating for me .
in the time , i have an air infection , which is the reason why i needed to have a little help up here , and i &apos;ve still got to have parkinson &apos;s disease , and some other problems that i don &apos;t want to talk about .
and again , david says , david in the psalmen , who are listening to the men , yes , they are the greatest book in the world of humankind .
and i &apos;m sure a lot of you here have thought about it as well , and this is a device .
and i had been in communicative russia , and i had left a lot of liberty that i didn &apos;t expect .
there are families that destroy themselves , friends who tell us .
for young people , it &apos;s often hard to understand that .
the reality of his life and its resurrection is the hope of the people . &quot;
the same thing famous is in pasbian .
i could not lead the evidence .
everybody can be wrong .
they don &apos;t need their name . they can just capture them .
i can &apos;t think me .
harvest witnesses , smoke .
two months later , i went to a different piece of task with the same task , and that was when i was in the village village .
she &apos;s 19 , her dream is to study to study them .
when those girls sit down , we &apos;re sitting in intelligence , we open passion , we open up , we open focus , we open , we &apos;re all the great leaders .
and something like that other young woman , through his head -- i failed , failing .
i &apos;m looking for ways that other girls are involved .
leymah , thank you very much . thank you for coming to ted .
we need a talented management to get rockbands to play .
or another example , big data loads .
they found a found pit of documents : 700 of foreign curities foreign fighters .
it was data available from an environmental savings conference from 2006 , other spatial data , none of them .
now the first step to the solution is to recognize the reality of the situation that you see .
work three hours .
i went off for me in a gysuit club .
because if enough people do , we can change the social definition of success , from the squeamingly simplistic idea that the win is dying with most money , and also more friendly definition for how good life looks life looks like .
as a black , for me , in america , it &apos;s related to me , relative to a white , twice as in a neighborhood that is the largest health risk for me .
but why is our situation so different ?
who gets a profit ? is there any way to make sure what the local community needs to do ?
and they make room for our little friends !
and we &apos;re working with a transcendent urban planning deficit .
he nearly his brilliance for his brilliant effort .
not in addition to the 90 percent of the energy that we &apos;re wasting every day , and according to what mr. gore reminds us is also our energy , intelligence and hard experience .
and she came back and said , &quot; i &apos;m so proud to have a son who developed a piece of software that allowed these children to make their mothers &apos;s day cards . &quot;
it seems as though , each other goes on this trend .
and if i move my hand , i can burst the balloon , or i can move the beetle .
so i showed it .
it makes sense of thinking about an analogy with language .
this has nothing to do with car at all .
i want to talk about .
our interest is to find beauty that is more than more aesthetic , but actually a truth .
all right ? one thing to the theme of art : art is discovery and art is to discover itself by its art . right ?
hopefully we would understand the clients in the inner , where he &apos;s at home , by connecting with him in america , and so -- we sent the team , and then something else happened . they made their own trip .
the engineers flew off , and designers came together with them , and they put their presentation together .
and somebody asked me about catherine , my wife , do you know if she flew me with me , or something like that ?
so , the american designer explains his philosophy for a form of art , a form of art , with a forager -- and the last moving around the project -- the project of deep blue group of bmv group , whose intent was to create the suv of the future .
and we &apos;re here in the 21st century .
we were thrilled .
because , according to the molecule of the molecule , 40 laboratories were going to work in the united states , and 30 more , and 30 thousand to europe , and a lot of pharmaceutical companies want to see in this area , and the rare tumor is , very , very popular now in the research of this industry .
and these chain of letters and numbers and signs and graps , which could be broadcast in a text , or spread over twitter , is the chemical identity of our connection .
it &apos;s beautiful .
in early times the universe in early times temporarily , it wasn &apos;t easy , it was an emotional one .
unfortunately , that &apos;s not a problem that we have given enough attention .
it &apos;s a constant momentum that drives the galaxies apart .
he said , well , entropy takes down because there &apos;s a high entropy for a lot more options than a low entropy .
maybe our universe is just one of those things that happen at time to time .
they &apos;re going to run into black holes .
so this is that &apos;s an egg isn &apos;t a closed system ; it comes from a chicken .
my english lost , i wanted to pass to pass .
i read books , science books , especially physics .
i tell you , trust yourself and believe them .
i thought , &quot; why don &apos;t i connect the normal interface of the physical world ? &quot;
but later , i realized i wanted to interact with these pixels .
if we &apos;ve got this information , it finds more about the book anymore , or maybe the new york times a secret overview about it , and this way i can take a summary of this summary of the book is the last visit .
so i take a part of a document , and i put a second section of a second place -- and i &apos;m modifying the information that i have here .
and now , if you look at more cost of it , this system costs you 300 dollars compared to $ 20,000 dollars of touching your touch screen .
we had to beat the strong japanese with its whole technique .
it will be a place where people can make where space is for nature .
this station has the same comfort , the same qualities as a subway station .
this was an old building in a favela in rio -- coke &apos;s julia moreira -- which we &apos;ve done in a school grade with high quality .
but the reason why i was able to do is this .
ep : well , show us some public services .
eduardo &apos;s : the 4 commandments of cities
so the best answer is to try to reconstruct an darwinian placment story of our artistic and aesthetic preferences .
i mean , you can &apos;t walk and eat a minimal landscape .
it went back to about two and a half million years ago .
we see beauty in something that was good done .
so we had to take it all down and start again .
we began with a three-dimensional pm , a vibrating wheel , a click wheel with speech commands , a football , and even a shoe , the pressure on the leg .
so that &apos;s how it works .
how are we going to make insurance rules ?
it was the beginning . the voice was picked .
helpless and i &apos;ve started to move back to this nightdream of the arab world , a world where the voices were determined to be both of my descendants as well as i could be my career .
strategic .
and for those who have been comfortable and not survive , we should think that our lives are not for the most harmful things that &apos;s going to happen to us .
so buy the software , and i won &apos;t tell it anymore . it can happen from this , and i think it needs to happen before the technology of course will be part of the human situation , something that everybody is familiar with , and everyone accepted .
but we can look at it , very inexpensive and simple ways .
and the usual astronomers were full of thinking about it .
so when you continue to move away from the sun , it &apos;s more and more powerful .
but in a long run , if there &apos;s no life there , we create it yourself .
in the course , probably stupid questions , like , &quot; what is this cap-looking key ? &quot;
it &apos;s the light bulb for that .
that &apos;s the other new way that our labor way is unique , because the work never gets to the end , you have to do all these other jobs as well .
i actually didn &apos;t want it because of the previous adventure .
that &apos;s the geek . they have this kind of friendly shape .
and then they were all the clouds above us and then -- wafm ! -- a strong nazi thursbeat and the surrounding rainfall .
i don &apos;t .
they were taking her colorful frows .
she said , &quot; the first thing that every muslim knows is that the koran is capable of supporting education .
it &apos;s your own path , and it shows on a afghanistan that &apos;s going to be different .
but she was sick worried . she was worried that her son was kidnapped , and she was going to get a child soldier , she got a child soldier , she worried that their daughters would be raped . they were going to get their life .
when the training officer officer is going to go around with a lawstick , seal cleed sam , her arms lifts her arms over the head , and slowly slowly her headscarf , to tie their hair .
and they need allies from their community .
and i put a blog about this letters and over the days where i needed it , and i made a crazy promise to the internet , if you give me a hand-written letter , i &apos;d write you -- without questioning .
basically , whether we could make a chemical app .
lee cronin : printing your own medicine
so the rituals came like this .
but also , not the muslim communities in north africa -- the animically , even some christian , even a jewish tribe in north africa are known to perform women .
islam , as a monotheistic religion , which governs the people themselves as responsible in the middle east , is creating the notion of the individual in the middle east , and is protecting them protected aritism , the collective of the tribe .
and so , the ottoman empire in his last decades of global democracy , a condeclared monarchy , and freedom had a very important political value at that time .
so in the 20th century , there was the vicious cycle in the arab world where they suppress their own people , including islamists , and they respond to acute islamists .
they said , &quot; we want freedom , we want democracy .
and that &apos;s because , if you take the brain out of the skull and cutting a thin disk out of it , there &apos;s actually a very strong microscope microscope -- there &apos;s nothing .
and there are different ways of doing this , but one of the popular species include the use of antibodies .
civil war has been concerned for over decades for headlines and all ethnic conflicts were almost present , than a significant , international threat of security .
that means a decline in two / 3 .
and the slow path for slow path of the peace process in northern ireland , he has very clear conditions for participation and the conversation .
the number number three reasons .
yet , no lot of diplomacy or institutional design can be a local failure or the consequences that come from it .
our journey starts in space , where matter , and after spspheres .
they behave today like previous times , their enemies have disappeared .
in australia , a liveress was turned into a balloon tree , and in hawaii , a trick was a silver word .
the first primates are diving up in the jungle , first koboldmakis , who are going to be a little bit later .
and then these people are planning to have a event , and it &apos;s beyond a foundation to help .
i said to him , &quot; i have this ingenious idea that will transform your organization completely . &quot;
mo bros from canada , from the united states , and from england , and he called us up and told us and said , &quot; hey , there &apos;s nothing for prostate cancer .
and i said , &quot; last year we had lucky to have 43,000 ambassador . &quot;
&quot; but i was running home , and i was pretty soon the conversation talking about what was going on . &quot;
i met benki in sao paulo three years ago , when i was brought him together and other leaders brought together to me and meet other leaders from around the world because we wanted to learn to each other .
he created a cooperative to help people to discriminate their lives .
they also know that we can &apos;t just continue to continue as far as usual as we can then get the outcome that we have always got .
when i asked sanghamitra , &quot; how do you beat from the english literature to hiv / aids ? &quot;
it &apos;s the inside of force . &quot;
but they have properties that we all recognize .
fields poller : learn : learning from the missing manusbook of human leadership
here &apos;s my world , and there &apos;s your world , and my world is always better than your world , because my world , like you see , is rational and yours .
and alexan mother , his parents , his teacher , everybody told him the story of homman , &quot; ilias . &quot;
these were not two heroes of two different adventures .
a linear , an underwater .
there are a lot countries depend on their position in society , depending on the stage of your life .
so i had to teach it myself .
how do you smell of the perception of people to be infavorable ?
and that &apos;s a very dangerous question , because it leads to a path of the fundamentalism and violence .
so people are seeking jobs after good jobs fail .
it &apos;s the one and dad told me .
passion and interest -- that &apos;s not the same .
they &apos;re going to fail , because they &apos;re just not going to do it because they &apos;re going to invent a new excuses , everything &apos;s right to keep back the keystep , and i &apos;ve heard i &apos;ve heard .
that could go wrong , my child , not much money , my child .
great , great friend , great spouses , great words , great career .
you and i was both pregnant , and i had a lot of compassion for them to think of how scared she had to .
the next stage is scatches are scattered , followed by largely diverse and extremely dense tissue .
the machines are getting bigger and more expensive .
after we put together with tapes , a polish from these saubes -- -- apart , michael separated the x-ray of a mammogram , which is meant to be done in the new detector , and decided to call the machinery the machine molecular imaging imaging .
so after we showed that we were able to find small tumors , we used these pictures to apply us to commercialize for a scholarship .
do you understand why there might be forces in the world of breast , who would prefer to stay at status quo ?
it &apos;s time that we &apos;re comfortable with both the extraordinary successes and the mammography boundaries as well .
it &apos;s the kind of power that we have , because of all the data we have .
so what should we do with the data of this man ?
yes , it &apos;s a scary result .
he was feeling about right and wrong .
i mean , think about it . like a great thing , like more as ambitious .
you see the consequences and whether it &apos;s all about , good or friendly .
and so let &apos;s get to the point .
what did i do ? i heard my stomach ?
it &apos;s interesting . that &apos;s a different way to think .
the homunculus is basically a visualization of a human being , where every body of the body is proportional to the surface of the surface that it takes in the brain .
this is white noise .
her scream . you say , &quot; blah , blah , blah . blah , blah , blah . who is the guy ? &quot;
and the irony was for me to do that , of course , is not for science .
it means that means momentum is your health in its way .
when i was living in the course of 10 and moving rooms in the outward room , john right next to me , and he went , &quot; hmm . &quot;
your cousin , your plastic chair , the toys of your children have a invisible reality , and they &apos;re very toxic .
because you can grow potatoes .
science is microsoft &apos;s biggest inspiration . he shows us a choice of his genius design -- an interactive , responsible sounds in a layered tablet , a nutrient , asthmatic capsules that remind the children , who &apos;s living , a living in the living room farm , a living in the living room , and more fishing .
so that was not a career .
it comes from south asia and has a very dark skin .
and at the morning , the gang leader came , he looked at sudhir , decided that he was positioned , and they let him go .
they have an exclusive property rights to control drug sales .
the payments looks very similar .
all my friends said , &quot; maybe i should do the same thing . &quot;
i think the words one of the gang members make it clear .
i started with paraglithing .
so my goal was to discover new places from which no one had had before .
so , the question is : does this actually feel like you imagine the dream of flies ?
so you need to be prepared .
of course , he &apos;s not interesting at the way of narrative at all .
what does it matter for a difference ?
it &apos;s made out of ice .
it was also about giving the city a sense of dimension .
so in a sense , art has an incredible relevant , i think , in the world that we &apos;re moving into it , very special now .
also , also weburon is going to be electrically electric .
in the bottom , there are great discoveries on us , fantastic creatures that are for millions of years of evolution , and potential biofuels that can benefit us in unimaginable ways .
nathalia crane was a small girl from brooklyn .
my blood was fond my blood when i read this because i wrote a simple music at 130 years after he wrote this letter .
that dolphin is aware of itself .
look at this body .
i work with a bunch of musicians around the world , and we often don &apos;t speak a lot of common language , but we &apos;re lying behind our instruments , and suddenly , we can help us to connect and feel ourselves .
when i first came to ted , where i met peter , i showed this .
the dolphins are particularly excited about what they expect tonight .
so , when bob and i were designing this , we thought we put a system that connects computers together .
first of all , thank you ! i &apos;d like to realize here that four people who might tell us about four days of time , and they to be a four-minute talk . thank you .
dr : thank you . radical : thank you .
i can only respond to &quot; wow . &quot;
now we have an communication .
because they &apos;re not in the middle east .
a girl that we met on facebook -- she was never in israel , born and raised in iran -- he lives in germany , and he was israelis because of what she knows about us . after a few months of the internet , they &apos;re going to go to israel , and she gets into the airplane , and he gets out the airport the airport ben gurion and starts , &quot; okay , no big
thank you guys .
and we mate , you know , they &apos;re sort of mutilated progeny .
the building the building the building in the age of china , and went to china .
it &apos;s like a piece of state culture embedded in chinese culture .
and then often , water is becoming ballast .
so this is from my apartment from my apartment , and this landscape &quot; landscape &quot; triangem balkone , which is called &quot; leonardo , &quot; leonardo army dicaprijo balkone . &quot;
there &apos;s an automatic irrigation system , which is that this garden landscape is turned into a war , or two years into a war of cambodia , is turned into a war club , completely in green hills .
so we &apos;re creating the whole island as a single ecosystem that uses wind power to run desalination plants and the heat properties of the water , heating the building and cool .
there are 800 million hungry people .
and that would be -- of course , this will be more complicated .
you know , you take a pizza , but you have no idea what the price is .
but if you want to know what you were talking about , you can &apos;t ask each of them because it &apos;s because it &apos;s what they &apos;re doing .
it would still make it very little .
we would reduce their ability to increase dramatically with the many other problems that they have to deal with , of course , to tackle climate change .
i noticed that many people have very , very unlikely that we should .
to make sure we realize that it &apos;s not about giving us a good feeling .
there were a lot of other workshops and university students and different things .
there &apos;s an obvious , in fact , the deep position of people in the west is that the whole world is going to allow liberal democracy and private capitalism as a growth model , and also continue the political rights about economic warming .
in china , 28 percent of the population had access to continue to lead school education .
if we go per capita income per year , 4,000 dollars a year will be likely to be 33 years of democracy .
some would argue might say that there are no more equal .
i worked in the last year , i was obsessed with a documentary about my own luck -- trying to help to train my mind as i could do this with my body , and i experience a better sense of my entire generosity .
but that &apos;s the weight .
if i make it a bit more personal and i look at what makes me a designer happy , the easiest , the easiest answer is : more of the things i like to do and do less of what i don &apos;t like -- that would be able to know what i really like to do .
stefan sagmeister : 7 rules for more happiness
this is a static culture .
what i &apos;m looking for is a way to add the properties that i need .
suzanne lee : let your own clothes grow
i spent two years to meet electricity workers like this in the southern china company called dongguon .
how much time do i need to get myself to buy myself a apartment or a car or a car , or to pay for my child ?
but it &apos;s still , his perspective of the world , and our tendency , workers as a facial less masses faces , and so it &apos;s hard to think of it .
so most of their parents are illiterate , and then they come into the city and on their own , they take them at night , or over their weekends , they are embedding english teaching , learn really simple things , for example , how to tell a word a word or how to tell a very simple thing on english .
small boys will be taught for suicicies of suicide for spans .
the kids are basically prisoners . they can &apos;t leave school ; they can &apos;t go home .
boy : the last day , god will ask me , &quot; why did you do that ? &quot;
whether there are living organisms there , or not , of course , a whole different question .
it &apos;s clearly not something that a squirrel can squirt around .
but in the other dimension , they &apos;re incredibly far , so far as you can imagine .
you can see here , as the english engineers are watching .
and in the process , there &apos;s a process of process , building the layer of that product , which is built by this product .
design is quite extraordinary .
this is a machine building .
if i gave you have a 3d printer , you wouldn &apos;t know how to use it as much as it .
so , if you know , imagine , you can pick up a token and interact that you &apos;re going to share your personal features that you want to buy .
and the idea of creating implants by being scanned , we &apos;re going to be transformed by someone who can be transformed in 3d data , and we can make quite specific implants for him .
jihad is a very powerful word , if you look at it in this regard , and it &apos;s very gentle , almost mystic .
why did you use the word jihad in your trash ?
so they struggle for smaller things .
who beat the global jihad ?
tv satellites and the internet and empower young members of exciting and new ways .
and it &apos;s known for prostitution , violence , drugs . a hard place to be built .
she had a friend who had heard of this organization called jamr bora , who kept money on people &apos;s money on people who were struggling , and they recorded a bunch of money on savings .
i said , &quot; and what about their dreams ? &quot;
this was part of a challenge that i took a month a month .
when i stood sugar sugar for 30 days , the day 31 looked like this .
but then in the second year , caltech started to envy us .
it &apos;s actually said that more energy is needed to make a solar cell than it &apos;s going to bring it in all the way it &apos;s going to be involved in all of them .
so the other light would only be reflected down , light rays from one angle , and it may be three times .
so we looked at this engine again , and we really realized really hard .
so we took the same genetic algorithm that we had used to develop the confusion that we didn &apos;t have any success that we didn &apos;t succeed with the stirling engine , and adapt the design sizes per dollar , regardless of the size of the energy , regardless of course , because the solar .
we built it built -- it &apos;s about 100 different versions of the last two years .
and it works , it works that the device turns out when the sun hits the sun , and then you get electricity .
but this is that is about las vegas and death valley is very , very good .
i &apos;m going to find very sensitive when home is going to leave home .
the weight of a paper clamp is about the same as 900 zeta-vilters -- 10 to the 21st -- the molecules of isoprene molecules .
we take military using military or test pilots around the fly .
my older sister was busy , both of my parents were busy , and then they were very busy , and they were busy .
that was a very important thing , but also an incredibly personal time in design , and we just wanted to say that the content is , not the package , not the packaging .
i don &apos;t know what to mean , action .
so i decided it decided that there &apos;s a couple of -- it took a confession , a few illustrations had a few illustrations necessary .
ok . so , so the first was very zunt , i start .
they were facts were banned from our house .
so my friends , if that &apos;s true , and it &apos;s true , what &apos;s the objective ? &quot;
and then i went to my tea .
td : but it was not really fun and fun , as i expected it .
but basically , our conversation turned into the different approaches of spiritualtiscope from the muslim and the buddhist traditions .
his holumpmpa : the technology of the heart
this machine doesn &apos;t know what it looks like .
when i say , &quot; we mean , &quot; i mean the advice for interrelations .
but nobody thinks that it &apos;s actually going to be very effective if there &apos;s a real outbreak .
the biggest part of the most part of money in the attacks of bush is actually rather in relation to anthrax and the threat of bioweapons .
sadly , it was made against the current form of h5n1 .
we don &apos;t know how important it &apos;s going to wash down with flu -- shocking , and you take a good thing to wash your hands .
then you get back alone because the pandemic is going to be 18 or 24 months away .
as a country we &apos;re not .
otherwise there will be problems .
lg : right . long time , i said we needed really hard diagnostics .
but it turns out that the 1918 wasn &apos;t at all .
they &apos;re from remote controlled airplanes .
but here i am .
passion is the slogan of all of my actions .
sadly , i chose to protect all of all .
notre , the sydney harbor bridge , the world trade center , the world trade center .
in fact , i look at the world trade center at the same level as a few of my smaller bicycles -- or a very different kind of presentation .
the mayor of jerusalem , teddy bear , i wish everything good .
somewhere in a group of a group begins to clap in my steps .
the most mysterious part of the forest is the top forest .
they have enormous capacity to maintain nutrients and water .
and you know , especially as little brown wife in a high norwest of our country , far-away from the fields of power and money , i have to really ask myself , &quot; what can i do for that ?
we &apos;ve got musicians into the canopy , and they made their music -- and it &apos;s fantastic music .
they were incredibly excited about the work .
in these cooking surgeries , i &apos;ve also learned that people tend to break themselves into the old people in film stars in scientists , but when we share nature , when we share our views of nature , we find a common denominator .
well , that &apos;s not all . the government refused to ban the data and tried to change the law in the way it wouldn &apos;t be usable in them .
so far , i &apos;ve told you how i was going to go through the national century , and i &apos;ve been shouting a couple of examples of what some other people i know .
you should be skeptical and humility .
you &apos;ve filled the house with surveillance open .
i had to focus on all my energy to find new species that live deep in the coral reefs .
that &apos;s a low-density of gas molecules that breathe with each breath .
at the time , i wasn &apos;t the only one who didn &apos;t know what he did -- that didn &apos;t have anybody knew .
and the other component in the breathing loop is the breathing helium containers to the wire of the carbon .
these are the high-technology option that we can do on deep submerged paths .
small fishing lights and galburns are not the only way down there .
so sharks aren &apos;t quite as dangerous as the most people they represent .
when we found him , we weren &apos;t even sure what was going to hear the family , so we called it dr. i--i-ie fish , where it looked like he looked like he was from one of his books .
the oxygen coed was a refrigerator , and he was drinking .
now comes out what was really amazing to me .
and their communication and social interactions improved improved properties that he could visit a normal school , and even a carate-ge disease .
they don &apos;t dip multiple times so that it &apos;s actually a travel report .
i came home , and i said to my parents , &quot; i just met a man who has a little bit , kind of ugly voice , and teacher is .
is your father still ?
you &apos;ve got to understand that .
would the discovery of an older culture out there would inspire us to find a way to survive our increasingly unsafe technical adolescence ?
this line would be 6 million miles over this stage .
so our planet has spent the bulk of its 4.56 billion years with the development of life , and not to join them .
since then , since have been searched , we can &apos;t believe in words , as incredibly hard to be able to see the remaining search .
i think it &apos;s a problem for fulfillment and delivery , because in the cloning press , &quot; which is the game changing ideas and scientific trends do they expect their lifespan ? &quot;
the ice of the antarctic is shining with such such smooth light that it &apos;s the unprotected eye .
10 times a day , you take the three yards of compressed cyacters of compressed scripts , and it contains -- it contains pure air and basnease , the snow , that the snow there for year , for thousands of years .
we only know the truth , we only know the envelope , but we don &apos;t really understand properly .
the new care of climate change is that it &apos;s not expensive , but economically .
china &apos;s energy policies of china &apos;s energy policies based on the core of radical energy efficiency and a technology of malnutrition .
they create a little plus in the state of state .
so the weight from weight has an enormous impact .
this is how you &apos;re going to go out the mainframe .
and for each car car , we recovered almost a barrel of gasoline , gune. , the dirty ones .
and at that point , i &apos;m going to suggest that we had before .
the fundamental idea of humanism is the improving quality of life that we can do good that there are things that are going to be done , because they &apos;re good , and that unfrequent empirics can help us figure out how to do it .
we &apos;ve we have 500 million feedback apart over the marketing and the value for this brand , purple moon .
girl 9 : because my great sister , who gets everything , and if i tell my mom , she always says no .
if we were playing the game , we would do that .
and just like hitler , word used to be an art collector .
and so led was all a horrible man report .
and i argue is true , not just as we think about things , but also how we react to things .
it &apos;s not just that you say there &apos;s more pleasure , you like it more , you really enjoy it in a different way .
of course it was the same man , but she saw him differently .
that leads to a huge amount of value .
when it was on tv , the value of their art fell together .
a very nice experiment was done by kurt gray and dan forner .
so , these are just a few examples .
but we &apos;re also unimpressed by authority , because it &apos;s so easy to fake .
here &apos;s another example .
so this is what they wanted to do in their teaching .
what i find really intriguing is that the pharmaceutical industry is doing exactly the same tricks of the same tricks and the tools , but slightly sophisticated versions of it , to deflect the evidence that doctors and patients , and that we use to make decisions of life and death .
how can we explain this strange phenomenon ?
it &apos;s a drug that i have prescribed with the patients .
we can &apos;t make decisions unless we all have information .
and i would ask myself the question .
and you have to feel that .
and you know why you have a plan ?
when he forget the kurches and iran forget it doesn &apos;t interest it .
because obviously when people die in the war , they &apos;re muslims , they &apos;re iraqi -- they &apos;re not americans .
if you can &apos;t throw yourselves , they killed .
i mean , these christians , they &apos;re nuts . how can you do your little kids to do this ? &quot;
of course , most of them support the insurgency , they don &apos;t support it ; they don &apos;t support the terrorists ; they don &apos;t support the terrorists .
it &apos;s an american , american soldier , an american woman who lost her beloved east -- in iraq or afghanistan .
can you put into it ?
i &apos;m not saying that i &apos;m going to help the terrorists in iraq , but as a sociologist , i say i understand .
and perhaps the most remarkable test : at the beginning of the 21st century , for the very first time in the first time in the younger decades were captured as well as any parts of the world of the world of economic growth .
but it &apos;s not new ; for tedsters , that &apos;s not really new .
i like to press that this : an idea -- ideas should be shared , so that an idea of a world can be a market .
india is coming up online .
but some of our grandchildren will probably experience it .
you can read this on the data .
from this other trial , a worry , and a goal , comes out and comes in the desire to the perception that i &apos;m in the outside .
is estimated that one tonne of productive land contains about four million species -- all unknown .
so we know that know that there are a population of a bacterial species of irish-derived , almost ununimaginable temperes and other levels of the low environmental changes , including radioactive radiation , that are strong and long enough to accelerate the burex containers in which the bacterial populations .
only about 15 percent of the known species are enough investigating to organize it .
i wish you help them .
the karolinasurch , for example , a papacious species , enlighten the gardens .
so it took it from the samples in the smithsonian , just a little bit of tissue from the foottoes , because there is so-called &quot; &quot; &quot; &quot; &quot; &quot; &quot; &quot; &quot; &quot; &quot; &quot; &quot; use dna . &quot;
from this conference in boston , three things went .
this one had a misformed lung , and it died after 10 minutes , but alberto frustration was convinced that the cloner is all over the other , and that this trend continues until one day again , back in the mountains in the mountains of north dakota .
so the red list is very important because it is shaped , which is at risk , very endangered , etc .
do you want to have back to him oozed species ?
c. a. : both the conversation and the potential are very exciting here .
a writer visited our school , jack of jack .
i had the art .
but stop drawing in my teaching . &quot;
use your own style . watch how to tell you .
i used to a last stack of postmaps .
&quot; punk farm &quot; , &quot; &quot; rashead , &quot; &quot; ruins of the purple &quot; elephant . &quot;
so how does that ? so , in two ways .
&quot; have architects ears ? &quot; ok , that &apos;s a little bit unfair . some of my best friends are architects . and you &apos;ve got to live .
and finally , after susan cain miraculous tedtalk , in february , we know that it &apos;s very hard for introverts when the group work in a noisy neighborhood .
and in our offices , we &apos;re going to spend a lot of time at work .
and our imagination is about researchers .
i don &apos;t have it on the stage , as a special effect , it used as partners .
i know that theater can improve the quality of people , and i know that theater can be healing .
in the art of today , we &apos;re going to become a scientist .
and just to show you how often you have daily in parts of this pig , i want to show you some pictures from the book .
this is done with wine and the fruit juice , by the way .
great . then , great . i heard about you for a couple of weeks , so i called them , and ask it to be the heart valve .
and one teacher analyst once said to me , &quot; for nettam i don &apos;t get money .
i had a great idea .
but &quot; 2 is called , &quot; i am not so bad . &quot;
we &apos;re there to make a lot .
a transition verb requires it for a object : &quot; sam don long for pizza . &quot; you can &apos;t just say , &quot; sam . &quot;
something that contains is something that is going to happen , with the result that somebody has something .
he didn &apos;t need anything . he could have been the whole time in bed , but it seems that his health is a point in the street room that you can positioning with the idea of movement .
but non-verbal votes , if one person put one or a relationship styling , and another sub-degree is going is another -- can be uncomfortable .
in this case , consequences are hard .
one is : why do we argue ? who is the benefit of arguments ?
no correlation , no , no , necessarily an argument in adversarial .
i think that it &apos;s a raging influence , and worse , it seems to be things like emulation , liberation , to prevent trade-offs or collaboration .
this guy can make good argument .
can you see that ? i think so .
or -- and this is the amome part of me for me : we want them to take out of us from nature in the world , and we make a design challenge , the masters of find masters in nature that might inspire us .
and in fact , there &apos;s a product called the tpa that is mimicking this protein -- it inhibits protein -- and on environmental friendly distances .
for me , for three questions .
it &apos;s twice so resilient as our high-tech ceramics .
solar transformation -- the most exciting thing .
we use chemistry in biological means .
the theme , we have to get close to 12 .
janine , thank you very much .
she said a business is particularly important for women , because their income kills respect and money for women .
what do you think about in the word &quot; microor small-finance ? &quot;
and microcompcau-kiva.org is experimenting now with crowdsourcing and middle loan .
resilience is personal subject for me , one that has changed my life .
it was a book once in germany .
they realized that in 6,000 years of storytelling , they &apos;ve gone from the hunt of cave walls down to the point of the letters of facebook walls .
you know , shit towel towel , let &apos;s take a swim .
markhm is an excellent feedback , which is an excellent feedback , it comes together in all crevassion , but also with a high energy effort , in comparison , open-source cellulose or blue jeans is a much more cheaper energy .
you might be leaving the hall .
so , i built the comknitter .
don &apos;t forget that they never seen before you do that .
stop the traffic at the red light .
and after some time , they had all their peanuts .
these crow pride to a temporary monopoly of peanuts , until their friends figure out how it works , and leave .
and i said , &quot; forget it ! i &apos;m the new governor of finance .
what were policy regulations that were going to make the really changes and had taken out of both parties ?
there are opportunities for solar and wind in the entire country .
i &apos;m going to argue today that the apps of social media we all know and love , or to hate us love to hate ourselves , we actually save ourselves become free of some of those of the presumks that we have as a society for gender equality .
you know there is the mass audience in the future . you have to understand that .
but i think that there will be women who are actually -- ironically enough -- whether they &apos;re driven by the heart of the taste of taste clusters , such as the &quot; chick flick and all those other genomes of these different things like that , that latin americans may like to like , young people might like .
i &apos;m going to catch up on the country in the country , mockingbirds , like mockbirds , like mockbirds triotycocktails .
we &apos;re 12 billion light years from the edge .
i &apos;m even privileged to suggest that it &apos;s a funny article that was published in the journal of ultrasound in medicine .
you can be done with you already .
now , the test would not be so much fun .
this was called the &quot; rereka theory . &quot;
there &apos;s a different way that the orgasm can increase the fertile .
at a point in the video , at the beginning , in the beginning , you zoom on his hand with the eherstristristristristrimeter , when you say , &quot; it &apos;s fine , it &apos;s just your work . he really like women . &quot;
this is basically a little camera on a motor .
he was signed up a contract to sell his new york house with a six-digit profit , and he just had five years .
well , i know that seems ridiculous .
move the node .
and it seemed to me that even though it was really bad for him to look at these unorganized red squares .
we &apos;re just happy when things are okay .
and we can also see that very clearly in this next picture .
and i think it &apos;s going to fit a lot better together if you do it .
but after a while , i decided to just go back and put the color into the scanner .
and i began to get more order in some flags .
when we grew up , he had a dixiely jazz band , and he always likes to play loukh &apos;s huky melodies .
and moms and moms , they &apos;re going to follow me away , and they &apos;re like , &quot; don &apos;t stare . &quot;
right , all right ; i am not victims anymore .
intent is like a fundamental component of human beings .
that might be the problem .
you tried to find an answer to the following question : what would people do , well , because they didn &apos;t even fought longer to survive .
i was in a wheelchair ; i didn &apos;t look like a propher .
we need to have the following our lives , our own objects , our objects , our expertise , our circumstances : with intent .
i didn &apos;t even have a proper address , but i knew that he was going to be abed , and i knew that in a city of 15,000 people called kfar kara , and i knew that he had had 21 years , outside of this holy city , i had broken my neck .
but abed didn &apos;t slow down , and it broke my mind again , and i stayed back with my anger .
did we have our bodies with their innate talents and deficit ?
i went out of my car , and i said , &quot; shalom , &quot; and she said to me that her husband would come home in four hours of work .
i was made for recovery .
&quot; yes , &quot; he said , &quot; once i am 60 instead of 40 . &quot;
if you think what you don &apos;t have , you &apos;re really going to be thinking about what you have , when you have , and when the gods are , you know , you what you have .
so the goal here was feelings of machines and not just feelings , but empathy .
and we connect two elements here .
and that was odd , and at that first meeting , i thought , &quot; i need to ask the next question , &quot; because i knew i was from this conversation from that conversation .
the economic damage for anyone who would do , cheating , about $ 15 .
that &apos;s what he &apos;s basically talking about in this 18 and a half minutes .
and finally -- i never realized that , some people developed their own version of the truth .
so i had 50 extended summarized summarized .
it was revolutionary .
and the mystery is to explain this funny number .
so , if we knew the shape of these exhalsions , we should be able to calculate these qualities that make a lot of dark matter .
and without galaxies , there are no stars , no planet and no possibility for our species to exist in these other universes .
you know , if we speak from the big bang , we often have a picture before us , a sort of cosmic explosion that we created our universe and started measuring the space .
but because this expansion gets faster , these galaxies will move away so far away from each other , and so quickly as we can &apos;t see them anymore -- not because of technological limitations , but by physical laws .
holy straw ! this is just crazy .
we had to think of him in front of a task , because when we were creating milo for the first time , we realized that it was a little bit like an audacity to be honest .
so , dimitri used -- he used his hand ; he used his body .
deep .
what we did was : we had to confront milo with a real problem .
thank you .
she thought she was dreaming , but they &apos;re not dreaming .
and when i first arrived at damascus , i saw this funny moment when people didn &apos;t believe that the war was coming from , and it was exactly the same as the bosnia , as any other countries that i saw the war .
and i called him luca , which means &quot; the &quot; gireger of light , &quot; because he brings light into my life .
the reporter janine di giovanni was in the worst corners of the bosnia , sierra leone and -- for recently -- she shares the stories of human tales of big conflicts -- and explores the shocking transition of trust roads to spiral roads .
and if it does that , every time you captured the target with the little proxy , a drop of brazilian orange orange .
basically , we used to do the animals so that we learned to control that notation and explore objects in the virtual world .
how far can we drive this ?
the global challenge i want to talk about today is that it &apos;s rarely on the cover .
we signed up this money to the man there , the director of school .
it fuels . &quot;
when you share one girl , you have a training , it &apos;s mostly less children .
and if you look at another , consistent aspect , the value of a slave was about 25,000 times worth of today .
with this hive , they ran out the hyenas .
and when they couldn &apos;t make more enough enough , they hired other women from the village .
she stayed under the classroom during the course of school , and through that , in the course , she was going to look excellent at the latitude , and became the first person from their village that had ever got a scholarship to the united states .
one of those things is , to a purpose , which is bigger than it is to serve .
and just like you can use the remote control , to change the functions of your television set , as you like , you use your language to change the functions in the brain as it is your interests .
it may sound arrogant or very smooth .
we can actually do the &quot; material of life &quot; -- like i said , all the stuff around us .
as wings can open the air dream that can use the birds , the language of cooperation that can use people to use people .
because while other men are limited to places that have adapted to their genes , we could learn through social learning and language to change the environment that it &apos;s based on our needs to be our needs .
but one thing to agree with that , despite the evidence that we &apos;ve just heard of , we &apos;ve probably had a couple of right missing genetic monkeys with neanderthals and denisovans .
and you clearly fall many , many more examples of their daily lives .
they didn &apos;t want to go into my camera because they distort the developed worlds , myths and ideas and ideas and shows what evidence seems to be a truth .
the hymenal construction is a surgical operation that creates the maiden condition so that they can think of certain cultural expectations that govern gifted and marriage .
this is a piece of playboy in the blink of words .
this is a place for military military satellites .
and it comes into a safe identification , because that &apos;s where the photo is reminiscent , if there &apos;s ever a real memory .
ronald jones was in eight years of a death sentence for rape and murder a 28-year-old woman .
so it became the goal of my creative process .
in the whole process , we found this great little manufacturer in virginia , and if his body language is a sign -- this is the owners -- — as it feels for a company to work directly with a designer , then you have to see that .
google earth comes to google earth from your backyard .
in order to visit different places and through different times , we put data from 1950 to 2050 .
i &apos;m going back to the present day , and i want to show you where voyager 1 is .
so far all of the happiness has really been more complicated .
the brain is flooded by cortisol , and it ruins hippocampale cells and memory , and all sorts of health problems cause .
and what &apos;s a matter of happiness in all over the other discussion , which is happiness for happiness .
the dopamine system , the demand system is much more centralized .
being alone is very , very natural .
so here &apos;s effect here .
well , cognitive maker etcoff looks like happiness -- the opportunities that we get it to gain and meders , the way it &apos;s solved by our true conditions , and his surprising effect on our bodies .
here comes the animal back to catch food as a reward .
when the animal creates this , it gets a license to be used as an acute credit animal in this area -- by the way , just like dogs .
so we &apos;re talking about exploding explosions , tuberculosis , but imagine that they can actually place anything under the holes .
they need to bundle out the pellets , the food rewards , and it needs to be complacated , so that it can be replicated in the wider frame , and it will have a lot more human impacts .
one has a packed in sharing patients in different brain scores , studying changes in their behavior .
well , consider culture , the phenomenon of human culture !
now , that &apos;s because you have receptors in the skin , touching your elbow and painful receptors that lead to the brain and say , &quot; don &apos;t worry , you &apos;re not going to touch .
the neurobiologist ayus-ur ramachandran shares the fascinating functions of mirror neurons . only recently , allow us to learn to learn these neurons , complex social behaviors , some of the principles of human civilization , as we know it today .
if you haven &apos;t aware of you , plants have sex , you have no more colorful , colorful ones and really interesting sex , really .
okay , this is another way that has evolved to be distributed by insects .
this is by morskachin .
heart disease is heart disease , for more women all age classes to death .
it had to spend herself as a man .
there was a small part of this initiative for women health who came to the national institute for heart , lung and blood , the botanological area of homeland .
right there , that &apos;s just a hot point -- right there .
we &apos;re now working about two and a half years at this five-year study .
these are all stem cells .
but we can &apos;t stop now .
we bring them on the shells that we call under petrishells shells .
let &apos;s see how power can be one of those principles .
tissue designer and fellow nina tandon crops , bone , bone , and it requires new methods for synthetic cells -- techniques that have evolved with a simple but force technique that is mimicking the natural environment of cells .
now , you know , i think you &apos;re in charge of the brain .
this environment , people , in this narrow response , is going to make a kind of framework that &apos;s not been observed until now .
nanny : do you want water ?
so we get about three billion comments a month a month , and now that &apos;s the wonder .
we gave this person gave a name .
my mom is in the kitchen , cooking , and i noticed that he &apos;s going to remind it in the corridor in the term , for the first time go more than two steps .
now cognitive psychologists tell us that the brain isn &apos;t going to see the world as it is , but a series of mental models through a collection of a collection of a collection of ancient effects , or moments of discovery through various processes .
what are we learning from this ? how can we use this insight ?
there &apos;s always a little room , a bit of space to create meaning from all the components within the strategy .
here &apos;s a smaller tower .
it looks something phalcal , but it &apos;s actually a bathroom .
this lamp up here is the same lamp , which is in every middle-class goodbye foyer in america .
because you make that with a broken window .
i use organic processes .
and jim was wandering along with his measuring tape on the front , looking for harterem material in the dump -- in particular , after the board , on the door -- he thought that he thought he was going to impress his boss -- because that &apos;s how we taught him .
the walls are so thick .
in this book , it &apos;s about the palace themselves .
look at that , but it doesn &apos;t touch my designer jeans .
and you &apos;d like to say , &quot; why you don &apos;t get it away . &quot;
and the situation is , a car full of sanity on her home way , from the hospital after the race to work on the rubs , and the police will admit that the way that there were no survivor in the car that the driver was dead , that i &apos;m dead .
and then we put a point in the middle of the circle .
half the half of the teenagers in the emergency room are speciated for concussion .
this is an x-ray that uses gamma rays to detect three-dimensional function in the brain .
and at the point i was leaving from the system .
and when i went through and i found things like this , there &apos;s interaction between pbs and teeth .
and over the course of months and years , i felt the neurologic flight of life itself .
in my coma , one of the reference was one that i felt , someone i experienced as being protected .
simon lewis : i knew when i was preparing for this , that little time would be to say a lot -- well , that &apos;s it . here &apos;s the controls .
because the first generation is in general , it &apos;s about the leg around the line .
we developed software that shows this : every bubble here is a country .
and in the &apos; 80s , bangladesh still is among the table .
so now i have money on this axis , and the possibility is that children there are .
and if we go back and tag the path so , you can see again , that the speed of development is very different , and the same speed on money and health progress , but it seems to be moving faster if you have a healthy health care , as wealth .
you can take a data set and apply him there .
it takes a couple of time to change this , but on the axis you can get pretty easily any variable that you want .
and you know , you understand life like it exists through evolution .
so there was something called dna molecules .
and we went on to say the people in london is that pauling would spread the pauling for dna .
it was crystallographing .
so , think about it . in the next five years , there was five literary thinking in nature on our work -- good as no .
and so , the dna was not useful , and the lawyers sped down until this calculation , 20 years later , when bowyer and cohen came out in san francisco and filmer , and submitted to their methods of recombined dna , and then he made up with a lot of money .
many autistic children have autism , just because they &apos;re missing a big piece of dna .
nobel yale professor james opened ted2005 to ted2005 and funny story , like he and his research partner , francis crick , the structure of the structure of dna .
no staff .
and in order to bring it down to the point , it &apos;s moving from one thing : don &apos;t negotiate with terrorists .
these girls just took a way to put in their own conditions in their lives .
so the girls separated a moment ago , and a beat said , &quot; why don &apos;t we dance in jail ? &quot;
i know that right because i was one of the girls who were lucky .
in this scene , people live in a lung lung .
and in both cases , we were able to look at the genetic sequencing of polio viruses , and we were able to evidence that these viruses weren &apos;t stem from these countries .
it &apos;s been a couple of times in the last century , and that &apos;s just even before .
it &apos;s just two tails , like that .
and really started , the virus began to expand at these four places , especially in the north india and nigeria , in large parts of africa , asia , and even after europe , terrible ways of environments that have been seen this disease for decades .
polio is the poorest communities of this world .
over 500 children , 3,000 children were born in the two states where polio was never stopped -- fattar pradesh and independence -- 500 children every single month .
help us build a momentum , so that there is a lot of time for every child , every parent everywhere forever , can make a polio .
good success . we &apos;re all with them .
she came out of the thick strifts , right on us , sat next to us next to us next to us , lemon , looking at her back and thought .
but all places that we stayed in there was a great prospect .
well , against this , there is just the hope that this elephant does .
and of course , we knew it would survive .
and these are not the only leopard that killed during that time .
bj : so you have to know , while , while you look inside the lions and leopards , it &apos;s particularly about critical consciousness .
every time you drink a glass of water , it starts off , you &apos;re probably going to wipe out at least a molecule , which is from the bubble of oliver cromwell .
so clearly that was so frightening it seemed too , he would go to the neighborhood office .
steve grand indicates that they and me , we , more than a wave as a solid object .
and the point is that nature is determined by the model of how to use it , and not by the receiver .
if life has been born on a planet in the entire universe , then this planet has to be our planet , because we &apos;re here and talking about it .
or , finally , there are some things in the universe that are so queable that no philosophy can ever the most old creature you could ever dreamed ?
i can take emails on the web , take emails to people , and see my friend steve cousins playing online grade .
and one of my challenges as a pilot is to land the drone on our basketball horse .
henry evans and chad jenkins : robots for humanity
we can also use cymatics to therapy and education .
exploration of the nature of nature that you don &apos;t see pull , i thank you .
so i looked at twitter , and some people asked me whether &quot; cala a boca , galvao . &quot;
so , as long as activism is so simple , you just come through it .
so we end up in this film bubbles , like my friend tedster , is what we call , where we only see the people we know about and the people who look like .
i think we think that we tend to look at what is the infrastructure of globalization .
this is taken down to 12 to 15 percent .
so it &apos;s a real problem -- and it &apos;s not just because the red sox have a bad year -- but it &apos;s a real year , because , as we &apos;ve been talking at ted , the real problems of this world , global problems in the range in the scale , and you global conversations to get to global solutions .
there &apos;s a trick here , because i suppose most people here aren &apos;t astonished .
but if you don &apos;t hoping for a happy accident , if you just wanted to get through something that you didn &apos;t know about something you didn &apos;t know that you need it to do , we wired to our social networks , in our friends .
in particular , there is a castle , in kibera in nairobi , which is transformed the axis of a country &apos;s axis in a flat store .
for many of us , it may be literature or a novebook .
everybody , i think , feel , if we go down under these stone lights the street down , we &apos;re less than less than the sum of our parts that we have lost value .
i didn ghtest village , i didn &apos;t met village residents who don &apos;t want to vote .
the question is what citizens do .
you won a prize !
broccoli is not chinese vegetables ; it &apos;s really originally an italian vegetables .
you know , at the time , it was a way to show that you were cultivating , and i &apos;d like , if you were a guy , and you wanted to impress a girl , and a girl on a license .
so it was an early application of mental property .
that &apos;s even been quite clear to me with the powerpoint ball on the 30th of march , 2005 , where you know , based on the number of maps that they sell , that they would have three or four fourth-winners winners -- these are the people who make five or six .
and the significant innovation of chicken mcnuggets is not to bring them into a very simple concept , but the trick behind chicken mcnuggets was that they &apos;re able to remove the chicken from bone from a free efficient way , which is why it took them so long as long people .
but it wasn &apos;t enough to use the priest .
he said , &quot; this guy , &quot; you think of it , he hasn &apos;t been restrained after these profound convulses , looked at three guys and said , &quot; what about hell do you have in the army in italian ? &quot;
i used to the 19th century , i used to use the word &quot; bad &quot; is probably the hyperbole of the year .
i didn &apos;t bathed . i didn &apos;t wear myself . it was dreadful .
they just switched it down it down , and they read the reports and so on .
so , much better than basingrene , at least for me , and it works , my god , it works .
i &apos;ve always felt that somehow i am a high nut because my readers don &apos;t know what i just told you .
but we don &apos;t necessarily have the resources .
this is somebody says , &quot; where do i know this ? i come from alabama . &quot;
and if we start working with the better early warning systems , then we can do a lot better in some of these problems .
all of that happened .
yes , so , of course , there &apos;s theory that these conversations are removed from different countries when they &apos;re fighting for their interests .
then barroas , the president of the european commission , to god , &quot; when will the global economic growth recover ? &quot;
this material is silk .
let me see .
i mean , why should you do all these things ?
fiorenzo omenetto : silk , a old material for the future
so , you &apos;re in the middle area . you have red and green signs .
if you come in , the guy &apos;s got behind me . &quot;
thank you .
the question is , what can i do with you ?
what if technology is to me in the balance of a relationship with some connections ?
so let me introduce him to you .
and then he said , &quot; but sarah , you could do more hard , you know it &apos;s too small ! &quot;
and his whole family moved to france in the &apos; 30s .
now , the man , of course , was very impressed by this 17-year-old , who could just tell him the formula so that he was doing it immediately .
of course , there was a different kind of sacrifices in the family , and i suddenly figured that later .
and there were the vietnam war .
sarah kaminsky tells the extraordinary story of her father adolfo , and its heroic lives during the second world war , by putting his genius and to save a talent for saving his career .
now , you might have heard that the climate press hits a strong , refunctioning planet , but unfortunately , the third pressure is the loss of ecosystems .
and i think about the great red warning flag for humankind is that we are in a preprafied position .
so this is the big bang , &quot; human development within the safe values of the planetary boundaries .
with the notions of a run , they fished , the australian great barrier reef , and scientists , that the great barrier reef is made of either of the control of the control .
the key to all of this , the red thread , is a change in the way , from a situation where we just make ourselves on a dark future , where we &apos;re going to our future &#91; unclear , we say , and we say , &quot; what are the conditions on this planet ?
even though it &apos;s true , you know , the reason why i &apos;m talking to you , because i was born in brazil .
but i was actually interested in the whiskey supply , rather than the ice sell .
&quot; the snail . &quot;
this is &quot; 6.500 yards , &quot; after a beard . 95 yards , &quot; to a hard judge .
if you make the dna out of it , you get a great distributed list .
a coat hangers .
and we can see the implications of this mutations as we compare dna sequences in the room for example .
and later , about 100,000 years ago , 50,000 years ago , they leave africa to colonize the rest of the world .
and there &apos;s a little bit about these qualities that we see in each other , which is to think about , and that is that they &apos;re actually only at the surface of our bodies .
statistically , there &apos;s no difference whatsoever that the neanderthal corresponds to one or the other african .
he went to the neanderthals , missed himself and spread around the world . somewhere in southeast asia , he met the denisovgers , flop and spread to the pacific space .
sustainability is quite important for us , which is about both social and economic and economic values .
let &apos;s compare the old frontier .
there are social areas within the airplane that you could turn into a place where you can play virtual golf .
these are survival .
and this cannot only find people .
the societal cost of this disease is huge .
so we &apos;ve created these new technologies that are based on the eye movement .
by using these extreme , many more , used , we found that our science can actually recognize the early early early .
we were doing breakfast on the plane , and finally , this is the army , you know , we used to get early early .
and at the point , you &apos;re clear . can you imagine it ?
so you see yourself where you merge , and you &apos;re trying to prepare for you .
i was trained to believe that soldiers are strong and clever and brave and true -- that they don &apos;t lie , cheat , steal or their cousins .
a 22-year-old person who asked surgery in their own thousand miles away from me to communicate with me .
yet , we need this shared understanding .
you may you know the line of it , which is like , &quot; never will i let me have a chance of aspiration in the hands of the enemies . &quot;
the brilliant nwriter adritchne wrote a book called &quot; people who were playing one of my pieces . &quot;
i always , harlem is an interesting community , because it &apos;s a very interesting community , there &apos;s a lot of other places that are thinking about itself simultan in the past , the present and the future is nobody is talking about it right now .
and this new series is , what is it that &apos;s going to be , right now , a african-american american americans ?
thelma golden golden : how art cultural changes shapes
i said , &quot; well , i &apos;ll leave him for two months .
if you put it up on the sidewalk and you keep all the adults , then help each other with what you can .
i said , &quot; well , have you looked at something about the stuff ? &quot;
i said , &quot; well , you &apos;ve got to put you behind you , admire all the time .
i &apos;ll come back to two months .
these are things i don &apos;t have any idea of .
it &apos;s called pit agora . &quot;
i want to go to indonesia , where i was about 21 , 22 years ago , so , on a scholarship .
it &apos;s this incredible balance that we think of as i mean , when we make a new way , we have something that hasn &apos;t seen before , this imaginary world , which you don &apos;t know before when you know , that &apos;s the edge , that &apos;s going to end up .
and if the squaks blows up , i see it &apos;s a sun . &quot;
stephano : from the moon , i admire you .
the maskied actor , the pub player disappear , and the audience makes a step in this world , into this imaginary world , in the storm .
and we climb up to the summit , and when we were the edge of the crater , roland disappeared , in the other end of the volcano , in the other end , and i &apos;m up there alone , alone on this incredible .
and i think that &apos;s going to be an incredibly motivated force , so i went to kennie , worked in uganda , and i met a group of boandic women who asked me to take a cheaali to wear them to help them build the first microfinance institute .
and at the end , we stood on the other road , and we looked at what we were doing , and i said , &quot; that &apos;s so beautiful . &quot;
i want to tell you two stories . both are playing in africa .
so he pulled back to the farm , and -- to make it short -- there are three acres of acres .
and so , anuj and acumen talks led to how to open the private sector to the private sector , because one of the assumptions of development , that in a country like tanzania , 80 percent of the population has less than less than a dollar a day .
and my wish is , if i look at these women , these farmers are meeting , and they think about all this continent , working hard , every day , they can also have this sense of opportunity and possibility to be able to believe and maintain access to services , so their kids can also live their lives and use their children .
for those of you who don &apos;t know what this is : a rube goldberg machine is a complicated way , a tremendously fuller piece of technology that does bear a very simple task .
and as if that wasn &apos;t enough , all these incredibly difficult things , yes , they wanted everything in a camera table .
and so , design is important , but it &apos;s also flexibility .
we need a few more silly things , except &quot; the silver chamber . &quot;
and technology has helped to write new sides of our history , or to address some pages .
art story is not carved . an engineer swiss sero sero seryini shares 30 years to find a lost expensive feder of leonardo : &quot; the battle of anghiari , &quot; he figured out that many pictures are hidden different parts of history of history . shouldn &apos;t be part of the future .
so we can make a model of your heart , create your brain on a chip .
and some of our colleagues connect to tufts models like this with tissue engineering , to see how cancer could spread from a part of the body to the next one , and you can imagine those kinds of multi-wireless chips as a next generation of research .
good business for the birthpentine , the farmer and farmers , domestic workers , etc , etc -- so these jobs are going to deal with human bodies that bodies , rwanda , which is a link a bond has no limit -- that &apos;s a wonderful job of labor . they &apos;re looking for growth . they &apos;re looking for growth ?
some can break with minimum transit , with a distance from 18 feet of air .
pm : we &apos;ll try to get the video -- here &apos;s it .
and amazing is possible , if you look exactly what nature hasn &apos;t done , if you &apos;re thinking in this little dialscale , that we need to learn a lot of nature , not at the boeing -- but if it &apos;s dealing with the realm of nature , but if it comes to the realm of nature , that nature has been 200 million years .
when it comes down -- let &apos;s see how it works .
so some of the things that we could do after lunch is a little bit more unpractical , and after a while , somebody made an particularly meaningful proposal , and then he &apos;s got him in a while he wrote an artist , aphorism came back to this is not . &quot; that &apos;s not . &quot;
one is not prime .
this is the great swiss mathematician of leonardo .
it even more exciting when he wrote these two big prime numbers -- and at the rest of his talk , he reached this whole .
i went -- the women who produced my radio show from another room and said , &quot; girls , they &apos;re all trapped .
it &apos;s remarkably clear , it &apos;s a remarkably clear , and it requires a phenomenal reason .
it could have been a politician could have been . or a breakthrough .
but a lot of people don &apos;t know that there really are the tasmanian devil . it &apos;s the largest carnivores in the world .
her body was tied with metastases .
right here , the tasmanian devil cancer has changed an absolutely amazing evolutionary adaptation .
the tasmanian devil cancer is perhaps the ultimate cancer .
this is a photo taken by dr. southat the year of 1957 that he planted cancer in a volunteer volunteer . in this case , it was a prisoner of the ohio state prison .
that means that from five marriages have to share with two their own responsibilities .
okay , now you do the same with your capacity as a car drivers .
if they failed , it was not that they &apos;re stupid , but the exam is actually unfair .
and that prejudice improves their well-being .
we wanted to know if people would take advantage of us , to change their belief .
the most optimistic , the less that region would respond to unexpected negative information .
the british government , for example , realized that the optimism bias can lead to the optimism bias , that individuals are likely to underestimate the duration and cost of projects .
and simplistic is simplification this : the power is shifting from west by west .
it doesn &apos;t mean that the age of nation-state is addressed .
we need to make a lot more the coverage of the coverage , and the skin reports will be the most effective thing .
story is not a line .
a lot of people claim that the 21st century will repeat the 20th century in the first world war , the world war , the huge growth of the european nations destroyed themselves and destroyed its central posture in the world . this was about this by the german and the resuleline .
so another way that we think in the 21st century is that we want to think about the idea that power is always zero -- my gain is your loss and vice versa .
joseph nye : global power
what elections are elections are a winner and a loser .
these were usually in the past of a temporary interest during the first few years , but then it was interested in .
it would be ideal , if there were default writers in the standard of the standards that are already given care of mutual expectations for mutual action in all three species .
now that &apos;s not a good idea .
let &apos;s get this department or the department , and then that allows that service .
it &apos;s an oiled , the root of the political problem .
other parts of the world were hit by storms that were even more destructive .
their electricity bill for march 135 dollars .
three : adapt to rise in sea level .
now , what the definition of commerce is the idea that we can predict the future based on the past , which is , according to the past . this principle of our engineering , our engineering infrastructure , the major infrastructure , urban water systems , building all water rights and legal , even water rights and legal prevention .
t : i don &apos;t want to let my parents down .
s : i want to speak perfect english .
that means we can we solve from i.q. tests only a few questions .
he found out that she refused to be more suspicious about speculative to speculation about what could be , that they were very likely to do with abstracted with abstractions , or the use of logic in these abstract logic .
what color are the bear in the north pole ? &quot;
and so on .
but i talked about training and engagement .
that &apos;s not one of my principles . &quot;
in 2010 , in 2010 -- unigraduate -- if you said , two circles followed by a semicircle , two / 16 , of something , then they would say eight , because eight is the half of 16 .
i called my wife &apos;s leslie , and said , &quot; you know , here are so many good people trying to do so much good .
i said , &quot; what &apos;s the , daddy ? &quot; &quot; a job . &quot;
he offered me to make the film , and i said , &quot; oh yes , it might be in a local tv program , and we can overcome our friends . &quot;
and my mother , who applied me in the fourth grade , graduated in the state of the state of virginia , who was my inspiration .
they have different antrines , economic and military .
i &apos;m just listening , i &apos;m just an agent .
without provoking , they suddenly do it for the command of their first minister , attack the oil fields of their neighbors .
you &apos;ve got to write the parents a letter -- the fictional parents of their fictional soldiers -- explain what has happened and conach .
but it &apos;s a self-verifying judgment .
i didn &apos;t know what they did . i had lost control of my classroom .
in the early &apos; 70s , i was on college .
it was a very small village -- a weekly base where people used to present every single week in the week .
because triangles are the only load structures .
every time i go to a school , i see the right in the eyes of children .
this is a toy from paper . it &apos;s amazing .
that &apos;s what newton talked about 400 years ago that the light is made out of seven colors simply by turning this .
over 100,000 children learn science to learn .
there are 12 million babies in our country -- who live in a world of darkness .
all of our old newspapers cutting into little squares .
there &apos;s a big comes and hits the front and knocks it down .
and third , change from fossil business to a solar economy .
and in fact , there are mass models in nature that can transform them into a comparable solution .
and the kind of the elements that i &apos;m talking about is , first , we have a restaurant in the productive greenhouse , a little bit like this in amsterdam called &quot; de 2 .
and these bumps are hydrophil : they pull water .
that &apos;s what &apos;s produced the sea water greenhouse .
now we would be able to use all the waste raw .
so i &apos;m somebody who thinks a lot about data as you &apos;ll see soon .
what &apos;s going to the rabbi ?
but then steve , the i.e. , didn &apos;t come back .
what were all the qualities that i care in a man ?
who were all the other women on those dating websites ?
for me , for example , at the english patient , &quot; it &apos;s my favorite movie , but it doesn &apos;t work in a profile because this information is going to be too flute , and somebody is not going to leave me and decide not to me because it doesn &apos;t want to be in an 3-hour , because it doesn &apos;t want to be in an 3-hour movie .
he looked like this , and i spoke , as i showed it this , and there was 850 points immediately .
it &apos;s clearly not a day fly . it &apos;s an amazing effect on our daily life , and you &apos;re taking this by nicholas speaking statistics saying a month after the publication of the game , &quot; the name of the game , &quot; black , &quot; passed 68,000 years ago .
it &apos;s better than the kind of these things that don &apos;t play .
this is something that we do all the whole time , when you drive car , you see , and keep the look at the cars around the cars .
they &apos;re really fast , very fast , very flink . and that with very severe loss .
most kids don &apos;t go to school at the way , &quot; great , two hours of math ! &quot;
i &apos;d like to leave you with this thought , and thank you for listening .
try to change it again .
it doesn &apos;t need a lot of technology of biological evolution to make random calculations , and it &apos;s just happening , of course , things with rules that just can be like these .
the idea is that we just sort of sketch it into just a question we just ask ourselves .
and if you look at things like the iphone app , it &apos;s quite higher .
i mean , everybody &apos;s going to be able to know what he is trying to know in simple language .
if the rules are just about the population is somehow inevitable that they work very abstract and partness , for example , under the level of space or time , which makes it hard to represent things .
thank you .
you also see that this region has the hardest potential to overcome the disease .
we will we going to be able to measure each patient to 100 different viruses .
i went to school . not because the masi i went to school , and went to school .
when i followed this tradition , i would become a wife .
it &apos;s being done , there &apos;s no anesthesia , it &apos;s an old , rosty knife , and it was hard .
so i needed the support of the village , and when the men were listening to people in the village , one woman got the opportunity to visit school , they said , &quot; what a lost opportunity .
i learned my mother was right in a property .
and i looked at her , i remember the day , and i saw something special in fishing .
we &apos;re moving something , because if you change your world , you become changing your community , so you &apos;ll change your country , and you will change your country , and if you and i do it , we don &apos;t have a better future for our children , for your children , for our grandchildren ?
that &apos;s what i call the 50th of 20 paradox .
visa covered that now use more people from bankers than credit cards .
and we &apos;ve found a couple of interesting things .
so it &apos;s going to be considering , you know , the conpromises constellation , about the weather , up to the team of the team , if prices are being given for consumers .
gore-ison is a very important way of personal responsibility for her management , and her collaborators , to the point that you neglecting the idea of the bosses of the awe .
patagonian art &apos;s based on the footprint for the principle of every product that they make , and benches the social responsibility , and helps one of understanding the ethics behind the ethics that are behind the product .
and then there &apos;s this other really interesting development that &apos;s happened in california , these are karots mobs .
so if we look at this , and step back , what i think is that the current crisis is real at every case .
i know a gentleman who &apos;s been married for 25 years after about 25 years , and so thanks to his wife , &quot; thank you to keep your bread on the table and stay at home , don &apos;t ask . &quot;
what do you want to hear ? go home to your wife , guess what do you need ? &quot;
in our neighborhood , there were large families everywhere , where fathers were the family-chief chief , and when i grew up , i took my mother being in an patriotic environment .
and it happens everywhere , under liberals and conservatives and conservatives , agnostics and believing , the rich and the poor and the poor , east and west alike .
and just i know that , during the time i attended this school , it gave it millihorkets in my hometown of my hometown of my nationality would have killed almost the pope , and turkey got zero points on the eurovision song .
so i feel that every language in a different way .
we often talk about how stories the world change the world , but we should also see how the world is affecting identity politics as a way in the stories , read and shared .
some people criticized me , other , i wrote myself that i wrote about the turkish state conflict .
if you can &apos;t bring us there , it &apos;s not a good literature .
as long as it comes from our hearts , we can write about anything .
but i don &apos;t think that &apos;s the only parts of the rex process .
now creative works can be as a kind of property , but it &apos;s property that we all build on , and creations can only form and grow roots and grow , once this reason and ground .
i &apos;m only a bit . it &apos;s a little bit . it &apos;s a bigger patent .
our creativity comes from the outside , not in the inside .
and then they say , &quot; okay , but how do you see your address ? &quot;
so i think to create best requirements , i &apos;m going to show you -- the next slide is not a try of showing the worst ted slide in the history of ted , but it &apos;s a chaotic .
what &apos;s fascinating and beautiful .
we assume that it &apos;s salewater , and that would mean that there &apos;s more water on this jupitermoon than in all the oceans of the earth .
you see , in the 1880s , 1890s , there were many scientists , a lot of the observer , the light that went out of atoms .
you can put that on a piece of paper in the lab , and you take a telescope , you think it &apos;s going to the sky that there are no dead stars that are bigger than 1.4 sunmasses .
here &apos;s a beautiful quote that i found -- it &apos;s about the happy accidents -- from alexander fleming : &quot; when i was watching the dawn of 2897 german in 1928 1928 , i didn &apos;t leave it all over the whole medicine by detecting the world strands . &quot;
and she did this picture of the earth .
i don &apos;t know why , but i &apos;ve been amazed by the thought that there are about two and a half billion of us around the internet , and at every time , more than 30 percent of the iranian population online to learn to build content .
and all of you are connected , as you can see , to create a picture of my activities .
when i did my own joint vividly , i made one for my daughter .
and my family and friends were given to hear me speak .
and i was talking about the people about that , i was debated and debated .
so i said , i would be silent , and on my next birthday , what i &apos;ve learned , and maybe i would talk again .
and i said -- well , rivers and lakes , hydroponics , south america .
so i continued .
if somebody said , when somebody had said , &quot; john , do you want to make something really ? &quot;
i don &apos;t have to show you my fault , which is in my backpack at the back .
we need to get up who we are , and we &apos;re going to go where we will be a different .
in the same year , one day , one day , my sister passed me that she went to china to earn money , but she would soon come back with money and food .
i realized that i couldn &apos;t survive in that way .
i didn &apos;t change my motivation before he died .
my foster father turned me to this dinner , and he encouraged me and gave me a reason in america .
i &apos;m going to live my life happily , and i &apos;m going to learn in dichoes until i see you , and i promise i can &apos;t cry .
my goal was that it &apos;s going to recycle my buildings , it will be recycled , because every country builds up and build the pavilion , after half a year , becomes a lot of industritile .
we can make it better .
i built for them from paper tubes for them , and so that the students could build easily , and i used to be able to use easily , as a foundation .
in 2009 , in italy , there was a big earthquake in italy in italy .
now i work in new zealand in christchurch .
now , this theory didn &apos;t just interest me on paper .
it even in the sound of course , in the sound of the mother &apos;s language , it also acts in the motherinstincts , and so that the baby makes something simpler in the hard task to understand and speak in the motherlanguage .
is it being born in a world of wealth or in absence ?
fetuses seem to be focused on the inmmcratic environment and display their physiology .
the idea that the prenatal transmission of ptsis is applicable is more theory , but for me a very intriguing one .
is a full demonstration of finger ability .
but if that of us , suddenly , is suddenly something very unexpected , we &apos;re laughing .
marco tempest : a magical story
you might remember it as aol-time war-fusion , okay . back then when the biggest deal of all times .
but to make an incentive to create the vaccine , each participants should be given a kilo of lentils .
but the little things that might call user interface is frightening bad .
it &apos;s sort of a mechanic world that we would love to be able to live , which is really nice to be nice in spreadsheets , all , and the numerically and the amount you tile and the amount that you do with something that you &apos;re doing with something proportional to the extra proportion of success .
because the people who don &apos;t have money that didn &apos;t have an extraordinary budget , but they realize that you could actually have bigger success with a government program , using the height of the height of the effort , but you &apos;re likely to achieve exactly the same outcome when you write the form of function , if you &apos;re talking english .
however , it causes an unfortunate situation in which only a tiny fraction of the world can actually be able to participate or benefit by the technologies .
thank you .
i felt overwhelmed .
i believe that this is the path , which is first of the first group of people , of the body , individuals out there in the world .
and over and over again , while i took my interviews and spent my days with them , i heard stories of life lungs and amazing little details of changes .
so this idea that these new economic stories and hope would be divided with friends and family , and it might maybe come together a little bit of money , what they needed for a loan to a loan , that &apos;s the little idea that was ultimately interviewing .
maybe you will smile , and you &apos;ll want to talk to you about what you already have done .
now , with social networks today , there &apos;s an amazing way to increase the number of people around us to grow our own supportive communities .
we need to do that , according to people really use it , just as they used to redesign , kiva , to make all the connections .
are there out there out there out there ?
maybe we should patent the universe , and everyone should compute a license for its existence .
our only survival is not dying , not on earth , we &apos;re expanding in space .
a few examples .
hi , earth , please .
we know how big the number is up . it &apos;s the galaxy .
i know what the consequence of me would be because we had failed arms , and this is a picture i &apos;ve done about three o &apos;clock in mountain , when we saw the computer monitors , because we had a signal that we thought , &quot; that &apos;s a stick . &quot; right ?
this is interesting for cosmologists .
that &apos;s not something like that .
and he gave a lecture . all i remember , is a word : electronics .
i have 18 minutes to tell you what &apos;s happened in the last six million years .
this knowledge gives us a very useful background that we can think about our heritage .
and i then said , &quot; no , that &apos;s an elephant . &quot;
but then compare the skull with a similar age of aging , and the little george bush here , you see the vertical line .
so for example , it &apos;s very early for their birth to deal with their environment -- faster than us .
can you imagine what &apos;s varioned this report ?
it &apos;s a place of myths and legends .
and if everybody should be able to hold the rules , of course , you need an effective system for verification and law , because as we have noticed , otherwise , trust behavior .
now to a place where it &apos;s something cooler than here , the ross sea in the southern ocean .
but we also know that species like this sea turtles stay in the eastern tropical pacific seasises .
it &apos;s not even particularly important to create new laws that relocated that , if you have the privilege of using our resources to the high seas that you have to know where you are and what you do .
so i &apos;m leaving the airplane , go to ted .
now , it &apos;s not always taking attention , but that &apos;s why they invented mothers .
he said , &quot; that &apos;s it , i &apos;m dead , and this is the last post in my blog .
and i think that machines can get better access to human language , and increasingly make large amounts of data , it will be possible to analyze the songs of a whole life -- the tweets , the photos , tweets , the photos , which is just make it in incredibly incredible numbers .
they were just shooting out of voting in the camp .
then he went back and broke down , because he thought there was no hope there would be .
it shows gdp per capita , population ratings , lifespan , and that &apos;s it .
the complexity there is unsignificant .
suppose they wanted to produce a laundry .
you can see how that works .
you think it &apos;s obvious ?
they knew that their hospitals were best medical hospitals , and they thought it was very unethical , trial or experiment .
cochrane wisdom understood that uncertainty , misability , inquestioning , it hurts .
it &apos;s full of us , our products , full of our junk , full of our demand .
sorry , think now .
because that &apos;s possible .
i know most people don &apos;t see that .
maybe we &apos;re rejecting .
it &apos;s certainly no technical or economic barrier to us .
the earth can support the support when we choose the right path .
that means that for every dollar you &apos;re going to take a pay at nine or 10 bucks .
so here &apos;s a little bit of advice .
68 is young today .
let &apos;s give you a love of love in this conversation .
so you take a resveratrol and you put it in beer .
today she runs around with their children .
remember , a turingtest is when you have a wall with someone talking to someone on the other side of the wall , and not know whether it &apos;s about a human or animal , and that &apos;s the moment in the computer of human intelligence .
of course , the future is going back to see 200 years back , next week , is 200 , birthday of darwin .
and then , a brilliant inventor of walking , a scientist who found a part of a cure for this disease .
and as he was thinking , the expensive way he didn &apos;t think about it , so he thought , &quot; i don &apos;t know about science , but with data , i should i look at the data and see if these expensive , hard , hard techniques actually works better than the cheap and simple . &quot;
goal is to be the largest bar in the diagram .
and i said , &quot; great idea . &quot;
so , by the way , this car car is reduced to detroit ratings , by the way , by average ratings .
it &apos;s simple -- you can browse it -- it &apos;s behind the seat .
with the data of new jersey , it acts differently , it &apos;s not just lethal accidents , but all accidents that are registered there , and it turns out that difference of 10 percent , but most frequently smaller injuries .
impossible in theory , but it &apos;s possible in practice .
this is a bunch of memory , labor memory -- nine hexabyte .
so what you really need is actually a lot is a &quot; cloudbook . &quot;
one consequence of it is , i think we &apos;re seeing this current spectrum of media -- tv , film , video -- to a media media .
so you went on to have without control .
there &apos;s a million social pages on the web .
and we protegger and say , &quot; oh , that &apos;s bad . &quot;
we &apos;re going to have better words for it .
i started caring about that .
what i had to admit to you with high abclau was i understand it .
but it &apos;s a human problem , a scientific , if you want to .
and these things are the reflection of processes , and the time that they &apos;re creating .
and the project -- a massive competition -- on the hudson river and in new york , that you asked us three years ago using these processes .
it has a material identity , and it &apos;s transparent , and it &apos;s transparent , and it allows us a whole different idea of a building shell .
this is going to be the first building in the united states without — well , i can &apos;t tell , without air conditioning . it &apos;s a hybrid .
and then it &apos;s again while you started to find a tectonic solution , and there &apos;s school .
and then the shell -- the corners of it -- noted all the dynamics , the motion of the building as a series of seismic absorb , geologic layers . right ?
thom mayne : architecture
no , no , better yet -- the of cooked food lives .
this simple and simple technology that was designed , works on this formula .
reward : that complex and all of our brains , the very different elements , the outside of the universe and the inner conditions , how we feel , etc .
and this brain is about taking care of its muscles and protecting the surface , and we feed our own cooking food .
despite the solution of a healthy hunger signal , it doesn &apos;t ignore the big brain , and it activates another program in the gut .
if we add the matrix , if we have a structural language that we need to learn if we can learn it , we could generate a balance and generate a balance that comes from a very distorted technology : cooking .
we &apos;re all encoded from the same genetic wood .
our fantasies are playing children in underwear .
you go back up here within 24 hours .
when i spoke at the first ted conference , i showed a picture of two men of the elder brothers who are running out survivors of el dorado .
i went to the arhuacos , and the wonderful thing about this story was that this guy , danilo &apos;s fand , first of a very short look .
because we had taught people to film people , we were able to continue to work , and our wiwa and arhuina filmmakers to make the last shots for the film while we returned to the other arhuaco to the sea , and we brought the elements from the highline .
you &apos;re the unique answer on this fundamental question : what does it mean to be a human and live ?
and worse , when it &apos;s when it comes the way into our natural environment -- on the side of the side or the coast of a river .
because nature is , in nature form the recycling system .
and he begins to digest cases and convert into the next five days into biocomproductives .
the biological income is really important .
and the atoms themselves have tobs are beautiful , but if they fire laser , they &apos;re exposed to right to the right frequency , an atom just absorb the photons of the tendency to slow down .
surprisingly , to work .
our leadership is working to find new ways to save money .
and this is -- -- that &apos;s a lot of challenging than i &apos;ve learned to be all the speakers before me and all those who are going to get after me .
and she thought about my work of mathematical models that should promote evolution and modern genetics .
the other half of the audience may not like head-tail-tail -- deep , cultural reasons , keep it for boring -- and find another pattern more interesting -- head-tail-head .
you can think about two ways of thinking about it .
if you throw a coin , you get a series of head and you get a number .
we don &apos;t know what caused them .
now , in 100 cancers , the test is 99 percent , and 99 percent will be positive .
how did he come to the one in 73 million ?
we want to know how likely -- in relation to each other -- the two explanations are .
we don &apos;t really measure of probability .
thank you .
the security manuals on the machine are left in your stecker .
you can &apos;t cut into one side .
so even though china is totally censored , booming the chinese network .
but these two very clever seed techniques didn &apos;t prevent that social media was becoming a public place , a medium for public opinion , and a nightmare dream for chinese people .
you can almost bring any academic elements .
one of them is yao chen . she &apos;s the most famous microblogging in china and has about 21 million readers .
but notice that this cathplus mouse play has a very fun feature .
you just give you a window where they &apos;re not censored in .
that &apos;s what we expect from our senses .
mom : that &apos;s a eule .
john niparko : so you &apos;ve written two books already ?
language is a different way . the language is very accurate .
so the music didn &apos;t think that way .
it pausing the question the question of whether it gives me hope at all .
joseph : i was born in 1986 .
they wouldn &apos;t be lazy ; they would want perfect hearing .
for you , and you &apos;ve got that , you might , feeling so close to a gun , to be comfortable .
the story of him as a defense soldier in the dutch army at the beginning of the second world war .
in fact , in fact , i took the gun -- not to kill , not to destroy , but to stop the judges , the bad guys to defend the vulnerable to protect democratic values , to govern the vulnerable to the more democratic values in amsterdam , talking about how to the world improve the world .
it &apos;s more likely to stay more than having a war .
until then , i represent my father , i announced my father &apos;s trying to shoot with an old wattz .
this is a computer program from fax and zeros .
you can look at your surface with a microscope .
so , the way is a good thing . not counting .
you focus on the consequences of failing the consequences of what you do , because each of your movement requires the full concentration and thinking processes to perform it effectively .
nano &apos;s energy cells could provide the amount of energy from where it &apos;s needed .
the human genome was about 1990 .
we used to use the point of advanced generation of technology to create the next generation .
we live in a three-dimensional world ; we can also use the third dimension .
but what we &apos;re actually seeing is that we even keep up .
and at the time , it costs under a tenth of a cent .
there are four important conferences about the emerging blood ent devices ; there are many experiments in animals .
by 2010 to 2010 , computers will disappear .
if you really look at exponential power growth , then you see these things are fairly soon available .
i want to believe , and they want to .
is that a dangerous predator or only the wind ?
and what do you see here ?
a similar experiment was done by a different swiss psychologist , peter brugger , who found that vastly meaningful patterns about the left face of the left rise in the right brain , than in the left of the left .
right , and they &apos;re creative , and they don &apos;t fall on too much nonsense .
that &apos;s the tail &apos;s tail , folks .
a pretty well-known illusion -- first was done with margaret thatcher first .
was john fam , kennedy was killed by a conspiracy or a single victory ?
you can -- what i &apos;ve done -- michael perell chief of the god who beat her temporal lobe with electrotic waves .
okay .
i forget the names of the army , i think it &apos;s called &quot; resistance army of god , &quot; but also the government doesn &apos;t have any white path , so let &apos;s looking at the first video .
in my country , it was -- we saw pictures of british soldiers called the young iraq , we &apos;ve got abu ghraib , we have guantananyo bay .
it seems to be able to start at the end of the end , because it &apos;s a waste product that comes out of other animals , but still it contains nutrients , it contains enough nutrients that dung beetles can live , and their larvae eat frog .
so next thing we &apos;ve asked ourselves about how do that ?
look at his response .
the dung pill is leaving a little temperature shadow , and the beetle &apos;s clightened the pill and wips over his face , trying constantly to try to his face refrigeration and the hot sand that he runs .
using the so-called lead orientation , he won &apos;t find home . it &apos;s going to come up at the wrong place . at the vector orientation , he &apos;s doing his steps or measure his steps or a measure .
well , a dung beetle has a rivannsized brain , but it does shows a huge amount of intelligence , if it comes to the point , its food source -- animal excrelic divides , and how does that ? everything ? it will lead to a dance .
so if we look at these sounds visually , then we might get a result .
there &apos;s no sub-titles of the ted title , and we miss them , but if you &apos;ve seen enough talks , then you hear the spiritual ear , and then the applause begins .
maybe the first person standing up everest . more than 30 years before edmund hillary .
the journey took 10 weeks and 72 days .
but bandura is still incomplete ends .
dsr : humans . people , you know ! that &apos;s it -- you &apos;re the person .
even if you haven &apos;t done it before , you &apos;ve learned a lesson that is useful for you at the next time .
because there will be problems .
but you have to reach in a few seconds that their emotional awareness is focused on them .
on the other hand , there &apos;s a lot to be devoted to me that drives the emotional level , and you have to recover again .
on what do you pay attention ?
and i look at the logo , and it burns me .
and everyone has competition .
after all that , you &apos;ve explained to me , you &apos;ve got to get it to this conclusion .
use a use .
so i decided to see that the name of the game would be , or my neworiginal act .
i &apos;d like it with intent there , but if i were going to be there , there was a helpful left to the band , &quot; the beatles , &quot; but i just wanted to get normal beetles .
i like to participate . i like magic .
when i click on the side of pittsburgh , gagi arin page , i come to this surprisingly little guy who is incredibly heroic .
but why , steve , need us a revolution ?
so it &apos;s not surprising that only 62 percent of the typical gares are optimized for the future .
be serious .
a true story : i was looking for a school for my kid .
this cannot be , just because of play .
dolphins who have big brains play a lot .
there are benefits in games .
it improves our courage to a change .
there &apos;s nothing special in the times of the times that is happening , except from the serious meme we &apos;re supposed to kick out .
discover it . because you &apos;re the leaders , the innovation leaders , the masters of ideas are .
so in summary , we need a process change in our thinking and behavior , but we don &apos;t need a group of a workers .
but of course , i &apos;ve been working for 1925 and more or less like what you see here . this is castleton .
that means that i didn &apos;t get led -- the work wasn &apos;t going to do me -- i just asked objects , because i wanted to see the world .
the director said there would be multiple women in shapes and burning , and then they were sold to america .
i had been branded , i would have been prepared for success for cybercriminals &apos;s success .
this is my camera , brilliant . the first -- that i shot with my bob dylan film 35 years ago .
so i started to say , &quot; hey , boy , you &apos;re just too much !
rg : you might remember , we fell in love with love .
rg : so that &apos;s why we want to share with four tabts of parenting with them today .
we presented the evolution of love to our child grafish .
i felt connected to my environment .
so , of course , this was a very difficult time -- really painful .
essentially , there &apos;s a stem-load of happiness in the relationship of the relationship , which , as we all know , intimately attached to universal happiness , and it going back to the first child .
rg : so in reality , we share general happiness .
rufus griscom + alisa : let &apos;s talk about the dishes of your parenting
he died 25 years ago , and was born in exactly 75 years ago .
many of you can afford them .
now i realized that -- yesterday , it fell together .
every time i hear that , i get gooseskin .
it &apos;s not to believe that yet not once happened a year since the extraordinary moment , the financial economy and the credit of the economy are moving , frozen .
now , since then , i &apos;ve been wondering why capitalism is incredibly efficient in some things , but so more efficient in others , why it &apos;s so innovative in small ways that it &apos;s so innovative at all .
and also , you can see the spread of time banks and parallel currencies , people who use the clever technologies to connect all the resources that have been free -- people , buildings , buildings -- to make the ones that most urgent .
and that &apos;s exactly the problem .
in the mid-atlantic , many governments have launched their own innovation labs .
i &apos;m not saying that the bulk would be before to go to the barricaction and make any extra banker at the nearest latin court -- so that might be as well .
now , since we see these huge differences in savings , it would be the language that language has something to do with these differences ?
you can say , &quot; yesterday , yesterday , &quot; here &apos;s what it rains , &quot; tomorrow it rain . &quot;
just to illustrate this , let &apos;s take a look at the oecd diagram .
they find nine countries in the world where there are a great proportion of the population of both languages as well .
it &apos;s almost impossible to find a savings behavior where the strong effect doesn &apos;t happen .
there could there any relationship there ?
let me , let me tell me that if i had an expert , dutch people , who would have the remedy for cancer , i would prevent that he comes to my british university ?
this system sets intelligence into english confidence , which is a very cheap measure .
if you don &apos;t think of an idea , you &apos;re stuck .
then the navy-pilot , i started flying with the electric plane , i flew an electrical missile and looked at electromissile planes as a kind of a hobby , but then i met a couple of professors from the kind of three professors that convinced me in the field that you could do , that you could do that very close science .
i hired me to be imagining a space station that visited the earth all 5,000 years ago .
we are the boss . i fear it .
essentially a principle , a high-tech example of where we can miniaturization , when the controls is outside the vehicle .
the nest the will always positioned .
compassion helps him to escape from the feeling of suffering , the most allest , terrible suffering that the one person experienced and expands his attention to the other selves , even for those of its misfigurations , and the growth of living .
another three years , no vision . again , it breaks .
suddenly , he had a dischanted idea .
so he took the maitreya -- this was a bullet -- on his shoulder .
and i actually was your mother .
and so you do it . you take every living thing that seems strange you and recognize how to be familiar with you .
they would enjoy it somewhere and enjoy a good time .
in buddhism , it comes back to the future .
and all of you know about the subject that i &apos;m supposed to talk about .
and here i &apos;ve changed this quote of printing stewart stewart by saying that we can think about something that is thinking about something that &apos;s going to take on the cellphone to the cellphone , the internet and constellations by saying that they &apos;re just -- the functions just are simple -- the functions what that simplicity is when we see it .
and there &apos;s a lot reward about complexity and emergence , and not so very about simplicity .
now , imagine this too to a city or a society , and you have an interesting problem .
so the second layer is the simplicity of the transistor and the internet .
you can build in russian cathedrals , you need to know what it does .
and , in health workers in these parts of the earth around 1818 , who have no work that have no work and ready to take around and make these kinds of things , a video phone , and the doctor can look at it .
gw : well , no .
but it &apos;s the combination of the internet and motivated consumer users -- which are vulnerable and disresolution , which have the means that they need , and then it comes in a kind of &quot; explosion creative collaboration .
all our patents , all of our patents , our whole approach to patens and new inventions , is based on the assumption that the invention knows what the invention is , if we can tell what it is .
and the range of globalization , this equipment has become cheaper .
what is to be allowed to be created for inventions , which is to be organized by knowledge . they &apos;re becoming increasingly used by big companies to develop an enormous on patents to prevent innovation .
what you can see , i think , is two key things , and that is , i think , two challenges for the charter .
just simply because it doesn &apos;t use it .
see that ?
and i thought , for the internet for all the employees who suffer under stress of stress , to help them to help you , with the things you in your job .
and i said , &quot; if you put this album , i &apos;ll deliver it to him , but you &apos;ve got to figure out who this ray actually is , &quot; because his name was all i had : ray . and , of course , this little piece of music , and that his daughter was pissed .
and i promise you , if you go from google streetview , eventually the moment come back to something that comes right away .
you can look at these days online .
one of them really was really out .
and she made a kind of description like how to feel when you care about it .
when i get the brains , i don &apos;t know what i look at there .
but if you have this gene , the teacher will be bathed into serotonin , in this way , the whole brain is unsensitive to serotonin , it &apos;s unsensitive later .
here &apos;s it : &quot; retitled , &quot; a historic book .
this is the large hadron collider .
well , if particle physics , we &apos;re more ambitious .
but they don &apos;t notice them because the weak force of their name is too , very tiny range and very weak , so they &apos;re just flying through them .
but there is a problem .
so if you move a particle with the universe , it can emerge with these higgs particles .
but it &apos;s really so that with this theory of the laws of physics , at the time of the big bang , it seems an absolutely wonderful forecast . the model has not created that this is happening , but it seems to be done .
at least one of the planet , it may be changed on one of these planets , primitive lives , and in the course of millions of years , in things that went upright and left it about 3.5 million years ago in the mud of today in the tanzania , and ultimately in a different world .
in another year book , i discovered a picture of barack obama .
in addition to his theories , the ancient species , &quot; charles darwin wrote about the theory of the emotional expression .
but the effort of colors was not just an artistic act .
but at the second question , half of the people they didn &apos;t like to think they &apos;re going on .
and the answer to their questions came from a voice that came out of this dark hole and , on the other side , a mysterious hand that showed out to take the documents while in the old documents .
it &apos;s not just about politicians and the law .
we didn &apos;t even see anything like haiti before .
and it was used also used in hot issues , like the future of consciousness for sexual violence .
you also have your own news strip of news on youtube , with 1,500 bars right now .
we need a need technology ratings in the leadership and answer this question , &quot; what would make amazon or google with this data ? &quot;
i &apos;m a writer , and i &apos;m interested in itself , because the self and fiction have a lot of similarities .
we need to understand the zeitgeist to understand the cause and effect , not just in the tangible world , but also in our desire and movement .
and it &apos;s hard to use , but also to be afraid .
it cannot be saved .
i &apos;m always searching for trying to find ways of seeing stories of very ordinary people to share and documenting .
and then we went to a fish restaurant , and chad , the surp guy , he was doing us , and he came up to us and my mom , and my mother said , &quot; did any pediatrician , young ? &quot;
and she told this woman .
so that made me feel good , because he had seen a lot of things .
so i &apos;m sure i thought i was going to take a book or a t-shirt , but i found a ray sheep .
the igelies said they created their gods themselves .
chris abani shares the story : people who claim to the soldiers , people who are compassionate , people who are human and their humanity , &quot; ubuntu , &quot; he says : the only way for me to be human , is that listening to me my humanity .
so virtually life on earth is almost wiped out of five times .
svante paabo has the answer .
why should that play play ?
and if you think about what the potential means -- you can put a complete copy of an organism from any cells from any cells .
this is what it looks like in 2000 .
or maybe it &apos;s chemicals .
and has a consumption of 15 watts .
below the right now , on the right , you see a robot that leads a 360 degrees centigrade in less than half a second .
so the robot is a little bit of what we call a station curve with minimency .
so i want to show you a quick film , from aphages desert ants , like in professor stephen pratt lab .
and you see , these robots are really close .
this robot is found out of what these properties are .
this guy is called the so-called bee beard .
the floars are sheets , if we eat it , we &apos;ve gone out , but that &apos;s a scarce view of pollination .
the trains that drive into the metropoles , you might have an all-subtle pollen wearing and make the city for a supermarket for bees .
people think very active thinking about our own health .
so we have some pictures of honey from brooklyn .
if you don &apos;t just just do one of these california dense cogaers , bread is a standard standard .
in the tens of tens of thousands of years that agriculture has developed , most of our ancestors were actually connected to farmers or extensively to connect .
so what happens ?
bread has found its way in tropical countries , where the middle class eats bike and hamburger , and where the commuter is more practical than rice or maniam rice or .
but this is a deceptive .
we need smart , scalable automation that need the problems that we &apos;ve had with liberzation in a large scale , avoided .
and we need to think of ourselves unbiased about the fundamental benefits of sound and large scales .
you know , they &apos;re part of those enormous range of events .
and that , i think , is evolutionarily unique .
and that inspiration , this key moment , came along when i was sitting in front of my sketching book , and i had a person who was doing a handle , when you get the gear at the end , you can get a long bar , with a lot of course when you know , when you move it , and move it moves down , you .
you can take care of interest groups like manufacturers , and you can talk to them , and we can use the knowledge of manufacturing producers and the one of their customers , and they connect that know , with our knowledge , to create something that didn &apos;t achieve .
the goal of my talk today is it makes your memory unplacated with these charismatic and majestic creatures .
they didn &apos;t kill them , but they called us to catch it .
and now the cobra is a new symbol .
it &apos;s simply is incredibly to see multiple gharial that are in the river .
and once a poison in the food chain is all of it , we are affected .
so much too polic will .
rm : yes , that &apos;s the first time we have learned about this .
most people , if you think about the diet that i recommend you , think it &apos;s a really strict diet .
it &apos;s important , but not important enough .
it &apos;s also less psychologically , it &apos;s plamatic , and nicoine ruins the pots .
the other possibility is the other way of changing food .
so you want to reduce health , it doesn &apos;t cause health and it doesn &apos;t happen .
and we were actually found a link , just like in the arterienpaste in our heart research .
the word &quot; guilt comes from the sanskrit and says , &quot; unit , connect , bring together . &quot;
girl : are you sick ?
he &apos;s horrible when it comes to technology , and it &apos;s absolutely intractable .
have just to have something for the meeting .
of course not all at the same time , but he had to be able to do all this .
we wrote that to combine these different technical components and combine them together .
and then we have these faces in smaller components , and it drifts up .
that means , as we were busy with all this , we were also in new orleans , and we were also in the world .
the next issue is that i &apos;m going to treat in the wind of wind , because we could hold a whole tedtalk about the next slides .
and during our work , fincher always meant that the hostile qualities were removed .
and the few here is 18 years old .
and then , after that , our gaze was just on top .
kartisayanarayay: how to celebrate the dance bears
and we went through the desert , the jeep has a tank .
and they can be really happy that we decided to do it .
the desert is very windy , and also very cold .
we had these rowed these giant waons for measuring the bison for example .
and if this creature was designed by an operation , it was certainly no excuse how i know him .
i can lose 40 percent of my body weight without dying without dying .
rw : that was great . thank you .
start a meeting with a poem , and that would be an idea .
very funny .
and i told me about you when you told me , i never want a box to get rid of a bag of compressed steel just going around in the house , because the mice could find them and have a fire .
it &apos;s called &quot; my 17-year-old year-old girl . &quot;
and there i discovered that chimpanzees are very machary , and a book wrote about it .
so i started interested in this thing , exploring them in other animals .
and secondly , it &apos;s ready for work , although he doesn &apos;t care about food .
but it &apos;s clearly showing the intelligence of the elephant .
people with empathy of empathy , like autistic children , they &apos;re not going to be bitten by guests .
and here &apos;s both colored brands .
originally she was done with capuchin monkeys .
now , you &apos;ll give us a brick and get cucumber again .
so here &apos;s the first given tagging with a crucial role . it &apos;s going to show everybody else .
that , yes , the guy was without the first thing , and he &apos;s going to get all the glory , but it was actually the first client who was a leader insane into a leader .
so i looked at my beard .
the danish security council had inspired me .
i started to stabilize .
you can discriminate almost to believe that you &apos;re eating doritos .
cheese ? coke ? where does this come from ?
a group researchers asked a few hundred people read a scientific article .
my colleagues valley valley of yarkoni and russ drick has demonstrated that the insula is on a third of all the emerging brain studies .
as a neuroscientist , i feel more excited than others to treat the potential of neurosciences , mental illness and maybe even make us better and smarter .
but the kind of questions that we face is when we want to understand the indus valley culture that existed 4,000 years ago .
so it &apos;s three inches of four inches in size .
i was fascinated by the indus script since i read in a textbook .
and also , there &apos;s a couple of signs that often stand at the end of a text , like this crug , by the way , is the most common precoming .
my students said i should be serious thinking about protected .
can you write it in pictures ?
why should that take us care ?
and you might be wondering , where do we know this sound ?
while watson invented the technology that was invented by the telecommunications revolution , he discovered that the star was going to erase the star of our solar system to make strong radio waves .
deaf , the crayer had built a nest .
they actually see landscapes and people and gods and gravel and barren and white and white and things like that .
who &apos;s not going to persist from tens of others if they &apos;re different than all the other ?
and i love that the body is , the possibility of helping those who have very suffering in the physical level or another , is fun to make it by taking joy of it .
the human being almost incomplete .
and what have all these pictures and things have in common ?
then we had a year in zimbabwe in a year in zimbabwe , under robert mug .
climate change cannot be resolved in the country , but has to be solved by a living in the world .
when i saw her in the eyes -- every year girl girl &apos;s manifested on the future -- but it was just an unaccessible sadness in the eyes of this girl , and if i can do that over the rest of the world , i think it would have been rewarded for the world hiv would be rewarded by people who were willing to donate .
thank you .
what experiments would they do ?
journalist , that &apos;s not for the public is not .
very simple , but beautiful .
now , how do we design it to design virus ?
here &apos;s rhex with paddle now , in an incredibly maneuverable swimming robot , transformed robots .
so in our blueprint , we put in the sticky axis .
this is a medical volunteer volunteer -- we can choose from a pool of 30,000 students -- that &apos;s actually only about a red pen .
and here is the design of cutkosky and his great students .
the vision of our eyes that works so well in the air is suddenly very limited and the easiest .
in contrast in the dolphins in contact with each other , and every single animal has a completely different reputation .
in a place like sarasota , in florida , is the distance between the boats that go from the 100 meters of a rainy group , in average six minutes .
so the reason blue and final whales create sound of very deep frequencies that can be transferred across very long distances .
as a new music style had been completely distributed from previously , and there were no such thing .
and on top of these variables , these variables from noise in this frequency range is caused by higher wind and waves .
it &apos;s a huge shift already , which has been in such a significant scale in terms of space and time through human impact .
and ship routes were changed .
the worldwide telescope takes the best images of the world &apos;s best telescopes on earth and in all and has seamadept to deliver us a holistic view of the universe .
but now , where we overline the whole universe .
boys logging 30 percent more often than girls .
i think it &apos;s the general internet use in general , well-known video game , equologically new access to pornography .
the interface basically isn &apos;t existing .
what &apos;s nice about it is , i &apos;ve been showing you the two-fold gesture that you &apos;re going to zoom in . you don &apos;t have to move to your handable or scalable tool ; you can keep doing things in different scales , all the time .
they are controversial , first , because i am it that she &apos;s saying .
then we were victims of nauporfirio .
yet fear is better than apathy , because the fear brings us at least to do something .
two years ago , in the city of galeana , in chihuahua , a community manager , eric le barón .
when we thought that masiosare the strange enemy , and we sang with the heart of a child , &quot; i &apos;ll give you a soldier in every son . &quot;
emiliano salinas : a response to the violence
if you understand what the top and right is really , it &apos;s a physical complex set of skills to be able to get up a ball and throw up , and then , you know , the lines go back .
so , complexity . so , how many here can juggle ?
pink .
what i want to do is : they &apos;re fingers .
what i &apos;ve done here for you , are a lot of these tricks , and i have the choreography , but i didn &apos;t invent the techniques .
thank you . the only thing that i want to say about this last session is , have you ever tried to go to juggle and drive to the end of the age of 120 ?
i &apos;m going to run into something effectively about , the latest number i work on . that &apos;s not .
and it &apos;s going to change as i run this .
they save a lot of lives .
when i went to the back of the back the last time , a lot of people were confusing to the flood of underwear , &quot; can i see people during the sample ? &quot;
so i thought , well , as a few of the things that i didn &apos;t want to put up with some of the world test designers in the world to figure out how to sculpt the same step ?
it &apos;s called spthe spyfish , and it belongs to a company called the h2eye , and by nigel jagger in london .
currently the farmers can harvest only in the rainforests , not in the side season .
in fact , if you look at things really carefully , if you look at the underlying sub-instructions of substance , there &apos;s nothing there .
if you ask me , sir isaac newton , the biggest scientist who had ever lived , who thought that jesus had come from the earth to insert the power of gravity in motion .
this is extraordinary . because rice , you know , rice has known to be extreme 38,000 genes .
what are we ? what is this thing that we &apos;re going to capture that we actually are ?
heinrich hertz , when he discovered radio waves in 1887 , where he called them radio waves because they were diagnosed .
so we &apos;ve taken a team of experts from harvard , which mit , from the american name dictionary , the encyclopedia britannica , and even our pride sponsor , the google .
if those books are not going to be lost over the story , they &apos;re in any library , and many of these books have been captured by google and digitized , which were scanned until about 15 million books .
what do they say ?
in the years of 17,000 , 1800 , 1900 , everybody didn &apos;t care .
i think you should avoid a mistake that you &apos;re going to be a mathematician .
but a lot more important is that the distribution is much more sophisticated .
this person was interested in the history of frustration .
when i said to a radio party , &quot; david , sara , they fit , &quot; some of them just laid up .
first , we invented ways to sign -- first of writing , then watch tape , and now video recordings .
secondly , i call that mixer .
these are just some of the hearing positions , or mases for hearing positions that they can use .
and i paint one day , standing on a box , drew a hat to my feet , and when someone came through and threw money into it , i gave them a flower and intense eye contact .
a nurse had one in the car , and took it right into the coffee that i was sitting in , and i gave you to teach her a smoothie , and we think about the care about the care of care and death .
and i realized this fear , which says , &quot; is this fair ? &quot; and &quot; choose a job . &quot;
the truth is , i didn &apos;t get them to do it , i asked them .
but the perfect tools are not able to help us if we can &apos;t look at each other , and we can &apos;t afford , but , and that &apos;s even more important , we need to ask ourselves without shame .
and we collect more .
and then he &apos;s here today .
these projects brought thousands of actions in a year with a year , hundreds of thousands of people took part , generated millions of keys .
and i was looking for a graffiti by a graffiti , little word language , and found that website to the teachers who wanted to do this , these characters in the upper part of their board , and they brought graffiti -- and i &apos;m sorry .
they said , oh no , you can &apos;t study brain theory .
this is normal science .
and also even though the brain looks very complex , things are complex until you understand it .
it just turns out it turns out that it &apos;s really hard to come up with things but once it &apos;s seen something , it &apos;s even easy to understand .
a behavioral measure of how intelligence is , and this is in our mind for a few times .
if you don &apos;t know it , that &apos;s the wrong thing up in your head , which is terrifying because it &apos;s mixed and not fit in it .
now , i &apos;ve already , i &apos;ve heard the song already heard about it , if you have the jill &apos;s song , you &apos;ve seen the next note in the brain , when you &apos;re singing -- you know , you know , you know , an algorithm during the process . when it &apos;s an album of music , the next song has the next song in the head of the previous previous .
in each moment , finally , let &apos;s think about how we test intelligence .
it &apos;s a memory of pattern .
but the ultimate is no frontiers .
we need something police , we need a military , but only to defend .
you can see it in your head . &quot;
she was traveling because she was outside the elections during the course of the world .
this is rigoberro menchu .
and now they would look at how this work works .
or to make it more , how does most women get the world ?
the amount of energy is used by the seventh of the world &apos;s population .
so , what needs to be done ?
she loved it . i got the abc . this was the point where i started my career as a professor , when my mother had time to read me .
we asked it was asked by participating in a study , did a photograph with a webcam , and asked them to fill out on a laptop a question .
but privacy doesn &apos;t mean something negative to hide .
they can tell people what they &apos;re doing , and then they can take their own personal information out of them .
and that brings me back to the garden of eden .
when i got my current job , a good advice was given me to interview three politician a day .
and the fact is that people learn from people who love them .
and they go to whole foods to get their baby , and whole full foods is one of these advanced food chains , in which all of them looks like it is like a lighter international international .
one of my favorites , one of my favorites , is that people are literally less likely to be exempt by notorious , human beings , lawyers , lawyers -- because we are attracted to unconsciously , which are familiar with us , which is why i mentioned my daughter president of the united states .
if we see a tracking hunt , with cars in a film , it &apos;s almost like that we should be focused on a tracking hunt hunt .
they have problems to make connections to other people .
even in face even more smarter than groups that are communicating in electronic ways , because 90 percent of communications is nonviolence .
through this competitiveness , court state , we &apos;re moving deep in each other .
but that &apos;s not the only thing people are going to sell .
they &apos;re being killed ; we don &apos;t hear them from them .
so my challenge was to understand how i can use this pain force .
a friend who backed me very much , a gannerin , gave me every month 2,000 rupees for vegetables .
i &apos;m not going to tell you all of you being mahatma gandhi or martin luther king or by medha petkars or something like that .
but &quot; coke &apos;s &quot; has the same pattern like &quot; under and above . &quot;
so , it &apos;s really responsible for many things that we consider modern dictionaries nowadays today .
right ? these little circuit surfaces -- i &apos;ve got them all worked except the time .
how can that be ? i mean , i love books , i really love books .
in the dictionary , it &apos;s an artificial frontier .
the proviewing different technical senses , &quot; is a lexicographing disposition .
i don &apos;t think he can make a picture of it in the near future .
i &apos;m really sorry . but if you put a part of something called a user -- like the dictionary , which is part of the language , or a flag that stands for the united states as a symbol for the country -- you use it synecdoically .
so a magazine 2.0 that i was doing recently was dickers as a phone book , so that way to pump hot air into the bubble .
and about at the same time , i suspect , too , i started to do something that i had at the focus of my profession . i started reading .
this is the mental equivalent to the full body disorder .
sapler property means that the whole thing that &apos;s going on is that the whole thing in the presence , is going to be able to go .
i could make a millimillimeter-wide 3d structure here , or my friends can see at home .
there was a mechanism there was a sense of fear , and technically , technically it was able to find the transmitter .
it could be deadly .
i &apos;m very closely on this little blue dot , with his blue holy .
thank you .
but at the smallest sound they &apos;re gone again .
once people got in the room , they saw themselves in the installation -- except a difference : one person was completely invisible , wherever they moved in the room .
imagine a cube , about that big , which stands in front of you in the middle of a room , and the one you want to be shy , if you &apos;re going to go to you by having double a two-double altitude and a half , it &apos;s growing up , it turns out .
take a look at the second tribe .
in countries like denmark and germany , the areas for the wind is now out of the wind .
and thorium , who was working on nathan myhrvold .
and the graph here shows the difference between emissions from the normal care grid that correspond to nuclear energy , or another energy , versus wind solar or photovoltaics .
the interspaces are something else .
these are the global rights dentings .
there &apos;s a lot of sunand wind .
if we build all the nuclear power plants , the whole nuclear waste gets up to hundreds , if not thousands of trucks and trains , every day through this country .
ray kurzweil and all the other talks -- we know that the tendency is central to the top .
it &apos;s wind with a budget to be cheaper .
we bought it in 1850 . this purchase is called a sopwards eselece .
this is gene cernal , a good friend of mine , he says , &quot; if i can the moon , &quot; -- he &apos;s too dato the last person on the moon -- &quot; and of course not impossible , &quot; but of course , of course , we thought the government would start to bring us there .
this is about an hour for 1.6 megawatts .
pilot : we &apos;ve got 1412 miles .
and by the way of course , a little bit of a piece of warf , which seems this month .
orpayer doesn &apos;t pay a cent of the nine teams for the top of the mountain -- for the way tried to the atlantic ocean , and we don &apos;t pay a cent to somebody else until somebody &apos;s terx &apos;s prize .
and i &apos;m not saying that we should copy nature , i don &apos;t say , we should emulate biology , but instead , i &apos;m offering you to know the processes of nature .
and all of this tells the bandwidth that we can create .
the closer you get , the more new qualities you &apos;ve discovered .
but it was very working harder .
but notice what happened in the course of this century .
then you put them out through different steps , many people don &apos;t do it .
only one of four million children have this disease . simply said , this is what happened : in a certain mutation in a certain gene is made a protein that &apos;s toxic to cells to cells , and that means aging , seven times seven times faster than ordinarily .
it &apos;s so rare diseases that it would be hard for corporations to justify spending hundreds of millions of dollars for the development of a drug .
so here &apos;s a picture of a lung chip .
francis collins : we need better medicine -- right ?
we don &apos;t want everyone want to be the same , but we want to respect each other and understand .
the existential , social and political impact that has an artist in the development of a cultural identity of his nation is very important .
this is a museum is as important for us to the west .
sm : what happens to the eastern ocean was located between the east and west -- last month , we launched the four-doha tribeca film festival in doha .
we all seem to think that -- well , if we look at the soil , there &apos;s nothing .
and she went away . and i didn &apos;t expect that , because i had an expected ...
so i realized there were more life than only the big things we see around us .
and then i actually get my whole nervous system .
because it &apos;s such little sculpture , nothing can go wrong .
ww : so i made the same procedure where i keep my breath , and i just work slowly , while i work the plastic , it &apos;s cursed , because it acts differently .
and as i do , i have to be very careful , because the color begins to turn into little bits .
and she saw how i was walking around .
so it &apos;s an art island , and that &apos;s what america is like for the first time .
the flag had to be made of little flakes from gold .
he said , &quot; this is the battle around itself , the battle for ego . &quot;
there &apos;s just you . and there are only us .
why ? because the soul , the soul of man is part of the divine breath in itself , a spark of divinal soul .
&quot; i &apos;m bruce . &quot; i said , forget t in ount .
would you have my calculation , my love , my voice ?
and she found the idea was great , but it began to be very quickly focused on my candidates .
a few weeks after i diagnosis , we went to vermont , and i decided to put myself an artist in my council of dads .
and then in the &apos; 80s , they realized that a special cocktail of chemicals could be effective , and within a few weeks , i had laid this treatment .
of course , i had no hair and no immune system .
and this happened -- what happened -- there was one in my life -- this is the council of dads said that the father was saying what we talked about the mothers in school .
and because it was the first thing that i lost , i &apos;ve been thinking most of this year about these highly fundamental acts of people .
there was the first anniversary of my journey when i went to my surgeon , dr. brulic , and by the way , the healey , great name for a doctor .
when he took cancer was diagnosed by cancer , bruce tusler became a long time to his young family , so how he submitted to this funny , soft voice , and particularly thinking , his groundbreaking friends of the council of dads asked the council of their own their own their own life adviser when they grow up .
ao : you were .
so i put the microphone in a moment on the side , and i play a lot of notes .
the first time you &apos;ve been playing with an orchestra , you &apos;ve learned the model you learned , and the orchestra was actually a different kind of version before a couple of hours before the sample and concert , and the concert stopped , and the concert was waiting for it , and you know , and then he could play them with the orchestra .
dp : let &apos;s let it play derek .
ah , yes , a table .
i like to read books with this .
we want to learn something about medical care .
and i think the best for intellectual efficacy in captivity is a ai in japan -- her name is love -- and she has a wonderful empathic trainer who works with her .
learning is important in this time when the behavior is still flexible -- and there &apos;s incredibly much to learn in a chimpanzee community .
they shoot everything , all that moves and bigger than a small rat , then they dry the meat on the sun or the predators .
and not that in the far distant world , but everywhere .
every single plays a role .
and then there is there , and lo and behold , another group that responds to you , maybe in america , or in israel , who says , &quot; yes , you &apos;ve done what wrong . &quot;
now , since we know the problems around the world , the human brain is designing solutions to these problems .
so we &apos;re going , we say , these beautiful and complex crystals are all non-life and very beautiful and complex cats on the other side .
we use this idea called self-assembly .
so these missing things are things , for example , if you had a power of energy through a system , what we would like to do is a protocell is a protocell that can harvest a part of this energy to get living systems .
remember , these are primitive things , so , dance end protocells are very interesting for us .
the challenge is then to throw all their purks of chemicals out of the lab , and try and make protocells from the life-level properties of this type .
most of you don &apos;t include dna , but they still have lifeproperties .
in this case , the rounddevotion of course is a place where micro-decisions were hit by people who hasn &apos;t said to do .
this is one of them .
a lot are very hard are very concerned about the water and air quality .
so it stands on feet , so that it &apos;s all the weight on the mouth of the mouth of the mouth of the mouth of the mouth of the mouth .
but we don &apos;t have a lot of notions of how we could do that or interesting .
maybe they might not know that they need to communicate with fish , but there &apos;s a new device that you can do .
and this is typically the model we &apos;ve been able to do .
and we should rethink leather .
it shows you all sorts of legos , because it &apos;s made out of the same cells , so better , there &apos;s no hair to remove it , no scars or insects , and there &apos;s no waste .
we can develop new materials , new products and new institutions .
but it remains : the fundamental dna of a car has remained pretty smooth .
we &apos;ve made an analysis with a gas station in every city for each of the $ 100 , in the united states , and we have these gas spots that you &apos;re never going to go beyond two miles from one station .
and a lot of people ask , how can you sleep at night when they whisper with this big problem ?
man , the office full of her office .
i was allowed to be allowed to be perperdine university , and i came back to my ex-school to become a special assistant .
and as a first pilot &apos;s day middle school in the entire los angeles school district , you make a lot better at a lot of it .
pearl arredondo , in the eastern part of los angeles , as a daughter of a senior memberman , who went to jail , and many teachers wrote a lot of the school . now , and teaches her story a different model of school , and talking her story to teach her story , you know homework sometimes aren &apos;t the most important .
it became a book , then to a screening .
there was an incredible idea there had an incredible idea , a crazy idea .
our brazilian forest , the old forest , who had the size of california today , and 93 percent destroyed today .
it was completely destroyed . there were abundant goods and the land was dry .
i was not in new york .
it &apos;s designed to scale information system that allows me to zoom out and zoom in .
but i had another idea for this map .
we wanted to put this on a map , and this is how we put their lifeof life needs .
we call this this muir network . if you zoom in , it looks like this .
this is the view of the east river highlands of murray hill , where united nations .
or we put up to the balloon space of new york city is going to live for 12 million people , but that the 12 million people in the end is perhaps at the density of manhattan life , only 36 percent of the surface , and the areas in the environment , wetlands and wetlands and wetlands .
and then , let &apos;s look down down to the people who live in the asian pacific or worse , living in africa .
what we do there is for examples of instruments , models and ideas , which , if they &apos;re being adopted , changing the game .
you can also start to change what you build .
we start to treat more and more and more .
a second important issue , the tools for collaboration , is the systems of collaboration , or the systems of mental property that demands collaboration .
and as we heard yesterday and earlier during this week , it &apos;s completely necessary for finding new ways that we create new political realities .
you get -- this is a building in hyderabad , india .
well , there are all sorts of new humanitarian models that are being developed by people around the world .
the store had one of these machines that can print on the sugar plates .
and this is like the following is : sopa and pipa , as legislation , is primarily designed by media that were established in the 20th century .
but that wasn &apos;t what the media workers wanted .
so pipa and sopa are round two .
if they destroy it , they will destroy it for everybody .
i want to take you into a different world .
for a long time , it didn &apos;t talk to me , because she thought i had the family down .
so we started the barefoot college , and we &apos;re refounding expertise and expertise .
the community , the community is given .
in 1986 , it didn &apos;t leak .
so we launched a school for children &apos;s day .
he &apos;s my yer .
of course , women were much cleverer than the men .
he said , &quot; did you know it in sierra leone a village ? &quot;
they came out of the plane , and they spoke to the press , as a age of age .
these are some of the research that you &apos;re going to see with the help of the allosphere .
these are actual afn data , radying microscopic data , from my colleagues , from the &quot; abstate and energy center . &quot;
we took this information , and we built it into a mathematical model .
so let &apos;s take a quick diagnosis before i go with the talk .
human beings have something we can think about like a psychological immune system .
what had he had to say about his experience ?
in our society , we have the strong belief that synthetic happiness is from minority species .
what &apos;s the right response to this ? &quot; okay .
right ? this is the change in the taste of taste , the change of the first times that they &apos;re evaluated , the second times .
&quot; i help to accept things that you can &apos;t change . &quot; right .
look at what we found out .
it &apos;s worth thinking about thinking : &quot; the great source of both misery as well as a lack of human life seems to be through the spread of differences between the differences between a permanent situation , between a different .
this rockets is using experimental motors like nitric motors .
this rocket went up , they created insound , and it swept up the wing wings , bombing in the sky and a burning pile of junk coming back .
i said , &quot; ma , you &apos;re a treasure . is daddy there ? &quot;
there are stories that we put on nuts .
let me pause here and tell you a pause here -- esther , my mother , had given up a couple of years ago , the general relief of all of atlanta .
and it takes into your pocket , pulls a disaster .
and she &apos;s coudulous , and i start breathing deep , like at birth -- you know ?
&quot; ma , are you still doing this ? &quot;
and why ? what &apos;s wrong with this ? &quot;
well , i was defending .
i grew up with this woman .
i exaggerate , &quot; go pedal , brackets . sh on the pedal , rocket . &quot;
there &apos;s a lovely hierarchy that works .
and i &apos;m just amazed that i &apos;m here to tell you this .
so instead of driving 20,000 miles in the year , how do you do the average urban people , drive 125 miles per year . are you happy ?
for example , for example , traffic and the carbon supply .
so i want to get to the second part of my story , which is , when are we going to start with this antiangiogenic diet ? sidewalk pricing is coming .
the beauty of these intershine networks : you can have these really very inexpensive devices .
what &apos;s the point ?
they had a five-page in an empty way north of toronto , and they shut down into a new lifetime .
my friend , chris , who i just showed you this picture was given longer to fight with a mental illness .
but i said i wanted to do three things today .
i love the way you see the world , because you see the world for the first time .
it &apos;s a great cover .
and when my father told this story , he says , &quot; the wacdest thing that i didn &apos;t know , except the bread . &quot;
you can go to a concert and listen to the arrenriship .
to honor and remember .
we were really paralyzed .
there are there the subscris , high-heeled plans for a long-term infrastructure and the reconstruction of the city .
at the same time , the city had this urge .
and i think that was the 21st , and we knew it had to be built to 2square .
dr : well , here &apos;s the problem : we knew it wasn &apos;t in the sense of -- we thought about the place , and about the need for a memorial .
have you -- as a person who was physically involved in this project -- any ideas that was done or not being done ?
because our structure was made that it should be written .
zznes at safety .
it would be nuts to know it , 103 g .
so it &apos;s really important for me to drive me around one day .
and also talk to the training .
in the 17th , a rat , a stable of a crappy island or shit -- as in the term &quot; yankee &apos;s a doodle .
here &apos;s the true definition : doodling is the blueprint of spontaneous characters that help you think .
thank you .
so this led to the eruption of the patent wars around the world .
so you can imagine that if you &apos;re going to get bigger manufacturers in front of you , if you invest in this product , you assume that the licenses are actually going to be available for these patents , you &apos;ll probably decide to decide something else .
the community has already been working today , two months later , using phosphorus satellites , to make sure that this product can go to low cost on the market , where and when it &apos;s needed . it &apos;s not equal .
the air temperature was not high , but you felt uncomfortable during that game .
but that &apos;s not all we need to do . we need to use active systems .
and hopefully , for this idea , the engineers and designers are using all these different symmetries , so it will be possible , really to create our thermal perception that we feel in a foreign domain of well-being , but enable us to become the best passive design , but also by using the source of the property , the sun .
the main thing , &quot; make it &quot; make it &quot; is an ideal , &quot; is ideal because such a product or service without a lot of bureaucracy .
they &apos;re kind of like disfreshing services .
we &apos;re just making the systematic field test to make sure that this device is going to have an asha activists .
and then i realized that these guys were going to spend into a quartett with other people who would be connected .
so we run a little bit of mathematics to study the size of this cluster .
not that they misunderstood me misunderstand : we don &apos;t think that our work should justify in any way , or could address people with one or other body scales .
and we don &apos;t only showing them , but we can also read them .
now , that works with emotions which are so fundamental , it brought us to think about it , that perhaps perhaps the fundamental causes of human social networks are somehow encoded in our genes .
and i can promote their intuition by asking you , who would you rather be if a deadly germ on the network ?
and these properties of persistence and toughness , dark and clarity are not in the carbon atoms , and they &apos;re in the connections between the carbon atoms , or at least through the connections between the carbon atoms .
sometimes i &apos;m worried that we &apos;re worried that we have heard so much about ourselves , that we have begun to accept every long-difference life with an interdifference , even comfort .
a recent gallup survey survey asked the participants how much stresses , worried and anger had experienced them at the last day .
they accept sadness easier than younger people .
people don &apos;t go to 50 dates .
and they could turn 80 times on their head in a circle .
ladies and gentlemen , the lxd .
many of you might have heard of the lakota , or at least from the larger tribal group called sioux .
10 years later , from president lincoln underdrew , homewas a flood of white settlement across the country of the indians .
the message of gold is to a massive charge of white settlement in the lakota savannas .
until today , most voluntary managers have ever been given for battle .
the housing cannot create no new buildings and fall apart the existing buildings .
what &apos;s the link between these images of suffering and the story that i &apos;ve been read with ?
the event that i &apos;m going to describe is actually started with diarrhea .
that &apos;s where we have the discoveries of the last year for the last 2,000 years . that &apos;s what &apos;s happening for human progress .
some farmers do this . many people don &apos;t . what &apos;s happening here ?
think about what that means .
let &apos;s think about it for 10 .
what happens here and when you get a stopgrist problem is that they &apos;re going to deal with the world in intuitive ways , models that they &apos;re going to take up to understand the world .
she says , &quot; you know what ? does i need to turbo ? do i need this heavy car ? &quot;
so far i was pretty negative .
it &apos;s about energy efficiency .
thank you very much , sendhil .
but you have to have the right tool .
now , if i take that sugar dough , the sugar dough doesn &apos;t want electricity .
enjoy , thank you very much .
it &apos;s just &quot; money &quot; and if you look into the side arena , there is , &quot; don &apos;t make me happy . &quot;
now , when you do , the healthy sense is that you have to turn the wrist .
she &apos;s gone . it &apos;s not a big round of applause .
i start with three ladies .
here : ten , boom , queen , king , ace .
not at the last map .
i &apos;m going to work very quickly through the deck and try to see a pattern .
three , four , five , six -- then , i guess , good .
lg : very good .
yes .
i loved that . now -- slightly more more .
yeah ? ok .
but now -- karo , heart , diamonds . good , good .
looks good -- batman . ow !
three -- of diamonds . yes , three -- diamonds . yes !
seven .
read me : feel feeling -- ah , ah , you know !
you can see it on my head .
this is the first group ; it &apos;s a pretty small group .
so i &apos;m not going to keep going on , not every single one in this room in the sub-level and aspen , and anyone else standing still starts to understand and love classic music .
let &apos;s try it again . ooh , the ted choir .
the same thing , when he comes home after a hard day , he comes up the keys , and says , &quot; aah , i &apos;m home , &quot; because we know everyone &apos;s home . &quot;
think about : 1,600 people , educated educated , take care of all sorts of things , understand , and you move from a piece of chopin .
the orchestra of the musicians came to me and said , &quot; ben , what &apos;s happened ? &quot; that &apos;s happened .
she said to me , &quot; i left auschwitz , went into life and i swear . i swear that i never would say again , that &apos;s not the last thing that last . &quot;
karl duncker created this experiment , which is being used as a many many experiments in behavioral research .
3.5 minutes for 3.5 minutes . this makes no sense , right ?
same disaction . your time is going to be stopped for norms .
everybody in this room has to do with its own version of the candle problem .
but yet , people with the highest rewards in the worst of all .
management didn &apos;t come from nature .
and it works so well that it has led to the next level to 20 percent times , as well , according to google -- where the study 20 percent of their time can work on everything they want .
if you went somewhere in a economists 10 years ago and said , &quot; hey , i have these two different models to make an encyclopedia .
and the wooden disk was thinking , as something you &apos;d like to capture , and that &apos;s a slight bit through the hands .
the end is the sun .
all red pages , for example , show in a direction : south .
and i thought about to think of crowd-beap-powered bloinle-chief of the pediatrities that are connected to block of camera .
it could interact with big groups of groups .
many people tell the economy is opening up the developing world , and social companies are taking care of themselves .
but if you earn half a million dollars , you want to cure kids from malaria , and they will be considered a shotetene .
the third area of discrimination is to take risks of the risks to tackle new conceptual .
this led to a true conflict for these people .
we got the last for breast cancer alone in this year , 71 million dollars , let alone spend all expenses .
we want that , because we &apos;ve changed the world and change that change , that we changed our way .
so let &apos;s take a look at the first video .
there must be anything has to be a bad ! but he just got a good thing down .
now , look at me . &quot; aaaaaah , &quot; and i &apos;ll stop you . go now .
the first one was , if you break down at the end of the concert , that means you did something wrong .
because they didn &apos;t know when to play .
all right , that &apos;s different . but isn &apos;t that the same ?
can we have the next video , right ?
that &apos;s a little good .
you can see , you can see he fired the taslide hive . no longer stick .
this bottle with oil , more than a hundred million years old , ancient sunlight , the abalerny energy , over five weeks of human hand work -- that &apos;s about 35 strong people coming by and work for them .
if only three percent of the co2 that &apos;s embedded in the arctic ice is released by global warming , all of the co2 savings that we need to do in the next 40 years to stop the climate change .
and while we are sitting here with other ideas and free ideas with each other , there are still people who work in coal mines to power the server with energy , and the minerals to make all of these things .
and it &apos;s basically about how systems , settlements , distributions , influence from outside .
we need national answers . we need answers to local governments .
and it &apos;s actually everywhere .
the main part of education budgets -- kindergarten to the 12th school school , or large universities and universities -- most of the money for that comes from the budget of states .
but what it really means is that there is deception here .
and california is not an exception .
you have to measure money for this system for this system , and these kinds of stuff , they are branded .
we need to accept that the future obligaties have to create the future of labor in the workforce today that we need to come from today .
this was carved in their left brain half , and had given the broca-area area , except the official center of their brain .
i was increasingly upset that somebody like nathaniel could ever be homeless in the commuters because of their mental illness , but as many tens of thousands of others were out there alone in the commuters who had the same sort of tragic stories , but it would never be a book or a movie about it would be made it from the street ?
this is my clock .
every remarkable experience in my life , i &apos;ve selected on the graph like a five-arena hall .
during this work around the five senses , i remembered about the solar powered clocks from my youth .
until then , you know , enjoy the five senses in their own lives and their disposal .
almost everything , what kids do is art .
that &apos;s obviously , of course , this is a infantile story , of course , but a sentence for the other is thinking about the other is the same , which is a professional as i do .
it &apos;s not necessary .
of course , there were children who had to .
works like this in basel works while i was punished , and i was standing on my cartoon of the palace .
some people get up to rock .
in this course , all the students have to study a theater .
and in this moment , the nastdevil disappears .
he told pride that he plays king lear .
i was fortunate enough to grow up in a time where it wasn &apos;t hard to visit a university of a farecroper a university .
the dieara around the global warming became more time and held me on exploration -- under other things , because i &apos;m going to admit that the white house changed my testimony .
that will happen without more greenhouse gas revenues .
little changes in the refusion effort that occur over hundreds of thousands of years , changing the distribution of sunlight on earth on earth .
hundreds of the hundreds and new orleans everywhere .
but instead of putting a rising of carbon emissions , to make the fossil fuel cost their real social cost of itself , the government forces our government to support the commercial fuel with 400 to 500 billion dollars of fossil fuel , tished egg , low-au , deep , deep , deep drilling , deep drilling , the tar , the tar .
i have 13 years old and stuntman .
very dangerous , but you &apos;re also going to notice that it doesn &apos;t look like it &apos;s running under the suit .
this was done by remote control .
also , here are helping science and technology in the modiability to the vehicle and tires .
this is the 50th point in london .
i took a couple months ago i did .
these are the braps . he had three kite .
if that happens to 30,000 feet of height , you die .
thank you very much for your time .
and that we are very smooth , and we &apos;re pretty steady .
and the third said , &quot; frank has sent you to do that ! &quot;
i have two children . he &apos;s now 21 , my daughter is 16 .
and i like university professor , but you shouldn &apos;t even be able to keep them high than the top of human performance .
academic levels of academic , right ?
i saw a great t-shirt that was , &quot; if a man sees his opinion in the woods and no woman hears him , still is wrong ? &quot;
now , what ted is the gift of human prexy .
in a broad in a wide arab accent , i went through my head . &quot;
so while , while we had to prepare for the tour , i had to remember the guys of being sensitive to the self-interest of the arab culture .
so outside , according to cnn report the second comedy festival in aa.
today , 25 , 30 years later , we talk about a death penalty for 85 percent .
but as you can see , you &apos;re moving down on this list , and that &apos;s because we &apos;re talking about disabilities here .
now , we hear about biochemical imbalance , or we hear something about drugs or something about a very simplifying notion that produces our subjective experience of molecules in molecules , or maybe in a very lonely understanding , intense understanding of what it means depression . &quot;
and that &apos;s what we do today , when we find out that each of these brain disorders , brain , brain , brain disorders , has a behavioral disorder .
we also heard that 250 billion rupees were predicted for state school .
and so all of our schools are english language .
all parents on this world want their children lead a better life than they , but they have to believe that change is possible .
look at the little girl who was one of the 28 children of all the educational schools , the best schools in the country , which was chosen for duke university prescriptions .
and our children go home with a bag of medals , with lots of admirks and friends .
and if you ask him , what he wants to do , he &apos;ll say , &quot; i want to make a word for him . &quot;
after his graduate at harvard , he opened a little consultionist company in the place white plague .
they were looking for the perfect pepsi , but they should be looking for the perfect pepsis . believe me .
so they came to howard and ask him to make it all right .
in six : with cheese , light , obsolete , heart , classic , extra-less .
back then , there , there was two sensones : french comes and gulon .
you don &apos;t give you the option between five different kinds , right ?
i &apos;ll give you one last example of variability -- oh , i &apos;m sorry .
there &apos;s no coup or cures or incanency .
hopefully i don &apos;t do somebody else &apos;s sued for the pre-death , but i think it &apos;s my creation .
we &apos;ve created a system where they &apos;re going to get to build .
and decades later , decades later , the source of their blindness is likely to be an bacterial infection .
vannevar bush bush with his memex -- the idea of making all of humanity available -- he had this vision .
and they think of a low dense arts and pleasure on the left and right side ; tradition and revolution on the top and the soil .
and that wrote a book in 1993 , but when i finished the book , i had to sit a little sign , and i was tired of having to go to my local shop , i shop , so i bought a computer .
we could have roundforms that are actually around .
why is this important ?
maybe all of you have been clear all the time , but for me , so many times i &apos;ve seen this very difficult day , i &apos;d never seen this understanding of the understanding of the original to see so much coverage .
the key is that fat texts didn &apos;t send her or their saturday night live writers .
the three things that gay americans seem to want to want to do is to go to the military , marry and a family .
if you put together all these elements : the viral layer of a great deal , a flash of pointing , which is based on honesty and integrity , you create a effect in the real world that can change an argument .
that &apos;s a lot of influence for 14 words .
how far does that go back ? how far does the story of modern languages ?
it can weigh two tons -- and it &apos;s mostly jellyfish .
as a juveniles , they &apos;re in swarms and become adults to be gigantic .
and so this is based on the mola ice fish .
and they divide the fins out , and they flip the eyes , and they get their eyes inside , and the cleaner fish come out and clean everything clean , because the molas , they &apos;re like that kind of cold buffet .
they &apos;re hugely busy .
it was a big idea , and it was safe , and it was an idea , and it was an idea , and it was very logical , and it was able to be able to understand the grekling sense of this greigh and deep motion through animation of global data , trends and other information about the globe on this sphere .
it &apos;s actually about 1.5 percent of what the end ad is going to be inside .
preston chatting preston reed is insane , and i feel very proud , really honored .
so he complained that the great gods that he &apos;s doing justice .
did we feel wrong ?
and i thought , &quot; that &apos;s what we need as a language . &quot;
stop , go and get your cotton sari .
and they were peaceful people .
we have civilization . hello , 21 century .
her mother &apos;s queen said , &quot; don &apos;t whistle . &quot;
&quot; father , mom , my husband shall become my wife . &quot;
he thought of course , it was thinking about murmures , ranter , and what we call today is called messed gister , where the men get down , so that the murderer falls into the trace .
the rca , the rca did , they decided to build them in prince cton , where freekeepers work at the institute .
they worked first , and they worked first by the highway band .
&quot; aha ! &quot; he figured out that it was a programmable problem .
i know if i beat myself . &quot;
he made the machine running the whole night . if anybody remembered stephen wolfram that was invented all the time .
now we &apos;re 50 years later -- it &apos;s sort of except power animation .
george dyson : the beginnings of computing
every doctor , any special will tell you . &quot;
we have a new one of the year , but we &apos;re working on the next barn .
it stands at the front line of the problem .
the labeling is a massive problem .
what are schools ? who invented it ? what is the objective of the schools ?
and then , by the way , it &apos;s nearly food . this is a little bit of cake , hamp , josage , sausage , pizza and all crap .
your children get milk in milk for breakfast and for lunch . right ?
it &apos;s really , really preventable .
and now back to these large brands , synthesizing , i said earlier , is an absolute farce , and i have to be ashamed .
huntington &apos;s kitchen . i work with a community .
thank you .
because isn &apos;t more more than queen &apos;s will ?
so , it is nothing in the hacker .
she served a official official between the vendor and the buyer .
and he made that great .
he &apos;s amazing in the private sector , by creating chemical applications for the oil industry as he used to take a global million bank and credit card manufacturing , until its entire country in 2008 .
they &apos;re just unresolved and obsessed with what they do .
and this rate grew together with the course of the chin that doesn &apos;t run more to school , again because of the urban development pattern .
i think it would be a great name for an indicator band , but engineers generally use it in subuse parking spaces , and the suburbs are full of them .
and most importantly , the suburbs is less on families , on the family households , there &apos;s a real demand for more third places .
this was a very big mall on a 100-acre block block .
and it &apos;s got picked up by a hetty , unsafe place , with incessely speaking in a beautiful attractive , stolen good address .
and where should we stimulate the recolonizing ?
but also , we &apos;re realizing that urban city will be dynamic , and we expect that .
ok , first of all , the women were a little shy , they agreed .
i am i haven &apos;t over again , i think , if you had told me in the younger few years , that i would be able to call it in more business , and people would call them , &quot; there &apos;s the vagina wife . &quot;
it &apos;s about a gender that is a fundamental resource of the planet , which is women .
a vagina warrior is a woman , or a vagina friendly man who sees it or surprise outrageally , and rather than having an ak-47 or a weapon of the violence in their bodies , and then keep it , and then keep their lives their lives , and then keep playing their lives that it &apos;s going to be wrong .
we were there for a week ago when 7,000 people were in the street , and how we went through the streets , and the people of juarez , who normally don &apos;t even go out because the streets were so dangerous , and they were literally hot and crying when they saw that other people were coming from around the world for their special community .
and obviously it occurred in a form that i only realized for a long time , which is that , if this is the world that we want to do , then want to cure the shattered part in ourselves .
his name was sánas teszler .
but help was help , with the path , and quickly afterwards , a car came out of the swiss embassy .
and when the main result opened a few months later and hundreds of new workers , black and white , and the first time in the facility were stored in the park , they were greeting black and white , mom .
&quot; yo napot , sya ! &quot;
and it was right in this voracious curiosity , that unshield desire for me to know -- regardless of the theme , even though the hills of the youngest days of the youngest day money feel that humanity will be more than anything in 2100 -- ridiculous years of today .
but that was an important lesson for me .
so i want you to take your imagination , think about these spacecraft , some of them 10 meters wide , with broely representations of raf-ie opera and dandans , who are comfortable with the sides of the sides of the sides today , with wild , dense forests with wild bear with wild bears of wild , brutal fights with scenes of fear and heroism .
most americans knew about the islamic world in front of 111 , and then it was forced to us , in one of the dark hours of america , and the perception was defined by the polarization because of this horrible incident .
hawa abdi : many people have been fighting for the emergency of 20 years .
the first rule : there are no association or political differences in the somali society .
tell me about your decision , dr. abdi and her decision dr. honors to work together -- a doctor , and working under their mother .
and if i saw people who needed me , i stayed with them to help because i was able to do it .
they &apos;re called the holy minister of somalia . the doctor &apos;s hawa abdi and her daughter deqo mohamed talks about her medical clinic in somalia , where they were in the face of the civil war and the public oppression of women -- a hospital , a school , a school of peace .
most discoveries were done by accident .
but in the only way was to get to the sea floor in a submersible , a very small submersible , and to get down .
the entire total 67 miles , there are tens of thousands of active volcanoes .
here &apos;s what a real quarter-in the juan &apos;s in the juan de fuca reef .
it didn &apos;t make any sense . they weren &apos;t just about a magmaram .
it has recently found ancient history .
we have this entire entire blue and yet , as i say , particularly the western recraft , we don &apos;t have any maps of this field . we don &apos;t have maps .
we don &apos;t only be proud of our universities .
there were there a couple of open-classtions in the standard commission , and in the night before , before the regime should begin to begin , thousands of people in a kilometer line in a kilometer room in the gate . they hoped to inherone of these places .
robert ghris : welcome to calculus .
he started at a senior day , and down the students after the week , after the week , the students were looking homework and doing homework .
here &apos;s the video coming into the video , and the students are typing the answer in the box , and they send it down . it &apos;s clear , they didn &apos;t fit .
it was tested only tested in small course , but for example , in fact , the math rating through the students on the y-axis of the misery of the misery of the gaxis of the x-axis .
and we see the distribution of the wrong answer in one of andrews .
so the goal is to try to try and push , and see how far we can come from the green curve .
i thought about my place in the universe , and about what my first thought was , what infinity is when i was a kid .
and in our society , it &apos;s obviously , of course , to argue the reality of others .
i don &apos;t think of those conversations because arguments have chosen opinions , and they &apos;re perpetrated by values .
no stone wisdom , but a wave of pain .
to make it funny about women is not the same as a man .
so i was looking at something more interactive .
like a pantomian meme , or a &quot; panty meme , &quot; which he called .
&quot; oh no . still , i &apos;ll leave you here . thank you very much again .
the manufacturing the habitat is right inside of us and plant their little flags in our genes .
keeping the face between both , it &apos;s always dangerous , because you too is too unprepared .
well , first seemed to tell me the thing , but after i asked a lot of these ideas , i started taking a lot of them seriously , and then 9 / 11 and i thought , like , oh , god , i can &apos;t go to the ted conference and talk about the end of the world .
about 98 percent of all people with depression , and i mean the really serious depression -- i have a friend with incredibly serious depression -- this is a cure disease with current medical care and technique .
how much money and effort requires to have a plan of dealing with a progressive species ?
and they can put those priorities , right ?
we have an electrotic field around the earth that is continuously firing to high energy particles like skeletons .
one of the problems we want to figure out how healthy the earth is , is that we don &apos;t have good weather data from the period of 60 years ago , and a lot less information about the ozone layer and so on .
more than 500 years , if we want to do it right .
number two -- my favorite one -- a traveling black hole .
not too not dreamed , right ?
but if we could predict it , we would have a lot of time .
how could the world end ? stephen pempek , the problems that could be wiped us in the world of human race in the way , will we have wiped out of an asteroid ? they collapse the ecosystem ? how about one out of your control ?
it &apos;s defining the system .
if you see the complexity , you can see just tiny , little verteridge and large , and motion , and motion -- this is just the shallow temperature of the surface , but it &apos;s immensely comlicted .
now marcel proust has this wonderful word that , &quot; the true voyage of discovery is not so much about looking for new realms , but maybe to get new eyes , &quot; new ways of thinking , a new thinking .
and see what &apos;s going on .
on the left-hand side , the great volcano is called the axial seamount .
nanotechnology : this is a little generator .
and they fly into the unfolding volcano .
and i think , if i hear these incredible people here , then i am so inspired ; so many incredible ideas , so many visions .
you can be a depressing general , politician , or economists , a musical agent in an ambian way , or a painter with dark colors .
that &apos;s what &apos;s called architecture . radical .
it &apos;s a language , but it &apos;s not a language that can be reduced to a series of computational records that you get into words .
so , i think , i think , is the architecture of this complexity in every single room that we are living with life in any intimacy that we own .
you know it &apos;s true ; the cathedrals , as unexpected , will always be unexpected .
so i &apos;ve never been interested in this very forgotten , which is repeated back from the same things that , of course , critic .
so , yeah , i think the risks we &apos;re dealing with each building .
it &apos;s political . there are so many party in this project .
not just for new york , but for the world .
and to do that for automobiles , you have to develop a really energetic efficient car , so you have to do it incredibly lightweight , and here we &apos;re seeing the only car with full aluminum sseries and drifting , built in north america .
and our car of the third generation , which is , hopefully in about three or four years , will be a $ 30 car .
if the sun hadn &apos;t there , we were going to be a frozen ice ball in three degrees kelvin , and the sun is doing the whole rainfall system .
for you , the dream is -- who am the power from the collectors ?
the headline is , of course , &quot; he started with a big . &quot;
em : sure yeah , sure , the thing about rockets is that they &apos;re used to be used .
they &apos;re just get a sense of scale .
the physics is really going to discover new things , new things that don &apos;t involve the present , like quantum mechanics .
most people who are the people who are interested in ben ina jolie and brad pitt will know where namibia is .
when we tried it , we were called tired of them .
are people in people in your communities , people who know the bush very well , and the wild was so good ?
and time to time , if they were caught , they were treating irreverent to the communities , and made a part of the great dreams .
they &apos;re going to stay down , because the herd is numerous rates of less than a thousand to tens of thousands of animals .
i want to know who know the people behind my lunch .
do i do that three times the week ?
and the best thing about this is that all these ingredients are available for every family in the next supermarket .
as a chef , i realized that the easiest thing i can do is to put the size of portions on my plate .
store your friends and neighbors and repeat it all over the year , maybe .
we &apos;ve seen a picture of our blue planet , our world bank .
or you wonder what computer models can tell us .
it &apos;s a big endeavor . i &apos;m here today as the representative for my whole team before you .
with a rate of about two and a half is every year .
right now , the ocean , the reality for many people over the last few years , but they speed the processes or the predictions were low at the beginning .
we &apos;re going back the time .
the abcent miles travels on the edge of 1.6 miles in 75 minutes at the 4.8 mile wide stream .
now , the last four years , my co-author phanish puranism , and i &apos;ve spent to explore this subject .
in particular , there are four types of invisible innovation coming from india .
they &apos;re bored pretty quickly and thinking about novelty , and then you tell your boss how to make the job better , and out of this process of innovation produces product innovations that will be commercialized worldwide .
and really , if i look at the number of patents in the past , i think that they belong to the top two or three companies in the world -- in terms of all the u.s. patents .
a time for a lot of bad things than the state of architectural and gnarly enter in isabel part of the ghost &apos;s house .
he was in the course of the following afternoon when he finally moved to an ounce assault for the age of 64 , which was the age of alberto giacometti , when he died .
would you think about a dozen verters ?
i &apos;m a jay and mark and the tedmed team that they invited me to describe a new four-dozen instrument that we call tumor treating fields .
when the cells starts , the core falls , the chromosomes are depositing the chromosomes in the nucleus and they &apos;re putting these special proteins of a three-dimensional sequence , and it relates to each other in each other , and it emlusive , very rapidly .
there was a time , novocure has two systems -- a system for cancer in the headarea and a system for cancer in the hull .
he received a high-eyed radiation .
in the 12th months for 12 , we could argue about whether there &apos;s a cell material on the margins , but essentially it &apos;s completely gone .
harvard medical school just makes a study to determine the optimal mating mating effort to maximize the benefits .
but for the desert society , it &apos;s not a project ; it &apos;s your life .
so this can collect the 25,000 during a good monro .
in many parts of the water hyavans in these large beds , in these big beds .
or , if you want to paint it , you can get it completely blue , because every roof on this picture is collecting rains in this picture it in the room .
but this is not a water .
you say a picture of a thousand words worth worth , so we can save 1,000 words here , and again , 1,000 words .
these are the trees .
the battle against malaria is now won ; tumor silk is down by 27 percent , so the last data of the world bank .
10 percent from india .
they &apos;re going to get the jobs in the bastiles that bring people out of land poverty and bring them to the way towards industrialization and prosperity .
and the countries on the right , and look at the per capita gdp . in principle , each country has per capita gdp of , say , less than 5,000 dollars , we &apos;ll say three .
ignore the scale down .
not right now , but in 30 seconds .
so in summary , the assumption was that if you give people a cheap amount of input , if you provide enough devices for them to make sure that is inconsistent with that .
and the big time said it &apos;s happened , because he was playing out what &apos;s going on in the chinese community language , and he was playing with other prisoners , and that was not an explanation that was at many chinese blogging .
and finally , the intent behind every pursuit of authoritarian deliberation is normally to extend the legitimacy of the regime , both home as well in abroad .
so i &apos;m going to envy that there is a hierarchy of cyberneeds in this room , a total of abraham maslow .
but when kendall -- and as i said , he was only 15 months older than she was crying , and she was like i stopped crying , when i was crying , and i heard of the inner dance .
now i also , i consider this fear that we have as men , the fear that just paralyzes us and makes us a player of this man box .
we all looked at him .
she &apos;s 16 years old .
we &apos;re both an important part of the solution as well as the problem .
but somehow , none of the things that india can really take in this section of the world is really able to control .
in fact , they were so brrar , that well-known members of members had the right age of phone lines than they thought they were worthy of worthy .
fishermen go out of the sea and they have their mobile phone .
and it was the popular tv show in afghans .
india is giving the jews , the destruction of the first jerusal temple , through the babylonian , and later the roman , escaped , escape .
but the whole purpose is that india is an architect of nationalism .
a trachoma is an eye-infection that can cause itself in the eye that can lead to permanent blindness .
i &apos;m the most successful virgins in the world . the first african one is offered , and what i did is i did , because i just didn &apos;t want to wash me .
so i started with a few collaborators , starting with this molecule .
kary mullis : future therapy on killer infections
you can look at glucose molecules to get a blind , you wouldn &apos;t see why they &apos;re cute .
so babies need to put up our frontier and care , and they do it .
you all have a piece of cardboard box and a piece of paper .
before david came out , he told me he wanted to tell me he wanted a company where all his employees are his best friends .
what we &apos;re doing now is , i &apos;m going to see , like -- i can &apos;t see here by here . ok .
why did we have the ones . now , like i said , we have it because we &apos;re important to be fooled .
we all tell stories about the christmas morning , you know , our children play a lot more with the boxes than they play with the gift of the gift they are .
it really didn &apos;t matter to me if they &apos;re all different .
we don &apos;t know , but it could be .
if you go back and restart it , it &apos;s a kind of a side product of the game .
this is a nurse who uses a simple prototype of jutre and a team of technologists and designers in their hospital , in her hospital , explaining what they were expecting a tragic information system .
i think role-play is actually quite reliable when it comes to think about experience .
and i admit that could be feeling , as though the message is , just to go and play like a child .
because it &apos;s very easy in the event that these conditions are absolutely gone .
but then i stopped , because i realized that i was at this cool guy who had no need to work on his ideas , and they should just want to get out of magic .
my partner is a pom , and i had to get rid of our staff .
i was the beloved , i would have been the fifth manager of depeche and thirty .
and then i started to do it , and it ended up with me to get my degree at the juilliard university .
stephen hanson from sweden .
i can just couldn &apos;t believe , like the poetics that everything is , these halls that send all of their single-islands mail to each other .
it &apos;s so wonderful to sing together . &quot;
and it &apos;s an enormous honor for me to show you here first .
because otherwise they would stop and reboot the engine , and that would take a lot of separation , right ?
and i just think that this example suggests in a general way , whether technology or design you look at themselves , even those who we love as well as well and good and good at their impacts , like a freedom , freedom -- they go ahead with certain interfaces .
you have a moral component right now in the kind of vision , and the good life you &apos;re presenting with .
so what are the values they evaluate ?
so i said , my colleague , sebastian thrun us say that there must be better ways .
and we were successful .
i &apos;ll give you in the fall .
and so this guy is putting the snail and puts her a stable beat .
all the limb comes forward , the body is bent down at the back -- just a spectacular movement .
it really did it really done me for a while .
so the next and last question was , well , how much force creates a fan cancer if it &apos;s able to break down snails ?
to get back to the high-speed videos , there &apos;s a pretty good hint about what could go before .
because when it turns out , if it squeeze snails , the arm has to dissect the arm , and it does .
we &apos;re still standing with a grain in the dark ages .
because that &apos;s a problem for us .
and this life forms a three-dimensional existence , which is extraordinary to us .
this bale from him .
okay , can we stop that ? light , please .
thank you .
when we started the project , we looked back in history to understand what was going on here .
we wanted to make this snips , a soft infrastructure for the oysters growing .
re-vivify the rivers new yorks -- with oysters !
so you &apos;ve actually increase the number of cholera outbreaks , because , as we know , cholera is in the water .
something that was something that happened in the environment , was a higher level .
since i left this field in 50 years ago , i traveled the world , and i always came back to some of these people .
and i &apos;m standing in -- because it &apos;s absolutely forbidden to have a picture of the dalai lamas in tibet -- that &apos;s the fastest way to be arrested .
and during that time -- since the -- it &apos;s been twice as much oil as in the antarctic valley of mauritius in this small area of the amazon , which is constantly being launched tribes in the area for ocean forced .
this is john doolichan , who is the gentle flyer of the calash .
these are over 60 films that have been doing children and they &apos;re pretty incredible .
how did it come to the shape before it &apos;s removed , etc . ?
the moon is only two seconds away when you photograph the moon , you have the moon from about two seconds ago , hardly a difference .
and from that , we go from the time , from these tiny variations to these irish galaxies and first stars to these broader galaxies , and finally the solar system , etc .
there are a few places that you can &apos;t capture because of our own galaxy , or because there are no telescopes that could do that .
you start with a couple of very simple ingredients , and some simple rules , but you need enough ingredients to make it complicated .
so the light needs three billion years to overcome this distance .
so it could look like if you fly around within billions of years .
we can look at the simulation , but it takes two days into a computer .
so no email , no text , no television , no excuse , no no food , no one read , no one read , nor don &apos;t even read a flock of reference or the course of the future .
others are turning to their friends or family with request .
for instance , for example , if i focus too far on the balls , i can &apos;t relax with you and talk to you .
or it &apos;s a tiny idea , which is to wake up in front of you who is constantly in the head of his circles .
now , i like to know the fragments of the pointillism , which is putting together the tiny , tiny moment in a whole distance .
or what if i didn &apos;t i paint with a paintbrush , right ?
if i think it was like , three years without art , three years without my dream . i was just blind . instead of finding a different way to pursue my dream , i just gave up .
there are actually a remote by about 200 people living in the zone .
for them , the contaminated regime of the environment was not the worst form of destruction .
what the reference of reference of belief may sound might be true , because the surprising truth -- there &apos;s no studies , but it seems to be so much that the women living back in their homes and the last 27 years of the radio conservation of the earth have lived , their counterparts that were going to survive 10 years .
i was so excited .
i think it &apos;s important to me , because i think we make ourselves a trap -- in terms of the way we make our relations with each other , but also the way we deal with ourselves and on our ability to the self-flexible .
we can work it , and this is called , we can delete it , and that means , we can screw up , we can make input , the face , the voice , the eyes , the body , doesn &apos;t too much , but not too much , but it too much .
it seemed to be in their eyes .
for one , we can deflect our attention right there , where we want them to be , to the other we &apos;ve always heard , and third we &apos;ve never need to be alone .
it &apos;s as we used them as replacement parts to keep our fragile confidence .
because when we get into the bites , or we hesitate the words , we just reveal each other .
not everybody could do one or two , so i didn &apos;t think their response .
i think certain things have helped me , personally , i know that i am not completely completely , but i &apos;m better than i would have been fooled by certain things .
there were three rules that i put in practically the whole time of window .
because i would pay it right . that &apos;s really bad , but i &apos;m paid for it .
they would be wondering how many of him said that this was more than he was in his head .
and since i learned other things over time , our results became a little bit better , but i wanted the end of the end of the game of a game that was just a byproduct of these other things , and not the goal itself .
i thought back then , &quot; oh god , if only one of the two &quot; -- they weren &apos;t in the same year , but i thought in both -- &quot; if this was going to be in the team , our team must be bad . &quot;
we can also use biomaterials and cells together .
just like the fibers of sugar wates , it creates this structure , these tube like structure that we can use as a biomaterial to use the help in the orbit of the muscle , where we can use their lives .
a few weeks later , we &apos;ve got a technically engineered organ that can put together the patient .
this scan technology , scan , scan first of the patient &apos;s wound , then comes back with the printing heads , and they needed the layers directly to the patient .
so here &apos;s the kidney that was printed today .
lm : 10 years ago at my operation -- it &apos;s just great to see him again .
i &apos;m going to explain how it is about it , and try to convince them -- in only 15 minutes -- that it &apos;s not a test that is not something that &apos;s a test trend , but a powerful cultural and economics force that is not only what we consume .
in fact , 99 percent of the exchange are successful at swaptree , and one percent that gets negative computing is going on relatively insignificant reasons , for example , that doesn &apos;t have the object .
they grow up and share -- graphs , video games , knowledge .
the second is collaborative skills are the skills .
instead of it , these people had to run , bicycle , take the train or to go to other forms of public transit .
with every spy that we do with it , with every idea that we post , every comment that we share , we &apos;re actually tracking , we see how good we &apos;re doing as well as well how good we dials and whether we &apos;re trustworthy or not .
every time the school was closed -- it was an ongoing school , and i was seven -- you had to travel around until you found her .
and they went off , following the footprints of the villagers , until they found them and they moved around them .
news anchor : we &apos;re seeing an enormous rapture of the city .
some big , abandoned men wearing the lawn in the church , but no one knew where to send them because no one knew the size of the loss .
co : the foggers &apos;s gone , and the insurance doesn &apos;t just take over the boxes .
so they use mail mail for the post , or excel or facebook .
mo : we needed planning tools , donor databases , gune. , remote analysis for volunteers , all on a simple website .
we could we could see the same development in texas and alabama .
and here &apos;s the statistics .
when we went by , two guys got into the kenyan landhill .
they &apos;re developing -- you can see the far on the right , which seems to be just on top of the layers of space over the room .
these green things in foreground in the foreground .
one is that -- it &apos;s called &quot; gecekoner du &quot; geically call , &quot; by turkish , &quot; and if you build your house over night in turkey , you cannot be evicted without a proper court mechanism if you &apos;re not going to hit the night .
my mom said , &quot; well , believe that you don &apos;t see the picture , and you can &apos;t feel that you can &apos;t feel the writing on the side . &quot;
this brought me with volunteers and herself in connection .
he had an election generator .
i &apos;m going to play it in the speed of what i read .
in no other latin america , it &apos;s more than a few thousand .
that &apos;s the world we live in .
and what happens is the prevention of alzheimer &apos;s disease , it turns out that , &#91; the adorable &#93; fish oil is used to get alzheimer &apos;s disease .
and we create a world where there is always more technology and fewer jobs .
reubrowne problem in this anecdote is that it &apos;s hard to offer his labor of a business of machines that prove us the statistics .
and i &apos;ve been born , stories have grown up with two parents , according to sleep after the time .
we have to make it better .
he said , &quot; i believe in the people .
then , on december 66th last year , just two months ago , this was taken up this one of the russians .
the abbatters of millions in the locals and death camps have led to ask people to ask : where is god in all this ?
it &apos;s simply ininconvenience for intelligent christians , and we need to recognize that .
i just give him to my picture . &quot;
in you , in me , soul and body and spirit .
and how do you feel like that ?
that was the first meaning of the word .
imagine a world where everybody &apos;s about 20 or 30 .
and so we &apos;ve changed with a small scale of technology in the world .
but we know that this is the more organized process in the universe , and it has begun with things like galaxies , and these have been keeping their order for billions of years .
at the same time , they want to give us things , and what they &apos;ve got us is basically progress .
the answer to a bad idea isn &apos;t not an idea , it &apos;s not , we just stop thinking .
it &apos;s more than just technical . it &apos;s more than the stuff that people invent .
that &apos;s up to 150 , 180 , 200 , 200 students per day .
it had been before , so there was rubber floors , so there were rubber floors , sound protection , light tubes .
we thought , &quot; oh yeah , you &apos;ll be the door of the door to love it , &quot; but that happened not .
there is no stigma .
you put the title , &quot; the book never passed away : titanic . &quot;
so we went into the thurgood artist high school , we went to a school where we worked on a couple of news things , and we gave them the students , and gave birth to the students .
it became an interface to the community .
there are there is there -- you &apos;ve got to put the product inside the line with an electrical lift up , and the guy behind the counter says you have to tell you that you have to get the swint of on the heroically what you need to do when you want to buy something , if you can buy something that you pay .
and he could not escape that .
and i &apos;m going on , not &quot; i hope , &quot; we hope we hope that the participants will lead us into a new era of participation in our education in our public schools .
i just remember that the noise was so heavy and so awful .
in my travels and work , it &apos;s in congo or in afghanistan , sudan or rwanda , i don &apos;t only know that the color and the sounds of war is the same , but the fears .
the war front is increasingly , not from human eyes , watching from space to our damaged enemies , rockets on invisible goals , whereas the people met the orchestra of media work , if this particular caq-assault has met a village .
this woman was for 20 years so she wasn &apos;t going to be kidnapped .
this mother has a bigger chance to cure her children than any peace vessels could come .
last week i was at the italian weekends in the mild .
so i kept walking , and then i saw this sign .
many of you may not like to have a pilot because you don &apos;t try good , but tofu is good food ; it &apos;s very simple food .
that &apos;s sad , but in a different way , it &apos;s a good thing , because that &apos;s how to remember it in its pure form .
for shiseido i &apos;ve done this cold series .
here &apos;s a new way typing , on my old color classic .
i was looking at any shape , and at the end , i made 100 fris cells . do you understand ?
you know , enjoy with pencils , together with the laws of simplicity .
he &apos;s an expert in aging . the pais on axis is how old is you -- twelve years , fourth-eight years , fourth-seven , fourth-seven , six p.m. -- and that &apos;s medical data . the capacity of the brain goes down to 60 , and then , after 60 , it goes back , a little depressing , kind of depressing .
optimism is sometimes , sometimes as an intellectual attitude .
the north polar ice shelf , geographic size , the same size . it doesn &apos;t look like that , but it &apos;s exactly the same size as the united states , will take a area that &apos;s about the state of arizona .
fox : two . cnn : two . c zero .
the heat heat solar energy , highly developed photovalres , reducing and conservation .
what the burden we have to wear . &quot; i would like to ask you to redesign this . how many generations in the whole human history had the opportunity to step across a challenge that is going to make our biggest effort ?
buckminster fuller &apos;s once wrote , &quot; if the future of the human civilization was going on , what would i do ?
they &apos;re working in different districts , they talk to various people , they have mulcers . we all know that , and they get automatically out .
in this case , i &apos;m showing more the work of designers because it &apos;s the ones that really stimulated me .
something that can be done now is bone tissue growing , that it makes a wedding ring from the bone tissue , literally .
the reason i was thinking about a couple of years ago , when i was thinking about how we were filling up and how the same time of these little objects , for example , is the walkman and then the ipod , a ipod to have the ipod , we have to create a metaphysical space space , which is much bigger than the real space .
because the power capacity of computers are going to be very big , and the productivity functions is not much larger , we &apos;re realizing that we should mark as much as possible to track our way .
there &apos;s another one , which throws out and break .
and i saw his choice on top of my choice .
and it turns out what we found was very surprising .
and what we actually discovered is that alpha , if we think more deeply about thinking about it , the organizational structure of the rise .
in this graph , i &apos;m going to introduce it to you .
one of my favorite comic is snoopy .
then there &apos;s others who are aware of compassion , and they don &apos;t look at television .
it has to be a commitment to be present , but of course not at cost of our own minds .
so we try it , we try it , and we do it by that belief , and by doing this , we &apos;ll be able to keep our habits , our feelings , our ideas that are holding us , you know , we can perceive , so we don &apos;t see the needs of the needs of course , making it .
and he says , &quot; god , you &apos;ve got to do it . you want my bread .
i &apos;m a pediatrician , anesthesia , so i deserve my living to help kids to sleep .
connect it with a connected , you take one or two weeks , and then the story is over .
it &apos;s almost as if somebody comes home to them and rearrange the cables into the walls , so that next time you &apos;re going to light bath , the toilet that goes three doors , or your computer sink , or your computer screen .
he &apos;d spread all his energy in once , in an explosion , which was just unimaginable .
you wouldn &apos;t want them want you to fall upside down or on your head because it would be .
if one of them would beat me down somewhere , he would be a panic effect .
apophis is an asteroid that was discovered in 2004 .
so we can also again .
so , think about it , right ?
but only if you see the whole picture , you can really understand what happens .
and they have problems to track their responsibilities .
anyway , after the whole great long explanation , his only question was to me -- and this is not a joke -- whether we were running tangar when we send music from michael jackson .
but it &apos;s one thing to have a concept , it &apos;s a very different thing to do it .
we were the best that they could do .
anyway , he &apos;s running an independent newspaper newspaper .
40 million million across 10 years , in 17 countries .
and these can be selective to be rented .
so i &apos;m going to try now to an experiment . usually i do not do experiments , i &apos;m a theorist .
somewhere in a different planet , which is a very distant sun looking at a different galaxies , where there &apos;s a lot of creatures that are very intelligent , as we think so interested in science , and that &apos;s not impossible ; i think many .
there even be a lot of nonsense about movies .
here &apos;s an example of this inerness .
the next -- second -- equation says that there is no more magnetism than this .
four sources reported when the plague was in cambridge , and he went down to the farm of his mother -- because the university was closed an apple from the tree , or his head or something .
that &apos;s the general rule , and it &apos;s important to see that .
when he had a copy of the kda james , it &apos;s called &quot; umner , &quot; he was so excited he couldn &apos;t sleep .
he won eventually a seat in congress .
so he put the pen down .
president johnson tante at this evening .
and then he said , &quot; don &apos;t remember my mom . &quot;
he then he stood with his back to the fire , and then the people had long hours of their frowning .
i first , i learned that you have to tell a story about the beginning to the end to the end .
i love the brooklyn dodgers like you , but i promise you , one day you &apos;ll become fair and tasty .
but today , this thing , i believe , is a key role in politics in the middle east .
this is probably the first real press block of a harbor army we have .
cyrus begins around 530 b.c .
and here &apos;s another story .
and it &apos;s quite clear that this cylinder was older than the text of isaiah , and yet , jehovah speaks in very similar words to the marduk that volunteered .
and the most obvious symbol cyrus called cyrus .
it &apos;s a document that can be so much for iran and region .
this is a creation of a strong bond between a child and parents provide the building blocks for physical , social , linguistic , cognitive and psychological development .
the lack of morality often leads to self-stimulated behavior , like handling , sorts or aggressive , and in certain institutions , bioharmaceuics to control the behavior of these children , whereas others are going to be addicted to hurt themselves or others .
the european commission and more important donors find ways to take money from institutions and to give family support , so that communities are capable of caring about their own children .
maybe there &apos;s a little change that i can share with .
it killed his blood . he died when i was 11 years old .
it wasn &apos;t about the end result .
i felt that i was going to take this argument for the global community to create this day .
it was never said in the world that there &apos;s a global trucilage of violent goods .
and after many , many meetings , i was thrilled that this man , ahmad fawzi , really one of my heroes and mentors , were able to get to the boat .
so he said yes , and we found ourselves in afghanistan .
but more importantly , we wanted to go back because these people were heroes in afghanistan .
we &apos;re now got resources in 174 countries in 174 , to get young people who are driving their vision behind the global arms .
it &apos;s all about the individuals .
but maybe , cows really have a rich mental inner life , and they &apos;re so clever , and we &apos;re not going to remember them . but we eat them .
maybe there are two brains can actually have a very different number of neurons .
it doesn &apos;t look like us .
a primate that eats eight hours per day , is only about 53 billion neurons , but then its bodies cannot be larger than 25 kilos .
what are we going to do what &apos;s not different animal , and what crucial has been to develop for the biggest amount of neurons in the cortex ?
i built my studio in rotlight town , and i nervously ed my sleeved with plastic finger , and i could turn the skin around and create and these dynamic tiles .
it &apos;s my work , arms and feet -- well , that &apos;s not quite true .
in &apos; 1992 , the mujahideen were all in afghanistan .
and he said , &quot; the red cross closed closed . &quot;
we have to leave . we can &apos;t stay here . &quot;
but they got people .
the inside , everywhere , all of us sudom , i sat a moment and heard rafi to his father : &quot; father , you can walk faster than me . &quot;
that was the job .
and it &apos;s actually cruel to think that way .
that &apos;s good for all .
there are many countries that are in wars like afghanistan .
the problem of change in africa is actually a question of leadership .
now , what has to do with leadership ?
a nigerian airway was given the same problem .
it was brilliant .
this was not the world that my children should grow up in .
when the project was a month -- we just started with education .
it &apos;s the first time in history , ghdiana , that a woman who was elected as a director of student government , at a university .
planetary systems outside our bodies outside of our own are remote cities , whose lights can see the boxes , but their streets we can &apos;t go along .
but this is just the tip of the iceberg .
the other assumption of that , and the small lesson is to show you that you &apos;re talking about assumptions .
i play the role of the magician , a magician , if you want to , a real one .
and she didn &apos;t answer the damn question .
i don &apos;t think so .
because , in effect , the sponsors love it , and so he &apos;s constantly bringing them into television .
a professional of light in , who speaks to dead , they didn &apos;t get me ?
what is homopathie ?
we &apos;d like to take care of you people in terms of doing a state , a national authorities and community management , so they were doing something .
ladies and gentlemen , i &apos;m james randi , and i &apos;m waiting .
these machines go down to the advent of a half pole .
my colleague , dr. paul fabon , saw this reality .
and that was a dangerous ratesman , because she knew that they had given too little oxygen if something was happening .
in 13 hospitals in four countries , we did over the age of 2,000 surgeries , no clinical degrees of degrees .
we &apos;ve we have talented students who successfully finished their school education successfully , a two-year certificate .
it &apos;s a syll-script that read from link to right .
and then then the bomb was the bomb , and here we are .
we realized we realized , the more meat , weak and dewing products we would eat , the healthier would be us .
but the lobbyists of the food industry would never leave .
these mothers bought food and they hired them .
soon you could get into new york in the new york .
self-forced bread , self-graded subs and offspring , because you could buy it all done in any store .
there could not keep food there , because the high fat , the strong spices in products , like mcnuggets or corn -- we &apos;ve all got our personal favorite favorite , you know , eating it would just dulous food .
and if the data that we get from china is going to evolve so on now , then it won &apos;t even take 40 years .
have been in food .
so my normal sense of common sense , my good intentions , were in favor with my taste nerves .
you don &apos;t be fascinating &#93; you don &apos;t have to say a lot .
if you have this electronic tattoo , you &apos;re going to roll up for long periods of mountain and berlin , so when you do that , be careful about what they post .
today i want to talk about -- i was asked a glimpse , and i &apos;m going to tell you what i think is the three biggest problems of humanity , from this long-term standpoint .
but suppose we did that .
that &apos;s a big number .
suppose we fix that -- we &apos;re doing something about all these things .
abductional , venture , cosmetics and brain programmable techniques -- that sounds ominous , but the separation between it is a technology -- it would be the archetype would be about to change and write the human nature is pretty subtle .
imagine a way that just does not have this neural machine to process music .
then you could live different kinds of lives and wisdom , and that &apos;s for people , as we are today , not possible .
jh : is this the predator , or is that the bottom ?
jh : looks like we &apos;re ready .
and then i went in the spaces so that you could see the first thing .
jh : oh , i hope . oh god , yes .
so , thank you very much . that was really great .
then he wants to be money , but we don &apos;t understand english .
i was certainly 20 , before i went to an art museum .
i thought , okay , you &apos;ve got a couple of criteria that you want to choose the works .
it &apos;s not photoreplacement .
they were interested in creating a novel , alternative arts space , and they needed money for it , so they decided to make some interesting fundraising projects .
this project is called &quot; love nest . &quot;
and i said , &quot; move for a funeral . we have something done . &quot;
she invented the swiss of the swiss , the zvuliulites &#93; , the one special jolicle for which they could use to use these fences .
next is from sam anti .
my talk is called flapping birds and space telescopes . &quot;
and the question is : what &apos;s changed ?
this fish , 400 scales , again , this is an uncut square , absolutely folded .
but we start small .
i can support on this long series of mathematical core and artists that have studied seamstresses and patterns .
many origami of origami are building toes in their models today .
it &apos;s folded in a third , a very simple pattern , you wouldn &apos;t even call it origami .
the china aerospace &#91; aerospace &#93; agency &apos;s agency &apos;s agency , and you can see here , and you can see the segel line , and you can still see the crease lines .
robert lang is a pioneer of the latest level of origami . it uses mathematics and engineering principles to fold overwhelming complex shapes that are beautiful and sometimes very useful .
it was a delight with yves comfort .
this is really just about the facts of economic moment that we live in .
it &apos;s been a young young women who bought houses in the city .
it once there was this was a guy who had gone to school , but he had certain skills , and with help , he could lead , he could take a nice monument .
for some reasons , men don &apos;t go back to college .
now you laugh , but this quote , right ?
and sometimes women who were praying to kill the daughter that they could have a son .
and we &apos;re always under the glass ceiling , women .
and the man who gave the talk that night was very interesting .
and it &apos;s interesting , if you think about it , as if you think about the civilizations that we think of as peaks of human achievement , greece , civilization of the hindus , or the mayas , or the mayas , the egyptians , the egyptian , what we know about you , is to turn around their ids , and and not for their own lives .
whether it &apos;s mathematics or music -- it takes a long time to get to a point where you can change something that &apos;s better than before .
you know what you have to do , even though it can be hard , even though it doesn &apos;t like it , and the time feels away , you lose themselves , you feel like part of something larger .
although television sometimes sometimes , about seven to eight percent of the time , when it gets to the flute state , but that &apos;s when you choose a show that you really want to see , and bring off their feedback .
and if &quot; where do you come from ? &quot;
and the number of people among us who live outside the old national state categories are moving forward rapidly , that we &apos;ve gone up in jail in the last 12 years , and soon , and soon the population has moved to the united states .
yet there &apos;s a big problem with the movement , and the fact that it &apos;s hard to orient itself into the air .
so i sat down , and i started writing , and i continued to write , although i am , actually , being used to get away from my desk .
thank you .
and i &apos;m going to talk about how the world &apos;s population has changed since and to the future , but i &apos;m not going to use digital technologies like i &apos;ve done in my first five tedtalk .
and the most successful ones of the developing world , they &apos;re more advanced , you know , and they became so-called emerging countries .
will it move forward ?
&#91; of all the emerging countries , in the world , the western world add down to the west for good survival rates of children and small family sizes , but we &apos;ve still got the poorest billion .
over the next 50 years , the world population will grow on 9 billion to nine billion -- and only by driving the independent standards of the poorest , we can inhibited population growth , the paradox answer , hans , the hans rosling at ted campcannes , with the help of a colored new data technique .
what &apos;s left is this distance , this rise of mortality , the further you go north .
and i started researching , and we found out , very exciting that the skin is made of nitric oxide .
we had to look at one -- because vitamin d is produced by low-uv radiation , and we wanted to separate our thing from vitamin d thing .
there is no change in the blood supply , where the extension of blood vessels are now .
and this is still in work , but dermatologists -- so , i am a skin .
here &apos;s a very powerful statistic .
the challenge is going to hurt us .
they bring cells into the body , and they allow it to form the cells , new tissue , and once the tissue is replenished .
however , indeed , they usually move up than channels .
we take the scaffold and we plant it with cells , and here you see the beating segel and close .
so we take the donor use very mild disinfects , and we take these mild contagion the liver .
why ? because they &apos;re not going to be stopped .
because i am a surgeon , i &apos;m not quite so funny .
as kids , we have dreams when we grow up , and we have passions and visions , and somehow we destroy them .
our mba programs are not teaching our children , how to be an entrepreneur .
then we went to the ritalum and say , &quot; isn &apos;t a business guy .
when i was growing up when i was growing up as a young child , because i was taught in early years , when my father was taught , not everything that was taught in school , so that he could teach me that business was in the morning .
but i was certain that i was going to get him to buy a license shister protector .
i would get the food and use them as pay .
so i &apos;m coloring a whole series of braun .
they just need a supply and demand and customers that buy them .
you know , you can pple up a one-ounce bottle and two bottles in a hot tube .
all they have on their toy account they &apos;ll be allowed to spend .
you can actually sell it , learn how to put out of all the email that you get , you know , the delusion .
i hope that you &apos;re inspired by giving you a little bit of what you &apos;ve heard of me to do something about what &apos;s going to change the world .
and within that one is focused on adapting to the focus , increasingly to learn more about more than less , and all of the evidence of interexpression of things .
and the domain of basic skills , or a minimting of cultural fraught &apos;s most of our students .
so , contrary to the conventional assumption requires the metaphor of action especially , in thinking .
ideology , biases , unestablished opinions simply .
so what do they do when they feel overwhelmed .
there are out there .
it has taught us ecology in relation to natural resources .
this should be familiar with everybody who had been celebrated with a couple of good friends who had been celebrated and dancing by a few good friends .
this man was an extraordinary supplier .
that &apos;s number one . number two : this ecology of the present needs freedom to be created within .
i can &apos;t put tacks on the teacher &apos;s chair .
so , a day , my best friend brian worked on a project .
and he &apos;s just a string that guy .
that we were afraid to be afraid , not creative by a series of steps -- and basically a series of small success -- and they replace fear and surprise to themselves .
he &apos;s turned it into an adventure for the kids .
what was my appeal ? what should i do ?
if we design these objects , we could think about how to design these invisible worlds and interact with our own personal ecosystem .
the offices to me like to talk about grasslands .
that we put them from the rest of the house so that there was no more air connection .
in this case vannevar bush , that the way we use information is broken .
he had a headset-microphone like me .
and there was a nice young man named tim berners-lee , and he said , &quot; are you an ian ritchie ? &quot; i said , &quot; yes . &quot;
in 2005 , in 2005 , i brought a website with a couple of friends called reddit.com .
so it went from about five percent of the mems up to 70 percent at the end of the vote .
it really wasn &apos;t really about self-elessness , but only to be interested in making anything cool .
but my father wanted me to read and learn .
so why did he spend so much time to study europe , instead of working on the field ? &quot;
so i started building a prototype .
they &apos;re building alone .
when i was a kid , i went to school , but i came back to gando every holidays .
voice : the system ready . open image .
joker : i present my front hive , mt : ah . watch .
and if you look at the graph in 2050 , by 2050 , the chinese economy will be twice as big as the u.s. economy , and the indian economy will almost have the same size as the american economy .
okay , it drew himself as a nation-state in the last hundred years , but everybody who knows something over china , is that the country is very much older .
you might remember what the chinese hits the constitution .
the question is , why ?
it &apos;s in the society radically embedded in relation to the way it is in the west .
and second , they are ignorant .
and the second result is that the world is inevitable as a consequence of being increasingly unfamiliar , because it &apos;s shaped by cultures and experiences and history that aren &apos;t really familiar with us .
for 200 years , the world was essentially ruled by a fraction of the world &apos;s population .
but mostly ...
only courage , girls .
i want to live in this light , with you , and with everybody .
it was as if we left our society , to say , &quot; i was here to the roof of a building .
so it was something strange to see these pictures and these eyes that were staring at me through a television machine .
we called the project of the face of 2 face .
and most people couldn &apos;t .
the army took it , but instead of putting them to the police station , they brought them to a complete rescent of the slum it was hacked .
you can see that enough in the media .
do you have no color in france ? &quot;
before i start , you know , if we travel where we travel , we never have permission , but we &apos;re actually organized like a community andotship -- -- a group of friends that come there , trying to paste the walls .
for example , for example , books -- not for sale -- the group of collaborative .
this is rio .
and this starts right now .
secondly , population growth and the urbanization .
they &apos;re selected cars .
zipcar started a decade earlier , in 2000 .
i think cities are connected platforms , detroit is a platform .
so much of the things we see in the interconnectedness , and a lot of what we &apos;ve created in the platform we &apos;ve created , let &apos;s define us , refining and off .
and that transformation continues .
our mobile phones are more powerful than the entire apollo spaceship .
forget about the way they &apos;re young .
we need to find a new way of directing the planet , collectively , and shared wisdom .
my students knew about me knew me . i felt very special .
i went to where the helicopter was going .
he invited me to his studio . he said , &quot; come on and visit me . &quot;
but i had never had a problem , i never danced .
and these guys painted huge pictures , and they look really good .
so we rented a small supply car and went around the east coast and tried to sell them .
i was devastated by the floor .
i told this manhood that you don &apos;t have to teach .
you know , i might feel like a rather , nice , a clean boy .
stephanie white : i &apos;ll leave you all the other .
she thinks that burt rutan is very impressive .
or maybe if you need tiger , a more jum-singer ?
let &apos;s see if einstein &quot; happy birthday &quot; for al gore .
e : oink , oink , oink .
this is tim ferriss around 1979 , in age two years .
at that point i realized that i was not the incredible hulk .
so here are the new rules for swimming swimming , if any one of you are afraid of swimming , or it &apos;s just not good .
it &apos;s wrong , which is about every parent teacher .
my family school . it was all right , i think everything in everything .
it was possible to read the asahi shinir , asaahi newspaper , about six months later -- after all about 11 months ago -- i came to japanese japanese .
so she came to me , and this was her herammal , the teacher .
third , poor changes .
sometimes it shows you what to do .
so , let &apos;s try to ask : what kind of school would make teenagers feel like to be inside , right ?
it &apos;s nearly all over their mouth by the mouth , intensive , over teachers , parents , parents , people who have education .
and with the coastal level , the mountain range moves out of a area called clay , a series of valleys and boxes that go from west to west , and you can climb the scarf in to get down from shore level of the coast .
and saul didn &apos;t have a choice . there was only the volunteers .
and there &apos;s this fiction , which is liberating , but , even more importantly , the sling ones .
now he &apos;s here , this shepherd , learned in the use of a devastating weapon against this vector of intense armor that gets from a hundred pounds of heavy armor and that incredibly heavy weapons that are useful is useful in transit .
the first was in the indiana &apos;s degree medical journal , and this has kicked out a series of speculations that starts with an explanation for a nazi cold size .
they didn &apos;t understand that exactly the reason for its apparent strength was the reason for its greatest disability .
now , unfortunately , and it &apos;s not amazing , most of the microbes that are being sold at the national academy , the pathogen .
and so i started working with this people , michael zasloff and thomas fishleg , to look around the microbes that sparked the thinky .
there &apos;s a project in uc davis , where you use probiotics to try to prevent early necrosical theoolictis .
we can &apos;t see them . they are invisible .
yochai has shown a graph that was a printing press .
we &apos;re generating the 1,4 billion pages of calls per month , so it &apos;s become a huge thing .
the real battle doesn &apos;t find between the left and on the right -- there &apos;s a lot of people -- but between the party , the head of balance and the side of the wheel .
my page is about some boba-lists that volunteers , because it will go back and again again .
most of the social rules and workpractices are very open in the software .
rick kay is a very well-known wikipedia , which is a lot of work in terms of the vandal beeus and a shower , and the pronomers .
you always think you would have 40,000 members , it &apos;s 18 .
and that &apos;s a much bigger project ; it &apos;s going to take 20 years or longer , to become relight .
they &apos;re singing , they dance , they dance from love , they have intense thoughts and writing stories about love .
i &apos;ve heard you &apos;re going to leave me here .
dusty is love .
moreover , in your brain , the reward system works , and it &apos;s full of energy and gridlock , full motivation and willing to risk all the main gains of life .
there &apos;s there more than eight words for what you call animal confidence : selective proxy , partner choice , choice of female , sexual choice .
no , you &apos;ve never figured out how two personalities together , to make a good relationship .
i think for millions of years , men saw their enemies while they were sitting next to their friends beside their friends .
where ? the roof of my hometown , a home for 96 families .
this is a bamboo buttress , with a train of 45 pounds .
they spend their days in detail in the circle of the group of color bodies , but at night , they go down to hunt in deep water .
and that &apos;s the only studied sound , because it &apos;s fairly easy to measure , you hear it for example when mothers and calves are joining back again .
what we need to think about is that we only listen to people who are hearing dolphins for people who are focused on focused ultrasound and we use in the water special equipment to record that .
and we found quickly that free dolphins don &apos;t just rely on a boat like that .
this is the scarf , and i &apos;m trying to get the dolphin to get to the keyboard to show you the visual and acoustic signal .
are you learning to emulate the function of whistling ?
that &apos;s got the &quot; kiss in the hat , but still feeling .
he &apos;s down . flies ?
how did this start with jetman ?
and i go , i turn up .
two parachutes .
people have people to do this .
just from curiosity , where did they flew when they flew over the grand canyon ?
and i hope that anybody can do that .
they even found responses , as myths that were perpetrated their lives , but almost at all they didn &apos;t care about the reality .
but already from the beginning , obviously , it &apos;s been wrong with this .
&quot; ah ! &quot; &quot; the creationists .
if the old greeks would only know that in australia in australia , if deafist is the saddest , they would have known that their theory was untrue .
if you have been seen temporarily , it would have inmissed the theory .
well , unfortunately , many of you are about to make the statistics right now .
okay , i &apos;ve made these glasses for my prescription and ...
and what we &apos;ve done is to open the center for vision in the third world here in university .
to understand that power makes sense , to see where we get .
dialog with the local and global , the audience , the audience , players and protagonists , the innovation use of places , all these things in the incredible work of the fantastic , french , french group luxe .
you go to the reason with the advice for science and technology of the academy of motion arts and sciences , some truths behind the trickster has revealed revealed .
i spent my entire time out , playing with the inuit .
enjoy it !
and during the last four or five years , we suddenly find dead bears everywhere .
it has the function of the earth in a garden . it &apos;s a sin garden .
this whale ice was born to the beginning of the industrial revolution .
it &apos;s also huge .
but he was right .
when she realized that i couldn &apos;t catch a swim of swimming penguins , they began to start in my direction and took them slowly in my direction , so they moved like that , and then let them .
but it was something else , a different seal had gone behind me , and she made it as a drug shelter .
great , so again .
so frank is sitting on his desk .
hello , could you stand up please ? just where you are .
once a man had a hole in the pocket , which was pretty traumatizing for me .
while they saw this , i didn &apos;t get their watch right now .
can i show people what that is ? it &apos;s pretty strange . am you listening to them ?
apollo robbins : art of deception
we also , from our side , we wanted to support the local technology community that helped us at the beginning of ushahidi .
what do she going to believe a call for rwanda , ghana or nigeria ?
it &apos;s modular , so you can also record satellite moders , and it also has remote places of interland .
sooner , before , before the climate , we had thick walls .
basically , what we need is that we don &apos;t need to have a cursors , or coaloutal , because we can use the buildings with these parts of the building , just as we can control the climate bias in the building .
so if one of these characters is familiar with this character , you can understand a lot of the human behavior .
our assumption is that it &apos;s blind before religion , or simply stupid .
the first is the har-care care .
food is becoming an extreme moral issue today , and much of it has to do with ideas of internal ness , so that you can help touch or fit in your body .
i &apos;m going to go quickly through a few other slides .
but on the &apos; 60s , the 70s , where the payload of &quot; open &quot; is a little more painful .
that &apos;s probably true , even when it &apos;s an alien subject .
if you &apos;re a very open for experience , it &apos;s revolution , it means change , it &apos;s fun .
but before if you feel george bush , before you throw a rock , ask yourself , accept this ?
jonathan haidt : the moral roots of liberals and conservatives
the situation is a little bit differently . the soldiers might know when someone &apos;s hostile , there &apos;s somebody who &apos;s going to shoot on them or something else is clearly threatening , rocks or something .
and because we had so many problems with the use of non-lethal weapons with policemen , i thought it would be a good idea to look at it and sit in relation to the military .
so it wasn &apos;t queensland , who had a special problem with dead at police .
and what they were doing was to pump the whole theater with anesthesia &apos;s gas .
it was not violent .
because the police is more limited in the use of violence than the military .
but he &apos;s trying to do it with a drill , or to motor .
i don &apos;t know if the &quot; is cobra called &quot; cobra , but it looks like something like that .
it &apos;s a little bit radical .
his mother gave him part of the garage , and he was collecting things of private flched , and he invented stuff .
and when somebody opens up your wallet , you get an extra line , an algoth message on your iphone .
makers are a quar , and i think it &apos;s connected to something like the birth of private computing .
sex tips are not glamorous .
well , of course , in the 20th century , glamour got the difference that was associated with hollywood .
and i think that begins to reach the core that combine all kinds of glamour .
the less experience we have with them , the more glamorous you are .
how do you create this sense of making this sense of making a perfect world ?
and of course the way , the glass of the top line is about that feeling of light itself .
i could have a whole talk about the matrix , &quot; the matrix .
it &apos;s very glamorous , but you know , it &apos;s invented the technology of the spectral .
this was a way to attach my head .
when i was scared , i went to more dangerous places .
i heard stories that got into my body .
and the fire that &apos;s burning at the third of six thousand days is the fire that burns the coast of the world .
it was the honey in the water that made it sweet , it was oil that made it sick .
it was all these things .
obviously it &apos;s a very violent .
and ivan put his sandwich up there , on top of the dumpsters .
what does he take care of sandwich ?
no , because the wind should get the trouble .
now she keeps the powder for sugar .
ok , so it &apos;s going to be solved a small contrast by my hand after the momentum in my brain .
so , you &apos;ve got to say a few words .
that &apos;s a great answer . rs , thank you very much . that was fantastic .
and sometimes we need a ... a push call , not true to show us that we &apos;re going to get through life , rather than having it .
but i think if you look at what &apos;s behind these things , you &apos;re going to be the best reason , the core of the question , which is how we think about time .
and in the process , cities have begun to rethink how urban structures should be designed to build people to be able to get slower and smell and connections to build together .
and norway , sweden , sweden , denmark and finland are under the six competitive nations of the world and work hours where the average american would be crying .
we &apos;re killing our minds with distractions , we &apos;re always busy , so we don &apos;t have to ask questions , is it good ? am i happy ? grow my children good ?
and the good thing about it , i feel happier , healthier and more productive than ever before .
so i &apos;m going to take you to brompa in kansas , where i was asked for a couple of years ago , a science museum on a site on the rivercenter of the rivercenter .
the bike path is directly through the building so that you drive on the river , see the show and you &apos;ll be curious .
we want our national museum to build the story of our people ; we &apos;ll start quickly .
we break through the mountain , so you go into one side of the mountain , and over the other , and we leave light through the mountain through the mountain .
this is what it looks like .
now , the stage -- stop or musical pavilion as we call them is an incredible place .
and on a surprisingly point , christian is going to introduce that note .
and the other dynamic is that we don &apos;t care about the jazz little bits of detail .
delicious for both for pakistan .
my heart and my heart beat up like one .
the maldives , as you know , are an island chain here in the southwest coast of india .
it takes moisture while it &apos;s coming across the ocean over the ocean .
they &apos;re very good flicking , but they don &apos;t get very far .
i asked a couple of the vish friends and colleagues and yes , and they come every year .
of those of you who grew up in india , remember the dragonflies in your childhood , you know , bitter sheets ? maybe at school , you might they drag a drink pipe ?
when are the dragonflies get up ?
so the impression about the impression that you have is that you have an air mass that goes up and goes up and down , and on , but it doesn &apos;t work .
then they come out and gone away .
if these are now sending their eggs now .
the story is not to end .
this guy is a very nice bird . it &apos;s the jakinger kuckock .
as a child , i grew up on a farm in florida , and i did what the most children were doing .
i also , i had a lot of tricks that i could exploit , and they had the ones that come in the planes .
here it goes in all directions . the fall is like the cartoon film , and that &apos;s what i like .
there we go . okay . okay , right there ?
it doesn &apos;t animate , but it &apos;s not illegal .
in fact , don &apos;t win the right word . i won &apos;t even .
so i decided to tell a story about somebody who made one of the most valuable objects of his era .
so that allows the bombarding to take this object , to tell visual the goal , because they &apos;re sitting in the apxglashard of of the bombing , and then they give up the atmosphere of the aircraft , the velocity of the airplane and the wind of the target .
the box is laid with handing onto one of the guards .
what percentage of those bombs , do you think , ended up in the three square square mile site ?
zero , no single .
we think these things can solve our problems , but our problems are much more complicated than that .
a walk in a metropolitan city , or a trip , this diversity of human species in amazing ways .
we &apos;re asking for the human ancestry .
now , what is based on ?
then you multiply it with 100 .
but even more amazing , in looking at the y-scale chromosome , the male side , realizing that the adam of the y chromosome lived in about 60,000 years ago .
antarctica is actually , antarctica is a desert , because there are so little rainfall .
early coastal migration went along the southern coast of asia , about 60,000 years ago , from africa , and we &apos;ve reached australia very quickly about 50,000 years ago .
it has three components . of course , science is a big part .
yes , it &apos;s female .
every stage is magical , because it creates an idea of something completely close to the almost in the universe .
that &apos;s twice the way people are there on this planet .
what &apos;s starting is that by getting young stars , young stars , all of these elements , it &apos;s moving around , the energy of the star comes around , they can attract particles , they form snowparticles , they form small dust particles , they form rock , and they form , and ultimately forms the planet and ultimately forms the planets .
so where do you find the goldilocks conditions ?
for most of the course of life on earth , living organisms were relatively simple -- getingly .
it is what makes us different .
we &apos;re burning fossil fuels with one rate that it has the bill that we put the goldilocks conditions in our human civilization , only allowed to flourish over the last 10,000 years .
these losses , they feel like we found out of the feeling , very different than we originally found out when the markets went up . &quot;
and that &apos;s the focus today .
we have one person -- well , we have to cut up two , because it &apos;s less than one percent .
so let &apos;s talk about a different characteristic obstacle to be done with inertia .
so 99 percent of people are organ donors .
it &apos;s a much more beautiful to spend money now .
today , it &apos;s more saving was not an option .
one last question : how many of you might feel like to have a really useful plan , when they &apos;re in retirement , when they keep their socials to expect in your life , how much your month is , how many every month is going to spend ?
so thank you .
i love to ...
and i said , &quot; i think she dance . &quot;
it &apos;s actually a symbolic gesture . i cut the script book . i &apos;m still putting more of myself , i get scared .
turn it out , just out .
there &apos;s a woodblock that takes his ag in your hand and hacking a wooden piece apart , and the whole galaxy is an atom in this ax .
a film tells a story .
so the divine and the gods were fought in the side of the divine .
bess : yes , my lady .
shekhar kapur : so what do i try to do here ?
an idea began to develop in my head .
the universe is a contradiction .
i got a scholarship , went to university , studied international agriculture , studied anthropology , and i decided i would get back .
he said , &quot; okay . &quot;
okay . let &apos;s zoom down .
there are very good evidence -- as well , we don &apos;t necessarily have a scientific method that &apos;s free , but there &apos;s very good evidence for the average cat in europe in their lives has a greater environmental balance than an average african balance .
the average consumer in america needs 1.8 seconds .
greenpeace has to work together with wwf .
we set them up , and we &apos;ve listed the names of the companies that have had each of them .
at the end , i think , 60 percent of the world production in the table , 25 percent of the world .
if cargill hits a decision , the entire palm palm industry moves , or 40 to 50 percent of them .
this is a substate of nature .
and thinking about the home path , what can help you improve in your research , and how to improve the lives of these patients . &quot;
as it turns out there &apos;s a neural pathways that go out of the brain and on the movement in exactly these functions .
we were left . we used to get our method , and after some months of hard training , we could stand the right paralyzed rat , and whenever she wanted to put their whole of their own bodies to the reward .
i too , every day .
and it is an honor to meet you , the future leaders in britain and this world .
they showed me how a good marriage feels , and that it &apos;s built in trust and commitment , and on the admiration of the unique talents of the others .
we always have to think that .
the story shows that it doesn &apos;t matter whether you grow into a welfare or a country on a social city .
a sopsteranian researcher . she &apos;s in rochester , new york , studied .
it &apos;s called &quot; aria . &quot;
right . so what has changed ?
because the relationship of clinging is due to a hump , which is a lot to high than it could fly .
for example , in the last year , the government of pakistan took the head of pakistan antagonists , pakistani citizens to pursue youtube .
and they came together to track the problem and solve it .
it reminds the description of the story as &quot; a bloody thing after the other , &quot; right ?
here &apos;s an impression of them .
that was it . image passed on request from the owner .
i don &apos;t know . maybe you think , hmm ... killers don &apos;t predict ?
so in the &apos; 60s , the united states were the first place .
and we see that the impact of the field is very , very strong in some countries .
all of this costs money .
and it &apos;s been a lot to do students with catters , or social families , to give the same opportunities .
how should countries pay their teachers compared to other elite workers ?
the burden of teachers that might have trouble need to be reforced , is going to be enhanced . the salary of any teacher is structured .
the strength is in the division of what other countries have done .
what i mean is , in europe , there were a lot of fighting , the citizens became more powerful .
in my country , there &apos;s been war .
the question was , how expensive was it to install a telephone in bangladesh ?
and even if that &apos;s true , what about the original purchase force ?
that &apos;s a business for you , but it &apos;s milk for everybody else .
as a result , the company has been the largest telecommunication society with 3.5 million subscritures , 115,000 of the phones that i spoke to produce a third of the radio in the network .
we don &apos;t know where the end gets , but it &apos;s going .
and i &apos;m going to do this by trying to predict precisely what the average per capita income in india , in china , will be able to reach the west .
i &apos;m going to do this now by bringing these bubbles back into a gapminder chart on which each bladder is a country .
and then , after the first world war , they put their rise .
it was deng xiaoping made of this one in here .
that &apos;s not a bad thing to do .
and the growth is faster , and with high levels of international education fund , you can see where they become 2014 .
you know about climate , we have great international experts in india who confirm us that climate change and blindness must be changed , because there &apos;s otherwise china and india are going to be suffering from most of the climate change .
it doesn &apos;t radiate in the electromagnetic spectrum . it doesn &apos;t bounce .
so , clusters of galaxies -- whether we make a snapshot snapshot forward , we &apos;re going to make a snapshot in the 10 years will look like this .
where does the observer sees the galaxy ?
and the next thing you need to do for your experiment is to get a napkin . i took a piece of millimeter paper ; i &apos;m a physicist .
okay . let &apos;s look at dark energy now .
we call them &quot; dark energy , &quot; and it makes the effect to expand the space .
and they put it deep into an iron mine in minnesota , deep under the earth , and over the course of the last few days , they did the most respected results .
and i &apos;m robbie , and i &apos;m 14 , and i play the fiddle .
and now you see a sister coming back to tablett , a kind of modular station for you , and it allows the syringe that you &apos;ve used back in the dish to use it later later .
you put them in normal , and it &apos;s going to be taken in 14 factories that are already equipped and licensed from us .
and i think in this sense , it fits the lovely thing to that cross mentality .
and part of the benefit is how long the program is being used to be used .
it turns out , it says a lot about human behavior .
there are no emotional components .
you can see that if the prevalence would be high , as unaids , as unaids , we &apos;ve actually had to see 60 deaths per 10,000 than 20 deaths , instead of about 20 deaths per 10,000 .
so the data that i have to realize is that if you have a surplus of accuracy , the new hiv infections have split down .
you can try to lower rates by treating other more vulnerable organisms .
as we manage to rescue , that &apos;s what &apos;s happening .
and i realized how he believed in this young age of evil , that if something was so good , then it must be the work of a human .
through his idea , the train went down 10 percent faster , and it took fifteen percent less stream .
we don &apos;t hang co2 for toxic .
and this algorithm in a software program using the bridges and a droaching difficulties .
in cornell , there &apos;s a group of scientists who are right now to make a synthetic tree , because they say , &quot; at the bottom of a building , there &apos;s no pump . &quot;
and in this spheres , life , that within 3.8 billion years , is an excellent , lifetime of life for us .
your movements see your movement is a dance that never gets bored to me .
rarely seen with a naked eye , this intersection of animal and plant world is a really magical moment .
children don &apos;t look school .
because all of my best school friends were getting married to become a big druche , and here i was with a tennis post , went to school , and took all of the odd activities .
now i was known as the woman who would not listen .
because the government didn &apos;t have money .
you &apos;ll hear about it , and you &apos;ll love it .
kiran needs : the slightly different police
so this project began with the following insight : about 200 million captchas will put people in the world every day .
you get a picture for every page of the book .
of course , since we make so many words per day , weird things can happen .
this is what i like most of the project .
you can &apos;t have a english , you can &apos;t access it .
ok , so , computer translation , still not good enough .
it turns out that today there are over billions of people learning a foreign language .
this is a sentence that was translated from german in english .
the beautiful thing about duolingo is i think it &apos;s a fair business model -- one , the poor people don &apos;t have disadvantage .
the connected , the company , the company , makes whatever it really can .
so i have to build only one platform , and do all these people will sit into it , and i can strip myself and i am going ? &quot;
no answer . that &apos;s how much a lot of you might be interested in a lot of being interested in answers after they &apos;ve just signed up .
not yet don &apos;t have an immigrant platform yet -- just .
we don &apos;t have this question yet , but the answer could be that happiness has a whole lot to do with what we experience right now .
as it turns out , people are important to be happy when they cheat .
matt haratworth : happiness is at moment
luckily , luckily , in 2008 , i decided to go back to ghana after the absence of 28 years .
the rhetoric of the rhetoric .
ghana was in the same situation in which the u.s. elections were going to be in the presidential elections 2000 -- bush against gore .
if the surfers are out of the surfers out and wait in waves , you probably wonder if you &apos;ve never been there -- what are they doing ?
as fish doesn &apos;t understand a lot of water , people don &apos;t understand much of air .
and that was okay for boyle .
it wasn &apos;t a spoken rule of meeting , but i &apos;m sure it was part of it , and if people hear voices that you can &apos;t connect with something or somebody , this person is probably not there .
you get -- well -- -- i just had a natural sense of science and experiments . i thought everybody always did that .
today , it &apos;s like , &quot; no , my love , verify your shoes , &quot; and -- but at the time , this was not like that -- i asked it that you do ? &quot;
we &apos;d have been able to have it , because it hurts heavily and made a giant squid , and it had plenty of power .
well -- there &apos;s a lot -- a lot -- a lot of science has happened since isaac newton is happening and all the stuff .
and even though , because the buildings warm at the day heat and make it a small less warmer at night .
now , in these studies , they found out -- these two studies of two different groups -- that was 5.5 watts per square meter , 1998 , 1999 , 1999 -- and it hasn &apos;t been warmer .
and for me , the path was going to lead to art .
nature has really has changed all the way back .
first , first , i was really afraid , but i was happy to work on a art project , and it seemed to be not embarrassed , so i continued to make my camera on my camera , and my camera came up with herself .
there are more than 31,000 miles in tunes , and only about six miles to be global as a museum .
now , i &apos;m interested in sharing motion and texture .
third question is , why is it hotter in summer than in winter ?
and we &apos;re going to stop with , &quot; we are the best scientific college in the world , &quot; because of our british clubs .
right ? that would explain it , right ?
so kids aren &apos;t empty vessels , yes ?
now , oh , oh yeah , then keep going on .
so when i was thinking about it , i suddenly realized that biology got us the answer .
when a chemist , i wanted to say , &quot; well , what &apos;s going on here ?
you &apos;ve got computing , you know , information , information , you &apos;ve created , you know , we &apos;ve created .
so there are two options : intelligent design , right and indirectly -- like god , or my friend .
i need information , and i need a container .
when we manage to do that , you forget the molecular detail .
they sit in seats .
because it &apos;s because we &apos;re so chauvinistic about biology , if you take carbon , there &apos;s other things that can happen .
so here is the data .
see . better can &apos;t fit it for that point .
we &apos;ve got a whole good range of neast .
and now i want to expand your perception across the mamment .
and here &apos;s where education improved , we get a medical security , and the child mortality dropped .
we have a problem in countries where there &apos;s a serious problem .
this is where we are today .
so , we need this long-term perspective , but we need to measure the impact over a 10-year period of time .
the problem is , again , it doesn &apos;t make much value because it can &apos;t afford more than a roller .
he said , &quot; oh , you probably build a three-wheeler with spare wheels . &quot;
for example , a two-cylinder went down in the car with just an anterwave .
so , in fact , a new paradigm shift through the same people who could not dream of it , driving their entire family into a roller on a roller , began to dream of a car .
one challenge , of course .
you know , new diseases require new pharmaceuticals .
these goals were reached in india .
is that possible ? it was made possible , by the way , by certain different reasons .
i was scared before the 18 minutes .
that was a great message : focus and you can do something .
my first app was a unique liberal app , called earth fortune , and the different colors of the earth ever switched to their fate .
if we develop the app and sell them , it will be used for our area of free and other centers that we sell them , and all the money out of it is going to local educational foundations .
that &apos;s a little temperature reactor .
and these reactors are run at 600 to 700 degrees centigrade . that means : the higher the obesity in temperature -- we know from the thermodynamics -- the higher the efficiency .
that &apos;s why i believe that in the 20 years we &apos;re going to need to develop fusion and make fusion reality , this is going to become a source of carbon electricity .
and i think , given the technology that &apos;s going to be equal or cheaper than natural gas , and you don &apos;t have to fill out for nearly 30 years , which is a huge advantage for the developing world .
and then you can &apos;t prevent you that you &apos;re surprised ; it &apos;s less likely to have a distinctive event -- it creates experience .
and experience , you can only have to 100 percent .
let me go back back to lionel triale , which in his standard work about authenticity , &quot; sincerity and &quot; in the early 1900s , the first showed .
a great book in which you &apos;re talking about about the universal city walk , and it suggests that it &apos;s false , but at least really false , because you can see behind the facch .
what they &apos;ve done is their options in the past .
thank you .
my connection with engineering is just like in any other engineer that i like to use problems .
and as i first saw this in my imagination , the bits exploded and flew with infinity speed , and the parts of the distance flew away , then moved back through gravity , until they came back with infinity velocity into the initial position .
and that &apos;s a found object again , a smaller fan that i found .
when i make these work , i always try to find one thing where i &apos;m going to say something very clearly , really simple , but it &apos;s not ambiguous at the same time .
one of the opportunities that was offered to me was when one person with a really interesting visual mri was done by a really interesting mri resonator piano at the nih .
six weeks , this disruption begins with the pope within the heart , which is actually able to move each of these fans in the heart , until we have an excessive heart -- and then the evolution of the whole human body .
but i &apos;m going to try to convince you that spectroscopy really is something that can change the world .
because this is the evidence that the planet was swallowed by the star .
this is the spectrum of the sun -- 24 , 5,000 spectral lines , and about 15 percent of them are not identified .
they &apos;ve heard about sunbootions .
and this is going to be an instrument of discovery similar planets in sun-like stars .
because you have to know how much of a radioactive element there are in these systems .
and we have some interesting cases , candidates , etc , things that we can &apos;t really explain .
and i just thought , &quot; why not just be a magician ? &quot;
but i want to be able to defeat them .
so i thought that that was my chance to break down with my measurements .
well , actually , first of all , in a four days long data analytics that i looked back , and those interviews , these stories and those stories and those who fisns .
a spiritual reading sounds better than a breakdown , but i assure you it was a breakdown .
and she does so that .
my husband to ask for help , because i am sick , and we were very married by my husband ; sex with my wife ; we &apos;re going to invite sex with my wife ; we &apos;re going to invite you to go to one on the doctor &apos;s pay waiting to be released ; people are leaving -- that &apos;s the world that we live .
this is that .
that &apos;s what we do in our personal life .
so i want to tell you about how useful you can be , if we think about something , we want to think about ourselves and make a difference .
it &apos;s primarily from a asthma inhaler , but on top of the page is a very small gps receiver that tells you a time and a asthma , in this way , you get new findings about its asthma vulnerability in relation with time and environmental factors .
in fact , this was a gift for me , because that &apos;s how our learning process began to think about a new way about life .
and here it is fully paralyzed , it can &apos;t breathe or move .
see here , almost 2,000 people take copaxone .
you go down on the profile , and you can see all your cumulative medications , and also you can see that in the new version interinteractive .
so , how can we give you a tool with this that you can go and put it into health care ?
i want to know it now . can you help us ? &quot;
but it works almost every time .
i mean , i didn &apos;t know what was going on with him .
we &apos;re on a wonderful , amazing journey to become human , again , to share a part of a community , something from us to be vulnerable , and that &apos;s exciting . thank you very exciting . thank you very exciting .
six and a half years later , there have a few amazing developments in the lab in the lab . three of them i &apos;m going to show you today , with them , we can stop the predators on our planet , and instead of all the amount of energy we need , they generate clean , safe and cheap .
it takes all the night available infrared light at night , making it into an electron in the room of two small layers , and allows them to be able to see a picture that you can see .
if that &apos;s done , this is the last puzzle . the water .
thank you .
and then make predictions can be tested .
the study was rapidly spread in the internet , and it got a lot of attention to international media .
so the next step , we built the network around these companies , and we took all the actization of the tntional cs , and the shareholders of shareholders , and the same way downstream , and we got a network with 600,000 nodes and 1 million connections .
similarly , in the control of ownership networks , it builds on the kdomen .
the reality is so complex that we have to move from dogmas .
no intelligent machines that replace people .
keep it strong , break apart .
now you probably think , ok , that &apos;s cool , but how can we use this in practice ?
and on the one hand , i had all my gminister joe soldier and a mattery .
when i first spoke about this research in the university of companies and schools about this research , they said that one would never start a talk with a diagram .
because maybe we can get this information like that , not only to raise people in the average , but also how we can lift the entire average in our companies and schools .
when they came to visit me , they looked around and they said , &quot; the brosesal looks like , when he said , &quot; raswarred himself in the movie &apos;s harry potter , &quot; and this is like this .
so we &apos;re going to be healthy : we have to turn the formula for happiness and success .
in 21 congressional days , we can recode with only two minutes a day to program their brain so that optimively and more successful about his work .
who amongst you have grown up in a family company and suffering ? yes , yes .
so , i was making a medical publishing system , and it was my first step here , to understand how -- oh , it &apos;s pretty fun to mix these two things .
it looks like fabulous , it can draw .
and so he began to have multiple crayers on the side -- so that &apos;s worth caring with our hands .
i made this advertising . i don &apos;t think of that alcohol , but i sometimes drink .
this is all the time at the same time .
so computers , as you know , these big computers , there are tiny computers .
i discovered that there are everywhere in the beach .
some people say , will you bring the risd into the future ?
for every 100 girls with a diagnosis of emotional disorder , we have 324 boys .
but its case is evidence that it &apos;s going to be played at the playground not be played wild .
all over 15 wisdom , like this , because this is because over the last 10 years , the number of male school teachers around half .
and this density curriculum is bad for all the vivid children .
all of these conversations have to date .
ali carr-cheller shows at the tedxallu three reasons why boys in school comes down and sketch her bold plan to bring them back to the classroom , when you get a new rules and video games , educate video and educate video and educate games , and educate them while they &apos;re having fun with them .
so some elementary particles interact with this substance , win energy in the process .
this is tiny , conventional units , because it &apos;s about 10 to the minus 22 gram , but in the course of particle , it &apos;s a lot because it &apos;s the weight is the dna of dna .
the reason for that is simply : wind builds the sand , gravity is falling it down .
i was also interested in the wireless interest .
you change the environment and the object . &quot;
we &apos;ve worked with a project in a project where it &apos;s about interactive journals .
this one is like a board , you can touch it , and i love the terrible noises .
now , i have this collection of my friends who can take advantage of me , called the animalia &apos;s data , from the latin word for human , classification system .
if you decide to bend the definition of fusion , i think they &apos;re actually aging .
and yet , we wanted to see very well , like the plane we built all together , pushed off the floor in the way it was seen .
this is in real time .
almost the whole commercial budget traffic is made over a relatively small number of large airports , and there &apos;s a very little more sophisticated resource out there .
either you live in a poorer world , you don &apos;t like what people in general .
but this idea with the placebo education is really interesting .
i can &apos;t completely prove that . but it doesn &apos;t matter .
the modern one of course would be this one .
in the world of food , you call the cooking .
it &apos;s just about changing the interface by which people are doing their decisions , and the way the decision changes in isolation .
&#91; unclear &#93; it looks like it looks like she just did it , but if you see it this way , it looks more interesting .
when i was 14 years old , i had no confidence .
again , i won the world yo-yo championship , this time in the savings of comic performance .
because it was so simple , and yet it explains a design in the universe .
audience : must ?
that &apos;s information that is copied with variation and selection .
this is something that &apos;s passed on person to person .
they &apos;re going to make them and me , as their core replication machine , and we &apos;re all fatmachines .
we &apos;re the only ones and memes machines .
he wanted to appreciate , n = , the number of communications civilizations in the galaxy , and he added one : the number of world of stars , the number of planets , but more important : intelligence .
but then , big time -- millions of years later , we have the second replicator that get the memes .
they &apos;re just information -- why should they ?
but the damage in this planet has already been added , is how dangerous this third point is , this third dot , concentrating the third replicator .
the aidhas been working in haiti for 2007 , and they &apos;re helping small things with engineering and economics .
at his last job , he was working together with his boss , when they broke the extra foundations .
what was expected me on the spider station is how the nurses changed my staff .
and then i got to the scientific academic project , talking more money .
and lo and behold , suddenly , the average of the average will be answered .
maybe it may be that there is a certain bonus limit that we don &apos;t want to skip , while we like to bring ourselves from small jewelry until we don &apos;t get their grip .
a third of people shredded their paper , and i &apos;ve said , &quot; mr. experimenter , i &apos;ve answered x questions , give me x dollars . &quot;
that &apos;s it . mission .
and if we look around the way around us , especially if it does a part of our sourcing group , then we cheat more .
&quot; i believed my intuition was it . &quot;
it &apos;s organized itself from the network itself .
so , image , a reputation , is built in trust in sensing and transparency .
what &apos;s my argument , and it hasn &apos;t even come into the sweater .
thank you .
you wouldn &apos;t assume that penises and skeletons have very much to do with each other .
and you have only to put the wall without the fluids that put the wall under tension , you have a fire storage .
it &apos;s a model of skeleton that i made out of a piece of stuff that &apos;s wrapped around a high-laser blob .
so it &apos;s from the same cotton tissue , the same balloon , with the same kind of mess .
the traditional language is dan lilices , and many of the music pieces came from yawn , and the dance and the singing , and my entire family tree is a scottish and through , but my mother and my father are very musical people .
and he said , &quot; well , i &apos;m in truro , &quot; which is where i was at the time , and he invited me to dinner .
dl : what do you want to play ?
nm via : it worked .
self-education , self-discovering and self-claim , are the benefits of a great education .
superterrc.c.e. , for example , an engineer from kerala in india , organized self-learning groups that built our computer .
so we collect a &quot; 2 + + and one &quot; tri- &quot; and turn it into an average value which is going to be filtered on the forehead , and it together who you are .
i don &apos;t know how many of you are familiar with the jiddic phrase .
it would be great if the story was coming here .
where do they come from ?
it &apos;s about a hidden angle of the labor market .
they &apos;re all trained for the work in camps .
markets have changed in the past 20 years , until the foreseeable , but only for the upper end of the economy .
politicians in a big , complex , clam-accurate project ?
and it should be a certain amount of obligaties on the twists that are going to attract the aid and the most important thing that the operators pay for everything , and the operates to the public sector .
it &apos;s little business of small people , but it &apos;s more intuitive , safe , comfortable with little signals and immediate .
but connected to each photo , individuals , with fulfilled lives and stories they deserve to be told .
gas , i &apos;m probably the only person who really am glad when mr. pudance is turning the gas cream , because i get a bigger budget .
but little atoms wants to merge together , they want to merge small kernels to form bigger in iron .
luckily , you get a neutron if you get this futile reaction , and can leave it .
and just down the road down , you see jet .
i wish we &apos;d had money and bigger resources .
but below the surface , it looked very different .
some say it doesn &apos;t look good .
and the egyptians , the egyptians and a lot of other arabs , who were involved and are , expect very , very much from the government .
this means that means human development and not secular is the key to empowerment of women in the middle east .
we also found an unintended consequence .
because i don &apos;t really be able to help the girls and the girls to help .
be nice to nerds .
&quot; transsonic stream . &quot; it even cuts to the writing .
this was taken on the first flight of the rocketcam .
but there &apos;s no way of learning a copani go when you &apos;re not going to fly .
a second per second line of 44 of the world .
it allows us to enhance our voices and our influence as a group .
we think somebody else differently , somebody more , somebody more expensive , somebody with more means to fix this problem .
we didn &apos;t blow him into the pacific .
it took 10 prototypes until we had something really flew .
and then come up with a deep sense of responsibility .
so the question that , as an architect , as an engineer , as an engineer , as a builder , who knows what &apos;s going on in front of all , because we have a lot of it every week , or that &apos;s self-cleaning or marriage of the injury ?
on one of those rides , i talked to the way that i was free to break the director .
it happened in places like this in the very remote desert , 20 miles from the nearest road .
and the last 10 years he spent two places -- the slums and the government prison , where he spent the last two years before he came up on this rock .
that &apos;s what &apos;s about perspective .
and so , in perspective , perspective , context and narrative keys , i &apos;m looking at my rides with the teenagers .
and this self is doing the car the car that &apos;s being done by the social world .
we can &apos;t have any plans for plans and tracking the ladder to the truth or success .
&quot; because , you know , that &apos;s not accurate .
so for the beginning , then we can always think about ourselves if we lose ourselves .
because , hey , if we keep all living in our own life and feel that we feel wrong for life , then we all of our lives life .
and i &apos;ve been building a studio in the last 20 years .
i want to introduce you four main projects .
so we looked at how to connect all the elements -- instead of trying to play a match .
and the british government says , &quot; you must be in the top five of your . &quot;
and then there was a certain kind of toy that inspired us .
but there was a basic support .
thank you . thank you , thomas . you &apos;re a pleasure .
but if you look at what the cultures of the world have combined , you &apos;ll see that an incredibly rich arsenal of behaviors and emotionings and websites are , which are , which are related to all more than 3,000 cultures of this planet .
but let &apos;s come with a certain runup to the world , and maybe judged us some of them , seemingly consent and violence .
what i wanted to talk about is the two horrors that made the most powerful reactions in the pasticie reactions in the blank slate &apos;s blank slate emerged .
another one of the humanities and art science for the universities are actually in many ways in decline .
but an act of a wise response to be called many university assignments .
i think the sciences of human nature -- behavioral genetics , evolutiony-syology , neurological science , cognitive science -- in the next few years are becoming more and more and varied and various ways , deep and deep root beliefs .
and then another band is tied around the scrotum , bottom .
and he takes off , takes the tip over his shoulder and then packing the scrotum , and then it gets down to turn his head down and then it bends down , but what i hear is a candy , and a sound that sounds like you fall a sound from a blob of a wall of a sticky wall of wall of the wall .
the lamb falls to the ground , the lamb goes two steps , drops , it stands up , and you get a few extra steps to a few extra steps .
and i understood him , i heard his words .
i have to tell you it &apos;s a great teaching .
i do that , but i &apos;m talking about some other things that i was wrong with some other notions of work that i thought that i think was naustable .
matt froveling , new , new canaon , a banker , who woke up a day and realized that the powder of his cows was more worth when their milk when he could use him to make a biosettlement .
but he looked at me and he said , &quot; boy , he &apos;s in my age , and by the way , i &apos;m going to call me a great guy -- he says , &quot; boy , i &apos;ll say , &quot; boy , boy , i &apos;m the captain of a crab ship .
i mean , so many of the commercials were shown there -- as a message , what &apos;s going to tell you ?
every year , there are less control , less fires , less plumber , less plumber , less sweators , less pipes , less heating profiles .
i didn &apos;t know what was true of these things were true , but i thought it was kind of interesting .
and i was led through tor and tor and tor and tor and tor into the arab center that is the place where you can hit the patient .
so i said to the psychiatrist : &quot; i get sexual gratification through that beat cars against walls , &apos; &quot; and i said , &quot; what else ? &quot;
you say , it proves that i &apos;m going to distance and high night . &quot;
even though this amount of four percent of ceos and business leaders .
he said to me , &quot; look at sharks here . &quot;
and i said , &quot; well , &quot; well , brocked compassion : an imfortune , a series of emotions . &quot;
i said , &quot; well , you say you &apos;re a psychopath . &quot;
he &apos;s in a bar in a bar , so he called it -- ended up for a month in prison , what i know , i know , bad , but at least a month one month of a month is not going to be all too bad .
and i want to add that there is shop , and his tags that is prescribing to the goal is , a conflict between the modern democracy , or at least the capitalistic democracy , on the one hand , and the world as you can see .
some people would say that islam is commitment .
now , you might tell you that television schles about the saudi islam is certainly convinced us that he &apos;s impossible with the ability to look at as the core of the democracy , free choice , free choice , basic freedoms and fundamental equity .
now , i started with the war , because it &apos;s the obvious problem , and you can &apos;t claim it would probably give you a war if you talk about these subjects .
and i couldn &apos;t agree with that at all .
penguins are very silent birds , and very , very much noise .
three out of these penguins -- peter , pamela and percy -- wore satellite tags -- and the researchers were sprayed by the dmen and hoping that the oil , until they sail from the island .
and had a syllinvon ?
so if we can do all of our problems , we can change something together , and we can die of penguins to die .
we developed a simple strategy , and put it in a public session .
you &apos;ve got to paint the artistic people in the community , describe what &apos;s growing there and how to use it . many people don &apos;t recognize vegetables , without the plastic packaging , and they do .
we &apos;re only voluntary in an experiment .
there are so many things you can do , but ultimately it &apos;s easy .
so when i started to engage with other traditions , i realized to my amazement that we think that we make a theater -- only a very new religious enthusiasm , that came around in the 19th century in the west .
so hilated on a leg and said , &quot; that &apos;s not what you hate your neighbors , that &apos;s the torah . the rest is the comments .
as if that -- we &apos;ve got a lot of relics people often believe that the main thing they do is they do , and very often have two-way targets at first place , instead of compassion and golden rule .
and all the horror as the old man will take his head out and see themselves .
now , first , let &apos;s look at something that &apos;s not so small , something we can see with the sharp eye , and that &apos;s a bee . look at it : it &apos;s got this size , about a centimeter .
so if you &apos;re a little tiny insect in a flower , what would that flower would look like if the flower is so big ?
we don &apos;t remember it , but it &apos;s actually a record of the whole ecology .
now this is interesting . this looks very different than any sand in the earth i &apos;ve ever seen , and i &apos;ve seen a lot of sand on earth , trust me .
i really , i really like this shot here , because you can see all this kind of little , sort of tucked in the balconies of the sneakers .
and i &apos;m sure the ross can bring this to design .
i &apos;m afraid i &apos;m still working with film .
but people donate their bodies for art and science .
the truck is running before . then it takes the truck in &quot; x-ray slices . &quot;
if you look at this , just the radiator , it &apos;s pretty bright .
i had a mac classic . this is a little box .
i do i do .
you know , the siegs of you , being the emperor of me -- that gets to have a trial .
i have a lot of luck , because it &apos;s better than all other children .
i &apos;m sitting in the train .
ruins science &apos;s life of life ? in his grummeans , a charming of tonight , robin ince , robin ince , is the more we learn about the amazing behavior of the universe -- the more wonder we marvel .
maybe a wrong thing is wrong .
not a professor and convicted , only two ghosts , ready to animate .
and then , my life was fine .
all i saw in manufacturing was that it had the right fight between the fbs between the tarbs and the hunter-man collectors .
so would it be time to process the information ?
he was the former oil minister in germany under president abacha and , of course , coincidentally , even a convicted of money .
he was making the global banks .
a new study of the world bank took 200 corrupt cases .
after a lot of months of mine , and the editor of hundreds of court , we found evidence that actually the shell and eni who knew that money were going to become arrested to a shell company , and frankly , it &apos;s hard to believe that they really didn &apos;t to do it .
today , i &apos;m worried about this idea , this world , this kind of kind of meaning of security .
you have to fight every one of them .
one of the amazing things that i &apos;ve discovered in my travels is that these species are emerging .
there &apos;s a young woman named kerry &apos;s reading in minnesota in minnesota .
you know security is going to accept death , don &apos;t admit it .
when i start to suggest that that i don &apos;t touch me , and i don &apos;t change my heart , i &apos;m in danger .
well , i was stupid , but not so stupid to reject that .
it &apos;s content , and pure shape , side by side .
i was so drunk . &quot;
so i set up the typescript , i paid them on a 19mist printer with water processing ink , dressed it on the wall , threw a bucket of water afterwards .
seriously .
not just yie collins .
how my wish is that no one should be a hunger or that anything would be free , a kind of utopian thing .
we love challenges , but if you have expectations low , believe me , we &apos;ll only be able to do that .
and if you think that &apos;s really not meaning for you , then you remember that clones are possible , and that means that you go again by childhood , which is trap , you might just going to be heard like my generation .
when i started with the week in the late &apos; 60s , the typical incidents of reported were confined to the fragmented census of individuals , usually the birds , but later , mammals and amphibians came along .
yet , our ears tell us a whole different story .
yes . well .
and i just got my school right now for my school , up to this communal day that i ate day , which i was working on the whole school .
this is one of my favorite ones where the rabbits are continually in plants , so the males are happy spocherner .
well , those are children , though , is clear . right ?
this is the show .
but if you were at a conference for game developers , you would find that they only talk about feelings , significance , understanding and sentiments .
today , after 20 years of television , making targeted me emotionally , pushing myself a reasonable insurance spot that the tears is in .
i know that non-lethal video games are worried about my mother .
there &apos;s a potential to do good .
some of the ideas are really horrible , and some of them are great .
game designer david perry , the video games of tomorrow are becoming more than fun for the next generation of players . they &apos;re going to provide room for rich , complex , emotional experiences -- which will be significant and consistent and consistent life .
i see that that we can &apos;t be able to learn unless we don &apos;t admit that we &apos;re blind .
and that buys two places that are kind of suspicious .
we usually don &apos;t teach that for six years .
and i &apos;m going to drop a little point for each of these parts , and these are the same distance , because it &apos;s 30 degrees away .
and how do you see if that really is true ?
you know , after i saw all the visions of the first few talks .
it wasn &apos;t just two years ago , when everybody was talking about , we had discovered the holy grail of biology .
the first is the obvious obvious thing , the story revolution , which you &apos;re all familiar with .
we all all the other . isn &apos;t that wonderful ? &quot;
that &apos;s not happening .
first , all of these technologies only are the collapsing medical research , which will be hacked by all .
and we can lose to lose the fundamental rhythm of biology and our health .
so my view is sure that one of the principles of our future is going to be transcendent in our biology .
i have a daughter , mulency .
&quot; yes , &quot; yes , &quot; i said , &quot; the men fertilized with her penis in the sperm that come out there .
that &apos;s what it is . &quot;
i looked into her trusted , loving eyes and said , &quot; oh , no .
when your high-print tube or your fire hydrates , you &apos;re trained a little bit , you &apos;re just packing the outside side with isolated packets .
so i went home .
raad mohiad in , medical radio designer : we needed pictures of good quality to make the cad model .
we didn &apos;t only bureaucratic problems , we also had professional vanches .
the only thing we &apos;re waiting for is that one of our patients had an event to say , &quot; i told you that it &apos;s not running . &quot;
i &apos;m really embarrassing how cheap the path of my idea was to my mammogram , that i won &apos;t tell you what it costs .
so i can start with a cartoonist .
and it changed the way they &apos;re going to look at their future employers .
that teaches us the story , they used to be used by the nazis to attack the jews .
people are scared . they help the rebels very .
but then they came up with the idea of making a book that showed a look at the political crisis of ivory coast in the last 13 years .
with a series of funny punches , patrick chappatte shares the power of the humble celebrity . his projects in lebanon , west africa and gaza , can be aware of a pencil in the right toys and bring people together and bring out countless people .
and then after that , i got an invitation to a science publisher , and i came in with the seriousness .
and that will happen , paradoxically , anything that you &apos;re hearing about climate warming , if we get co2 down to 10 parts per million , we &apos;re not going to have the plants that allow photosynthesis as well .
its impact is the distribution of these very thin input to the whole planet , and we had a very dense death of the dinosaurs , and we had a very dense death of the dinosaurs , the death of these beautiful monmons , , leconm , right here , and couaeceras , on here , and so much .
this is a 464-inch skull of a creature which probably has 2.2 to 2.4 feet tall , and it moves like a protein and probably a head like a lion .
and , if no impact , what ?
in this particular case , it all happened again , and again , the region of flutbasage .
but what &apos;s going on this thing , and to happen is that we &apos;re going to get the diver in trouble , so i &apos;m going to do a little gedanken experiment .
here &apos;s one way we can give care of care of medicine .
now , what we &apos;re studying now is a signal ?
these are the sweet ones where the global supply chain have the beginning to catch us our favorite brands .
this spare material cost $ 9 pounds , whereas real hepares cost $ 900 per pound .
so if we want to make the most important public goods on the international level , like here in a global supply chain -- we have to bring a different mechanism .
so , effectively , we use the power and the impact of the single , truly global institution in the global supply chain , which is the multinational companies , is doing the right thing to use their power for good things to get the most important public goods .
go the website , look at the bottom scores .
4,000 companies are a member of us .
if i should have a daughter , she &apos;s going to call me in plan b instead of mom because she knows that way that whatever happens to always happen to me still .
but i want you to know that this world is made of sugar .
now , spoken word poetry .
step two , the moment i would say , &quot; i &apos;m going . i &apos;m going to move on .
and i tell people that this is where big stories are starting -- these four steps of things that they feel passion and things for the other .
but i teach spoken word poetry because it is accessible .
it &apos;s clear that when i was a kid , i just went through life .
the only thing that &apos;s left is is a permanent shadow of positive light .
her pictures the ownership of resistance against war and racism .
the response to the street were violent accounts .
it was a very old ritual , which was considered the political struggle for the political fight , the south african face .
maybe because something that was learned from the weak response to the war in bosnia and the absence of pain in rwanda , had been much more dismissed than serbia attacks .
journalism had opened a channel for the natural relief player of people , and readers answered .
this experience called a lot of questions , among other people who are asking questions about skin color and equality , for who they are in our country and options are revealing options .
the attitude that they had that they had was absolutely remarkable .
most people are going to go to the safe feeling that their voice is counted , because they rely on the election system .
then you destroyed the candidate .
that &apos;s a very serious talk .
and the color corresponds to the majority religion .
now let &apos;s look at the changes in the world .
because death of a child is devoted to another child .
and what is the cause in qatar ?
i &apos;m going to use these carton where your notebooks were .
religion has very little to do with the number of children per woman .
our bus is brought us from san francisco to london .
you should see them from perspective of a mother &apos;s perspective , seeing the helpless as your child &apos;s disease .
so , as we had smallpox that smallpox had not work .
i feel a hand stereo bonds can replace me any time .
once the who says we &apos;ve arrived in phase four , it will not be like katrina . the world , as we know , will be stopped .
it &apos;s usually you get about here .
let &apos;s make it transparent , more government , not one single country or a company at a neutral country , with these things like this , which we can see , a different area , and another continent , and let &apos;s start with gphin . we start .
and they got pretty stupid , so they sent their reports earlier .
you can see my grandmother here .
and we had this sple , recycled paper paper .
we need to think of the resources that our products are out of .
that &apos;s about the size of germany .
it was clearly unacceptable , and then you have to act .
and after the company are seeking active .
and i &apos;ve since then i &apos;ve been on mystic path and trying to look at what albert einstein called &quot; the optical delusion of everyday consciousness . &quot;
they consciously they are false , but actually they &apos;re dangerous .
curious , i &apos;m curious , you know .
probably not .
paradoxically , because when i &apos;ve taken these goals , and i &apos;ve worked out of passion and purpose , looking for great amounts of results , instead of the results , all of itself , including sursurous , including .
he risked his life when he went to the people whose families he murdered .
sometimes , sometimes , if the war has done over and over the movie teams , the inspiring stories are the ones that have remained unslaved .
but here &apos;s the head of the dfs , mr. r. oliver sharman , mr. a.k , you &apos;re coordinated in the middle of their people .
we get information with the mail , the normal tube mail , or not , we can check it like any ordinary interrogation organization , forms -- whatever don &apos;t just make it so easy if we talk about talking about huge database of information -- publish it , and then we protect ourselves against the inevitable legal and political attacks .
wow , so , so changed your mind to change the world ?
j right , two , two verters of reuters , two little children had been violated .
j not we have seen it on what we published .
you know , hero -- hero of the people -- who gets this important light .
is it really going to you ? &quot;
i mean , there &apos;s a way -- there &apos;s a way that you can deploy for various things .
iceland is a northern country , so it can be like norway , in the system .
and then i &apos;m going to wear all of these numbers on top of these blocks that you see here .
this is the 1913 trio who plays one of my pieces in milwauwane museum for art .
as you can see , none of them seem to be sure about what gives us good reason to reduce them in our diet .
and the results of soyauce were unspeakable because the data allocated was very large , but it seems to be the sojasauce that actually grew up the potential carcinogens .
good .
and maybe the cells itself changes to make the cells resistant to it .
but soon , i developed a new mathematical model that can quantify the effect of this environmental pollutants in the lung of asthmatic patients .
but imagine a world where the doctor is in this place , rather than steroids , inhales and medicine , and says , &quot; why don &apos;t you go home and clean your air filter .
they &apos;re only learn to fear these differences when an adult affect them , behave like that , and maybe those natural curiosity censored or the expertise in the hope that they behave in a more gentle young children .
at the time , i had the opportunity to send a call to an inventor , which moved outside of the community of traditional medical theater , to bring their talents to the science and the art of the building .
poetry and neglected object into the realm of art .
and she looked at me , and she said , &quot; but aimee , that &apos;s not fair . &quot;
why did you say that ?
but they were actually impressed my words .
it &apos;s hard to explain .
it &apos;s not easy for young people to make a living .
so , by the hottest themes on microblogs , we can see what young people are most important .
that doesn &apos;t mean that they don &apos;t have a loan on the wedding , but it shows that these young couples are ready to marry , without a house , a car without a diamond ring , and without a wedding in order to show their beknowledge .
now , the idea of making new perspectives on our planet , and to be able to communicate this message , every day , leaving me every day .
we had to go back to the next year , back all the way back into the remote parts of alaska .
but some places are moving back and over again .
sousa &apos;s not a friend of language machines .
two farmers , thomas lee and tinie co by , the chickens have harvested , judged because of this technology .
if you think about what &apos;s going to be reagan , the teenagers who are singing together and the old songs , you should see what our kids are doing today .
today , everyone can contribute with access to a $ 1.50-computer sound and images from the culture of ourselves and use them to express something else .
so for example , for example , you can say that their works are freely available to the ones that have amateur , non-commercial , use , but not free for commercial use .
i work with motion with motion and animation and also a old girl and musician .
where i just talk about trust now since i wrote the book &quot; liespoquam , &quot; i don &apos;t want to meet a little bit more .
this can have a dramatic cost for us .
if you look at that , it becomes interesting .
it was really early .
these were the educational requirement .
we think warmth think about warmth and smile , honesty , mastery .
we tell the best stories , and leave the shoulders .
science has brought a lot more indicators for daylight .
so look carefully , and you &apos;re going to see the whole video of the license smile .
in this much , in this much loud world , it can be able to make it feel meaningful for us to become a little more explicit in terms of our moral agent .
last time , a lot of storytelling has been discussed in africa .
and it &apos;s important to know that igbo is an open-source language , where the words &quot; yuus &quot; and &quot; yuus &quot; means &quot; the &quot; &quot; the &quot; &quot; the &quot; &quot; the one &quot; &quot; bike &quot; or &quot; iron &quot; or &quot; iron . &quot;
if you do that again , i turn from the building and i &apos;ll bring myself .
but the book was instantly published when i could be accused of creating the building plan of a failed longing .
the view that says , &quot; don &apos;t do that .
it &apos;s never going to be easy .
no mind will leviches .
and if i travel home from these universities , thinking about development , thinking at the home fly , and i think , &quot; we &apos;re trying to bring condoms or vaccines to the mensche , &quot; you know , cokes &apos;s a little bit , you know , how do you do it , how do you do it , in all get to bring coke into all those remote land ?
so , when the sentence starts down , the person can identify the problem and go to the problem .
so if you have an accident , or mom is to give birth to a baby , you can forget it right now to break the clinic .
they put it all in the world cup campaign .
you start talking to you about why the interstate brosher fication is something you shouldn &apos;t do in the village , and you see it .
look at a country like india .
at the end of the next summer , we &apos;re going to address money for polio .
and that &apos;s what most sea researchers have seen as well .
most of the biomass is down in the food chain : the plant predators , the papadal fish , the urirs , the algae eat .
and if you go to the original site , you &apos;ve ever seen it ?
the amount of times , as many fish per square meter , is increasing dramatically 170 percent .
so if you get less fishing , you start more .
people lose their jobs , because fishing break together .
and i want to close with a thought , which is that no single organization will save the ocean alone .
it would only cost 16 billion to convert 20 percent of the world &apos;s global ocean in marine areas that can even be able to deliver the fragmented new species .
the truth is that the titanic -- although you break all childish records -- not just the most exciting story of the sea .
it &apos;s got the tentacles that frops around .
this one , sort of thing that looks incredibly consistent .
and here you see a cloud of densistic hydrogens in the sea , which is emerging from a volcanic age of the sea floor .
dg : you can see -- here &apos;s a crab that lives down there .
what you &apos;re looking at here on the back of the crab is food , a very strange bacteria that lives on the back of all these animals .
you &apos;ll see , you &apos;ll see how their inner habitat is between many different animals .
the water system provides a company , so it needs to move the whole environment .
david gallo : living in the deep ocean
it &apos;s really destructive .
but you &apos;ve actually got four separate planes here , and i &apos;m excited about who can tell you the color levels , and especially how you &apos;re going to solve the patient problem when they &apos;re putting together , and once the student .
i like this question . it &apos;s about a water tank .
i have kids that have children who are trying to join in conversation .
we need more patient problem : thank you . thank you .
now , radical innovation is actually the most exciting thing , but also comes from places where a great need is , an unfulfilling bypass demand and not enough resources to work -- usually expensive solutions that expensive solutions that are addicted to professionals , except what schools and hospitals are related .
millions of people live here on the miles of miles .
they were raised tall , illiterate citizens , who never did homework .
if you get to school , things will be picked up , you know , test , developers , systems , teams .
and so , you learn to do it for these people , and it &apos;s not going to be in the back , learn already before , and the food of the brain is eaten .
and i learned it from this guy who is an amazing person .
and that &apos;s what we need so much again in a global scale .
and they all have the same kind of characteristics , highly collaborative , very personalized , often technology , learning that starts with questions and problems and projects , not with knowledge and curriculum .
charles leadbeater : education innovation in slums
and i got scared .
and then he made in his pocket and he pulled this out .
that &apos;s really frustrating , and i felt like it outside , as i wouldn &apos;t be gay enough .
this is , of course , the gay agenda , of course , is known as the u.s. constitution .
it &apos;s about what the state of michigan is defined for me from the adoption process .
they recognize them as a developmental level in life with their own meaning -- and so different from the middle of the city is more different from childhood .
i didn &apos;t want for aging .
when i went , i grew up .
you can work on changing the relationship to your past .
and if we can do that , then that won &apos;t just be for us .
all grasses , so all of these grain are plants and most trees in the wind of the wind .
and here &apos;s a long time that has been a long warning that has no nectar that gets to get the piration in , because the mimic , unlike the fly is expected , has no nectar .
this is a helicoding cerceros also known as &quot; dead horse . &quot;
and they fly into it and put out .
and that could serve as a basis of a suncreon , because the solar creves of sun accelerates .
people were crying . i &apos;ve never seen my mom at the end of the hypertext .
the vessels from england in sea , you go to africa , over the atlantic -- therefore the name is the middle passage -- and country in america where the slave is sold .
it was no abstract stuff in a broshop or a movie .
we change as human beings through games because we are engaged , we play , and we &apos;re learning , and we &apos;re learning . thank you .
again , the diversity .
and then you see people who are going to celebrate the last night and celebrate the last night that &apos;s happening right here .
i took the first 10,000 sheep that i collected , and i put them on a website called iheepa marketing .com , where you can buy one was 20 sheep .
it &apos;s about your own interpretation and doing something else . &quot;
this is a collaboration with my friend , daniel massey .
we made a music video for one of my favorite , radio head .
collaborator , it allows a last recording of his last recording to be a living , champion of thinking .
and it &apos;s called &quot; the &quot; the &quot; is downtown . &quot;
i worked in the lab in mexico for months in mexico , a year in egypt .
so i did a series of work with identical words on french and english .
sometimes i look out of the inside , like ego, city city and the inner circles .
&quot; fatty city . &quot;
there are mammals is actually in charge of production .
this was for a state of rescue people and fire .
you can also be both function as a form of art in public spaces .
you have a lot of scenarios .
we are a world of world &apos;s ancient organization . it &apos;s a global phenomenon .
you get from many sites that everybody can achieve anything .
it &apos;s going to be showing that feeling , from magazines and other media , that if you have power , a few wise ideas in the technology , a garage , you could turn up a big thing .
your success . but even your failures .
if we think about failure in life , one of the reasons why we feel fear of failure , not just the loss of income or status .
it would be mad , hamlet , a loser .
this is an insight that i &apos;ve done about success .
that was fascinating . how you relate this idea of somebody -- that it &apos;s bad to think of somebody as a loser , with the notion that comes from a lot of people , that you &apos;re being the control of your life .
how could that be so lightning done so fast ?
if i said that i go back 15 hours , and we &apos;re coming back to the dock after a long day , and it &apos;s night , and we come back , and there was 14 hours and 58 minutes , and i could beat the boat and i could be able to the coach , the coach : &quot; that &apos;s great .
i had laid up to all sorts of times , in english , then in german , followed by spanish , and then french .
after a few days , three days , you &apos;re going to be able to bridge a series of physical ways .
so that was about eight o &apos;clock in the evening .
we had antihials on board , and if i was bitten , i would just be able to go .
and what do i do now ?
but i am ready .
in the future , you can control your entire vitaliators , all your vital signs , your heart muscle , your blood pressure , your oxygen , your temperature , etc .
how does that work ? well , there &apos;s a smart band-aid or sensors that can carry inside a shoe or a wrist .
and this title story of wired magazine has actually captured a lot of it . it was a lot about the nike shoe , and how quickly he was leading to the training of training sphysiology and energy consumption .
who would have ever thought that you could get your own eeg , by the way , by a very nice way .
it &apos;s like a steature sleep competition .
and this article in the economist opened it nicely together over the opportunities in healthcare in the developing world , &quot; cell phones have changed the lives faster than any of the common technology . &quot;
and finally , another example : sudden cardiac death .
so if you really want to solve the problem of epidemics and so on all of it , let &apos;s start with it , and since then i had the idea , i had to shake hundreds of hundreds of hands .
and arthur looked at the old book , and he said , well , that was wrong .
it could be that if we fix four or five genes , we can live 200 years .
so , you see , it &apos;s almost like a pawlener -- we &apos;ve lost the first hundred years of psychology with real trivial theories , which is that if people respond to a situation ? &quot; what i &apos;m saying is we &apos;ve created different levels of course , or we &apos;ve created a big chaotic system with thousands of people , we &apos;ll get back to the nuclear problem of psychology .
you have to learn to learn in the restaurants .
so this is great for vegetables in oil , which we &apos;re doing here .
we used to use red , heat sprawl .
here &apos;s an computation that shows how the intensity of a grilled , or another beam of heat waste , acts depending on the distance .
this is what happens to the water in the corn .
he gets a stable test . and you don &apos;t understand that .
and so you can see him through a lithotomy .
we &apos;ve been in the era of the great trials , but the price was big , because they were saved life , but not forced the quality of life , because healthy people don &apos;t need surgery , and they don &apos;t have healthy people just have a very serious from this .
and so -- now i &apos;m coming to the robot -- the da vinci robot shares the wrist on the other side of the deployment .
and in fact , if you know , or somebody you know , in the last few years , his prostate is probably , it &apos;s very likely to do that with one of these systems .
but for the patient , it &apos;s transparent . that &apos;s all you &apos;ll ever see .
because they get their continency , lose hydrators and sexual function . for the patient , all of these are all very important .
miranda and i are here today , because we want to tell us how our accidents have led to discovery .
even though they &apos;re part of the plastics that are not dependent on the plastic floor chain .
we came up holes into our agagar and polling a few samples and grinding mushrooms .
einstein once said , &quot; problems can never solve with the same way they were born with . &quot;
in some other , it &apos;s hot .
and charles checked it right .
you try things out .
this is the former design of the house .
and you might see why my style is pretty deep , with such a haircut .
ed : no , bud , &quot; d &quot; is right to the buddha &apos;s audience : party . all love .
other things could have happened . the japanese would be able to discover the monterey .
it was always part of their point in the world , and that &apos;s really big .
and it &apos;s also important to what we do is important because that &apos;s the ideas we need .
on four different continents , there was more similar everywhere .
what it takes to make an elite and helhelpless people are the absence of the legal state .
bl : so , daphne , we &apos;ve got a gasoline and oil fertilizers , and if we &apos;re going to reach a little bit .
now , the relevant is that &apos;s important is that people don &apos;t make a major creation , but a paper are like styrofoam cups .
we don &apos;t buy people from slavery .
children who were liberated in the fishing industry in ghana will be united parents again with their parents , and then they brought back to their parents to build their economic wealth , so that they &apos;re complacated , absolutely grown .
but it &apos;s recently , very recently , thanks to technical progress , now is the quantum levitation and the quantum locking movement .
first of all , many strands of magnetic field are caught inside , but the superconductor is not if they &apos;re moving , because their motions are using energy , and the superconductor is .
and of course , this continued of magnet can also expand to form any arbitrary line .
and it was inspired by this quote by douglas adams , the situation is from &quot; by aneleders through the galaxy . &quot;
but anyway , i got my stomach full iron and brought him back with the train back to london , where i was confronted with the problem : okay , how do i make out of that rock building for a toaster ?
and the last material i &apos;m going to talk about today is plastic , and of course my toaster had to get a syringe .
this is he &apos;s toy .
when i was a student at mit , we shared one single computer who took a whole building .
so we &apos;ve been updated , so i can show it until the last year of 2007 .
communication technologies : there are 50 different ways of measuring this , the number of bits that are moving , the size of the internet .
and we &apos;re going to start to influence our health and our intelligence on them , and we &apos;ll move forward to that technology .
it happened in a neighborhood called the wellawatta , a first-class neighborhood in colombo .
for hours later , the ocean , the ocean was covered with wooden parts -- it came from the slums of slums .
voice 1 : it comes back . a new wave .
now , i think the first is that we need to think about the blogosphere , that we have to understand , and we need our linear equation of value , or , that you have to pay attention to get something good , in fact , in fact , there , without great products from great money .
it &apos;s very easy to think that networks are very good , that the link is a place of a place to another , that a dense group is a very good thing .
before we should have great fear that we fall down in the circle , until eventually we die .
he said to me , &quot; we already redesign something in the country .
watch the finger . the thumb . the thumb comes up . wrist .
and fred comes about the state of ocean oil , because they weren &apos;t good and nothing was done against .
that &apos;s the fishing industry .
and the approach , the sound of sound is that they &apos;re opposed to light to move through water .
for example , it found fish that was sold as tuna , very valuable fish , which was actually tilapia , so much less valuable .
what &apos;s exciting is that is that the oceanic census has over the coastal world organisms in temperes more diversity .
so , you know that animals can live without oxygen , or at least some of them , and that they can adapt to even the toughest conditions themselves .
this bacteria is part of masettling that lie in front of the coast of chile .
so we need to recognize these hot spots and make our best to protect them .
it fits into the environment . it &apos;s the environment .
what have i heard in the last four days ?
i find this very interesting and very proactive , because what you &apos;ve heard over the last few days is the sense of walking in different directions : directions that are specific and unique to the problems .
i &apos;m fascinated by a concept that became living in the early 19th century -- in fact , in the second decade of the 19th century -- through a 27 year-old poet called wig aids .
it strikes me when everyone in the world had been quoted : pogo was quoted ; shakespeare was moving , backwards and sideways .
there &apos;s no evolutionary advantage , to store chil-to-quality , or see the color of a rose , if it doesn &apos;t affect the way you move in life .
there are other trains , of course , but with enormous computers , we are approaching the optimal solution .
the control of the movement is sort of like by the way that the sensory feedback is extremely smooth .
but we have concepts in terms of probabilities .
and that means that we are we really basaananian controversi-machines .
and hopefully the barrier is happening is to be present .
and based on this presentation , we convinced ourselves in this field that the brain is able to make sure that the sensory cues pulls out .
and the second player will tell you that he should remember that experience .
and it turns out that we are so stereotypical that our brains are going to be devoted to the neural system to decode this stereotypical .
if i have to decide between those two , i would choose that right because it &apos;s less variable .
daniel wolpert : the true reason for brains
we have the topographic measurements of mars on the air . we know the altitude differences .
why is water important ? water is important because you need it to be alive .
because it &apos;s almost the whole , 99.9 percent of the disease that is produced by living animals , not little green males , with microscopic life under the surface or on the surface .
how can you see the mystery of mars on mars ?
we &apos;re going to find where these gas is coming from , because we can measure the grafts of where they come from , and we can get the next mission in the right area .
because we have we tested models , multiple times eight years in a half of a dozen wind centers in the nasa langley research center .
so , this is the early ages .
so you go to the container store and gibts a large amount of money , and then you start to start this crazy little thing that never -- that &apos;s just nuts .
there &apos;s a whole programming language and robotics tools , so if you want to teach someone that &apos;s programmed , kid , child , adults , whatever it is .
so every one of the table explaining what we should do .
why should you try to cool a whole business ?
it &apos;s hard to change the habits of the consumer , because the consumer doesn &apos;t know what makes the stuff . do you know ?
and yet know , &quot; what you didn &apos;t see , you can &apos;t paint .
and that , with millions of lives saved , at least one million lives per year . a million .
it &apos;s really crime that we don &apos;t invest in this country anymore in the field of energy .
here &apos;s our call to action -- my call to action : the transition to the environmental mind has to be a big deal .
and recently we asked ourselves whether it would be possible to use that insight to actually find ways that make the world better better , to make things better , actually to get things in order not only to understand .
and there are different kinds of relationships between people .
with the measured red line , we show the adoption to the random people and the left line that &apos;s shifted to the left line , we show the adoption to the central people in the network .
and we did we find passizing by looking at whether they were looking for the health care of the university or not .
here we are at the 19th .
or , frankly , for advertising for all kinds of products .
let &apos;s send us its temperature . &quot;
the building was building was the accumulation of the cenzolan economy , and the death of the united construction of the 1990s .
even though it seems to be a complete chaotic place , if you see it from the top , there is a whole network of water and channels that channels that connect every single house .
in all the places that i &apos;ve been talking about today , i found that it &apos;s not as much as usual , and it turns out that people can be able to adapt to each other .
when i asked the people asked their homes out of the earth , they were just saying that they &apos;re poor wheat and apple farmers who had no money to buy materials , and they dug up this most suspicious form .
but that &apos;s not happening .
it liberating the nurses and the aid workers to do the mundane work of how easy things to empower things around to spend more time with their patients .
but with baxter , it doesn &apos;t hurt .
now , the robot for you .
the more people get older from the retirement age and older , the less people are there to take care of them .
a steature of traditional equipment could be touched by 500 points in a day .
and then finally produce mobile apps , like virtual applications with narrative .
we owe it to our children , our grandchildren and the generations that we will never make it , to keep it , and leave it down .
the new york times , the new york times , covered between 200 and 300 people were killed during the genocide of the genocide .
there must be a role -- there must be political noise and cost in political level as a response to massive crime against the humanity .
this movement is solved from the bush administration , from the united states , from the united states of massive disserration -- military , financially , diplomatic , diplomatic , a whole series of obliincide to darfur that no other country has given .
the second is that we have a problem in the american history of american history , with our credibility , a problem of legitimacy at international institutions .
it started as the causes of wars for the 1970s for independence and decolonization .
or do you feed the civilians to know that criminals are in the camps and literally put their knives for the coming ?
i &apos;m going to finish , but i &apos;d like to finish with what i call the four lessons from sergios &apos;s life , how to stop the evil of you to win the upper hand . so i would have the question .
on the microlevel , people were visible .
we can &apos;t leave us on the institutions that they &apos;re talking to the excuses without the space for us to deal with it , to deal with this combination of humility and a cool sense for responsibility to the rest of the world .
are we going to be able to feed a population that &apos;s going to have nine trillion dollars ?
the fact that we know today is that we lose 10 seconds a child to hunger .
this message , these words can say that it &apos;s not an old-fashioned species ; it &apos;s a brilliant way to save the life of a child .
a lot of the world can &apos;t go to school because they need to recognize and find a meal .
they start training school programs for their children , all through people in the village .
and we see people change their lives .
what i want to do is to offer you a challenge .
so if a pathologists would look at these plastic bottle .
and that &apos;s it .
in health care today for the treatment of diseases in the last two years .
i was very lucky that i met danny hillis a few years ago .
a neuron underneath the microscope is very elegant , smaller things that are there and stand out there , but if you put it into a complex system , you see that it &apos;s a brain , and that is going to be a complex system in the body as a complex system .
so the idea is that , chemotherapy this complex system just bothers , as well as the bone , then it carried up and down it down , chemotherapy could work that way .
that &apos;s all .
but if you have pech and you get sick , then you go to your doctor who gets some blood , and we will know how to treat their disease .
you know , when andy grove by intel was dancing back at intel -- and andy was one of my mentors , the way , the way .
avian song , for example , is a sound that is quieting to most people .
or , but we start down here , decide what &apos;s the effect we want , and then we design the soundscape for the effect .
second , the music needs to fit to the situation .
they &apos;re going to have massive counterwind .
i &apos;m not going to answer this now . but i &apos;m going to answer some of the most popular questions .
thank you very much . thank you very much .
and astronauts as well aquante are the need of air , food tools , water , heat , all those things you need to survive in space or water .
you &apos;ve got to realize that you have a problem .
ten years ago , i stood on the ice in the ice .
but there are good news .
with scientists around the world , i &apos;ve investigated the 99 percent of the ocean in which fishing , exploding degradation , drilling , garbage waste and whatnot , to find moments spots and ways to find them a safe future .
some say 10 percent , some 30 .
you might have heard about evidence that bumblebees cannot fly .
a great model for fly .
so it &apos;s not just pure numbers here , but it &apos;s also about the challenge for the fly , if you have to calculate all the tiny neurons .
this is work from eve mardes and her many colleagues that explores this fascinating system , showing how a small neuron group can make so many things because of neuromodulation that can take place at any time .
it &apos;s not a stable cell .
so what we &apos;re doing is comparing structures in our perceptual bubble , and we make a decision .
the really big step was the neocortex .
they &apos;re highly active , highly noble able , and so they &apos;re likely to be able to build the capacity and learn that are unimaginable to us .
it &apos;s the same way in a forest . every pine tree is different .
and we have mathematics to describe this process .
and when we got hooked closer , it &apos;s like a true universe .
but during this whole time , when i was out there , this strange cajak journeys , too , to extraordinary , beautiful parts of this planet , i was always looking at the project orion , and how my father and his friends would build this giant spaceship .
the air force was the air force , which meant it was all secret .
if you saw the 1959 , it would feel like this in the driving room . this is an accelerated fund .
and one of the bad things that could happen to nasa is an asteroid , a trillion months , and everybody says , &quot; what are we going to do ? &quot;
so i said , &quot; you know , i don &apos;t really want to write about my research .
i can animate the lines .
and we are evolutionary evolved to do it .
you know the expression , &quot; listen you so far . &quot;
but if it comes to us , we &apos;re so a feeling that we are in the driver , we have such a sense that we &apos;re in control , and we make decisions that it &apos;s very hard to accept the idea that we actually have an illusion of a decision for a decision to the real decision .
and then they said to half the doctors , &quot; and yesterday , they took the case of the patient , and they realized they forgot to test a drug .
now , a weekend in paris , a weekend of rome , these are different things . they have different food , culture , art .
thank god , thank you not wanted the domized opportunity .
and the question was , are going to help the ugly terror and the ugly tom &apos;s tom brothers ?
did you know that we had 1.4 million radio masts on earth ?
in hospitals , they &apos;re a security risk .
we have 1.4 million million , more efficient , and then you get 14 billion .
and down here is a little hole .
you &apos;re going to ask some critical questions . you &apos;re going to say , &quot; okay , does the lights have got to be at all of it ? &quot;
so if i don &apos;t want this , this is the receiver of data , i can just make the lights off .
it was about using bone as a tool -- saying , the monkeys running around and eat , and they &apos;re suddenly realizing that they can create things if they use a tool .
that &apos;s what we work ; it works every organism .
what kind of doing they do that .
for me , this might be -- every calf of all the calf , which comes over -- because i come from a very cold area .
they &apos;ve found the underlying flavors of trauma , but you can &apos;t forget that we need a receptor in our genome on the tongue , you need it to be able to taste it .
so again , this is a case that i think of my wall in the wall of this car , mot-pharmaceutical kology : you know , there are better for it &apos;s better for the plant , so it .
nature has created a few rules .
when he was a little world , he put his clay on her leg -- yes , it &apos;s not sweet ?
i ask the owner , &quot; well , how does the dog embrace you ? &quot;
so , on this point , the dog knows what we want to .
and that &apos;s always what i &apos;m talking about is in training .
and it was considered himself through the quiet persistence of suffering .
i mean , who with a healthy mind would think that the dog would get closer if you &apos;re so flagging ?
so we go into a relationship in it , and it &apos;s ok for a year .
it &apos;s such a powerful training technique .
wk : yeah .
how much power ?
thank you very much for coming .
and there are some things that you don &apos;t need to hear in songs .
often , oftentimes , when i meet people and you learn about me , a certain kind of unwardness emerges .
the six is a tiny and very sad black hole .
if some of you are shouting , you know that $ a square number , that &apos;s why you have pizza , eight times eight , 64 fields .
it &apos;s a line from a poem of john keats .
the desert formed a mile or two a year .
and homo erectus hired the same tool over 30 generations .
you can teach them in the lab , practice a little trading , and there &apos;s also a recreation of other animals , but the exchange of a different will never happen .
it &apos;s wealth , it &apos;s wealth ; it &apos;s joyful to save time .
that &apos;s what we &apos;ve done as a species .
but there is no evidence for that .
they were built all of the firestone of the region .
the tasmanian en were closed in isolation .
and in the future , if we go on , of course , we &apos;re going to see horrible things .
40 million cups i couldn &apos;t flip on a canvas , but i &apos;ve got 410,000 , so , 410,000 cups .
but the same day , 1,100 americans died in smoking .
i &apos;m not saying that the biggest problems are .
how do we explore the shatora of viruses around us and help us ?
we brought our chip to hewlett-packard , and we use her radying microscope to one of these dots , and you see this : you can see the dna strands of flat on the glass .
and so we get a unique signaturation , finger absorbing all of all viruses .
you don &apos;t know what &apos;s going through the door .
all we could get from the drbank , the national depot for dna sequences .
the sixth day broke the towel .
the first gene we &apos;ve done in association studies for prostate cancer is called rnasel .
maybe . there might be nothing to do with cancer .
so in the spirit of a full spectrum , i &apos;d like to tell you how we found this new technology with a couple of little heterogies that we can learn about innovation and valuable ideas .
the process was invented in 1886 , of a few 22 year-old -- hall in the u.s. and heroushed in france .
electricity generates magnesium , and two electrons become magnesium to magnesium , goes through the electrolyte , takes two anmonic electrons , and it connects to balance .
after some time we &apos;ve arrived at the 20 watt-hour cell .
our battery can keep the very high temperature increase from electricity .
so rovs are not new .
except we could do it all .
because they discovered these things , they coined a lot better , and they lived their own failures , learn based on failure , it was very important .
after reproduction we click on the egg .
i would see it with tribes , cities and civilizations .
there &apos;s a little ad down here for the planetary atmosphere , air pressure and temperature .
and yet , there are the genetic trends and a lot of interesting things that you can find for example with the hubble telescope , in realistic times and sizes .
we &apos;re going to come back in a couple of minutes . i hope that if you learn to change this a little bit that this is going to have an important impact on your life .
what are these nonverbals of power and dominance ?
i &apos;ve noticed a couple of things .
there are two differences in terms of the two important hormones of testosterone , the dominant hormone , and cortisol , the stress hormone .
from a low-power condition , the willingness is only 60 percent . a significant difference .
people hate this . marianne lasteros calls this in social gas . &quot;
it was very difficult for me , and i have to say that if one of his identity , the core of his self , is driven , and that was kind of me being intelligent , if one is taken out -- nothing is going to feel powerless .
so i want to tell you , don &apos;t get it until you can .
biberdams , yes . holic m , no .
it &apos;s the majority .
and no other species does something like that .
a virus is a nucbic acid waste with attitude .
basically , it would have been able to carry on , on the edge of the outside of the outside .
and that &apos;s not our fault , as little as when our viruses destroy people who have no immunity .
a quick story about an ant serves , dan dennett , in a brilliant firepiece of ideas , which is a strong argument for the existence of memes of memes : concepts that are literally alive .
in those early years , i spent a lot of time crying silent in the morning , crying .
and i &apos;d like to play you a tiny clip of it to give you a positive argument that south media music has nothing to have a tiny tiny .
so t is a f .
now we &apos;re going to put that into musical context .
nicholas : my name is nicholas mccarthy .
where there is no trust , the music is just tainted .
i brought a bakery with 20 unrailed people .
in the end of the rest , it &apos;s the third largest economy in the world , and yet most of these people are not seen .
you can &apos;t talk today about poverty today without talking about bed nets , and again , i &apos;ve got a pediatrician of harvard that we &apos;ve laid out the world at the way , the world &apos;s rock of the rock -- for five dollars , you can save a life .
the women .
now , the theme of hard interaction reminds me about one of my favorite stories from the middle east , about a man who drew his three clubs 17 camels .
it &apos;s scientifically proving that thanks to the communication revolution , all the peoples around this planet , all 15,000 peoples associated with each other .
this system i call the third side .
we &apos;re here to see whether we find a way to stop the suffering and blood vessels in cheety . &quot;
let &apos;s try to get the root of this .
now , it &apos;s not enough to tell a story that is compelling -- because people need to experience this story .
then we got to northern northern jordan , to jerusalem , where everything turns out to be abraham , and finally to the place where it &apos;s buried in hebron .
and they commissioned a residents who said , &quot; this run connects us to the world . &quot;
what would the ice tree look like ?
if we are able to assign our peace nets of the third party , we can even even hold the lions of the war .
no money is always a good start .
ok . let &apos;s see if the shower works in the house .
we come on the morning with tools and mountains of several gear at the first day we &apos;re doing a local team that start with work .
and we &apos;re getting a lot more .
as our subscrioriginal friend said , &quot; your white one should be out more often . &quot;
so how do we reduce the smoke ? two problems , and design should be more than one thing .
thank you for having taken the time .
to remind you , it &apos;s writing l-e-b .
our challenge is to discover the compassion for others we want for ourselves .
and it started with three people .
these are my traditional students who cook traditional sauce , cooking plastic , and we went down into the cafeteria , and we built our teachers .
very academic , i think .
but the most important thing is to learn my children and give them .
omar knows now that carets come out of the ground , not from the mediterranean of superstock , or from a thin safe window , or a piece of silver window .
we take exhibitions . i went to the spring .
let &apos;s kick out of the school .
we build our way into a new economy .
and then we put a cable , a wire , into the right heart of heart , generated the electroogram , the signal relaxation from the heart .
we put a copper castle that &apos;s stabilizes the ark and make heart attacks .
we send him the signal , which says that you have a heart attack , we send the signal to the hospital , we &apos;ll analyze it there . your doctor is going to be with you and you &apos;re going to care of this heart attack . &quot;
christina grasely , first time , i thought , &quot; this looks like a gun and it &apos;s pretty strange . &quot;
we formed the company at new ropace , and we were doing in terms of a remediative neurostimulation in work , and this is how the device looked into the skull bones .
if you think about the treatment of psychotic disorders -- here i want to add the ted group -- like to about random neurogies , ocd , who are currently treated with severe success drug that are suffering five million americans .
there &apos;s the easier explanation , and i said , oh , well , i did it .
some of the united states .
you have so many information . that &apos;s great .
i &apos;m thrilled by each , you can think while you &apos;re going to step , but why are we supposed to give up old habits ?
does anybody remember those things ?
imagine that knowledge for each one on the world is free and using computer technology to use content , to improve content , to play with it in a few years rather than .
more organizations we work with work -- uc , oc , uc , is known .
yes , books that may be sold 100 or 1,000 or 1,000 spending in the year .
the same kind of markets , like math ml , for chemistry .
i want to close with a few last points .
and in a certain point , i &apos;m going to actually show out what the $ 100 laptop might look like .
the parents love this , because when they open the laptops , they form the bright light source in the house .
and that &apos;s why we &apos;re going to not get away unless we don &apos;t have five to 10 million units for the first run .
and this year is even worse .
this is the machine we showed in port-au-prince .
and yet we count .
so we want to make it quite a white volvo .
i want to tell you all that you are all cyborgs , but not the kind of cyborg , which you think now .
whether you like it or you start to step up online , interact with people with your second self if you &apos;re not involved .
but what i realized when i was going to college was that a technology is not simply accepted because it works .
and then , if you do that once , then you can see how you can imagine yourself in a legal way , rather than just looking at everything else , and once it &apos;s baseball , i have to it -- and i need to do i have to do that , and i have to do that , and i have to do that , and i have to do that .
hiv is not like other diseases ; hiv is stigmatized .
it &apos;s the consulting for infants , conserving sex .
if i tell her , it &apos;s supposed to take their pills everyday , but at home no one &apos;s white , it doesn &apos;t work .
our organization , mothers for mothers , women with hiv as a nurse .
in africa , it &apos;s very hard to get to the men .
i was afraid to tell you . &quot;
our organization is helping mothers on this path .
who &apos;s hiv is negative , you know , you need to know what it is .
this is a very important process . it &apos;s partly dependent on the environment of the animal , or human beings , where they &apos;re being eaten synapses , and they &apos;re not used synapses that will not be used in a certain environment .
sometimes we &apos;re laughing at teenagers .
it reflects activation in the brain that offer an excellent opportunity for education and social development . thank you very much .
i want to tell you about four robotic projects , and how they &apos;ve inspired me to be a better person .
for example , if he could go to a dinsparty at the white house ?
it &apos;s being used in more than 2,000 hospitals around the world , and allows a surgeon in its own coordinating system , but a lot of partential tasks in a surgery are routinely more comfortable , in the same way , all these tasks , and in immediate control of these programs that the surgeon , in immediate control of the surgeons with the time .
today , charles asian can build a robot like the industrial robot , my father and i tried to build .
he had been released out of his 27 years of captivity and was in a period of relocating his sudden status as a global symbol .
these were the people in the wild park who were responsible for their well-being .
the croc is shake up .
and it &apos;s an amazing example of something that i &apos;ve seen in all africa .
and i saw the young elvis as she tried to climb the hills .
but that magic will remain with us , and the important thing is that we &apos;re going to carry aside what it was .
none of the things i &apos;m going to meet in my life is going to live over this time , so that was the perfect time for our plan and our imagination .
we &apos;ll we all realizing what we want to know , at least me .
this is a picture of my family . this is netra -- my wife .
it allows us to build ourselves and design what comes in the future .
it &apos;s got the shock , injury and weight of the kidneys .
sometimes i walk sometimes go out and volunteer out to shade out there , and then i can see at night and i can see where the meat that i eat .
i had to put this in a context .
it &apos;s in the middle of the pacific , right around the line .
as you can see , the fish are very dense , and there &apos;s a nest range that they interact with eggs and sperm to reproduction , very normal processes in the ocean , because of the activities of the people in certain places .
they &apos;re also a country that is exposed to a living threat .
and i had time . i was eating the minister for fishing from kiribati .
it &apos;s got plenty of steps of them in order to bring the project under the roofs .
pipa-begs has the license and pays for the state for it .
which you don &apos;t really do .
so , when we look at the technology of knowledge workers , i slowly think that this idea of general lists is not so special , especially when we start to do things like siri to watson and using technologies that can understand what we say and answers us .
and even though none of these things have done a lot of things .
now , i don &apos;t think that mccain had a lot of luck , and it randomly ended up in one of the villages that technology improved lives .
well , you don &apos;t have to worry about reading everybody , and i won &apos;t read them either .
in the realm of arcacadia , they showed things like this , from the edo epoks -- a hundred ways , &quot; happiness &quot; in different forms .
they divided up on a different lines and added their own version .
and other people go down and they merge .
and this was just two weeks ago .
when we learn from tribal practices , some of us will subscrit us , but there are other practices that we are , if we hear them , maybe admire and benms , and ask whether we want to have these practices agents .
older people typically have the leadership functions in traditional societies , and they are the ones who are the best skills in politics , medicine , medicine , religion , freedom and dancers .
conversely , in fact , changes that we have more older than younger people than younger people have ever before in the past .
they usually love their grandchildren , and they want to spend time with them .
but there are many things to admire in traditional societies , and maybe to learn from them .
now , this is a clear prototypes prototypes , and the thought behind it was positive from creating the world at the world , which could be connected to things that are used to the other people who use religion to the wrong , just to the bad people with a bad message .
for a while , the consultant .
but it &apos;s not about religion and the disonizing .
i said , &quot; look at the eyes , it &apos;s your eyes . &quot;
and the 99 &quot; flew out of superheroes about what happened in the world .
dana : but i can &apos;t help you .
i am in clinical psychologist was a psychologist , and in the state of new york .
last summer , when we were in our house in new york , he was playing in the garden in his playhouse , and i was working in my office . he came in , &quot; baba , i want you to come , i want my toy . &quot;
and the good news is that maybe there is such simple solution by making our eyes more powerful .
and the youngest financial financial crisis -- how much of this graph does it make these numbers ?
as you can see , there &apos;s a special , regular pattern in this data , two peaks each year .
what &apos;s going to the year in the year , once in the star , and then two weeks before christmas , has a big peak every monday and bust during the sommer ?
and i knew how to make it , but it wasn &apos;t that i was incredibly , really great at it . it was more like that i was sensitive to concepts like rate and space and moved and typography .
and that whole thing -- it &apos;s two languages that work at the same time .
so when we do the same thing , we see a completely different picture .
it &apos;s a possibility of making a tremendous amount of information and knowledge on small space together .
it &apos;s really -- you can probably have conflicting cue points , except if you can see them .
and then it comes up with something is called a volky heart note .
it smells like cut grass . now this is the skeleton of the molecule .
this is about , in work hours , 200,000 dollars in the course , if you take a low salary , and you don &apos;t take any money .
so i &apos;ve gone up and i started to convince this game to try to convince myself that a minimum of plaubility about the whole crazy story is .
i could i could perform the electron dance , but instead i &apos;ve done a video that &apos;s much more interesting . here you see how it works .
so , they asked me to make new grief , and that &apos;s why we started measuring .
basically , we have public leaders and officials that are out of control , and they write laws that are unintelliyed , and those laws are dependent on 40,000 pages with individual suits , and that complexity has an incredibly negative impact on our lives .
and the business came very well .
margaret thatcher was my mother .
a little break !
and then , from me was expected to determine whether that was the voice of god or the devil .
by the way , years later , my social worker told that i should never get there .
thank you very much . it was an honor for me .
it &apos;s extremely competitive , more , intensive labor , and it &apos;s going to require a lot more more people to start to put our past together .
so let &apos;s go to turkana sea that is one of the sea basin , in high north of our country , kenya .
so his bones were being buried quickly buried and very beautiful .
i think it &apos;s our collective intelligence .
well , to finish with a very positive bias , i think that this is probably evolutionary is probably a pretty good thing .
in this folder , 17,000 photos -- over 20 gigabes of data , and it &apos;s getting more .
as you can see , i actually created a museum sign with a brief history of the dodo .
and i thought that it took it took it so long to appreciate him , because i could compare him to this one , and i can tell you -- it &apos;s really , it &apos;s exactly , it &apos;s exactly the same shape , like this one .
&quot; john &apos;s grill , &quot; which actually is a moment in the headline of falcones , which is still a well-trained state in san francisco , chefs , who played in a wilder , who played a wilmer cook in film , and they gave them an original victory of his original .
and when i put my bronze in my bronze with a sculpt mass , it was the two centimeter smaller .
i broke out six ribs on the left .
the wheel of bone 1 looked like if you could drop a peanut , you &apos;d be caught and crushed it into a thousand little bits .
a arm was in disgust , who was on a turn .
but you &apos;re going to go home and see how life changed life . &quot;
and started asking , &quot; why not i not ? &quot;
and finally , a guy came out . he said , &quot; hi , i &apos;m andrew , and i &apos;ll take you fly . &quot;
and then i made big progress until i was running around in the house , waiting for the walls of the walls , like there , and mom said that they were always going to follow me to wipe away .
the only thing is that we find the flame of human life by living our lives as the ultimate creative expression , who we really are , because we &apos;re all connected to each other , through millions straw , and it &apos;s time to connect and capture it .
the design , nature , arh , is the three things that explain my work .
when i filled water , i realized i &apos;d pulled a skin over the water itself .
how that &apos;s going through me and how it comes back to me , that &apos;s what i want to understand .
it shows how to make a holistic shape , like the car industry , and then you break out what you need .
these are being sold as a work .
i have a big idea with phillips auptions .
they were laughing everywhere on the world when i showed this .
i &apos;m trying to build the furniture .
my people go lunch . the doors are open . they come back in , because normal is rails and they &apos;re going to move it into the inside .
so long-term is the story of design , so you have a design passion , so or leave it .
i did i did it because i wanted to see this phenomenon of oxytocin called bioluminescence called bioluminescence .
but you don &apos;t have to always get so deep into the ocean to see such a light show .
it also has a little kinnor with a blue stamp lure with the rest of a long way .
they always always know where it is going on , and it doesn &apos;t have to be monoghs because some of the female have a couple of females in their own .
most of all we learn about about the ocean by shipping and wires behind ships .
so we &apos;ve had a system that we had collected in a place that is a kind of oasis at sea bottom and possibly be visited by great hunters .
and a half two and a half years ago , i fell out of creation .
i worry about the well-being and the growth of art . in effect , i gather dead animals .
it &apos;s more like a birthday party , or the coffee break -- it was something else to turn to the public world .
this is your will be on the american west coast .
so the question is : why does this happen in nature ?
i was born with a rare visual impairment called the achromatoper -- complete color blindness . i &apos;ve never seen color yet , and i don &apos;t know how colors look like , because i come from a world of gray steps .
especially the gang of malnutrition .
i heard a phone rings , and it felt green , because it sounded exactly like the color of green .
i would be able to encourage you to become a cyborg .
she said that life is too short , and they don &apos;t have time for that .
we don &apos;t want to give up our rights . if somebody is wrong , you have to get back to court .
the fear leads to less professional cooperation , which is in tens of thousands of tragic failures , because doctors don &apos;t trust themselves , &quot; are you sure that this is the right dodo ? &quot;
so , oh a few years ago , it became in broward county , florida , scratch in school break .
you put a little lawyer all day in your shoulder , and you &apos;re like , you know , could that go wrong ? do you feel wrong ?
so how do we build the boundaries again ?
but it &apos;s a big hurdle , because we &apos;ve reached this legal tar sands , when we were convicted of all these bad values , racism , gender disputes and pollution and pollution , and those were bad values , and we wanted to create a proper system where no one can have bad values .
there are many people -- certainly in me , and most of the people that i &apos;m talking about -- a collective dishappiness about how things are running , like our institutions work .
we &apos;ll see .
and by dealing with other people demands a kind of flexibility that doesn &apos;t use any rules .
it was a toy gun .
judge forer did what they had to do , and then he caught her chair .
that means that these people are creating things just for incentives .
he was married , his third child was on the path , and he suffered his head of living with his spinal mundature mixes , and re-dreams nightmare , and he had begun to take some of the symptoms .
there &apos;s a banker who phoned a for-profit lab in a life called the bankers who encouraged banker -- i know that &apos;s hard to believe in believing -- the bankers who worked in there , encouraged to make their income customers of their income patients .
aristotle believed that wisdom was the key to happiness , and he was right .
it was an extraordinary time . i &apos;m now going to see the mentality that we had -- america and the rest of the world -- had that .
if you were born after 1950 , you see it as a conversation , otherwise it &apos;s memory .
it was very , very frightening .
well , you need about 34 pounds .
he wrote a lot of explanations with the tenor , &quot; we have to kill the right four million americans , who should be two million children . &quot;
right now this is that moment , it might happen that we experience a nuclear detonation in one of our cities .
a bunker is called , either , you &apos;re going to have to go into the basement , as deep as possible , or a new floor , which is if it was a sea explosion , higher than the nine-floor &apos;s work , so you have to be in the 10th floor , or in the basement .
and then , they &apos;re looking for protection , and they need to run with the wind , of course by about two miles .
i am none of these social options .
we &apos;ve been aware of decades for decades .
so how do these financial tools , the means that we &apos;re going to need to be able to make all these social challenges ?
but again , this path that we were at the time is not going to lead us where we want .
it saves money .
shared value is capitalism , but a higher form of capitalism .
so we learned that most anatom-classes are taught without voluntary laboratories .
now i want to take all of all the skin , muscle and bone , so i can see some internal organs .
we can also can see the muscles .
he agreed , bleeding that no word for the members of society existed .
but in 1809 , david ricardo a lot of dust than he argued that the economic sciences had to have another , dedutive approach .
he was capable of iteration , unsufficiently , and at parallel processing , and it was through lochcards programming , an idea that babbage &apos;s babbage .
this is the unintended consequence of the revolution with our four friends .
he said , &quot; any confused naturity , the evidence in the presence of life and i said , &quot; really ?
how would you do it ?
and this was steen rasmussen .
by the way , this is accelerating , it &apos;s almost like a thousand generations per second .
it &apos;s also not important whether it &apos;s a poem , or it &apos;s a mathematical text .
they have about 28 of these instructions .
you &apos;re going to get the active efficient wave .
and the guy says , &quot; no , no , i &apos;ve actually lost it at the other end of the street , but here i see more . &quot;
these are the data from a single survey for the surplus program in zambia in zambia , which i &apos;ve worked on a few years ago .
the top film of the year was &quot; stirling slowly : now only right . &quot;
i &apos;ve developed a process in which i was the center of the universe for this technology .
they don &apos;t need a programmer .
&quot; take care for example for human rights &quot; -- this is about the health sector -- basically people make people from rafts in the congo , where it &apos;s an epidemic , a horrible epidemic , and you use our software to document the evidence they find , so photographic , so that they can bring the warning of court .
and in this sense , dung is a beautiful metaphor .
life will put together from all kinds of lines that go into all kinds of directions in three dimensions .
and he told me , &quot; don &apos;t do that . go down to slow down . &quot;
and after 20 days , we ended up with successful in egypt .
so the idea is , if we fly around the world in a solar-powered aircraft , absolutely no fuel , then the future can tell it to be impossible for cars , for heat , for computers , and so on .
even the airplane turn here , it &apos;s so easy .
this is not a plane .
like another famous man , jerry garcia , said , &quot; what a strange , long trip . &quot;
that &apos;s what i really want to talk about today .
and that &apos;s a feeling that i never forget more .
see , africa is going to see our idea of justice .
why don &apos;t we do that ?
the price of the u.s. could use a nuclear framework .
we can reverse the inevitable impacts , and transform the quality of millions of lives , which , in particular view , exactly as ours .
in all the tv from peace and love to the west coast , it was the muscle that brought the movement in the gang .
not only in their lives in their lives , but in welfare , stability and safety , that we &apos;re going to win .
and what we did is not done to wipe out the fire in africa .
anyway , i &apos;d like to get your help cartooning .
please go and work and work together .
communication is very important for ethiopia -- and it will change the country .
elvis uses this formula , and shakespeare also , when he wrote in &quot; romeo and juliet , &quot; the sun is the sun . &quot;
we talk about beautiful calm .
in studies , a group of people were asked to read some economic articles , and then predict the price for the next day .
but even before it was fossilized poetry , language was a fossilized metaphor .
i love this picture .
but there are so much potential .
but a woman has to do what you need to do .
i &apos;ve been doing that in my work .
this is something i &apos;m going to share with you in western media -- and there &apos;s a lot of stereotypes -- the yemen from a single angle : that &apos;s yemen .
i wish that the world would know my yemen , my country , my people .
while they didn &apos;t have a medical case for their claim that there were a relationship between opera ariina and pulmonic hypertension , they actually refused that i would sing my own .
but if you need it , it &apos;s a gift of god .
my fingers started walking in blue , and i asked myself , &quot; what &apos;s going on here ? &quot;
i didn &apos;t want to transplant myself yet , but within a month , i was a strong deadline of wire -- very attractive -- back to the hospital .
so my doctor called the fano -- the best at the clinic -- to come down and operate on to operate the fingers around my vocal chords around .
thank you very much .
we &apos;re talking here , we &apos;re talking about a proper open distance of chronic child diseases , other things like obesity and child diabetes , or noted puberty .
in fact , aromatism is playing a green role for breast cancer that is the latest treatment for breast cancer , which is a pest called lebzol , which is blocked the aromatase , so that estrogen can &apos;t develop a tumor .
basically , amphibians are good indicators , they &apos;re very sensitive , because they don &apos;t have protection of pollution in the water -- not a ozone shells , no membrane , no plastic .
p , p , before i started this film .
many of these workers have a life expectancy of just 50 years .
a teacher told me how to describe the wages less than five percent of the plastic products from our trash mountain .
hundreds of thousands of people who are full of the brips of pullers filled with their bare bones of pulky and other kinds of garbage .
little plastic bits are hard to focus on arable organic pollutants to a million focus of concentration , than in the sea water .
the wildlife name is meloia sempervirus .
think of that tree , as it comes down into the redwood space -- 99 meters , 32 stories -- a single organism , a single organism , that its forms spreads over long periods of time in the sky .
they don &apos;t seem to be suffering under the same heights of suffering .
if you get to the trees , you think you can &apos;t fall . it &apos;s hard to move .
so , in order to traveling , we see the iluvatar .
the canadian shirt are often called the redwood of the east .
ants don &apos;t spend strangely at a redwood , and we asked us whether this ant species is only at this one tree or maybe in this haze .
and we also know where brain came from .
i asked them asked to that .
here &apos;s the latest virus that we found in a file called serstabe .
we now we have a whole market and a business system in underground , online crime .
here you see here , you can see the clotter of a visual file that contains it .
and in this blog , he wrote about his life , his life in st. petersburg -- he &apos;s just 20 -- about his girlfriend , over his girlfriend .
lc &apos;s , these little devices that don &apos;t have display , no keyboard that will be programmed , and make her job .
what &apos;s really important is to find people behind these attacks , and more importantly , that we find people who are at the verge of being part of this world of online crime , but not yet .
and you believe , you know what other people want , and what other people don &apos;t want to do , how much power people have , how much of these people might be at the way they want to do .
you &apos;re sharing your opinion with you , and you share your opinion with sally .
we have to know what they want to argue , not what they want deep in their heart , or what they believe is , but what they &apos;re saying is , because this is very sure is , because this is a very strategic posically , we &apos;re going to be good back and trace out about important elements of their decision-making process .
how are things going to develop for him in the next two , two years ?
the number of these people take off . the power is going down , and the result of the result is going to be their britive fuel material .
it would be good if people would pay attention , and take this kind of calculation seriously , and if this would contribute , because this would change things , but it would change things in two previous ways .
and the system is comparing every moment of one video with the other and looking for the regities .
so both of the sony have brought in revenue .
and i think they agree with me that happiness is an idea that is worth spreading .
you &apos;re going to require the voices of the oldest budget , from the far distant , the world , to get the world into balance .
in fact , mau collected clear data by using his whole body .
and i &apos;m going to remind you that there are cultures all over the world , with immense wisdom in them , as powerful as the micrstic navigate navigation that doesn &apos;t be recognized as the will be aware of a brilliant , brilliant technology and science and knowledge that quickly disappears rapidly .
i am the &quot; why &quot; i want to know why you are .
how do you change change ?
audience : yes .
they tell us , we don &apos;t have any resources , but ultimately , if you &apos;re going right -- it &apos;s going around when you think -- they say , what &apos;s the reason they didn &apos;t achieve it ?
so this is that in my lab , i had a opportunity to look at three million people out of 80 different countries in the last 29 years , and soon the pattern became clear .
let me run through it : first , security .
and it &apos;s important , right ? you want to risk your life .
&quot; my family leaving my family . &quot; what he did . this time was one of the most painful life support . my three decisions opened me a different way .
how many know anybody know ? go ahead .
now , i play for almost 10 years for ted , and so far rarely played a song i composed .
and we define ourselves about these differences .
every point you can click in the details , and you see here , &quot; i &apos;d just feel so much better if i could put me in his arms and your love for me in the humable of his body and graving his lips . &quot;
the next movement is called mobs .
we see people who sing themselves down , &quot; regrading , &quot; &quot; responsible . &quot;
this is an answer : what is beautiful ? miss world .
it &apos;s called the universe : unveiling our modern mythology .
we can put a click and make a picture of the scene at the universe .
here we have our star field . there are our shapes .
but i think they &apos;re beautiful . don &apos;t you ?
what does that mean ? i have no idea .
it looks like a series of apartments , winds will be a nice layer , and the winds are different , and the cloud layer is different , and in the middle of the winds , inside the winds , the air sludge , when the movement of the cloud , the spikes of the clouds , and those beautiful , how the cloud of clouds are revolving the backline of the skin revolve the moon
and by the cleared edges of this clouds , they &apos;re ideal to discover figures in it .
so let &apos;s go back a few years back and see what was going on .
even with computers that are getting faster and better and better , it &apos;s a challenge , with gigabytes of data , terabytes of data , terabytes , to work and changing the relevant information .
you can see x-rays , x-ray radiation , from the teeth , the metal in your teeth .
again , it &apos;s completely interactive , you can turn it out and look at things in real time on these systems .
it actually works like a big iphone .
and to go a step further , we have a heart here .
so , motts something in the mri machine , and it probably does it with its right hand because the left half of the motor cortex is active .
i can solve the skin of the lion .
i start to start by a little bit about myself , and why i do this incredible life life .
i counted the number of brick stones , and i have a lot now . &quot;
but the puzzle is why the universe emerged in this particular condition , it &apos;s completely unresolved .
to make it quickly , we &apos;ve explored this alternative .
this is 1990 , and then 2002 . and here &apos;s a forecast proposition for 2015 .
they said , &quot; go and do it , we &apos;ll come and teach . &quot;
the students now , the students usually leave the computer spaces usually from 2 or 3 a.m .
i understand the course that it covers a lot .
so we celebrate a party , as you can see , i &apos;m completely covered at that point .
everybody wants an aimcenter in his country .
people were excited . they thought it wouldn &apos;t take long long , until computer &apos;s capacity to the brain .
so how does the brain ?
indeed , in fact , more like building building the building in neurons , called the ion channel .
this is the red request called the path .
it also captured the movement .
now , i think many africans have this other perspective , and i think it will affect technology .
so it &apos;s a little bit tricky .
and since the mass of the schwarzschild radius , i need only to know one thing .
and then we see light that can &apos;t be described by the moon .
our tools to see how stars are orbiting the black hole .
without this process , you can &apos;t see the stars .
to give you an idea of how small this size is , that &apos;s the size of our solar system .
and so you don &apos;t see young stars .
and that means that these things exist in our universe , and we have to figure out , we need to explain how these objects can come into our physical world .
one day i was on the streets of new yorks , saw some children between stairs , cars , hydrant baseball .
and the way we respond to them has changed over the centuries , just as our preferences for them .
in every musical age , there was a lot of different preferences , different things to transmit , different things . &quot;
you also got the effect the effect of technology , and they got through the printing press music , musical books , musical books in the hands of the performers over the world .
what are the long-term implications for us and the music ?
you don &apos;t need to worry if you don &apos;t know anything .
and the wind turbines were growing , and today they can convert them to 300 feet , but they couldn &apos;t be able to increase , but more altitude means more altitude means more wind and more energy -- about twice as much .
and the erce gooy would be a 15,000-watt wing .
but he wrote it for his wife ...
and something that both of them have things together is your mental state , because i don &apos;t draw -- i &apos;m one of these teenagers who are a very easy back-up , so , when i try homework , when i try homework , and i don &apos;t try to draw , then i try to draw , you know , you know , you know , i know my job .
i &apos;m going to try to bring that in any order .
and so jon had a brilliant idea : he passed away to promote the best of best dancers directly from youtube to form a dance group -- the league of extraordinary dancers , the lxd .
without an desire is not to create .
and fortunately , there is a group of people who can really be able to take advantage of this tool .
and that &apos;s what fascinates me so , and what , i think , is completely underestimated , is the significance of the rise of online video .
for a scientist in a different lab , it can take months for months to figure out how to discuss an experiment that &apos;s described in print .
the ambitional innovators and the influence of this world could spread their ideas around the world , so the history of spoken word is still more .
we &apos;re not allowed to learn at 21 .
we have our own film .
so if you come here to talk to talk about it , as french coffee &apos;s coffee was notated in our brains , that would be successful .
dias are fine , but maybe you should have a couple more procking thinking .
but before i do that , i &apos;ll just tell you a couple of things that can allow this .
and again , again , the main feature : these neurons are involved in the way that abstract ideas are dominated , and i &apos;m showing you show you some symbols here , and i &apos;ll show you a value from many reasons .
a region is called &quot; experimental economics of the other : behavioral economics .
if methane formed methane , or coal prices , or if oxygen was erupting , the birds burst in oerie before the people happened -- they were looking at an early warning system : &quot; comes out of the mine . it doesn &apos;t look good . &quot;
somebody asked , &quot; why ? &quot;
local power , central power , and also civil power .
that &apos;s all happened ; it &apos;s happening ; the information -- and the internet has been done in so many ways through our society , but it hasn &apos;t really changed that way yet .
we work with some of these people .
not the beauty of poetry , and not the strength of marriage , the level of public expression .
so i &apos;d like to propose with my current talk , which is the teachers who have to be honest with the right , and many opportunity to improve their educational approach .
one goal group had shown videos of teachers in classrooms , and then measured by different criteria .
it &apos;s a very simple , but extremely useful learning , reflection .
however , the system would have added advantage for our country .
three years ago , i started with a couple of disciplines with a nonprofit and collective habitat lab in brooklyn , new york . the concept is that people can come by teaching school , and in the lab , hermecles , all this in an open and friendly atmosphere .
in fact , the diey people from around the world , from america and europe , last year , we were making a common ethical code code .
and i think it &apos;s the same technology : it &apos;s called dna phones , right , cool ... so you can study whether your caviar is actually fuzzy , whether the sushi was actually tuna , or whether this goat cheese that was so expensive , is really expensive cheese .
let &apos;s call them &quot; iceland networks . &quot;
can you tell me , why , in the age of science , there are still laws and places that have come out of a credible age age .
you &apos;re a very , very bad person .
after the same estimates , in 2010 , 1.8 million people died in the context of aids .
it &apos;s called the damage , and it contains among other things that you provide clean needles and radiation , and it provides an endangered therapy therapy and other evidence to reduce treatments to reduce drug addiction .
also , it &apos;s important to come into the general commons , so that we can change the assumptions of religious or more accurately , because it &apos;s used too often to justify for punishment and murder .
there were both water and water nets that made these sorts of irdentonal expansion expansion .
we &apos;ve seen the great cities from the time before the car .
in boston , we &apos;ve done exactly the wrong thing .
architects are thinking for a long time is now to develop things that can scale for 300 million chinese chinese , people who want to live in the city , and that &apos;s what &apos;s happening .
we need spaces for shared work .
and the oil was particularly used to the lighting , but to power from wounds and other things .
sharks were killed up to the center of the eighth , especially in places like a refugee in county , waterford .
and most of what we know is that we know thanks to being able to enter the surface .
and then you have to calculate the path .
so let &apos;s look at the bottom , which has passed to the genes that are passed from the parents , we see that basking sharks , compared with the first study , one by the factor of 10 less than other sharks .
so basically this research opened up with this research , and found that the size was about the 9,000 .
and once , when we were standing in malin head in the head , a shark filled with his tail against the boat , and he would probably be afraid because the boat was so close , and it was more likely to deal with the tag .
this was known as an sifish slime .
so you can just figure out of having a shark that &apos;s a shark .
police officers were breaking down to the streets for the streets .
another keything that comes to me , which is as much as the most natural phenomenon , is the magic of algbinos .
it &apos;s looking at me in front of me who counts money .
the inside , it in the inside , and even faster , cannabis to get heroin and poison and cocaine .
when you know , if it does , you take it , if you see it .
the shoppers are too tightly .
at the night , in conclusion , i got the panic case in trying to make the girls who don &apos;t want me to get me without souching .
and the powerful insight persiby me that i was a minority in my own country based on one aspect of my character .
my goal is to make a thin portion of everybody who is not 100 percent straight , or by everyone who feels close to the lsbg spectrum .
adaptability is really key .
over here , with the people who had one or two heterosexual experiences .
i grew up in the south bronx , a downtown ghetto in new york , and i was surrounded by evil , like all the children who grow up in the middle of a metropolitan town .
in order to harm people , to hurt psychologically , to disrupt them or to completely destroy ideas and make crime against the humanity .
so they &apos;re doing pressure from these soldiers to cross their skills , give them permission to break the ability to break the arm to break them , pat them , without sambike shoes . these are the eupism , and that , and so taught .
if you want to change one person , you have to change the situation .
we &apos;re seeking men between 20 and 50 .
okay . here &apos;s the data . you can &apos;t be more wrong .
and secondly , we know that there is no difference between the guys who are going to be the warm , and the guys who are incarcerated .
does it make a difference when warriors who move into the battle , change their appearance or not ?
understanding is not sorry . psychology is not excuses .
and their understanding of heroism is that there are ordinary people who make heroic actions .
in order to be a hero , you need to learn divergent , because they always have to be used against the production of the group .
path three : you become a hero .
and another miracle of celebration is to celebrate , is that we have an imaging process that allow us to go into the human brain , and for example , what you &apos;re seeing now .
a conscious mind is a mind with myself .
so close , their mental experience and the activity of neurons in the retina , is part of the brain in the cerebral , or actually , a leaf of the visual cortex .
the things to do is what you refer to as an inner milieu -- for example , the total management of chemistry in our bodies will be very happy from a very good reason .
i promise you promise , i promise nothing to say it should be failing .
but the novelty is here .
so i was born at the last day of the &apos; 70s .
jennifer baumgardner wore one .
so we &apos;re able to take the next generation to a completely new way .
which i get to the third paradox .
now when i was a little girl , i had a couple of very strange ideas .
so , i just want to help people come with themselves .
and i want to share a new possibility , a technology that we &apos;re working on at the moment that we can become familiar with our self as never before to our self as never before , human technology that will promote our centuries of our centuries of sustainable self-knowledge .
in the first process , in the first process , we were really excited about what we could control with our thoughts .
here &apos;s an application i made for the ipad .
so you can imagine that children play video games play with their brainwaves better and improve their adhesive symptoms .
from that &apos;s where we learn , the plot , the outcome and the main person of our personal stories .
big nurses do that , you expect them to support the little sisters .
if i want to be beautiful , i go back to a meter of the mirror , then i don &apos;t have a fold anymore in the face , which comes from all the eyes and the darkness .
and after that , i got a job at accenture in the field of global .
it &apos;s a little thing , right ?
and then the door to closed .
i had lost it . and i couldn &apos;t see anything else .
i just knew i &apos;d do that .
but on the way here , it &apos;s going to be happy , i used my white eye stick , because you can break in a long row at the airport for a long time .
and only recently , i came up : if you go to a party party , and you stand around and keep a glass of rotter , and you start talking about people , you don &apos;t really want to talk .
the other dog doesn &apos;t have that circuit .
people who believed in psychological solutions had no model .
it got experiments in experiments that this was reduced to the accident rate .
this is my proposal to get people to take their antibiotics to the end .
it could really change very important .
and the idea of one of which should have predicted before the others is fundamentally false .
when you drive it , your car feels like it would drive better .
the success is to be done , and it &apos;s done .
this is actually happens in cancer research as well .
three trials were published in which reboxeine was compared to other antidepressants , and in which it was so good as the other . they were published it as well , but three times more patients who showed that reboxed was worse than these other medications , and these trials were not published .
if i took a study , and half of the data points in that one study would have predicted before , then they would be accused of the scientific jewelry .
we &apos;ve got to publish all of people &apos;s trials , including the older trials , for all the medications that are in use in use , and they should say that we have a problem here that &apos;s not solved yet .
but this is our skin of the visible universe .
we &apos;re wearing it into us .
now , the guitar hero came from our lab , and my two teenage daughters , and most of the students at the media lab show that they &apos;re going to provide the right kind of interface that people really care about being in the people who are really interested in the middle of a music piece , and over again , and over and over and over again .
it &apos;s a real experience , not just to learn how to play play and rhythms , but to train musical memory into a group .
and here is the great bariton james maddurena , as he enter the system .
so , the process and technology , we basically needed a technical solution . so , we &apos;ve got a fireclote camera here , looking at an infrared beam .
we asked one of our students to look at what &apos;s measure the camera .
and odysseus gives his best in the actor and says , &quot; fold me up . fold me up .
that &apos;s odysseus as an old man who doesn &apos;t wish anymore more than in a sunny course of the way to experience his wife &apos;s degree outside of the father outside of ithaka -- others .
because it &apos;s not so easy to get rid of five dollars .
you put one , you tie themselves , and you turn around , and then you break out afterward .
every result , each of one of these markers display , and everyone is in a series that shows a level of prosperity and retirement .
and it &apos;s about exploration of virtual reality .
it &apos;s pretty good that it doesn &apos;t affect the people , because if one of the faces is smiling , then the other face will be struck .
this is one of the reasons that much of what we think for western science , math and construction arts , actually , in the first few centuries of centuries of the persiirs , is developed the arab and door.
x is an unknown , because it &apos;s not &quot; sh in the spanish . &quot;
so , that doesn &apos;t it surprised that if you talk to be the mental illnesses , you &apos;re likely to hear stories of false suffering , shame and discrimination in almost all life of life .
for me , there are five main points that i &apos;m showing here , which are the ultimate importance of effective for effective task publishing .
her fundamental power was a serious review of lord star .
economy has become politics in politics .
how bad can it be ?
from the way of public welfare , compared to the center of the private profits , they get a completely different response , which is that capitalism provide more sense than destruction .
but the computation that comes down on the next stage , which is about the level of economics , is important .
i &apos;m looking forward to spray the institute of business in the u.k .
i &apos;m not afraid .
they were fantastic .
they took him with a sandwich shop in pasadena .
we sat there talking about it -- of course we never solved that .
but he was convinced about it .
he wanted to go out and do an experiment .
the only way it worked when the helium atoms were very , very far apart .
and the way that , of course , were feynman diagrams .
extremely effective , it really had -- somebody said , revolution &apos;s a negative word .
i literally drew on the walls of the apartment , moth it on the box , and we came in and cut , decided that it was wrong , and it made it up and building it again .
they came to me to me and said , &quot; well , what can we do to do this thing ?
there doesn &apos;t seem to be able to be able to be able to be able to be able to be able to be able to be able to be able to be able to be that kind of activity .
allowaner disappearing from our cultural consciousness , which is a little bit terrible .
so even though they don &apos;t know the parts , what you might have is a very good exercise for the children who can understand the meaning that you can take things apart , and whatever complicated they are , you can understand , and that means that you .
gever tulley : five dangerous things for children
and then we put the damage that damage is the destruction of the surface of a stem cell paste , which we &apos;ve developed in 1991 , so that the surface of the joknorpels were pulled back and left a smooth threshold .
we &apos;ve already done this . we took tapes from pigs -- young healthy , strong tissue , planted it in the basis of a related diagnostic in 10 patients . one of our patients then took off to three canadian thkihhood , with his patients &apos; &quot; pig , we call it . so we know that it can work .
that rock rock have met our earth over three billion years ago , and they &apos;re responsible for a lot of what &apos;s happened on our planet .
and they were traveling through across europe , sold to hundreds or thousands .
here on the bottom level of bibiothethek , you can see the books and objects .
we &apos;re only get to see a skull . and yet there &apos;s a brain .
my 44th patent ; about my 15 , invention .
maybe it will jump through space if i meet the side of the side .
and abc and sony have developed this new thing , where if you &apos;ve got to sit down in the supermarket -- in the beginning , it &apos;s going to be safeway ; it &apos;s a safeway : they &apos;re trying to do it in three parts of the country .
every sound of sound we know is a trial , increasingly to be perfect linear .
it &apos;s more way that you can tell you and see who &apos;s friendly and who can &apos;t .
and my father died before he could find out that somebody in the family would make something out of themselves , hopefully .
my present work seems to find an resonance in people , and it somehow surprised me that i still ask me what &apos;s going on ...
but all the necessary is necessary is to fill up certain areas of the letter forms and so i can clearly make the words of the background .
i think one thing that religions have right right now was the application of the visual miracle to announce a message .
it should be something that didn &apos;t address it , or writing myself , something that they would be worried about what &apos;s going on in the world .
and yes , sometimes the money is a influence .
the main properties of a system like this is that there are only a contact point on the ground .
with the same way , we can also bring it to circle one person .
they &apos;re going to grow up on the nanoscale , and they use proteins that are used to the genetic level and allow them to bring these really exquisite structures .
now , if you look at biology , there &apos;s a lot of structures like dna and antibodies and proteins and riboth of whom you &apos;ve heard has already been multistructured .
so , in my lab , he came into my lab , looked around -- it was a great visit .
we &apos;ve effectively manipulated a virus that it takes carbon nanotubes .
we &apos;ve discovered -- using genetic technology -- that we can actually increase the efficiency of these solar cells on parts of these kinds of color systems .
one place , one place , a place or a space .
i used the software to use .
i &apos;ve done it all -- i &apos;m up to bed , i got my chef -- but i didn &apos;t really sleep .
let &apos;s look at some of you .
we all know that this is true . you would never experience a spontaneous meeting that there will be a staff of staff .
so meetings and managers are the two main problems in companies , especially in offices .
maybe every two weeks , or every week , the week , they may be talking about the week .
jason fried sweeney shares a radical theory of work : namely , the office is not a good place to do it . onstage at the tedxmidwest , he &apos;s about the main problems and provides three strategies that work work again .
and we do this thing we do , and we &apos;re going to come back to my original question : what do people wear ?
now , according is the mobile phone is personal -- it allows a certain privacy -- and it &apos;s comfortable .
you can &apos;t ask anybody to go for you .
and instead of using them , i call the owner of the phone cell &apos;s telephone .
but what i like to do , you just need someone in the street , which is a little flat surface , a barnel and a toothbrush , they get a lot of dust , and of course the know-how .
it &apos;s from a study about illiteracy , and it &apos;s about a man in a teelate .
and we need to learn really to listen .
what this does is we find a direct stack -- we see a direct collision between availability -- and what &apos;s done by availability -- and a fundamental human need -- that we &apos;ve heard a lot of things that need to make common narratives .
what was impossible for a couple of years ago , it can actually be measured .
these results , i think , really powerful . you give a lot of people new hope and options .
but i always meant , &quot; well , you know , i &apos;ve met the best choice that i could make , in the face of who i was at the time , in the face of me .
in this situation , you &apos;re going to feel more regrets if you &apos;ve missed your flight for three minutes when you &apos;ve missed him for 20 minutes .
so if you sit around and worry about , whether you pick a big one or a small mosquito , businesses a company , or whether you should buy the subeard or the prius , you know what -- don &apos;t let it .
the fourth component here is that psychologists call our regrets to protect .
text : the answer .
it &apos;s taken up several years since i got my tattoo .
it &apos;s not about living with regret .
when the tsunami met south asia , the united states gave 1.2 billion dollars .
but the price of 600 is 140 per gallon .
so in the face of this low price , we &apos;ve now got the money to transmit aids drugs around the world that we can &apos;t do right now .
we have about 500 people living around the world for our aids program , some of them without payments -- for transport , shelter , shelter , shelter .
43 percent of the children who need an infant food program to the prevention of malnutrition and early death , they receive the supplements that they need to stay alive and grow .
thank you and god bless you .
in green school , children smile -- unusual for a school especially for me .
and you know what that is .
a community emerges .
food is incredible .
but what happens is what happens , our learning male children , lesma head -- we call it new , and it &apos;s fine in these beautiful , beautiful classroom .
it &apos;s a model we built for bali .
my tongue , cookie and vocal chords were still healthy and not fall . &quot;
and then apple alex , the best voice i had ever heard .
there was one reason i was .
roger ebert : as you can hear , it sounds like me , but the words are standing up again and down .
i doubt that every day you &apos;d dreamed 50 years ago , which is called salman khan .
we use words and communication to break out of it and touch others .
you should never be able to read your wife .
so , &quot; says the psychiatrist , &quot; you &apos;re ugly . &quot;
after a few years , they had multiple newspapers in cash and eastern europe .
and music has a rhythm , has thick and depth .
so my forehand was very surprised at the beginning .
i was a very young , i think 11 years old , but i already asked questions , and i began to start the political education .
the wassp pole hit my clubs and smash it .
i had more than 50 surgeries .
so i had to try to eat again .
so we just keep going on .
and i thought , &quot; i &apos;ll just touch it . &quot;
in the night before the ducky realized he was probably his last chance to explain his big breakthrough .
but not only scientists are interested in symmetry .
as soon as you enter , it immediately looks : the reflection in the water .
what can i do with the starfish that he looks unchanged ?
and at the end of my talk , the one who gets the answer to the next is one prize .
now , the effect adds into something that is completely different from the triangle .
and again , the tiles are covered .
this new object doesn &apos;t have a name yet .
so , i think there was a couple .
anthropologist &apos;s cross-whaling of all white , which made an interesting observation : our ancestors 40,000 years ago not really understood what they were doing if they could see it .
and that &apos;s all right .
but in the early 20 century , something was happening to happen more complicated than that .
in the early &apos; 80s , something else happened in the course of a mysterious epidemic , everywhere in the united states and ibm , the maker of the cycle , didn &apos;t know what to do .
so many important creative things can happen when people learn from disasters .
just by osmose . nobody sits with them and says , &quot; that &apos;s like this . &quot;
&quot; please , please , please say -- tweet .
i know that &apos;s something quick . i &apos;ll like to give you the list with all these titips .
and if i want to add something to a stack , well how do i do that ?
that &apos;s how to yo-yo . thank you .
perspective , it doesn &apos;t just change itself , but the whole world .
and i said , &quot; that &apos;s good work . that &apos;s interesting .
and if you do that once , it &apos;s like poker playing and instantly put it all .
it &apos;s entopped -- still ...
when these algorithms , like the algorithms of wall street , they run away or crumm , like we know what we know .
because algorithms , because of wall street dependent on a special quality , it &apos;s velocity .
or we share the water , and we bring us the money out of the air , because it &apos;s a red future future when you &apos;re an algorithm .
the fact is , you can do all with a towel .
js : today : there &apos;s a really , really , natural invention , which is where you have to wind with your hand , and it comes out .
but that &apos;s just the security .
and you ask yourself , &quot; why is that there ? &quot;
and you can have a bigger impact on the environment that you create a change in your neighborhood than if you move vehicles vehicles . thank you .
why ? there are just a few diseases that are responsible for the vast majority of these deaths : diarrhea , pneumonia and malaria .
and rich men are affected .
use for bed nets .
so the top 20 percent of the students have a good education .
but the more we looked at it , the more powerful , the great teachers were the key .
now , the supply system is reward two things .
if you do you go in and sit in one of these classrooms , it &apos;s very strange .
here is a situation is where i think weak consequences .
and so i think some great things are going to grow up .
julie burstein : &quot; isn &apos;t that a wonderful story ? &quot;
it &apos;s the challenge of loss , the oldest and constant human experience .
it &apos;s removed and further from the day , and the light and the year &apos;s miler , and it &apos;s sort of it &apos;s not as i &apos;m a jurer . i cherer .
and then she told me a story that was four years ago .
and it was a voice hall , when i realized that perhaps the biggest impact i had ever had to be somebody else , a moment that was a woman who was talking about a stranger for four years later , &quot; you &apos;re an incredibly important person , &quot; i didn &apos;t think anymore .
and in many ways , medicine was always always .
it &apos;s been able to be fixed by cancer .
2004 , during my surgical training , i had the great fortune of dr. roger ers who won the nobel prize for chemistry in 2008 .
this is the greenhouse light through fluorescence .
some are shredded lymph nodes , and they &apos;re bigger than others .
but i continued on .
we went to discover magazine and the economist .
they &apos;re caught up , they felt fresh air in the face when they were leaving the house , met new colleagues and a great conversation , and an ayan experience when they found something new .
if we could turn them out , then we could try to figure out what they &apos;re good at .
and their neighbors that didn &apos;t have that molecule wouldn &apos;t be .
this is an optogenetics today .
another story i want to tell you is about a quest for the treatment of post-traumatic stress -- a form of uncontrolled fear and concern .
now we &apos;ve analyzed organisms from all the tree of life -- every wealthy except that animals , which we consider something different .
and the retina is obviously a complex structure .
now you can see that the animal actually has cleaned the walls and go and use its own platform again .
buildings are complex ecosystems that represent a very important source for microbes that are good for us , and some who are bad for us .
and that &apos;s because we all drop microbes .
if it hasn &apos;t been fully full -- compare the crash from the pentagon with the twin towers , they see that very clearly .
so i wrote a heart when i saw this .
about two months ago , i had a big breakthrough , one of my great , sort of a bright achievement , which my website now finally is the first search proposition for &quot; steven johnson . &quot;
what we have here is actually a gobalcolor brain that you can do a lot of experiments to see what it thinks .
but what &apos;s interesting is that you can extend the quest and see interesting things and get a sense of what else is out there .
it follows a kind of force , so there are some extremely well-lived link blogs , and a long ratch of blogs with very little left .
so the signs that people have every age and from all cultures creating their identity in a kind of narrative more interesting form .
it was education of the most profound and skilled way .
&quot; phaban : a debate inspired about the loss of the security on the face of criminals .
when the matz on the lake with the demand of human-like conditions , they were these teenagers who were the crew of food .
our members of the binding point of the binding point that we describe as often our children .
that &apos;s just one sentence !
now , as kevin kelly has already shown , there is no goal .
so for the material river , the projections are quite smooth .
richard meiman , who was one of my teacher , he came up with my desk to give me groundbreaking , and he said , &quot; bill -- you need to understand -- solar is nothing to do with architecture ! &quot;
you know , most people have no idea that it comes from the latin word , which is how much means to &quot; make it together . &quot;
since then , we &apos;ve taken the 4,000-species chemicals in a database that we &apos;ll provide in six weeks of the public .
they &apos;re just five days ago .
then we put the parks we do as ecological infrastructure .
edward burns the starting , information , basic information information , u.s. intelligence agencies , and we &apos;ve heard of things like prism and xton score and others .
i love freedom , but i find certain surveillance in order .
so this is trying to do it , and there &apos;s a very big part of the internet communications today , try to deal with this encrypture .
you might find a meeting on the team development of tuesday night .
it &apos;s the struggle against the terrorism .
and what we need to understand is that we deal with search in search with search machines .
a single country , each country in europe , can &apos;t change the systems and cloud service in the united states .
in the way to the frontal brain is the area , in which complex wisdom processes , like decisions are taking -- it &apos;s the last thing in the late adult age .
and every neuron for themselves is largely unique .
the first thing we do with the collection is how we do a mr .
after this is a routine . you know where these trade-offs are about .
it &apos;s basically a huge data set of information that is accessible to all the scientists in this world .
we can do this in several individuals that we &apos;ve been studying .
and we find some special cases , some things that are outside the cloud .
how can we start to understand the workway of the brain ? just as we start to understand a city , by this visually amazing talk , allan jones shows out how his team is based on every tiny region in every tiny region is communicating .
but the gdp enables little progress in africa .
we know how to eradicate malaria , but some people come and my &quot; you &apos;ve got the millions . how about bed nets ? &quot;
and in the 20th century , randomized , controlled studies revolutionized medicine because we &apos;re able to be able to discriminate between drugs that are going to do things and they don &apos;t act .
so , they are simple ideas , but we didn &apos;t know .
so it turns out it &apos;s a traffic bill , because it &apos;s cheaper to swallow incentives than you don &apos;t get too lazy .
envy them for free , use it .
well , with experiments , you can just answer the question .
so why is that ?
but now it &apos;s not going to be easy .
all right ! that &apos;s the worst .
because nelson mandela , when he was on the first democratic chief president in south africa , she saw a country to saw himself in the abyss of the chaos .
a satellite picture that looks like on the earth .
zambia : 2004 , from 2004 , from 18 percent reduction .
headline in south africa : &quot; they &apos;ve landed . &quot; it sounds ominous .
2.2 , seven million barrels of oil per day , same toys like kuwait , and venezuela .
banking has a tremendous transformation , from over 80 banks on 25 banks . the system gets empowered .
ten years ago , there were very few countries called the population of standard &amp; amp ; poeise , moody &apos; s , or narkh .
south of investment , by the south of investment , eureka nainaive , why is that investment in africa can be a skill business strategy .
age , that &apos;s just another day in life .
nature . beauty . gratitude .
i guess somebody thought that was necessary .
rl : i think he &apos;s a big american .
at the moment , where my gaze moves around , i immediately started changing the couple of things so that you just missed where it started , and where it stops .
brain magic : is it about brain magic ?
how can somebody read with the fingertips crossing ?
kt : my god .
that &apos;s so strange .
are you allowed ?
nicole : no .
kb : can you show us where ?
and i just want you to go back with your eyebrow back from the table , whereas the pressure hits , when they feel like they feel .
it was very quickly , but it went down , ok .
keep sure it &apos;s solid , except a hole that it &apos;s normal .
ok , think about the many letters in his name .
well , i &apos;ve got no mail down there .
so , you don &apos;t know where the spike is , and i don &apos;t know where it is , ok .
kb : well , steve , do you think it &apos;s there ? yes or no ?
but if you need to guess ?
she had two spongy in the hand , and two to the knees . my mother was extremely depressed .
so here &apos;s my question . my question is , why should an psychological damage is always going to be more active ?
thank you . so , we filled up our adrenaline , and we get our cortisol , and then we killed , we were killing or eating , and then those two chemicals suddenly , and we were in normal condition again . okay .
and i observed , both religious people are equally obsessed with morality .
the bottom line is almost below zero , if there &apos;s no way we shake .
they then get the message from the computer , &quot; person 1 gave them this amount of money .
so oxytocin is the force molecule , but is it the moral molecule ?
now , this adam smith wrote 17 years later after a little book called &quot; the prosperity of nations , &quot; which is the founding of economics .
he said , &quot; i can &apos;t .
a lot of stress oxytocin as well .
her mother was in place two .
and they produce oxytocin .
they were amazing .
how do we make the schooltraining today in the world ?
there was no hotel , so i went back my computer , and i went back to a couple of months , saw how kids were playing on it .
sugata mitra : i &apos;m going to show the face of this young woman here , because i guess many of you know .
we are we looking at every single day . &quot;
i think the camera in a false angle . these are just amateur recordings , but as you could hear , it says something about neurons , where they &apos;re doing that gesture , and she says that neurons are communicating .
because you needed it .
sm : what &apos;s going on here ?
but that &apos;s not sexy enough .
but i want your help .
you see , the closer i get to this antenna , the higher is the sound , and you can go deep .
it &apos;s really a mirror of your current self , and if you , you know , you know .
the cases that i was documenting , ranks of family feks in brazil over the victims of genocide in bosnia and the first led to an airplane until the living dead in india .
chapter three : joseph nyameroa gudijo formed patients near kisreu in kenya who suffers from aids , tuberculosis , unfertility , mental disorders or bad spirits .
in chapter seven , i &apos;m involved in the impact of the genocide on a tree .
it also monitors the internet and the instruments , the local media , as they deal with potential disputes -- including tibet , ethnic pigqualities , human rights , more democratic movements and terrorism .
it &apos;s a measure , or eye to the eye , so that has led to many dead deaths in the region .
something appears in the gaps , between all the collective information .
and i &apos;m told me the dynamic .
and i make a lot , much less .
and i couldn &apos;t embrace that .
so , there &apos;s always , always this big -- i mean , just this caleimal scope of things you can exploit .
oh no , i don &apos;t like that piece , &quot; and so on .
that &apos;s how we experience music . of course it &apos;s not .
you know . i have to say something .
tom green : yes ! and they &apos;ve been trained for a year .
so they created their own rules . the rules of the internet .
the story is that story , scientology had this very embarrassing video from tom cruise , who was put online online .
you had to fight with issues about child porn .
cp : i was skettating , so that was a few days .
christopher c. mt : the poole , the anemicase online
that &apos;s 10 times longer than mammals used to reach their maximum water size and make all these habitats .
a predator . maybe 25 pounds or 10 pounds .
these are the tuareg , and they &apos;ve already been living for centuries .
it has a whole difference .
one : less than large , but less than half as big as the skull of the supercroc .
i &apos;ve talked about a few . we have to move on it .
who is who blame ?
these are the questions that i &apos;m doing . we &apos;re talking about ethiopia , and that &apos;s important .
strange landscapes , rambling heat and bad crocodiles , scientists are talking about the genius of evolution . paleontologist , photographer paul sereno talks about his surprising encounters with the hilarious story -- and leave you about a new way , teaching computers at adventure .
and a second time , she grabs derartu tulu , try to take them .
they &apos;re trying to keep the same kind of secret .
her uterm would kill .
you &apos;ve always got to be careful here , someone is looking at the same time and offers a kind of immersive response , because you can get rid of almost any explanation at all of it , with that .
you &apos;ve got to be part of the group .
only to our life time , working with fear and pain .
and what each of you &apos;ve found is that you &apos;re going to get rid of the stress as well , the stress and the enemy .
so cynthia breazeal : kismet interacting with people like a child without no words , or before it learns , and i think that was good , because it was really the first of his species .
people use that people use this sign to determine for example , as the persuasion person , like sympathy , as selective as trustworthy .
this is like this telereview robot today , if you know that -- it &apos;s been violated like this .
but if robots do to get involved , if we like to work with robots , if robots are compelling , then a robot can help save a diet and a sports program , maybe he can help their weight .
and depending on whether you could get involved with one of these inlived , it was a potential indicator for a slow folder .
so here is the headline of the letters a in the gshell 2 .
i have a style , laughter , seb &apos;s really hard , because it doesn &apos;t go , you know , it &apos;s too .
he &apos;s sniffing on the left for houston , and i salute the knarre , and say , &quot; give me the cousins ! &quot; and the penner wants to run away .
i wasn &apos;t aware that you could have the creative control .
you think black , you know , black wisdom is really hard to work in this business ? i am a suspicious mulatte , so i &apos;m too black to be aware , and to know , to do it right .
and this is showing up in the galleries like a sequence .
but suddenly , suddenly changed .
so all i did is what i do , a great disclaer , and i &apos;ve come up with stories about all the european or british celebrity and comment on our public people .
in fact , it was a kind of traffic act , which was problematic because the police tried to hurt the human masses , but it was so much fun -- it was great to make a performance performance .
so i &apos;m going to look at these videos now .
and these are the times where they &apos;re most prolific .
these missive suits signs of health workers or healthcare studies have to be seen in africa , and we cannot continue the things that we &apos;ve always done .
we care about training , and we &apos;re sure that this process is about repositional .
look at mrs. jones . look at the chart , what do you think ? &quot;
if you don &apos;t get a heart pacemaker , you die .
and i think that education approach in cardiology , which is introduced the virtual heart institute in jamaica , is very important if it comes to the diagnosis of heart disease .
you have to solve yourself from language in words .
i just see specific pictures .
i have a huge one , and the control person there in blue has a really small one .
there &apos;s an unfinished information on this fire hydrant .
it would be the airplane of airplane .
it &apos;s like a bridge between thinking and social .
if a kid like racing car cars , then you use the car race car cars .
i &apos;d like to thank all of you .
it &apos;s worked very well . i &apos;m happy to see things that change the world really , and we need a lot more and a lot less abstract things .
wake up .
the shark experts are the best of the world ; among us : big predators .
and at that point , in this summer , everybody -- scientist , athlescientist , noter experts , neurologists , my own team , bonnie -- everybody didn &apos;t expect it for impossible .
and then , of course , there &apos;s our basic rule that i never really tell me how far it is , because we don &apos;t know how far it is .
but if you don &apos;t speak , if you come to land , you will be pissed . &quot;
all that is great , and i don &apos;t care .
we ditate together in iraq and afghanistan .
they ate together . they signed together .
a article article in the title &quot; goodbye . &quot;
more media means more dispute .
now , first , the problem is that the problem is going to lead a large software project , the problem of keeping this social chaos .
people literally confessed him , and they put them up , and he put them up from hand .
&quot; are you talking about the evil cats ? or is that this thing you think are you going to do ? &quot;
someone asked a question in quora who is , &quot; why is it so that the legisyer is not using distributed control ? &quot;
clay shirky : how the internet is changing government
the rocket that you see on the lower screen screen is supposed to fly up , but somehow they flew out .
well , i think that &apos;s fairly easy to answer .
in mars is also volcanoes . and this is the mount olympus on mars , which is a kind of volcanic sign on the planet .
and what we &apos;ve found is , it turns out that there are grains of sand , and again , as you can see here , and when the sand storm hits the rover , it clears the surface .
we call that the seven minutes of terror .
bc : in the first 15 seconds of the break , we will stop from 900 miles an hour of 80 miles per hour .
so i want to tell you tell you a little bit about the steps that we &apos;re running through .
and i know many of you who have learned last time , that these airbags are really cool stuff .
and we have a variety of different satellites that are going to form , each one of them looks different , and it &apos;s weird to explain the scientists for decades , and then they have to ask the nasa around more funding to see how these things look and why they are .
and with the radar , an instrument we have on board , we have lakes , like the big lakes here , so it looks like on earth .
but why do i tell you this story , and what about the future of our health do ?
i don &apos;t know if i would try it , but that &apos;s actually .
maybe i didn &apos;t mention it , but if we use artificial intelligence and radiology , we can find undetected injuries before .
but maybe we &apos;re going to use the game of the game today , like kinect of microsoft , and then hacking , to create diagnostics , for example , for a brain , with simple detectors , with hundreds of dollar devices .
too much information , i think more than you need .
and i think that we &apos;re dealing with these technologies to change the definition of disability will be partly in part of the way .
one chip can do thousands of tests where it &apos;s required in the world .
so , doctors , all of these data , the genomics , proteomics and the environment , but we &apos;re not ready . how do we treat that ?
i studied a lot about stem cells -- embryo stem cells are particularly fascinating .
and so thank you very much very .
but later , i was going to think of the clothes of the clothes , that in your crmerin kitchen , your sink , your gline , your ghtenute concrete with you , pure invention ; the true , lustness , hidden in these sex robby , was completely , at all .
a scream like that , so frustrated , he didn &apos;t need a voice or couldn &apos;t wear it longer .
and that &apos;s something that in dozens of books about horses and their rider that i &apos;ve been given in those days , never mentioned .
let &apos;s drop .
the girls , the girl , sort of fell off .
c.h williams : my youth &apos;s poems of youth and age
samuel pisar , creator of auschwitz , said , &quot; the holocaust teaches us , &quot; the holocaust teaches us that nature , even in their most cruel moments , is more sexually related to people compared to people , if he loses its moral guidance and reason . &quot;
but images don &apos;t have to be broader to remember the tragedy of war .
what we &apos;re going to try today is , in the fine six minutes that leave me , it &apos;s like three questions . the first one is , &quot; why ? &quot;
it was our high-frequency incanacy .
two headred two people in the team , but none .
if the ice was more or less , i could just pull both of them .
this was a pretty radical technology , and a radical approach -- but it worked great .
i photographed this , and i put on my quiet and made a video post .
i thought that was just going to be rich .
that &apos;s why i &apos;m not done myself by the length of my starting trip .
every expedition on the south pole that you &apos;ve heard about it is either going to fly from the pole or using vehicles or dogs or dogs , or bardas , and no one . no one ever traveled back . that &apos;s the plan .
and then , the most profound school council came from my life .
&quot; fantastic ! &quot; i thought . &quot; let &apos;s throw him out .
i mean , it &apos;s all very depressing , not true -- people have inter-food conflicts , we don &apos;t notice , and so on .
what if we look at fear as an amazing contested , something that could be so deep and understood men like storytelling ?
we can just give these conclusions just a different name .
it was only later later when i was interested in how about these questions that i was when i was scared at night .
a good reader has a joy of an artist , the wish of becoming jaunting by history , but also the readers also need the audacity of an academic mantra , which is the intuitive reactions of reading on the story in history .
over the course of the last 40 years , i &apos;ve always seen the same faces of royal gene and the president who govern us -- old , arching , authoritarian , corrupt conditions , regime we saw .
that &apos;s what they said . that &apos;s their propaganda .
we always believed that the changes from the inside that change is going to be a manifestation of culture and cultural diversity , with our tradition , and in our history , but for the same time for universal values , coupled with the world , connected to the world .
he said to me , &quot; we don &apos;t ask for cameras .
wadah khanfar : actually that might be the biggest story we &apos;ve ever covered .
i think you &apos;ve heard your talk .
and a little bit of me think , &quot; this is so disgusting and really dangerous , &quot; but the biggest part of me is thinking : &quot; please be close to me if you come to me .
no . we share needles because we don &apos;t want to get to jail . &quot;
now , the ones who show that eye systems are not effective -- they think that &apos;s one of these nerviac slides , and i &apos;m going to press my button , and the rest will appear , but no , that &apos;s the whole slide .
and that is reflected in the epidemic that we have today .
so if you look at these viral thing again , if you start a treatment , if you &apos;re sick , it &apos;s what happens that the viral load is falling down .
it means that we need to make more prevention , the more treatment we have .
we &apos;re not all the voters , of course , but ted is a community of memory leaders .
and we sang this old song together , because they didn &apos;t sang a lot of energy , i sang , &quot; hey , hey ! &quot; and they just rejoed , &quot; black-eyed susie . &quot;
he said , &quot; well , you could go to the franklin mountain , where i come from , or asheville or mount airy , in north carolina -- somewhere where much music is played .
you take kate , i &apos;ll take sal ; we &apos;ll both have a johnson gal .
of course , we were only 10 years old .
the first thing i learned about that day was that i never wanted to work in my life .
after that , of course , she was proud of the story about her , but after the concert she came , and he said , &quot; david , i have to tell you something .
on the list , things like , the narzans at the early spring , the smell of fresh heu , take a wave and trauma , the bodysurfing , a touch of a baby hand , the sound of docdocian ard , the sounds of muqfather macwaters of muddy waters .
so he was working on something that was going on .
chris berquis got the task to do the scar .
we want to be in the top subjects , and we want to make it different .
because the idea is that everything is predictable .
and this network of relationships are constantly folding .
and if you get it very close to the end , it &apos;s the most important in a relational universe where all properties are .
that &apos;s year , in that year , we &apos;re not available for our clients .
on the third level , the appeal is very likely that i would do my work , if i didn &apos;t overcome financially .
it &apos;s not finished yet .
tesla afilm comes from this program and the fry of the fry , and i grew up with a million days .
and probably most importantly , is basically everything we &apos;ve done in the seven years after the first sabbatical , from the thought of this single year .
like this donal clay , or chopin , or mozart , or la monte young .
with help from 100 volunteers , we created these rather bloody characters in one week , saying , &quot; obsession will make my life feel better and my work . &quot;
so , it &apos;s going to take a while .
and this ceremony has to succeed with the whole community , with the involvement of all .
so , in funeral relations , but also , but also transforming , in a ritual spoil , which throws the most emerging properties of death in this place : its effect on life and the relations of living .
how would it be able to look at love with love , because it &apos;s such a familiar part of what we are what we are ?
now , the day of holy &apos; day . i think we &apos;re all agreed , right ?
and yesterday , elaine morgan ha . wasn &apos;t she great ?
thou won &apos;t kill you , thou shalt not steal , thou don &apos;t want to wish your next . &quot;
and understand the financial crisis is very , very difficult .
and somebody was talking about metaphor on monday .
and then they listened to and they said , &quot; let &apos;s march . &quot;
&quot; i think i think it was a president of president , he said , who said ... &quot;
i &apos;m interested in how many of you are between three and 12 .
and this is how happened in all museums .
so the most of pest pest genesgenese is actually externally harmful .
so they &apos;re very simple at different .
it &apos;s not noticed that the gny things looked like .
a colleague of mine in berkeley , and i studied a triceratops .
and when we cut torosaurus , it had adult bone tissue .
you &apos;re always amazed again .
it &apos;s small and big . it &apos;s an amal cup , a waterfall of water .
it &apos;s formal , self-interest , no depth , size , measurous . no purpose , no matter .
this was done in the caranimal foundation .
the acoustic separation was also destroyed .
mediathethecs has about 16 places where visitors can look at a server and digital or packed in art .
it &apos;s like a sarg ; it emits virtually the whole sound along the middle entrance .
i didn &apos;t think that women in 2011 still put in this bloody way .
i &apos;ll tell you a secret that you probably already know : our reporters are constructed .
i know everybody know all of you are confused , so i do this .
it would be helpful if more women are going to operate in leadership positions , and a new global survey report that 73 percent of media care jobs in the top management will still composed by men .
remember , complete picture of reality can depend on .
with these three plants , they can create all the fresh air they need .
this whole thing about wire was not going to happen without saddam hussein .
and then -- remember , if you had a condoleezza pot at a sudden , and that was criticized it ?
we &apos;re not allowed to forget that while some of us had all options -- and pat , they &apos;re really a precursor in this regard -- that there &apos;s a lot of women who don &apos;t have the opportunity to make and empower and to understand it in their hands that women need to help each other .
it doesn &apos;t mean the world would be much better if only women would say that .
or &quot; isn &apos;t your children suffer from below , that they &apos;re not always at home ?
of course , we can &apos;t underestimate the messy and the ugly impacts of the arab spring , just as little as we rely on the role of technology , but what happened is given us a sense of what &apos;s possible , if the centuries of teold power structure , the pyramid , and the people on the people at the top , and the pharaons are brought .
well , that value is still too high -- still many people lose their lives .
we can &apos;t get this goal , we don &apos;t really accept that we can achieve it .
that &apos;s exciting !
we &apos;ll win because we have dreams , and because we &apos;re ready to post for these dreams . &quot;
and there &apos;s a lot of people , a lot of synthetic biologists do , like craig venter .
i think it &apos;s actually a computer scientist .
so you can use a natural source .
so , you &apos;re all floating in the solution . so to see it , we have to get it to a shallow surface .
so this looks very good for building small computers .
you can code the number of 32 dna on the right side of a dna origami , and if you add the tiles , you start counting -- you can see the 32 and dog at 32 .
look at the square that we built with origami , and the counter that grow out of him , his pattern is exactly the pattern we need to create a memory .
now , i &apos;ve written a lot of thorny songs for my first panel that i still stand today , but the following .
now , meanwhile , now founded two more social enterprise .
however , the market forces around the globe for now no way that you can call call a blood , and fight the bribe .
because we are insane people who are trying to do the impossible .
you can do that , for global heroes .
like a bigger conversation about israel and palestine , the middle east runs out .
there &apos;s a talk about gratitude .
and all of that comes from architecture of complexity , or the patterns , how things are connected .
well , a degree of a degree has been given to a degree .
the work of housements could be as good as a hospital in a hospital .
it requires a lot of experience to learn how to make people .
but the jugaters and the sancy and the judges all said the same thing , &quot; we do it very naughty , but have to keep the assumptions . &quot;
the lival story story is one .
there should be a nation-survey .
so what can we do ?
the bonus that he discovered is that it actually makes more money .
somebody &apos;s watching us .
thank you .
if the grape is grape , it &apos;s not going to burst . &quot;
i said i &apos;m going to build a arm .
he &apos;s beating our control man . the man behind him is our engineer / surgeon -- basically , to have somebody there !
i could give you a smart bike control or i could let you run 18 pounds . i can &apos;t do both .
it was amazing .
and he said , &quot; i had a truck before i went over , and it had a circuit shake .
it &apos;s not possible . it would be beautiful , but we remain realistic .
dean kamen : the feeling behind the invention
well , she was older now .
in new york city , i was alive alive in a sarg alive , in april , 1999 for a week .
i thought if that boy could survive for a long time without breathing , then there &apos;s a way i can do that .
that was a more awesome idea .
every morning , months of months , i woke up and the first thing i did was my breath for 44 minutes of 44 minutes from 52 minutes , so i purked a minute very quickly .
and i wanted to try it to see in the most extreme situations , to see if i could slow my heart rate underneath .
every morning after you get out of this tent , the brain is made like extinct .
but there was no way for me to prepare for the aspect of live television transmission .
i then figured that i &apos;d be better to fight , just to stop and stay here until i &apos;m going to make unconscious , at least i can draw me .
but then i realized it had 16 minutes and 32 seconds .
matt mills : really great here is that without hustles .
tamara , could you help ?
okay . now , we &apos;ll move back to the aurasma application , and tamara is going to beat video video with a day , and with my passport , so that i can remember forever .
through our annual emissions , more than six million tons of co2 from factories and automobiles -- what &apos;s contributing is that the air store sunheat -- it seems to be warmer .
in africa , over the last year , there were 600 million of wild animals , and two billion pounds of eggs consumed .
first , even if all the co2 emissions stopped today , the global warming would continue .
and then we saw a fall to the east coast of the united states , and it moved more west around the coast of the united states .
today , there &apos;s a different movement . the movement to save earth is saving .
it &apos;s not about pre-history .
then people from the darwinian history , people have solved the evolutionary story , and we &apos;ve created the second great great evolution , which we &apos;ve been characterized by creating the change of the environment in which we &apos;ve seen .
but they were created by scientists , and they were used both recycled and genetic technologies .
in other ones , in other states , they are banned .
the same thing was done in zlon , which is an endangered sheep .
it &apos;s not just about insects , though .
one last example : mussavalina of the nothwestern university has been used an entirely functioning way to use any all-agile brain of a block .
can the industry create the industry in their milk , in its blood and in your wallet and other body fluids , drugs , and industrial molecules , are going to make these as an organ manufacturing machines to store ?
and he was sort of interested in the junction pattern of skin color .
the earliest members of our ancestry , the species , homo species , were darkly pigmented .
but the whole uvb , or almost all of it , break through the thick of the atmosphere .
this has enormous consequences for our health .
you don &apos;t have to get into exotic examples or fossils .
there are many kinds of disorder .
in fact , in fact , cheating .
if you raise the high , you &apos;ll probably realize that it &apos;s cheaper almost nothing .
i was very strongly involved in these things , my eyebrows , but then on other phenomena .
also the eiffel tower also has a ctceship view .
on the right-hand side , in the upper half , you can see a theory that is very , very , very , very , very , very different .
this was a very geomter mathematician , and i said to myself , &quot; look at here , i have a problem here that i couldn &apos;t solve about 25 years ago , and nobody else can solve .
so how did this happen ?
and we certainly had the wheel in the hand when we met all these decisions , and let me tell you , it was a very highly agless and coueful experience .
and you know that .
how do you know ?
they were responsible for their decision .
who can make them meet and how can we make them ?
and here is agriculture .
in africa , the small farmers have the bulk of the risk .
after being spent more than a decade with trying to study and to try to demonstrate strategy and funds , what was wrong with africa &apos;s agricultural markets , i decided it was time to be against .
so in the design of our commodity exchange in ethiopia , we &apos;ve done something quite unique , and we use the approach to a integrated perspective that we call the ecx edge .
but it will create new possibilities .
the threat is called desertification .
yet desertification is a great danger for all the continents . it &apos;s about 110 countries and about 70 percent of the world .
trees or spouse are good as well .
i &apos;m all other than an economist , but i did , sort of literally , literally , a sleg calculation -- -- and it seems like we had to pay for a cubic meter lower than 90 dollars .
the world is likely to have lost a third of their original country in the end of this century .
i had no practical skills .
we became a lot of excited of these people who can now sell a blueprint , to sell a lot of bioproducts or electricity back to the grid .
and he does this every day , and every day the man is likely to get over at him because he sees the little boy and at the same time .
we know , because in the mid-19th century , wonderful the victorian engineers of the 19th century state systems and the sink sesection , and it was dramatically returned .
we take nutrients up . we &apos;re a clean nutrients .
they tried to sell soap as healthy . nobody bought them .
this woman , the mother of this boy built this latrine in a few hours .
we write the year of 2013 , yet , 2.5 billion people around the world have no access to new toilets , and if there &apos;s no cloning , where should you do a business ? onstage , and food sources -- and they have an unmissed , &#93; a , funny , funny , powerful talk of the journalist , a journalist , a journalist , you know of course of course .
and here you see the same reef . this is the same reef in 15 years ago . this is the same reef .
but yet , not only the fish are out .
now , about another form of pollution , which is also a biological pollution and flow of nutrients .
it happened when i did in france in france .
and if you get home , you discover that 80 percent of all the trees in north america and europe have left their leaves .
so the question is : are we going to respond to that ?
think about it .
i remember what they were at the same way .
maybe it was because of the swamor gas , but -- i know what i saw .
there was a character called &quot; gildennavium-generated pluses , &quot; which was a kind of big catered calendar , floating in a giant tank , which was filled with this orange bubble of psychedelict , which was filled around him and fold it space and time .
second , the aliens was played by a rubber cap .
and their summer date were grown up and had a lot of her face , and her shoulders had a certain resle .
two hours . they gave me a message .
shattered the system , or gelherute , the planet . it &apos;s hard choice , but it &apos;s not really a choice .
investment is only represent a fifth of the national income in most modern economies , but they play an absolutely vital role .
this is a strange , rather , to call history , to call it in very simple terms .
this is interestingly , interestingly , about 650 miles north in the north , near barrov in zbriah , in zbriah .
and at the same time , the solution becomes clear because this is not necessary to change human nature .
it has to lead to invest in carbon reductional technologies and infrastructure .
and in the core point of this economy , we put a credible , more stable , more realistic vision of what it &apos;s going to be human .
before the background of global recession , climate change , inequality and other challenges , tim jackson offers an unical new way on the general economic framework , and explains how to promote the crises and invest in the future .
and as i go back , the magic .
sometimes , when sheila put out in the milk , the color was washed up to their arms , and it looked a little bit more unhelpful , but our solution was , &quot; ok , hide your arms . &quot;
it starts with a very small starting of coal , four times hydrogen -- that &apos;s methane -- it &apos;s just floating up .
no one wakes up in the morning , thinks , &quot; wow ! i &apos;m going to drive a couple of a $ $ 0,000-carbon to work . &quot;
we talk about energy autonomy . we talk about hydrogen cars .
so , you might be wondering why it &apos;s so that every time we have high oil prices or oil spill , these ceos are shouting down to washington , and they bring them into the public and try to hurt them .
what we did we have done is that we &apos;ve done drilling morals on the east coast and the west coast .
we pay for our taxes at 15.april .
one of the things that we need to do is we need to try not to reject ourselves , not to reject ourselves by thinking that we can have a green world before we use our oil fuel .
and so says , &quot; the national academy of sciences , the national academy of sciences , the number of gallons of gasoline that are burning in your car is generated by 29 cents for the health care . &quot;
we want to see the afghan star . we &apos;re going to go late .
by the way , they &apos;re measuring the public performance , and that they measure with men -- that shows the subscrivocal scores in the show -- it &apos;s a very important model for these young women in here in abu dahbi , but also for the tv viewer .
and that swim took 18 minutes and 50 seconds , but it felt like 18 days .
and we looked at our right side of this great kbee glacier .
we want you to go up and leave this hill again .
after he went to the north pole , lewis pugh , he would never walk back in such cold water , and then he stopped from bin laden &apos;s mt . everest -- a large amount of 5300 feet , and it was just conducted a trip to teach him a whole new attitude about two things : the swim in the swim .
this is a two-eyed counter .
can we have a kind of self-replication behavior ?
so what i &apos;m showing you here is that we can create a 2d form -- the b -- put it out of a string of components that follow extremely simple rules .
you know , i &apos;m going to make a juliemal here here .
i think that &apos;s true in general , in a lot of concepts .
saul griffith : talking about everyday inventions
but also , we live in a modern town , of course , realizing that the things we need to be around the corner .
after all , google maps have been shown to me that there might be a civil rise or a few digits .
this example shows how it goes .
the red bar shows the chance of being killed by the hands of a different type of men , as opposed to the natural death , in a wide variety of societies in the highlands of new guinea and the amazon rainforest .
and what he &apos;s seeing a gun with a gun in his hand .
steven pinker : how much of the myth
and so i looked at the marketing .
if i talk to my students about global issues and they read them in the coffee break , they always talk about &quot; we &quot; and &quot; the other . &quot;
in part of the united states that helped engineer engineer and investment .
the united states had only had 2,000 dollars a person .
but that was in 1963 .
and it goes over there .
we can &apos;t divide them in two parts .
income there and child mortality .
it &apos;s five percent . they &apos;re faster than the millennium development .
that &apos;s a dollar per person . that &apos;s hiv in the countries .
make a local issue out of it . take care of prevention in a way that can be done .
but they &apos;ll remain one of the most important superpowers , and the most terrifying superpower , for the rest of the time .
with cultural evolution , i mean the evolution of ideas .
so , as a tennis , usually it &apos;s going to lose returns ; it &apos;s always a zero amount , but if you &apos;re playing dope , then the person on your web is on your internet in the same boat like you and you play a car game .
well , back to the end of apocalypt .
to my defense , i would say , &quot; well , i would say that , &quot; well , &quot; you know , &quot; you know , &quot; that sounds like this , it actually follows in cynicism .
i think this is the first step in this direction . this is the slow objective .
the g8 peaks is the solution for africa &apos;s problems for the help , something like the marshall plan .
but it has also options at the same time and much potential .
now , since i don &apos;t see a show of hands , it seems to be true what i say .
well , they &apos;re paid by doing good jobs , or , in african countries , that inadvertently , to profit from corruption .
because they don &apos;t have to talk to their own citizens .
you need the butt stadium to connect our parliament .
&quot; not good . &quot;
and i think that &apos;s great . i &apos;m proud of that .
and for six years , we &apos;ve been researching very lucky people .
the first life is the pleasant life , and it &apos;s just the best of the best , it &apos;s so much pleasure as possible as possible as many positive emotion as possible , and skills , enjoy , to learn , to make awareness that extend over time and stretch and space .
when the first map is played , time is silent for len until 10 days later is over .
and i mentioned that for all three species of life , the pleasant life , the good life , the meaningful life , people now work hard at question : there &apos;s something that &apos;s permanently changing ?
because it &apos;s really about it . and that &apos;s our target .
and it turns out that the qualities for happiness , for the convenient life , for employment , for the sense of which are different from those of the hip .
so on the vertical , so these are the shade of the camels .
and he said , &quot; oh yeah , i can remind myself !
and a crocodile goes along the stream of the building .
and most of this is not in the cities , but in the middle slums .
james nachtwey , the last year at ted was honored by the range of the medical system that was associated with it , entamed americans coming back from iraq .
well , this female came close to him .
one of the biggest challenges in computer graphics was to make a photo-real human face .
and you see here , you can move your eyes and mouth .
we specialize on high quality of video games for video games and films .
between 17 and 20 years , i became wildly less .
and there are , of course , the ituri forest itself -- now up to about 1,1,300 plants .
i &apos;m not even talking to that at that time .
and now with the important things . you probably have all a mobile phone .
this is called coltan , and gold .
one day we met with the top commander .
the elephant forursts just , and they took the shock teeth .
i don &apos;t think anybody can accused at google , because google does the right thing , even when people use al-qaeda , to connect .
corneille ewango -- a hero of the rainforest
over the last three decades , we &apos;ve gone through a quiet revolution .
let &apos;s say it &apos;s a foundation . it &apos;s ready for money .
so , to be honest , i think that , without knowing somebody , is a very american way .
one of the most self-organizing effects of it , especially to give a price , is going to be the commonality , the feeling that we all sit in the same boat .
they &apos;re very enough to halve growth .
so what if we could get the historical billion growth growth for the next 70 percent ?
and these 0.8 are a big challenge .
this is the percentage of the agricultural land that was used for horse food .
so you &apos;re holding google and amazon , wikipedia , and running water and floral water .
i have to say that somebody -- i read recently , that van gogh didn &apos;t have any psychose that he could have previously known the temporal lobe that he called temporary , and i call his creative diet , and i -- i suppose that makes something about part of the brain .
i myself felt surrounded everywhere by death , because my mother believed that i was going to be next , and then she .
you &apos;re not going to discover anything about it .
there &apos;s something two-way reference about what to do , and then we do something .
and it was the same thing that i felt , when i was growing up , and i heard that rules of sittism and morality of my father was heard of my father who was a baptiist .
these are the things that i think about time .
and i said , &quot; well , about this village &apos;s indigenous people , declining minority .
and i can also find it by totally imagining it , and become what i &apos;ve imagined , and yet , in this real world , the fictional world .
it doesn &apos;t matter whether you &apos;re running a cafe , or whether you &apos;re an intellectual or a guy , a businessman or hot air .
i ignore every message , because i don &apos;t have a painful problem .
if the cow &apos;s purple , you &apos;d notice it for a while .
every loaf will be bathed in one of his bakeries by just one baker , in a holm .
not because it would be hard to make interesting mustard -- you can &apos;t make interesting mustard , but nobody does it because nobody is obsessed with me , and therefore his friends don &apos;t talk about it .
my father has one on the desk , and so he sees his grandchildren every day , and how she &apos;s constantly changing .
they didn &apos;t have their prom through advertising , but by doing that they did something remarkable .
as an artist , as an arab or a man who lives in 2010 , there was only one for me to say , &quot; no . &quot;
after violent , a different artist , protesters , who are going to be weighed by the tank , and a message is i wear a new face , which is every day wearing every prince .
one is : less people with fatty property , which means that property is less fun .
colalcorn : the world in 2200
this picture of me is showing a living day that shows five to seven days old -- you can see another piece of nabing on the belly -- which because of the thin ice in the water , and the mother is trying to press it &apos;s going to breathe .
it &apos;s just drawn over the soil , in this case to catch shrimp .
i was looking for the very senior shark shark , and this animal was really , until about 10 years ago , hasn &apos;t been photographed yet .
and today , you can crawl out and see the housing .
this animal was hit in nova scotia in canada from a ship , and it was drawn to the country to study the cause of death , and it was the wing of the ship .
all the ecosystem on this place is going to be very healthy , tiny little animals like the naked grafts , floating over debullies , or a series of series , that &apos;s a very important animal in the ecosystem , because it &apos;s a very much , very important place , and there .
now , after the majority of orangutans lives around the world , we are disappearing for every baby , six orangutans of the rainforest .
it &apos;s not longer the poorest district longer , and there &apos;s an enormous development of biological diversity .
this is what it looks like in the practice : we have this grass that we want to get rid of .
this is what it looked like three months .
and you need bacteria to tie the nitrogen , and without those organisms , there will be no capacity .
we &apos;ve lowered the air temperature by three degrees fahrenheit .
where we start at the beginning only a small surface , with increased debris , the surface and the netherlands is taking place .
when a member of the agreement is injured and those trees drops , the other 19 members will decide what &apos;s going on with him .
eighthget &apos;s two-drinks bottles -- oh yes .
but then i would say , &quot; if i got that , i got lost a lot . &quot;
thank you very love . that was a true pleasure for us .
what &apos;s about design is every city has a design .
i &apos;ll tell you that .
we don &apos;t screw it , even though the nose doesn &apos;t like our uncle &apos;s nose , because this photo is us .
right ?
it &apos;s part of the soul and the soul is not part of the physical world .
in some days , he &apos;s high and not at some days . &quot;
one : it &apos;s real and not escape .
i &apos;m sorry because of the philosophical academic theater , but if it &apos;s going into the axal endard of motor rings , a lot of wonderful things happen in the ion channels and the damn it is moving .
add two and two and lots and lots of them .
i &apos;d like to leave you this : consciousness has to be accepted as a basic biological phenomenon , but very part of the scientific analysis , as any other phenomena in biology or the other parts of science .
and i &apos;m convinced , as many others have said over the last few days , that we &apos;re extremely bad our talents .
any education system on earth is going to reform now , and it &apos;s not enough .
and many of our ideas have been educated , not to make the circumstances of this century , but to deal with the conditions for the future centuries .
the clock is a multi-incentive device .
he said , i would throw my life away , if that would be all i wanted to do with it , and that i was going to go to college , and school , that i would have big potential , and that i would just waste my talent .
the other big problem is customization .
we &apos;ve got to think about what &apos;s essentially an industrial education model -- a model of manufacturing that is based on linear and adapting to adaptations and to share people .
thank you .
steve pinker , and i looked at the size of wars in the last two centuries .
a half of a century , i &apos;ve already tried to avoid wars . a question always accompanied me : how do we use extreme violence without using violence ?
and just very rare , at a few cases , it helps to use more force .
i have a little mantra .
it &apos;s useless .
and i think for these changes there are signs .
we use the suburbs , the gang skills : the evolution of the self-assembly of self-recognition that can recognize and work with our fear , fear of cooperation , cooperation with others with others , their courage , the courage , and most importantly , most important use , to violence .
he closes out there . there &apos;s no things there .
you see , i can &apos;t do much , i &apos;ll just stand there , again , again with closed eyes , and other people form me .
for me , it &apos;s a buddha of the 21st century .
the legendary sculptor is an ony gorgley plays with the space and the human shape . his work is exploring the space that we feel inside of our bodies , and the outside space that we perceive , in which we know that we are just points in space and time .
so the equation is a concept .
the cheapest and safe barrels of oil that there is , is this that &apos;s not used by efficiency .
it &apos;s uncurable to get the best people and bring them together .
if we can actually do that , then it must be possible .
the continuum of humanity , certainly . but in other sense , the network of life itself .
but it &apos;s so much seem , we know we &apos;re not alone .
the number of active artists , for people who are writing poetry , singing songs , who act in churchenchchoirs exploded over our bold ideas .
and i thank you for your goodness and my patience to me tonight .
the whole story was actually started with me as a student in pittsburgh , pennsylvania , in a tough neighborhood that had abandoned .
and my building was a building was a measuring model of the top burg-airport airplane .
they &apos;re real , and they &apos;re in my building every day .
i &apos;d like to show you some of the food that these mothers in social help in the million-dollar kitchen cook .
we make we form , we &apos;re training travel , charging men for travelers .
these children , who were abandoned of public schools , and this is what they &apos;re capable of , with affection and sunlight and food and good music and confidence .
and it worked very well , until today .
he said , &quot; no , you &apos;re the gift .
and this is our new institution , full video technology .
i want to do that if i grow up .
and willie brown said , &quot; well as i am the mayor of san francisco , i &apos;m going to build this thing , and it &apos;s going to be my crew for the poor in this town . &quot;
and i think we &apos;re going to take away this year as the first replicator of the center in pittsburgh .
and i think we can rotate the whole story of a story of celebration and hope .
you know , it &apos;s a pretty complicated thing . you have these pulses of your eye from your eye , millisecondary , and you tell your brain what you see .
how important is that ?
they &apos;re just from a cell , and they have the special property that they just include a dna strand .
so it seemed to us that they &apos;re just too small to have a effect on the environment when they just act as individuals .
in flash in light , if there &apos;s lots of stars or sunlight , the lights can reach into the habitat of the ink of the ink , because it &apos;s not too deep .
it &apos;s not that a few bacteria in you get , and then you start cranking , you &apos;re too big , that would cause no effect .
you &apos;ve all got a specific system system -- you &apos;ve got a molecule that &apos;s &quot; i say . &quot;
and that &apos;s exactly what we did . we followed two strategies .
we believe that when we watch bacteria , we &apos;re going to become more insight about complex cells in the human body .
bonnie bassler discovered that bacteria are talking to each other . using a chemical language of coordinating defense and shop for attacks . the shares overwhelming impacts for medicine for medicine , industry but also understanding our self .
who else ?
one of the reasons the best flute players are supposed to get the best flute is not just to allow musical vision to all of us , but also , so that the curving performance of the best musicians and recognized .
it would be an awkward advantage when he &apos;s driving the golf cart .
charlie : i &apos;m staying with my original proposition .
here it is how it takes it out .
anatomors of same-sex marriage says that the purpose of marriage is basically the creation and the honoricies , recognition and support .
right . we have this one -- in small -- doing 1,500 people from long beach , and we &apos;re doing it in the rooms of harvard at harvard with about 1,000 students .
that the main reason we think of malaria is bad for something bad is the essential of malaria that it does with aging aging .
you know , there &apos;s a lot of nonsense about this question , like with one of the answer .
now , in tahlal interventilates later , when the disease is relevant , and it &apos;s trying to stop the tooth of time , and prevent that the organized effects at early early .
and that &apos;s in all technology in technology .
we &apos;re not doing anything with them , until they &apos;re two years old .
and that &apos;s a useful .
where can cause damage ?
i think we know what to do , and this is where i hear .
if that really is true , does the biological impact in the world of fragmentation ?
there was some in iceland coming in iceland .
the whole thing with the female trend has nothing to do so that women would be better than men , it &apos;s more likely to bring women from men and other values and behaviors .
so i had an incredibly many women for models that have affected who i am today and where i &apos;m here today .
since then , we have doubled the streets in the united states , and we &apos;re now using a fifth of our income in transportation .
and the young adults today , these interruptives -- 64 percent of them decide where they want to live , then they pull them , and then they look for a job , they come into their town .
by the way , we have an asthma epidemic in our country .
&quot; cities act like the plague of the health , on the liberties , on the comfort of man .
but all these innovations -- all of these innovations -- that was in the proxy .
how do we solve the premap problem ? urban planners jeff speck shows how we can release from the dependency of our car -- that &apos;s what &apos;s called &quot; gas cycle , tim-driven muscles &quot; -- by making our cities lead and enjoyable and more people .
he was the last person who had a colony of this frog in his lab .
the second project i want to talk about is the thylacine project project .
shortly after the arrival of india , they were extinct in the australian land , and then they were only more than that in tasmania .
any conservator worked here , the glass had seen the little , and i thought , &quot; boah -- great ! &quot; and they break down .
when i was talking to this guy , i saw in his eyes , and i thought , in my mind , this man &apos;s head is reminiscent of how they were atroogers , as they have lied .
for me , this is the reason for me to make life together -- we &apos;re trying .
now , i want to remember this -- i know you &apos;ve seen this statistics -- of course , 6 billion , now , at about 18 billion .
it &apos;s not done .
all the resources from africa come from africa , including people building these countries today .
she was three years old , and i was 15 .
i was so happy -- that my sister was alive !
so what did you do with the 3 billion dollars ?
have our president and leaders that are talking about each other , they &apos;ve ever put these people together and said , &quot; look , your company and your companies have so much capital , how are grateful .
agriculture is going to work better if there is a railroad station that brings goods to the market .
why can &apos;t we use a part of the help than a behavioral mechanism to enable people to take risks ?
so i &apos;m a surgeon who explores creativity , and never ever got a patient to me , &quot; i want you to be creative in my field , &quot; and so i think this whole thing is a little bit ironic .
maybe we &apos;re not the right thing to do .
and it works -- actually , it doesn &apos;t really matter sound in itself .
so we had this field , which is the middle of the prefrontal cortex , which is where the activity shot into the height .
and it &apos;s good that it &apos;s not too fast .
and this is what they &apos;re doing : they invite a silent artist , and let &apos;s memorch him a sign that you wrote for him , which he never heard that he never heard before . and then they let him improvise him .
you have the increase of the brain activity a comparable task when this one task is creative and the other task is memorized .
i want to say that , probability and statistics , that &apos;s the mathematics of games and gamble play .
the second challenge is to see the actual model of brain waves .
tan le : all right . so we choose . &quot;
evan , you &apos;re a great example of this technology .
bill gates is one of our clever guys working on these problems , and he supports this work , financially , so , thank you .
malaria is the great health health issues .
today , you need a complicated laboratory analysis requires a lot of object making and needs a technical force to study them .
you can give a drug .
the united states did .
momoore &apos;s law made computing is cheap ; so cheap that we can make about life and death of a single insect can make a decision : thumbs up or thumb .
it &apos;s slowed down a lot of the opportunity to see what happens .
and then distributed . distribution is a big problem .
and i thought i &apos;m going to try to think about nature , nature , nature .
the whole earth that you see here is mostly from my food that falls from restaurant , and it &apos;s developed in these kevks that i made out of the storm of the trees , and then planted all these things .
and this is an english air transmitter . he &apos;s controlling the air stream through the room .
in fact , try and make the whole sustainable supermarket in the world .
it &apos;s about taking a second day every day of my life every day , my whole life long , and then this one second of my life , including chronic rein a single connected video , as i can &apos;t get them apart .
now , i &apos;ve become a little bit more clearly , and it &apos;s extremely difficult to record this one second day .
at some point , these creatures are supposed to live on the beach .
in reality , the new invention of rads .
once it &apos;s in the ocean , the pattern of the zeroes are here , and it always knows where the beach is right now . a very simple brain .
it was very early at the time that we had to go to the path of synthetic engineering , to figure out whether we could synthesize a bacterial chromosome so that we could actually do degraving lungs in order to learn for the lives of the lives .
moreover , we realized that when that worked , a rewise opportunity would have exactly if we could bring the synthetic chromosome to do it as the bacteria .
and what we found that 10 of the 11 out of tens of thousands of thousands of parts of people that we have synthesized , completely accurate , and so appropriate for a life of life .
that &apos;s why we don &apos;t have the rest of the code , it &apos;s only the three quotes out of it .
synthetic biologists , for example , are now are dealing with primary environmental issues .
i was sleeping three weeks for this project , and this project , i think , is what &apos;s done with excess is because , three months ago .
&quot; some of these have said a certain meaning , &quot; it means , and other are ambiguous .
and in particular , as the simple parts of organizations interact and the behavior of the whole organization .
so every year , right on the same day -- and it &apos;s a mystery of what &apos;s happening right now -- the colony sends a juvenile , bleed ant and the males , and those flies together and mate together .
the time that the colony gets this stable is when colony begins to breed .
this is what the waste workers do .
and later they &apos;re recruiting them for work .
if i do , for example , if i do a chaos , the nest maintenance workers have to look at less ants .
instead , it &apos;s sort of the organization , it changes , and it &apos;s something that the colony gets older .
at the beginning , they look at the ants like a little bit of a microscope .
thank you .
if we look at where the assets go , what we see here is the arrows that shows in the middle east , all of us continue .
in this time , our demand will double .
we heard of us , we have plenty of them .
but if we look at the earth &apos;s gas reserves , it could be the bridge to natural gas because we have plenty of them .
the first was the barnett refer in texas , and then the marcellus in the northeast , under new york , pennsylvania , west virginia and haynesville in louisiana .
and he said , &quot; well , it &apos;s a bridge solution . &quot;
it &apos;s not wrong about nuclear power .
tbp : solar -- wind force , i &apos;ve been given it with jim in 13 seconds .
sanone picshers : natural gas as a new energy plan
when people were heard at the east coast , 1849 , they thought , &quot; ah , that &apos;s nothing . &quot;
this is from the clonal gold rush . this is the &quot; white pashouse . &quot;
and that was , of course , the conventional story .
so , all the wiring and all of huge infrastructure -- i go back now , to the exponential part of the web in 1994 , when it &apos;s grown around 2,300 percent in the year .
one thing is important . and that &apos;s -- you know what it is .
and they couldn &apos;t just lay out the wire because it was cut into a light socket in the house .
because , you know , creving out -- if you think about the gold rush , it would be pretty heated because the last nugget away away .
and you think it &apos;s great that the world &apos;s world traditions , the leaders of the world of the world of compassion , and the golden rule as fundamental principles , as a basic measure of their faith .
it &apos;s not consciously selfish , but for a biologist , that &apos;s the logic .
basically , if you &apos;re my enemy or my rivalic rivalic , if you &apos;re not my friend or your family , i &apos;m going to be more less to apply the golden rule on them . okay ?
so , or so , the results get up , that &apos;s a zero-sum game .
you &apos;ve seen it in the last depression where bad things happen with economics , bad for everyone , for a big part of the world .
if there is something that i can encourage you to encourage every person , politicians , religious leaders , and all of us , that would be the moral imagination , so that i am bringing their ability to put their ability to put themselves in a different situations .
in the 1950s in oxford , there was this fantastic doctor who was very unusual called alice stewart .
the prevailing the conventional wisdom , which was incredibly enthusiastic about the new cool technology of this time , the x-ray machine .
i wonder how many of us have such partners , or trust them .
and it means that people , like many of us who have led organizations , and they actually have no damage to find the best people , usually failing the best of them .
now , in the university of delged by their graduate students , they &apos;re five hypotheses they &apos;re ready to defend .
so , this man , with all the cells in his body , they all have the same genetic information .
so he made a shot , so he took his filter on the liquid , which came out after he had sprayed the tumor through a filter , and she injected it into another chicken , and she got another tumor .
so if you take out it out , in a dish , you don &apos;t have milk anymore . you &apos;re completely forgotten .
so we asked ourselves what &apos;s going on the surface of these ugly tumors ?
and maybe i have to discover my discovery , or it has to be changed .
i &apos;m fortunate enough to have these great students and advisers who taught me so much , and i saw many of these groups come and go .
no , it looked good , it was about two thirds of them .
they just didn &apos;t want to answer this person at that point .
but basically , our insights is really something very different .
and you &apos;ve told you about this guy who had a smooth , or the woman who didn &apos;t look at the picture .
most of you would say that one of their identity points are the eyes . the eyes are the windows to the soul .
do you remember this astrotrin-reviews reviews that we &apos;ve been talking about earlier ? well , if you write a fake review , you have to publish this somewhere and we &apos;ll leave it .
you &apos;ve done that right , and most of the things that this task solve is at random .
man 2 : okay , glass , connection with the fly club .
you &apos;ve seen what people did in the video .
i just like a cigarette , it would be cool .
i don &apos;t get it from the research .
so i do that .
because it &apos;s awful , but yet you feel ...
i went to the parson school of design , and then began my career as a designer .
her mother says , &quot; delicos ! &quot;
im : it looks good , right ?
it &apos;s like this website .
chef : for iron ?
in the medieval societies there were fixed condefined allealleanimcies .
with 22 years of 22 , i started the organization in denmark .
that would have never been possible before .
one of their leaders had been killed in pakistan .
and what the result of that is that if these parties were elected , and they inevitably fail , or inevitably political mistakes , you have democracy for the political mistakes .
without human rights , they don &apos;t guarantee the protection of their own person to perform a camel .
and with that , i &apos;m going to stop .
the first one , the mr , is the printing press . move nasty , oil -based colors , all of these complex forms of inventions that print could be done and enveloping europe from the mid-14th century .
every time we have a new state of the media landscape , it also raises a new producer , because the same equipment , phones , computer , computer , computers , make them make .
people were collected information , there have been a bunch of news facial articles on the u.s. ted survey .
the media had a media fund ; they were produced by amateurs .
it &apos;s the green lines that are now driving the source of the free inhaler , which i &apos;ve got to my last story .
media , the media landscape that we knew was so known to understand so it was so much the professional news to amateurs and more than more .
and the total temperature is even lower than a summer day on mars .
these climbers are achieving the edge of the ice collapse in the same way .
this is a radio device that he called later his wife later , who i &apos;m going to tell you about .
okay . this is a picture that was taken on the summit ridge itself .
our two most powerful climber , todd burgers , and pete athans decided to get to save who they could do , even though a strong tiger storm was underway .
apparently , doug was on top of the mountain .
that was really said .
so you have the prefrontal cortex here that lights in red .
and you see , an energy flow from the middle of his brain , where it has images from his family , in this area that drives his will .
this was scott fisherman , rob hall , andy harris , doug hansen and yasuuuuko &apos;s aba .
the first one is the perception of people .
english language has always seen as the language of the empire empire .
i think these six factors -- the increase in terms of the perception of the population of the population , as humancapital , the rise of the indian enterprise , the rise of english as a powerful than a powerful than a vulnerability than democracy , is a positive factor , the democracy -- led democracy , led to democracy -- has led that india is growing now growing .
for a long time , we neglected our cities .
that needs to be improved , because without these people , as a formal labor force , it &apos;s going to end up that you &apos;ve completely dismissed a lot of people .
just to give you an idea , the world needs to stabilize in something about 20 gigatons in the year .
thank you .
and basically , basically , they went to the election to express that they couldn &apos;t choose anybody .
the societies have more options .
they don &apos;t fear the mass .
we assume that our societies on mistrust reasons .
five major big revolutions , according to the theoretical terrorist gras , political culture of the last 50 years . it shows how every step forward -- from the cultural revolution in the 60s , has contributed to violate the trust in democracy . he said , &quot; which has been done , is democracy a future ? &quot;
so do you want to help the government to find a better business model , waiting to waiting these folks from jail , waiting for them again , working again , but with them on a new way , but with less crime and less victims ?
and even more concerning : after a particle in the inner state , 70 percent of the nobel laureates have spent a child &apos;s child .
and also , in parborough , we launched the program and collected data , and we filled the program over time , and we changed the program . so we added new elements . so we went through the longer-term -- and we also access the longer-term demand : bigger labor of longer-lasting labor -- bigger than the longer-term engagement .
i said , &quot; where are the cat ? &quot;
some people don &apos;t want to talk about it . i &apos;m here to talk about it tonight .
there are so much . you can laugh . right ?
so you go down the aisle and says , &quot; &#91; imitate arabic &#93; -- paul ! &quot;
so i am going to school in brisbane and in australia , and so i &apos;ve had my crazy passion to see many amazing places of this world .
in a very successful 11-minute performance performance brings tom thto beat , comedy and a &quot; mouth &quot; is full of an instrument of disability and fun and ways that will take them laughing .
our first wall creek went on december 3 , the band .
and if you don &apos;t know how , you come to me . i &apos;ll help you .
and we &apos;re creating that without any tissue .
a lot of these patients were comfortable with surgery and people cutting around their brain .
and one of the unique qualities that we &apos;ve got to measure the mri is actually measure of the possibility of temperature non-invasive .
he leads a normal life .
again , it was immediate relief .
and this needs time .
she &apos;s an italian mode-designer designer .
and that all the others would have to license or be licensed because he belongs to anybody .
and they have been faced with many laws , but these laws are normally not used by fashion designers .
and that , let me tell you this , is very good for profit .
they make themselves yourselves .
there are a few other fields that don &apos;t have copyright protection , including food industry .
it &apos;s more complicated than that , but that should be enough .
johanna blakley : teaching save from free culture
so once a boat got to get me a very remote , and i realized that archaeologists that i was supposed to meet was not to find .
i think this is one of the most prolific and robust things on the planet .
there are numerous ancient protein in the u.k. all over the united kingdom , when you take care , you &apos;ll notice that the eggs was there in front of the church .
they also have a clonal growth . the oldest clonon is 35 years old .
they survived tens of years in the desert in the desert , in permavia on the mountain of mountain and on the sea floor .
so let &apos;s take this map and i &apos;ll show you how to manipulate it .
in the hands of the ted community , you &apos;re wonderful tools that can change our world in great ways , but in the hands of suicide bombers , our future looks very different .
the terrorists have built their own central monument to border pakistan , where they have the bbc , al jazeera , cnn and local indian networks .
whereas the 60-hour siege in mumbai were 10 men who weren &apos;t just with weapons , but technology used to bring an 20 million city to a halt .
small robots are cute when they make music .
if you have the code , you dominated the world .
technologies have been better , and the dna sequencing is now 5x as fast as after moore &apos;s law .
the cost of dna sequencing will be trivial .
thank you .
&quot; better than an untouched life . &quot;
and i thought , after all the horror , that the way people really pray .
he said , &quot; we always felt that we were always proud of them , but now we feel like anybody . &quot;
i was born and raised in baltimore , he studied the emotional economy , working with the ministry of trade , and after 9 / 11 , he decided to go to pakistan and to change something .
and he looked at her day every day , and it looked like she was talking to the people .
it &apos;s not necessarily simple life , but at the end , that &apos;s all that supports us .
which one could be self-portraits ?
they &apos;re done in the right order .
but when her husband ran , i went to see her and saw that she wore an eclid .
&quot; close your eyes . i &apos;ll give you something there is no diamond bin , and also no chocolate , but it &apos;s a surprise , in a lot of cake paper .
they suspected , i would use my project as a trump to make myself on the students .
on : and before , a couple of millions of millions of millions of millions of millions of millions of millions of millions of millions of millions of millions of millions was required for this machine , and now it can be every woman from the country .
when he was aware that his wife had had to decide between food of the food and the supply of their monthly needs , the obama &apos;s arinachalam at the process of helping the piece of the month , his research became a very personal issue -- and led to a stunning business model .
i stood on the glacier , i stood up with the gluten that was very strong .
i had to taste the saline in my mouth .
and i thought that was going to happen to the north pole of the north days .
it &apos;s such an important swim .
10 seconds for the start . 10 seconds to start .
four , five children sat in a table , even under these poorest conditions , all of them had a very , very good understanding of what climate change means .
talk me for that , i &apos;m going to open up your knowledge , if you want to .
well , we need to make a small course , and we &apos;ll start right in the middle of texas .
we have the molecules built .
first , i had two species .
i wanted to go back later , and i was going to be empathic , which is , i wanted to feel what they want to say , and a culture of their self-assembly .
these were people in their 90s .
it &apos;s like fiction . it &apos;s like a permanent ad , and we all have &quot; refiled &quot; our lives .
and i began to wonder what &apos;s going on there , and you &apos;re thinking about the conversation , and basically i did .
there are other ways to get someone to open up , and that &apos;s just a little bit of view .
he &apos;s basically said that this man did more suspicious than he wanted to be heard because he saw the letters .
she came onstage . naturally in a wheelchair .
so why is the new cars from this year like the last year ?
it won many awards .
what problem would you solve ? &quot;
it &apos;s not an unusual thing to cover it with a ceiling .
we &apos;ve learned how to work with the available resources to make that product .
are we designing for the world we have ?
and we realized that this project had no economic benefits . it didn &apos;t have any customers . no one would buy electricity . no one was interested in irrigation .
many of them didn &apos;t want to bribe .
in london , for example , where the bae , the hite company , came off into a huge corruption , wanted to pursue the obama for severe trughts at the time -- 100 million pounds of pounds of a particular friendly country , 10 years old friendly country , which was 44 for 44 billion pounds of war .
some of the most puzzling social problems in the world , and peter own , is going back to the systematic , enhanced governance in longitary state of the global companies , and at tedxberlin , is a very exciting goal that describes its organization .
i choose a painting . it may be one of 50 .
and so i came up with the story .
this is very simple ; the only one that &apos;s not easy , the pearl earring is .
and he didn &apos;t look at me . he looked at his maps , and that &apos;s one of the most ductive elements of this painting : it &apos;s so focused on what he does , he doesn &apos;t look at us .
what do he think he &apos;s going to be red ?
he managed to make the word soghter .
when tracy chevalier looked at the story of the story : how did the painter met his model ? what would be the expression of your eyes ? why this man ... he &apos;s three stories , they &apos;re inspired by portraits , including the story , the child who led &quot; led to her husband &apos;s cowansy ring &quot; the girl . &quot;
when we went back to italy , and one of the things i remember is that my family had great difficulty to share stories .
action .
it &apos;s a bit of fun .
just me and the gount talent .
you know , i &apos;ve spent a couple of weeks with all these actors and producers , and the problems that you need to do is dramatically , for a dinner countries , a filmmaker who works in america or europe .
no tales of bulldokers .
fs : oh , yes . i think i mentioned it briefly -- it &apos;s nearly 2,000 films .
fs : you can put a traffic in lagos in lagos , buy a movie or some bananas , or something water . yes .
&quot; sorry , moma , video games aren &apos;t art . &quot;
and we talked about dance , but i was really jealous on the walker arts center for the advancing , because it &apos;s so wonderful .
if i show the sims , i &apos;ll leave people feel what it means to have a different interaction with &quot; the sims , &quot; not just the fun , but also the responsibility that came with the tamagotchi .
we also add our design of our critical dimension , we might even acquire weapons as well .
time , time , the way we have time to experience in other forms of interaction design is really amazing .
it was the first example of a worker for something that &apos;s common .
if i first got involved with context , i &apos;m trying to create a place that is comfortable , private and relaxed , as i hope you know at the right image .
and they developed their own lives , and they became bigger -- like a glass in the walker &#91; a center .
this was built in six months .
most of the visual language is -- by claes -- of claw , but these two little boys are my sons , and they were in the play , &quot; doctor .
but we were trying to let our ideas make together the objects of the objects .
it &apos;s a way to get into contact with some of these people who are so important to the reexplored of architecture .
so i decided to get it into a depression .
so that was the opportunity to make a sculpture out of it .
the building is very sculptural when you walk around this .
it &apos;s hard to make high homes .
this is the living room .
these are early studies , but you &apos;ve got to sell furniture on normal people , so if i went to down the building , the people say , &quot; the furniture in here , but in my normal building , they &apos;re not going to look well . &quot;
the site coming up to the street is much of normal , except for a couple of dives of pencils , so that this point of the apartment of that point of the room .
and the light is lit , and it puts a kind of light blanket in the night .
and this is actually the hotel .
the original building was added because it was very similar to the property , and it was clear .
but the food wasn &apos;t be as good as our stuff , and it failed .
fossil fuels aren &apos;t available for fossil fuels , and solar energy help them doesn &apos;t help you to sign their own .
so over the next few years of students and i worked on to develop a process .
but one thing that we were doing in a certain degree was down , the briquettes , and the briquettes were quite shallow , and we lost energy as they were burning in burning .
so you don &apos;t only have health benefits , but also the benefits for the environment .
and we need to rethink our development strategies so that we don &apos;t do any education campaigns that are going to set them from a farm , but they shut them off from a poor farm .
there are our senses , our special senses , our vision , our promises , our listening , our taste meaning , our feeling .
here &apos;s a classic example : rebecca is a nice tumor of blood vessels through her skull through their skull , and her nose is destroyed . it can &apos;t see bad .
and to turn to go to your neighbor . push your subjaw and turn them to the person next to you and see them -- she looks the misky .
he lived a happiness . probably was that he had a successful and satisfying job , and a loving family . he could participate in social life .
and this is probably the difference between beauty and of this kind of surgery .
now , we know that he was convicted of domestic violence , and no , he &apos;s not one of the good guys .
this is the target that he presented for us .
so this is a problem with problems with existing replacement .
how can we change the relationship from children ?
70 percent of all antibiotics that are consumed in the united states are taken across the animals .
what we &apos;re taking up is what we are .
because the government has gone to mass goods , because cheaper corn and low-cost socks in our food chain that make this food for food is very cheap .
we need to teach the kids that a chicken is not a giraffe .
maybe plants even plants , and we serve them in the mold .
so i work with private companies , who are ready to do research and development with me who are ready to take advantage for me , and they &apos;re really ready to work in schools .
but we need to really do to become a witness .
so i don &apos;t know how that &apos;s like this , but i &apos;m going to go to starbucks or pete it , and the great milky coffee in san francisco cost five dollars .
that &apos;s a part of you up .
and i brew , spog and ridicule , because they think , &quot; that &apos;s impossible . consciousness cannot explain . &quot;
this is this lovely picture , showing a rat bubble . it &apos;s an imaginary reader .
so that &apos;s the problem . so , i have to try to do a little bit of work that some of you don &apos;t like to have it from the same reason they don &apos;t like to explain a magic trick .
we &apos;re seeking a donors .
i realized here on this bridge was a lot of people -- you can just see them over the bridge .
who comes from you turned the figure on the right ? ok .
as a cube , in front of a black background , seen through a swiss cheese .
now we &apos;re going to be in the experiment .
and i wanted to show you that scientists using the dritore method to show you about their own consciousness that you haven &apos;t even dreamed of , and that means that you &apos;re not a professional for your own consciousness that you think you think it .
they &apos;re basically basically -- to a certain degree -- trying to plan what other people are supposed to do ; they &apos;re planning for their lives .
but it &apos;s not true , because traffic is an non-linear phenomenon , which means that when you reach a certain conducture of traffic , a very quickly begins .
but when the congestion charges were there , it was not the way you expect , people and more frustrated .
it &apos;s unfortunately in almost any major city reality : traffic traffic -- especially during the main traffic age . jonas eliasson unveils a small percentage of the driver of the main transit , and it might listen to the past .
these are the opiates people on the roofs of kabul , 10 years after our war started .
so if you hear what i want to talk to you about today , i want to say that i am at the name of all the patients that i &apos;ve met , and all of the ones that i haven &apos;t met .
and with the internet , that &apos;s all , not only because we could find information , but also other people who were able to gather together that could give us information .
so i made an ultrasound .
now , what i read in the webmd : &quot; the thing is , &quot; the &quot; is a bad man for advanced kidney cancer .
if you &apos;re wondering why patients are motivated and they want to help , think about it .
you see , that &apos;s the immune system .
so here is this .
so she made the ultrasound .
as dave debronkart discovered that he was sick at a rare and lethal tumor , a group of other people who had been known in the internet -- and found a therapeutic that didn &apos;t even live their own doctors , and so he asks all the patients to know their own health data and health and healthcare .
so , imagine of a business , as you &apos;ve never existed before , a pit industry that doesn &apos;t protect the earth , but bacteria help us by putting minerals out of the sky and sea sediments .
with echoes with echoes , this is what i call the sounds of kehlhead through the mouth or the nose come out of . it comes out attacks in your environment as the echo , who are listening to hear this echos and turn this information into an acoustic front image .
in chinese words , the word of the word is &quot; sign &quot; like the word &quot; happiness &quot; -- &quot; chinese believe that bats make prosperity , health , health , longevity , achievement and serenity .
the big question , the big question , which is the modern molecular medicine , which is : does you make this gene changing more susceptible to disease or just the other ?
our bodies beat falls in aging , and these are causing social problems -- one reason why we &apos;re dealing with it .
in the western world , bats are often as a very scary , yes , unmissive imaging . the zoologiol brothers encouraged to a retrothinking of bats with bats from bats , their unique and fascinating biology of deep insights into our own genome .
so , what did you do when the last time you get serious ?
and the wells of electronics isn &apos;t all , but many countries in the bottom billion .
so what is what &apos;s wrong ? why is there the so-called &quot; resource &quot; ?
and so the countries of the bottom billion need a very mature politics .
a few economists have come back in time and said , &quot; why don &apos;t you try one ? it &apos;ll reveal the value . &quot;
right now in this moment , in the world , there are a billion people in arms in arms or failing countries , and how can we help them ? economist paul shows a bold a bold , compassionate plan that we can close the gap between arm and rich .
they &apos;re not going to be done .
this is allan olicates from toronto .
this year i was in latin america , china , where i was talking about the base of laparoscopic surgery .
and we trying to make the earth smaller , to get more daght .
steven broitzberg : a universal translator for surgeons
i liked the kind of my work on my work , but i wanted to make it bigger -- from an object that you see , to something that you can lose .
i want to create this sculpture c in urban spaces around the world .
i &apos;ll conclude with this story .
every time i danl , i think i think about this liter and all of carbon .
but now we have a way to do this .
as you &apos;re doing this , on the upper left is one ad , which is connected to the brain , your own tempo rules .
they &apos;re facts about the well-being of conscious beings .
and that &apos;s why all of the cultural variation can be like human beings to evolve , at least in the context of principle in the context of a one-way , neuroscience , psychology , etc .
the concept of physical health is undefined .
that brings us to the cause of things that people tend to do in the heart of morality .
but the demagls are at one right ; we need a distinctive notion of human values .
that means to have a field of expertise .
so , if anybody wanted to wear a veil in the room , or a funny hat or your face , i think we should be free to volunteer , but we need to do we want , but we must be honest about the limitations that these women have laid down .
the other thing that asking questions after &quot; good and evil , &quot; and wrong , &quot; not by science , but sam harris argues that the science of moral affairs , the shapes of human values and the question of what is a good life , can have an intentional stance .
you see the mother of the motheral , two daughters , probably on the right and left , and a single egg on the right .
after a few days , the temperature , hatch out of the egg the larve of the parasite , and is going to eat the aphid from the inside .
but the question remains , even though , if you could see , you know , the pest , the pest , the natural food enemy .
why good beetles ?
my last picture : all of us , whatever we &apos;re saying , we can also sing : &quot; give a chance ! &quot;
i was a car graphic and a car of automobile , so i have hard to rage on that subject .
it &apos;s nice to fun thing to make the brain &apos;s fun than anybody else else , i do .
hometown of the urban -- that &apos;s what the new yorker needs .
her unicigo name was fay wo , and this was the -- i wasn &apos;t finished enough to say , &quot; take the drawing . &quot;
in the fall of the northern men on greenland , the enemies have lived in greenland and the north men had a very bad relationship , and we know that the inuit men have killed killed , and , probably more powerful , to dive access to the outer spanish , from the northern men in a critical period of a critical period of history to hunt seals .
in addition to the northern men , for example -- a competitive -- what the chiefs wanted to do , more affirsts and more protection and more resources , and the chief their middesers , the chief the land , the chief owner and the land -- and the chief of the temporal bear , but the community of course of the long term .
and this is just see a choice .
there are quite a lot of people eating insects .
in many food that we take to us . i &apos;ve only have two food on the slide here on the slide -- pink or suricles , or poetry for camparpari , or garpari . a lot of our red foods are colored with a natural color material .
so if a third of the world &apos;s population will increase its meat needs from 25 kilograms of average , it increases 80 pounds of average , and one-third of the world &apos;s population in china lives in china and india lives in china and india .
so these are two points for insects .
and also , 80 percent of the world has been insects , so we &apos;re only a minority -- in a country like the united kingdom , the united states , the netherlands , everywhere .
and by 2020 , you may be able to buy you with the knowledge that that &apos;s an insect that you &apos;re going to eat .
allison hunt : my god , it &apos;s coming up here .
i &apos;d like for 10 months , and i had to wait for 18 more months .
no peer review reference of speakers , no trace from the usual stuff , no .
as technology progressing and continued to evolve many of us , that will make us very complicated , making us smarter , to connect with the world .
the idea is actually relatively simple .
and this one , this is a representative of a device from the 15th hundred device .
but , you know , there &apos;s a difference between the two , because you can say to your ipod -- or with your iphone , you can tell exactly how much clock is it , with ambiguity .
and more advanced grid became cultural symbols .
it &apos;s a robot that &apos;s got three legs , this is inspired by nature .
the first version , the other one , is strider .
the diameter is the diameter , and then it turns on the left and it turns to the right .
now , we don &apos;t have enough time to engage with the technological details , i want to show you a few of the experiments .
and this graduate student , it probably uses it for the first time , but she can move it to the various ways .
i don &apos;t know how many of you have already heard of the robocub .
how do we take all the ideas ?
how do we develop these ideas ?
so , it &apos;s not just about the fact that it &apos;s just about , you have to work very hard .
they &apos;re going to be to live .
there is basically not have a pool of well-qualified teachers , and only eight percent of the people in the county have a bachelor or a higher degree .
but next to our personal reasons why we want to be there , there &apos;s a huge need .
in games , you the class and shares them in two teams , a team on every side of the game belt , and the teacher takes a piece of chalk and just write a number in each of the wheels .
as frameers for education offers a counter-toxic to all the boring , rigid , arousal territory , which is so much of these school-district classes .
studio h h offers a way to develop the people who need of skills that he should need as an architect : all of the creation of building wood and metal into the research .
there is there &apos;s no doubt about the technology we solve the problem of replacing fossil fuels .
we know that desertification is being called by livestock , usually by cattle by cattle , sheep and goats that are releasing the soil and methane and methane .
we never understood it .
there &apos;s only one possibility , again , just one possibility that remains the cmatologists and scientists are : the unthinkable thing and livestock , which are depositing around and killing , replending and imitate predators .
and the spot for 30 years of casty and arrested , regardless of the rain .
i &apos;ll just ask you a quick question .
so that &apos;s my personal reason .
to find kids to find that prakash participate . ) , when i look at the eyes of this child , they will recognize the cause of the outcome .
what could the causal relations between the earliest potential capabilities and have been developing ?
patient : i can &apos;t see it .
pam , if you &apos;re looking at now , please join me .
so , as you know , when you look at this circle as a representative of all the children that we &apos;ve used to be treated , this is the size of the problem .
which i didn &apos;t know .
so i met the guy , went to his office , and i saw this plaphs and newscharacter of the people that he trained .
and if you go to 85 , there &apos;s no way of creating the 200 meters .
and i was so sure my time was coming .
they were calling us , in something like , &quot; my ladies , you &apos;ve got one minute . &quot;
they have hair hits hair , and i can beam my zedest .
and so , and i walk around the world in amazing .
there are venches on the feet , and then my subscribers are in pink , you know , and my achilles selives -- they move a little bit .
the current debate about copyright laws like sopa in the u.s. or acta in europe is becoming very emotional .
so the internet of the internet according to the internet and inhaling the content , so in the conversation in the conversation , they were brought to a worker &apos;s worker in the minant .
this is the mathematics for the world now more than ever in human history .
what do we mean when we say we &apos;re going to teach it to other people ?
so , i think , i consider calculus , a kind of craving stuff .
i don &apos;t think it &apos;s fair .
if you grew up with computers and paper , it doesn &apos;t really matter what order you &apos;re taught with them , you just want to have the best tool that you &apos;ve got .
i don &apos;t think much at the opposite .
well , it &apos;s a bloody hard thing to do the pigeon , that &apos;s the problem .
and the land that matters first is going to catch up into my eyes to make a new economy , a better economy , better perspectives .
now i got a little bange .
my training had begun .
i &apos;m not terribly tired , but where i am , i get all kinds of advice : go here , move you , passe on this one .
often , that feeling often that this sentiment of compassion goes .
chris : stuart ney is the blind
even though , if we follow kevin kelly , nothing has to remember at all .
but i also wanted to follow a couple of a hundred obs and disposessed laws that are in the bible .
in fact , the bible of cognitive psychology is very powerful cognitive psychology .
the first is -- &quot; thou shalt not take the bible literally . &quot;
three , you should have mystified .
these are very powerful , spiritual leaders , even when i think they have to say .
so if we want this book to win any meaning , then we need to make ourselves in it , and with him rings .
so we have this wonderful progress .
and the academics think of these work teachers was too , it was too inspirational , so we developed serious applications like this opk prototype program that &apos;s going to be a laser with a laser .
and these work has been seen by alex mcdowell , one of the most legendary people in the world .
if we want things to pick up things , 3d , space , that we &apos;re tracking skin movements now , because we can get inside , not in 2d , not in an artificial 2d , but in an inch .
paul is the developer is this developer , and maybe it &apos;s the easiest way to get to him and tell me what &apos;s going on .
we can &apos;t make any technical progress if design is not maximistic .
so if it &apos;s logistics or utility management or natural gas and natural manufacturing , financial service , financial service , pharmaceutical computer science , biological computer computer science , are at the moment the scogram , but that &apos;s not the killer application .
it was used in washington d.c. , and it was used to track refrigeration .
lolcats is the sinclair are cute pictures of cats that are going to be more cute through imaging articles .
whereas the parents -- maybe a little bit stressed , you know , pause , you &apos;d like to pick up a little bit more later .
the trick for design situations is therefore understanding when you leave you on the economic part of the abmachment -- the parents pay the caregiver -- and when you leave you in the social part , when you trust .
but we can also support people and reward them who create their cognitive surplus of social value .
the only difference between the mahabharata , &quot; and our cricket was that the cricket had ever been in the rest of the lives , and the next day again .
and so cricket became very large , and over cricket , the rich people came to the country .
it was a sense of pride of what we can do .
everybody saw them in their own , but no one had got it .
there were cricket and the indian film .
because we had this auction .
so before i go , i want to show you some side effects of this event .
now , this simple equation , even for you , for those of you , don &apos;t like the equations , is something that &apos;s quite familiar with you .
so this is an example of how the speed of us can get things in the sense , a sense of their likelihood of being -- and how misfigure it can be . it &apos;s not just puzzles .
nine of them were sold these people .
and that &apos;s a systematic mistake that people commit .
would you spend your favor 20 dollars for a ticket ?
i &apos;ll give you an example .
and when the journey to the other end of the city of 100 bucks , it &apos;s worth 100 bucks , almost no matter , but the people don &apos;t think about it .
for example , if you &apos;re going to be sold or 60 dollars in a month .
next distance near top near the fighter near the fiddler of the fireman , but slowly , your normal relationship is given her true ratio .
we &apos;ve got time for some questions at dan gilbert , one or two questions .
i mean , what would we need to play this culture ?
dg : well , you know , the ones who are the most suspicious of evolutionary explanations are all of us , the evolutionl-syists themselves .
aubrey de grey : i heihey aubrey de grey and the cambridge .
when i realized that i was able to allow me certain libertions with the sujet jet , i made the following series of drawings .
and i really got worried .
and i woke up and said , &quot; well , maybe that &apos;s not that ? &quot;
first of the willingness to suggest to me a critical a critical audience , i think i &apos;m too sure about my thing .
on the other hand , it &apos;s on my list of didatic posters .
there &apos;s also adult response to the adult response , there &apos;s a kind of fragmented response response , not only about a potential diet , but when there &apos;s been threatened by destructive materials , the facial expression is amazing .
he really blew . i thought he would commit to herself .
when we started collecting data and to put in political orientation , we discovered a general difference pattern -- that &apos;s the psychologist yoel inusable and paul bloom -- because we saw all three studies , that people , their own ones , to be very successful , more conservative .
in another one we described , like a woman masturlt and her teddybear has been stabbed .
were you ever there ?
so what do you want to do for solutions , i mean , the job of a poet isn &apos;t just ... husband , the big fight . it &apos;s just . the hurting bgs .
have you ever get out of hollywood off to the end and film a damn thing ?
yes , mom .
i don &apos;t remember .
that &apos;s you , right there ?
but we pay high school .
eo : we admit you &apos;ve got to the ted stage .
mm : it starts instantly .
so , oreg-media &apos;s team that &apos;s sitting in the east coast -- and we &apos;re on the west coast , and we &apos;re doing the software , and we take our tool and bring our daily images and the daily images and text .
you &apos;ve continued your way to live in a life where you rely on to work for somebody .
luckily , i &apos;m also fortunate to get more excited with a little bit more money , and the stuff became more sophisticated .
it goes up there and then -- he comes up again .
i went to see him a few years ago , and he showed me his early work , and his early work had given a certain impression to my early work .
it &apos;s not natural money .
if it &apos;s undense -- bilbao was not .
what did you get to get through ?
shortly before the mayor , we went back to the harbor .
fg : no , no , wait for you .
i went out of the car , looked around and saw a coal mining town , and i turned around and i found myself in one of the senior landscapes that i had ever seen .
i even have in my own conscience , and here in my work , i &apos;m trying to build the same kick switch .
i &apos;m going to keep going on with a few of china .
and this is what they did .
the next round comes in . an incredible workforce that &apos;s built there . shanghai -- i watch the urban renedization of the city , and this is a whole town of urban , which is transformed and turned out over the next five years of skyscrapers .
now , i &apos;d like to point out in this picture : when i first saw these buildings for the first time , the realization that they use no central air conditioning , every windows has built salad conditioning .
i needed five suggestions , because they were always running . it was impossible to slow it down .
as we need to prepare for that recording is about eight to 10 minutes for your lunch .
and this whole notion -- the things that i &apos;ve been photographing , from a great worry about the scale of our progress , and what we call progress .
and all you can contribute to distribution would be great .
and there &apos;s a real way to get new audience if i had the chance to do it .
and it &apos;s increasingly more important that we can figure out how to extract these resources from these extremely complex waste currents .
they have emotional or very similar electrical and magnetic properties .
that &apos;s the last frontier of recycling .
even sometimes a dead animal , unfortunately .
i thank you for your time .
after i have thought about this , i see a couple different options .
so the advantage of holly is that they actually don &apos;t have the same forms of technology like us .
it doesn &apos;t look for a lot -- and it &apos;s actually not much .
they could you start paying attention to the price , or watch how much they buy -- to keep their monkeys somehow in the eye somehow .
and that &apos;s so much , if you looked at the results of the monkeys , you couldn &apos;t tell whether they were stem from monkeys or people in the same market .
i &apos;ll just give you 500 dollars .
it turns out that this is the result of at least two biases that we have in mental level .
he &apos;s always a more , so the monkeys get two grapes .
what &apos;s remarkable , for us , that if you give the monkeys these options , they do the same unrational things about people .
think about how to eat our inherignite sweet things , or fat like boxes .
laurie santos : a business of bonobos -- so irrational as ours
every third that lives in a town is living in a slum today .
swarm stamtte are the 24-stones .
i want to describe this .
we worked with windows 2000 .
certainly we are investing in innovation in innovation . we invest in reverse education in science training and gatherers , but we invest a lot too hard to invent our institutions to re-invent and design .
now , in many of these examples , it turns out to make the balance of governance , you don &apos;t yet it yet , but you &apos;re starting to see how people develop innovative applications as an enhanced system of governance .
it is an adversarial relationship between civil society and the government , who has the control over this information and who is in their property .
thank you .
it wasn &apos;t always beautiful at that table .
an abductive cornfield with a couple of stew-ups , which reminds me of the hebrew tradition that you might be able to harvest , but you &apos;ve always got to rely on the edge that somebody doesn &apos;t have a lot to worry about their good nutrition .
twelve people in their religion , their culture or their tribe , who teach the same message .
and i think that &apos;s one times that the bible is mentioned a health system system , and a commitment to do what &apos;s necessary -- that the needs of the children has been given by god , so that we asked an answer when the eternal mother asks , &quot; what &apos;s the children , are all the kids ? &quot; and we might say , &quot; yes ! &quot;
but we have less good with the public sector , we know less well .
that &apos;s art and politics are silent and nature from nature at any time , but could it be a very special relationship , which might be created in their uniqueness .
it &apos;s not on the street .
this was the deal in care .
so we pulled it off from the edge of the margins .
it can be used for everything for ideas , films , for installations .
so i was born to the most challenging time when my country was in the war .
so i &apos;ll do something else now . that &apos;s easier for me .
but i never saw a dead body at least , at least i have killed .
i was eating snails , he dance , hasen , snakes , and everything life wore in herself .
i don &apos;t have breakfast , no lunch .
they only get the food that falls from the sky , from the u.n .
one of them i was .
i believe that , because there , because there &apos;s a section of the death penalty debate , maybe the most important of all of where everybody agreed , where everybody agreed , where the love of the joy of death penalty supporters and the loudest opponent opponents are completely addicted .
that &apos;s paradoxically , the annual levels of magnitude has remained up , but the number of death is down .
that &apos;s the second thing i learned .
but the fact that we have a lot to learn is not that we don &apos;t even know a lot of knowledge .
what we do with the death penalty system is we pay later later .
my father was smiling and said , &quot; i hope you know what that means ? &quot;
it was so obvious that there were actually our parents who gave us the gifts .
i took the bus into the town to buy my new libra poster .
and apparently , the people in jerusalem were all 600 bc , every single one of them : husband , wife , baby , baby .
maybe your larger ability to cooperate and adapt your larger ability ?
martin luther king didn &apos;t say , &quot; i have a nightmare , &quot; when he liked the civil rights movement .
and we know a long time that this is not a good measure of measuring a nation that &apos;s probably a nation .
and that &apos;s really what i &apos;ve done in my adult life -- thinking about how we can measure happiness , how we can measure well-being , as we can we do that within the limitations that our environment is .
these are the united states , among these triuns , also other western countries , and indeed , a few iran-iraq nations .
and they &apos;ve invested in social programs -- health and education .
and the point is that we still need to improve well-being .
at a personal level , we also need incentives .
learn out .
and i &apos;d like to continue to push the frame of something , talking about compassion from the global level .
and then i thought about the people in the ward , whose gray star was over , and i realized how i came from this sort of most narcisal feature to the altruism of altruism to feel good for those who is helped . i think that &apos;s a motivator .
they &apos;re controlled by other brain areas .
there &apos;s a phrase in the world of information science in the world : at the end , everybody will know everything .
as a dancer , i know the nine rasas or navarasas , anger , virtue , absau , humor and fear .
but i told myself that fear and tears were no options for me .
it &apos;s the force , so much of us to devote us a lot of what we think is that , even the way that it &apos;s going to be something like cancer is insignificant .
and all of these were incompatible .
thank you .
technology is called linked data , and it &apos;s very simple .
in those documents , there are little four-corner , little boxes .
they &apos;re a database of their database . they don &apos;t want to leave them before they &apos;ve created a beautiful website for it .
well , you put it in this crazy little pot and there &apos;s a google .
i did this on the map . i did it again .
the annual turn , the dotcom bubble , the stress that party you go when the clock hits when the champagne gets beat before the champagne , and then there , there are these amino yearns , who were a lot to be more than the year 2000 , more than only one two and a few zeros .
there are a hundred billion of your generation dollars and 10 million lives or death on the game , and also the security and future of them and their family is in danger .
they need our help . they need the cavalry , and the cavalry will not come from mars .
the mexican x is not given the mexican hit no way .
i didn &apos;t have patience until i was home .
it &apos;s almost like a 3d photograph .
he would say , &quot; for the common . &quot;
it shows how limited our eyes or hearing or touch , are we really seeing ?
and they came .
she &apos;s called &quot; take &quot; &quot; reslave . &quot;
so again , the shadows became the object .
alabalasuubramaniam on sculpture play with time , form , shadow , perspective : four trusive senses sensations that can reveal what &apos;s going on in reality . at tedindia , the artist &apos;s an extraordinary installations reveals .
5 percent .
a second reason has to do with group forced .
what brings me to my second argument .
in the 1990s , my interest , and my passion for changing art to a new form that came from a slry neighborhood outside of durban .
so , hopefully , this is going to be a few or maybe some unpleasant memories .
yet , in google , we know that &apos;s the most famous category .
but today , things have changed .
the hurdy-gurdy is the only instrument that drives you with a wheel to get so like a violin , kind of making the saps and creating music in it .
i &apos;d like to talk to you today about a whole new way of thinking about sexual activity and sexual education , through comparison .
when do you play baseball ?
that &apos;s what they like .
there &apos;s always a winner in baseball , which means that there are always a loser in baseball .
what i did and my colleagues did , 32 people who were brutally in love with an fmri scan .
as a polynese said , &quot; i could have jump to heaven . &quot;
i would ask , &quot; would you die for you or die for them ? &quot;
it employed a bit of a while or being so hungry .
then , the worst invention of women was tog .
almost always is the producer from producers that calls me to a television show , and what we &apos;re going to say is a woman .
in the western world , little girls start -- women used to start having sex to have more partners to feel less regrets for them , to marry less children and bad marriages to build better .
with orgasm , with orgasm at orgasm .
but increasingly more people in the united states are taking this long-term base .
the mysterious is important . you think of people who feel in people who are admire , because mystery is dopamine , that drives you in love .
i will never forget this day in the early year 2006 .
they got diabetes . done done .
you &apos;re treating the obesity .
what if obesity is merely , if obesity is the metabolic response would be a lot of endangered disease that should worry about us ?
some people believe it &apos;s too many calories .
it was the system that i was part of , i left it down .
my great-great-grandfather was henry ford , and my great-great-grandfather was maternal firestone .
and with the time , i &apos;ve become my intuitions , more or less of the consensus .
if you look at the population of population , it will realize that we don &apos;t want to work on today &apos;s budget .
so using use of use camps , buses and trains all the system .
and while these groups are the challenge of a clean energy challenge -- and i find it really amazing to see how much intelligence , how much money and how much more things are in the last three years in the last three years is clean energy .
how do you bring those two things together ?
it was a sort of a initiation of them .
he invented the ship camps .
and so put a book a book recently , i think you could see it , with the title : &quot; march , less action ? &quot;
the third part of dealing with the idea of the non-knowledge , so that , to be aware of a previous knowledge stage .
that &apos;s one of the attacks again , and that &apos;s when this conference knows , and clearly has shown : where are we going on ? how are we going on ? what do we do to start ?
by showing a series of inspiration , unusual and inliced products , explains the british brand -- and design guru bennett shows that it &apos;s not about the big gesture , but it &apos;s about solving small , universal and neglecting problems .
here they are , playing .
the streets are taken over the children .
our parents are illiterate and we want to read them and teach them .
70 years ago , a man required to put a whole nation called &quot; we can . &quot;
before the breakdown of the communist system , i had the privilege to meet the space city and other places to get to the world of russia .
that would be the answer .
interestingly , we &apos;re seeing , in a period of about the peak of life expectancy , in that period , urbanization has tripled .
it resonated with changes even though those still were not known .
this is a view in the inner bank of hong kong by 1979 that was opened in 1985 , and in which the sunlight is moving deep into the inside of this space .
a combination of biomass , water layers , burning the plant oil -- a process that has been developed , interestingly , interestingly in east germany , the dependency of the soviet council .
the dead sea , clearly much lower than the entire oceans and lakes .
and this is a common platform .
you &apos;ve got this shadow that you can see here , you know , it covers the sun , but you &apos;ve created the celestial light .
you enter this room and think , &quot; great ! it &apos;s so powerful , except because of this sort of view , this giant light source in the middle .
light is also is important for social interactions -- for development with all of these programs , the symbols of life .
and where we don &apos;t need it , we need to stay dark , we can avoid it .
can we use light decenter ?
it works in the same .
is it because i &apos;m writing good ?
or the indian council of science research , desire doesn &apos;t that anything you learn from people to serve them again .
we should do something about it .
and everything starts with curiosity .
if we can create markets for these artists , we don &apos;t have to deal with digging and break them down .
that &apos;s what we need , people that can scale them up .
scaling is an inconstrained , an inmissive capacity , the needs of local people , the quality of the rules that they do .
anil gupta : saidullah sahib is in motihari , back in champari .
and we have a very vibrant network , especially in china , but it &apos;s increasing in brazil and other parts of the world .
he said , &quot; i can &apos;t . that &apos;s the only thing i can , but i &apos;m going to invent a machine that solves your problem . &quot;
i would love to talk about this technology , and later , after this 15 minutes , i would love to discuss all the idea of technology here about what &apos;s inside here .
150 years ago , trains were worth enough , and thanks to steam , we managed to turn a continent into a small time of land .
and each one of these individual industries , by the way -- the business of the golf-carts is going to be billions .
so we worked very , very hard , but we knew that it &apos;s not so hard to develop the technology about what acceptance is important and how technology can be used .
they didn &apos;t have to go through 100 years of learning around us .
sure , in the rest of the world , you have the ability to leave the place in the world , everything that you can burn into heat , or to drink the water .
and so on the course of the year &apos;s year , were thousands of thousands of people .
and since it &apos;s illegal , the only way to have the geographic corridors under absolute control that are being transported to the drugs .
you go up with it is : when you come in a neighborhood , you teach the people of your arrival , and the most potent bandes of the neighborhood offer them to represent the zeta brand brand locally .
new markets come from a parent , if you merge with a new multinational , you have a new connection , either with marriage or other tutoring species .
so we don &apos;t have to understand why technology is important where they evolve , but also , especially important , when timing is all .
it &apos;s almost free , against the end of their lives .
now there are these four types of technology to look at these four stages of life of a technology .
interestingly , it has outdated a different way before , but not the ones who matters .
it &apos;s an economic power ; it &apos;s a technology .
for some of the technologies we &apos;ve talked about .
patient capital works in between and trying to take the best .
the first was miniaturization .
the idea of growth is more central .
while one of my final visit in pakistan , i asked dr. sono , to move to see some of the irrigation farm in the thar desert .
now the time for us is to start investigating and look for new solutions about all sectors .
if you were looking at the book , you saw what i really did .
my main field of the college was english , and i didn &apos;t have any need for it , but i was missing that writing , so i started writing a blog , and i started with these little stories .
how much money do he take in beer ?
and one story is about this baby and his name is irin .
and you find blogs of people , and these are the records of people who write daily daily -- not necessarily about the same subject to things that you care about .
this is the only photo that i have . and thinking about what we can do with our blogs , we think about the people who are going to 90 dollar computers talking about who they are , and they share personal stories with each other -- that &apos;s a great thing .
and that was one of the event that i realized how much graphics can be able to affect the connections of mutual relations in the world .
it &apos;s been harvested for jew , except by our generation .
we need to use these techniques to get a better understanding of the emergence of the oceans .
we studied this fish , but only we had to learn how to keep it .
sometimes the tuna are really large , like this fish of algae .
we &apos;ve seen an astronomer calculations .
the other side in monterey , and on the farallon islands , there is a team that has launched by scott anderson and manipulated , jorgensen , and throws white sharks .
this is only three years , and this is the data data data .
why not connect the public with this initiative , right over your iphone ?
so i went out with my company , and i said , &quot; ok , let &apos;s see what &apos;s going on 9 / 11 . &quot;
&quot; is your name ! &quot; &quot; yes . &quot;
then i did websites .
here , you buy my ct taste in the store 99 in dena city on sunday , and november 15th .
and where do you know that home was ?
i understand that this is on the individual level of symbolic .
hasan , curiosity .
sebastian bought in a sharp way to protect his good call .
it &apos;s about reconstructing people to build meaningful connections , connections that we have to discover our humanity back beyond airbnb , through markets like airbnb , in order of markets like airbnb , pansy , and build on personal relationships , instead of information transcreative transaction .
in fact , recently , i &apos;ve learned that 12.500 charges of iron and were combined together .
and it &apos;s not just transmitters , but the scope of the reputation data , the surprise .
there &apos;s a wave of business hall in terms of the tv and legal cloud , and there &apos;s a bottom-up cloud that can figure out how they can see their online reputation , watching and use .
and stack overflow is creating a very high play field that tends to empower people to get their talents to the top .
a big difference between the poor and the rest of us .
everything &apos;s flowing up .
and who created these numbers by using the same diagnostic interviews with random people were chosen by testing individuals to compare the state of mental illness in the societies .
we like to say -- and i know that many americans are here in the audience -- if americans want to live the american dream , they should go to denmark .
here &apos;s just one example .
but i should tell you , if you criticize a targeted choice of our data , we never choose to anticipate our own purposes .
richard wilkinson : how economic africa kills societies
so here we have a simple titan knee .
but our users , our clients , do other things . they overbeat their legs .
this is my final point as well .
he &apos;d spent 10,000 dollars in order to buy a website that shows women in sex in luxury .
whether you put a breath from stolen waste from the bulldoons with a nayellow bike , a barliphed , or weights out of rocks that you want to do with little chunks , and many of you would like to learn the best , and many of you want to learn , you know to hang out of their restaurants and restaurants , hair , hairshops stores .
that &apos;s so cool that i have it in my house , but it &apos;s in the field of a bridge , i don &apos;t use it to make juice .
instead of showing up , &quot; there are 73,000 results .
no problem .
it &apos;s about brainstorming brainstorming . right ?
now visceral is subconscious , you don &apos;t notice it .
and more grief about it . that &apos;s exactly what emotions do .
so this is clearly a wish norman .
we hired an idea . the argument was that schools have no skills in the people .
that brings us to the question of how to change the teacher perception ?
so i took this experiment , and repeated it outside of delhi , this period of the town shivpuri in central india , where i was saying that there was never taught anybody there .
i was really surprised .
and this may be a lot of great interest for these group because they &apos;re all talking about groups .
the third of the things , and again again , to make it a little bit , i took a test with over 500 children in a whole india , and asked them with a 68 different set of questions for their opinions .
and a series of such specications should make technology to repair and repair values and violence .
i was fascinated by the cold war , from the infleting negotiations of nuclear mediterranean rockets , the norwegian war between the soviet union and the u.s .
i &apos;d been in germany in germany , of norway , and different places , but i became a new york worker to serve at the u.n. security council for the british delegation .
one was that british government decided something about in the summer of 2004 , in the course of the use of intelligence information about weapons of weapons of weapons of weapons of weapons of weapons in the field of the earth war , a very limited , a boundary issue .
another thing a second thing happened in kosovo , which was sort of got the question i didn &apos;t really answer , &quot; what do with my life ? &quot;
it was a complicated thing , and i &apos;m not saying it was easier than it was actually .
and we started talking about , and he said -- i told him what i was doing , and i &apos;m very suspicious that i was going independent diplomat in new york .
if governments are less , the problems that affect us in the world is to take advantage , then that means , who &apos;s left to tackle who needs to tackle who has to take more responsibility to tackle ?
it &apos;s going to be great . you &apos;ll have a exchange .
carne ross : an independent diplomat
and he comes behind the counter and it &apos;s unsnup .
thank you .
we feel romantic , pity .
here we go .
there are emotional , irreverelessness and social commentary , not only within the society of the fight , but there &apos;s two times spoiled shows , &quot; excessive colts , &quot; and &quot; phyle pyle , &quot; and three and three and three , three and three of the biggest tv shows .
do we want to see shows shows about people who have to save and unemployed ?
no , they want to vote .
but slowly , it quickly complained about me this cute insight that my students might not learn anything .
this was what happened to happen .
but i bet it was so presented that it was not in your mind .
i &apos;m always talking about this idea , a story , and scientific communication has this concept , which i call the tyrannei call the tyranny , where you cannot tell a story .
i dream about a website like wikipedia that explains every memorable scientific concept in simple language that any five of the eighth-graders understands today .
we &apos;re talk about being resolved or increase .
others dance , turn and circles to reach self-transcendence .
we want to fulfill our individual needs .
let me show you .
the main argument against group selection was always always going to have a group of cooperized participants , but once you have this group of subjects , they &apos;re going to get over the participants , out of the chain , they become individuals who will exploit by the hard work .
and pretty soon , the whole population is dealing with these new superorganisms .
the staircase brings us from the experience of life as professionals and usually upward to a experience of life as an elite , or sustainable .
a great challenge of modern life is to find the staircase in all the mess , and then do something good and noble , as soon as you climb to the top .
and i found out that there were historical prades .
because , inside , it &apos;s the replicator of a japanese tea house from the 1600s .
because i find it a lot of emotional -- -- and personal , and the beautiful projection , is that you see that you can actually focus the work , that &apos;s actually able to focus on powerpoint and other programs not .
i would probably park it in front of the other .
so she &apos;s neglecting .
&quot; when new technologies come up with new technologies that are very used to older technologies that are very used to older technologies , are more afraid of all the way .
they were liberated to new york city .
anyway , it was one , this is one of the advertisements that i learned to the best , because they have been disabled , and that &apos;s what i feel like that girls looked at the computer .
it &apos;s a little rau , but the structure -- the second plane -- the second plane before the impact , there was something more responsible when the right thing called -- it &apos;s not the right word -- in this title than in time or newsweek .
i don &apos;t think that &apos;s a improvement .
when i taught the students , i always asked the students , &quot; what &apos;s the definition of good work ? &quot;
danny hillis actually have an update -- he says , technology is anything that doesn &apos;t work yet .
i can &apos;t imagine , i can &apos;t imagine any biological principle that hasn &apos;t existed in any organism .
and last i come back to this naked wheel .
so it would sort of it , it would be close to the top of the animals , and if we did that , we would find out -- technology actually did that .
it &apos;s not just re-inhabited . it &apos;s continued .
that brings us technology : choice , possibilities , freedoms .
and if you think about what technology wants , i think it has to do with it , and that &apos;s what i really think -- everybody here has a job , and their job is to spend their lives to spend out of making out , that is .
and i knew right with six years that this is an animal i wanted to learn more . so i did .
yeah , i &apos;m going to give a filmmaker . &quot;
once the crows were touched the arm , they were dead .
so if you know , if you dip into this rift , there &apos;s a post , because there are thousands of active volcanoes , anytime , all the 65,000 mile .
and there &apos;s a whole new hydrothermal vents that has developed .
she said that a small group of thoughtful people could change the world .
in theory we thinking about thinking , rational people .
we tell us what form we should adapt .
and then when i was over 20 , i noticed that there weren &apos;t too many investigated .
because we have cities . this is where we live from .
we &apos;re talking -- images -- the dna of a company , the metabolic sm of a city , and so on . is this just mumpitz , shanted , or , or a central part of it ?
this is a group of software firms , and their livelihood versus age , all of food in the height and every power and billions of dollars .
the heartbeat reduces beat , they &apos;re going to live longer , more metabolic of oxygen and nutrients through the membranes , etc . , etc .
and the most important thing is that the exponential is the equivalent to the three-quarters rate in metabolic sm , bigger than one .
scaling up of the form of form .
here &apos;s walmart , but it doesn &apos;t look very substantial .
i could access it .
i could i allowed them to the most interesting interesting period of soil .
we are we &apos;re looking at the educational landscape in the educational landscape of a culture of the right answer , which pops up in an average multi-quadripleo test on the pasfront place , and i &apos;m here to communicate with you , with learning to do with learning .
everybody had done it had it . it allowed them to fail and learn them .
regenerative medicine is a pervasive concept that everybody can understand .
1930 was 1030 workers per retiree .
it &apos;s a chucking whose limb was caught again .
obviously , we tend to cure ourselves in a natural process , and let &apos;s make cells doing a lot of work .
the material put only natural signals .
he &apos;s cooling the shell , changes its properties , and he pulls it out of the dish .
they decided they decided that the fluid in the fat of fat that we have in the united states .
the good news is that &apos;s happening today .
i want to conclude with the words that no one can change our vision , but collectively , we can prompt your appetit .
okay , okay . oh , good .
it &apos;s lovely to know that you &apos;re worried , you know .
even when some of course , some of their presentation favorites are terrifying , horrible .
i have to try to calm me down , breath .
so i think everybody think that we need these people , but in particular , you see people like me , you know , i mean , latinos , we &apos;re just the majority or two weeks .
well , i wanted to just want a good night .
but that &apos;s where we had some problems .
even though it &apos;s still hard sometimes , i want to tell you that it helps me to understand that the society is more tolerant , usually because of places like this , because of ideas like this and because of people like them , with an open spirit .
and i realized that this is the way we &apos;re going to invent ourselves about time .
so it turns out they had a lot more in common than i had ever thought .
so i had to rush . i studied engineering .
so to give this thing to a face : people like muyunus who founded the grameen bank , more than 100 million people around the world of poverty and won the peace of heat price .
our mission is to create conversation that creates social changes and demands .
we all of all the public when the public was interested in part of this film , and today it belongs to a source program for schools in england and scotland and a major scandinavia .
so i like this : &quot; on the kilibano &apos;s again , snow . &quot;
and that reminds me about the idea of what &apos;s going on when someone comes from a taxi like this , has an accident , an accident .
anesthesia and doing anesthesia , look at the bag .
and this is one of the problems that we &apos;ve generated in nigeria and africa .
that &apos;s how i mean with proper technology .
so that &apos;s not new . we &apos;re going to turn up this technology .
in this moment , mandela , the world press , that virtually an genocide in his country is going to die in the rainforests , after the end of apartheid , thousands of apartheid , and the end of the victims of apartheid , and that the casuans , women and children .
i think the writer campaign basically , and about three or four wonderful people who help me support me .
avelile &apos;s mother had the mobile virus . she died of an hour-related disease .
voice : we &apos;re a people with a will , a solution and a common thing .
so , wael ghonim , who &apos;s the director of google egypt , and at night home , and at night at night , he &apos;s a facebook activist at night in the case of cnn , and interview to cnn , &quot; if you want to free to get free , you have to give you the internet . &quot;
but look at china , vietnam and other soviet state states , because what &apos;s happening there is very much tougher .
and here in the united kingdom is also concerned about a law called the digital harvest , which is called the more sophisticated light on private intercures to monitor civil behavior .
but in the last two decades , they &apos;ve never seen unprecedented expansion , and it &apos;s about 15 percent to the global gdp worldwide .
the justice system didn &apos;t work right .
the distribution of production and sales centers have the tendency to lie in the developing world , and they become more widely endangered violence and blood ties .
i showed you how many boats , how many ships it requires only to get one of these guys .
&#91; unclear &#93; , don &apos;t even take the police , that it &apos;s affecting the profit of great exports .
it &apos;s not really difficult .
it &apos;s a powerful industry , and it creates artifacts and violence , wherever it comes .
they knew what had happened .
no one told it .
well , for the public was done for the public .
there &apos;s no comparison that you could do . because we are the only creature that &apos;s on two legs .
i &apos;ve been trying to suggest for more than 40 years suggesting that the aquatic theory of spotting is faated as an insane thing , because it &apos;s certainly not fool.
anybody else else ? come and do it .
and in 1960 , she decided , &quot; this is the ufos and the yetis . &quot;
and secondly , i want to pick the issue for ted 2006 .
yeah , i was hanging up with a couple of google guys yesterday .
so 4 years later , and i &apos;m probably going to get 200 or 300 tags per day of people that i don &apos;t know , and that &apos;s a great opportunity to meet , well , other cultures , you know ?
why ? &quot; and i say , &quot; mutti , dad -- i &apos;m going to try it . &quot; you know , i don &apos;t know if you know that , but the video game market market , kids play this game , and supposedly there &apos;s a lot of money .
so i &apos;m trying -- i &apos;m trying to create little activity that makes people express themselves and , hopefully -- wow , i &apos;m on the side , but it doesn &apos;t exist ...
you &apos;re actually learning , and there are these lower floors activities that are the key to create a little bit of commitment to the more sustainable capital that we &apos;re missing , and very quickly -- i love puppets . here &apos;s a little .
now , i happen , i took a mast one , and says , &quot; yes , they &apos;re phoned and said , they like it and not . &quot;
attacks of homatine doesn &apos;t take anything .
politicians are weird creatures say politicians omar ahmad . the best way to bring you to engage with our favorite subject is a monthly handled letter , which is why good old scripts are more effective than email , phone or contributions , and tells us the four simple letter to write a more powerful letter .
it &apos;s pretty self-closive .
and i put them up and transformed myself physically so that i can &apos;t criticize myself in my room or a client .
and again , it &apos;s an invitation to make people out on the glacier and to the poor .
an levin argues that everywhere in the world nations find themselves to realize that social democratic welfare state is unsustainable and unaffordable , because he depends from the most fragmented economic conditions and the demographic model of a last era .
i am a social psychologist , and i study morality , and one of the most important principles of morality is that it opens and blind .
but it turned out reality .
republicans like republicans . this is not a surprise .
so there are a lot of reforms that we could do to agree with this .
it ruins the ability to trust each other , to feel that we &apos;re all in the same boat , because we &apos;re obviously not .
so , again , we see these two graphs exactly expressing the same thing .
the southern poverty law center is often fighting against the industrial prison complex to prevent a system that is more poor , young men .
i work together with the architects , neil smale at the barentt-architectural architectural arts , and we cooperate with international researchers to create these new materials from a bottom-up approach .
if you go through oxford , where we &apos;re today , and looking at a look at the brick , which i &apos;ve done in the last few days , you see that many of them are made out of limestone .
we &apos;ve observed this in the lab .
i &apos;ve been able to be done for about three decades of over hospitals , and i &apos;m probably most proud of that .
i am i am a lawyer for jura , psychology and psychiatry at usc , i &apos;ve got a lot of good friends , and i want a husband who wants to be here today .
and i quote from my wrips : &quot; i had given my classmates with my classmates and neval at the shock essay , &quot; talking about where we wanted to work with a homework .
then they hucking my arms and legs on the bed .
i &apos;ve never met a couple of patients who thought that was true .
i could put it back right now , and we could do it completely well , ha ha ha ha ha .
it &apos;s a national tragedy , and a scandal that is a prison of ln , county &apos;s county &apos;s largest institution in the united states .
i first encountered this concept , at the darpa grand , where the u.s. government has paid a price for the building of a self-cleaning car that could drive a desert .
is you realize that we could be triple the capacity of the highways , or not alone , if we don &apos;t leave us on human precision , if it &apos;s about taking the trace ? you &apos;re going to better position closer , so you can drive a little bit more shorter traces on a certain traffic breath and all traffic .
it leads to wild fish , including cutanchers and the rainbow .
they worry about making an abnormal water supply , they worry about a efficient waterfall , and they &apos;re starting to think about how their water usage is affected the image of its brand .
this man has made the decision to close his water back and make the water in the stream .
i am a pop cultural nerd , and i think a lot about what makes a strong female personality , and you know , films and tv shows big impact on my own website .
if you say that , you can allow everything .
compassion is fun .
another example : three goops -- a chef , an engineer , especially funny , had a mattery health -- that three belongs from one area in india , in the 200,000 people , had lived with any medical care .
and he called &quot; level 5 ceo . &quot;
the second ingredient is autonomy .
what does that mean ? imagine .
it &apos;s people who are part of a broken legal system , and unfortunately , torture is to be the cheapest form of the investigation . it &apos;s cheaper than a legal system , cheaper than a lawyer and earlier access to one puncture -- most of the time .
or is it other countries ?
but i said to them , &quot; i only have a question , at the point where everybody has landed on the state of state , what &apos;s going on with you ? &quot;
there &apos;s a favorite poem of the defenders that share with each other . it &apos;s like , &quot; have a courage , friends , the journey is never going on , and the stakes is very high , but then they &apos;re not alone alone . &quot;
in the same sub-state , sometimes you sit in , if you sit down in the new york and read , it &apos;s comprised and easy feeling .
i &apos;m an italian . in italy , design is normal .
so i began , &quot; 95 with this exhibition called &quot; forced material in contemporary design . &quot;
and so , &quot; is the last exhibition i did in moma , and they ended up last year .
i want to show this to two design examples of the background of a economy with very , very clear boundaries .
also , the work from people like marti guixe , trying to engage them by getting rid of the mouths , so that they can learn from their mistakes .
it &apos;s also the story of many other africans who are here today .
let &apos;s go and try and talk to the principal .
so the money became out .
i used to even during his presentation .
it &apos;s not enough to complain . we need to act .
my partner , m , which is a little bit like an engineering guru , has been hacked .
i have so many conversations led about things that i think need to happen in africa .
and he was trying to take me down . but at the end , he said , ok , i don &apos;t know with legal high school , i &apos;m a doctor of political science .
and we africans need to take responsibility for our continent .
so we had to start out of the front .
in november , 2012 , 2012 , more than 33,000 aubs of different nationism , but this time they were being asked by storm and rainweather .
these are two big words i don &apos;t grasp .
you take a blood tag , and you give it in a device called coulter fashion .
this device , it &apos;s called a touchb quiz .
the questions and talks that followed was fascinating .
rule number two : take a mess .
ramsey musm : 3 rules to keep learning
you may find that , but in my family , we have different aczms .
whole cities were wiped out , because there was no water .
and by 2050 , it should be nine billion .
so we &apos;re going to use these renewable energy for our water production .
and the chairs with an strange face of facial expression , and then as a result , they add up , &quot; ... and thousands of young people from aths are composed of aths , madrid and new york will demonstrate for social justice , saying they &apos;re inspired by the arab justice . &quot;
they say , &quot; the power of the people operates only in an annual country between x and yman . &quot;
there are certain rules for nonviolent struggle that they can follow .
but that was just the beginning of the show .
the same is true for the west , where you all see these valries , young people around the world , protesting , &quot; one , &quot; one . &quot;
and she said , &quot; i saw your talk in the live stream .
i said , &quot; if 500 to 1,000 or 2000 are being over my life . &quot;
so let me give you to projections and say , vulnerability is the birthplace of innovation , creativity and change .
when i was ted ted , like the 1996 , like ninja barbie , but i &apos;m vulnerability ted -- i thought i &apos;d leave my shame stuff because i was doing six years for six years , before i started writing about vulnerability and talking .
i saw my ted fellows in my first day .
that &apos;s all about being in life , to be in the arena .
and you have to know that more .
and he said , &quot; this is practical . &quot;
and i know it &apos;s tempting to stand outside of the arena because i think i was doing my whole life , and i think in my way , i &apos;m going to go in and be right when i clean and perfect .
thank you .
good .
dr. v : i sat there with a standard village , because i came from the village , and suddenly , you &apos;re in contact with the inner self , you know , you going out with him .
it takes about 20 minutes later . you &apos;re going to need a surgery to take surgery , put into the warol bus and take into our clinic .
everything in everything was the productivity of our labor force that was much higher than elsewhere .
so we compare it to sorle .
so the question is : how do we transport all this from the digital in the physical world ?
when you change the handle , it can adapt to it .
fabian hemmert : the changing future of mobile phones
when i started diving in 2005 in 2005 , i noticed that in 1991 , our trajectory of the activity of activity expands the way a wheelchair expands , except associations with submersizes desire and adventures , as opposed to the wheelchair .
it &apos;s still working on the food chain .
but the climate policy in the rich world -- as far as there is -- is not based on priority , but at cost-analysis -- to find the process of which economists believe that you have the tiniest effect on our gdp .
the other side is that , if you get older , you &apos;re gifted , you &apos;ve been gifted , and to be born , and to be born , this is clear tutoring for society .
the earth was always upset .
you can &apos;t just drill a hole and shoot it out .
and the idea behind this kind of geo-engineering , as it is called , is that if we were able to freeze the earth , we could shoot sulates , sullicals and aluminum particles in the stratosphere to reflect on a part of the sun into space and cool the planet .
dh : well , that we don &apos;t do a lot of normal things in our show . this is what we &apos;ve learned about it . so we &apos;re going to try it . could we get an inspiring music ?
now , i challenge my luck : i &apos;m trying it to be six .
richard wurman : i &apos;ll say something ?
rw : should i hold you or not ? dh : not that .
bf : incredible , you say ?
bf : mah , a little tough .
wow , wow , ok , stop .
bf : yeah , a good setup . a big setup up .
dh : i do it ...
i feel a great sympathy to charles babbage , because his hair is always crushed , like here in every single image .
completely mechanically . this whole machine is mechanically mechanically .
so think about all the other animals .
it doesn &apos;t matter whether the computer is mechanically mechanically , as the one of babbage , or electronic , how the computer is today , or perhaps in the future , cells , or also mechanically , when we get to nanotechnology .
so , give me five years .
north pole . i did this picture last summer .
according to the u.n. , we &apos;re talking about 250 million refugees in 2050 .
the 12 , when i would have to go back to iraq and talk to people , and i would have to touch and kiss their feet .
how can we do that alone ?
half the half of the earth are gone .
we &apos;re all part of the solution .
and then we transmit it into a piece of software , and then we build it back and look at it .
it dies , eight days later .
and it turns out that nick goes to a child &apos;s hospital , with this sort of bloangananananancide , like the 3famine .
don &apos;t worry about the situation , soon by ipod , facebook and , in fact , poised with birds .
the father of my father was one of the 10 resnob brothers .
we &apos;re going to collect his mark , to save a child &apos;s life with leukemia .
and then finally , we got two big animals and we started looking at pigs .
coral is a beautiful and unusual animal .
the mathematics of quantum mechanics is that the world operates in the smallest scales so works .
all those of these materity particles , there are legal ones , and they have anti-particles that carry off the electric charge .
and weak nuclear forces interact with matter , depending on their hyperand broep charge , which emerges this pattern .
if we do that , every level of materness particles have two extra charges , which is dristing up and spin-down .
if we work in eight in eight dimensions of wood , each of us can rearrange each other particles .
when other physicists and i work on this subject , the math can appear like the dark .
for my parents , it &apos;s the biggest mystery of the universe , as i could survive all the time , without ever to a wise work .
i feel that i need that for my imagination .
but how did they behave ? that &apos;s what he wanted to know .
and these really aggressive behavior are focused on the biggest part against individual citizens of the adjacent social group .
so the position of women to make a better -to-better , girl ships , so that they can end up with a higher school with the simple knowledge everywhere in the world , by improving families of the families , family size .
when i started to join africa to talk about the problems of chimpanzees and the power of their forests , more and more clear , more than how many problems with africa is going back to go back to the previous colonial exploitation .
and these young people , if i talk to them , they &apos;re either depressed or apathetic , or silent , and they &apos;ll say more or less the same , we feel like that , because we feel that you don &apos;t have our future , and we &apos;re going to do anything about it .
they work in refugee camps , with chickens and sell the eggs for a small amount , or use them to feed their families , and feel a sense of pride and dissustainable , because they &apos;re not going to depend longer , because of others and their vegetables and their chickens .
what we buy . what we put in .
and another last comment about this -- the young woman who runs this whole conference center , i met it today .
and the total picture is : we have to find a way to turn the shark .
and i know i have a service with me and my family .
but if you want to do it as a stylison here , you can borrow your fingernails in different colors .
if you interact with a person here at ted , you might look at a cloud from verkwords , so that with this person , associated , who are on their blog or your own personal websites .
as an anthropologist , her son &apos;s convicted of his son , i saw her in the media , and i thought , &quot; what kind of tager woman .
i don &apos;t know where my son is .
i &apos;ve learned them as a woman who couldn &apos;t be so much , not only under the circumstances they were at the time , and what happened to her son , but for life .
i &apos;ve been talking a lot about statistics in the past , talking about clean drinking water .
the smallest bacteria is about 200 nanometers .
so we &apos;re still added to that .
you take the filter up and put a new one .
and what does it cost ?
and in the vacuum , of course , in which the native european powers were born , the two blood mortality in the last century -- one in the first one and one in the second part : the two world wars .
notice that i &apos;m not talking about a government .
we &apos;ve had 50 years behind us , very unusual years , the story where we had a fully monopoly world in which every single bit of comfort , for which every bit of comkmal , to washington , to be able to washington , to be dominated in a world dominated by one giant .
i guess iraq and afghanistan were last times in which the west is trying to make it alone , and it &apos;s not necessary to us .
today in our modern world , because of the internet , because of the kind of things that were shared with each other .
ashdown &apos;s third law is that in modern age , that everything is connected to anything , the most important thing you can do is what you do with others .
paddy ashdown : the global power transition
their chances are so small .
that &apos;s why there a 65-year-old , about 125 times faster than a 12-year-old person .
here in sardinia , the more you get , the higher your market , the more you get in for their wisdom .
they also have a 3,000 year-old , old adage that i think for the great food table at all .
and this is a good question : the u.s. institute for age-exploration gave us a question for these 100-year-olds .
it &apos;s a mixed community .
marge is 104 .
you &apos;ve come out to engage their lives so that they have the right perspective .
so in the training program , in january , usually in october .
we may not yet not yet flying cars from science fiction , but we have the walls that change color , depending on the temperature , the keyboard , which rolls up , and windows , windows , windows on bone pressure .
and now after the publication of his work , others can start where he stopped and even relate to outcomes and improvements .
what &apos;s happening ?
sometimes we value something wrong or too late .
how do we get there ?
the biggest issue about the whole thing is the willingness to express our data .
you keep doing that again .
and my partner -- byron lights -- and i just have to pass him down to weightlessness .
if you look at the mathematics : e = mc square , if you look at the cosmological constant , where a anthromagnificent ideal there is , where you see life has to develop life that defines the universe -- those are things that are very difficult to understand .
it makes different things inside a cell .
one is that the society is living in a very stable house , but even in a hut , it was consistent with a person &apos;s value .
i salute every night else , to avoid problems with the police .
so i went to a book store , and i found tims book .
becky blanton had stepped up to live a year in her tiny bus and see the country , but when her depression went to the end , their campinterest journey became homeless . in this very personal talk , she shares her experience to become one of america &apos;s work .
and no difference , people who chose them were people that we chose .
again , education , classrooms .
clearly , he had his vasectomy , because his hotdog &apos;s half is half and he was very happy .
it became the director of the national aids commission , increased the budget of five .
imagine if you have to spread condoms to all kinds of technologies .
there were political responsibilities , a few financial responsibilities , and everybody joined the struggle .
now we &apos;re going to make scottish camtan , as you can see to the left , to sell all of all the people with the scottish ancestor .
in the way , the supreme england shows us , uh-mr.condom , &quot; mechai viravaina , the inexlenged plan of his country , starting to increase the standard of living standards . first step : control of population growth , and that means every lot of open-source -- and very effective -- talking about condoms talking about condoms .
this is a free app in the app store , so if any of you have had them on his cellphone , we could play the robot and play games .
that &apos;s a couple of cool things that romo can do today .
what &apos;s true than the truth ? answer : history .
only a terrible and determined heart can win a gold medal .
i don &apos;t know .
two teenal boys .
feminism is not dead , not dead .
so the course , her husband beat her , because she wasn &apos;t going home in time to cook him .
we want a world where life is saved , and the quality of life for everybody is going up , not just for the privilege .
if we go into the crosses , we sash the poorer , and we make ourselves to work with passion to create an almost perfect world .
if you &apos;ve ever gone to a game of game theory , you may have heard of it .
you see activation in following regions : in the middle prefrontal cortex , dorsteps , but on the top of the ventrotal prefrontal cortex , the chief gyrus of the gyrus , cniuli , often to do with conflict resolution , as well says , &quot; simon says &quot; simon says , &quot; simon says , &quot; and the right and the left parcuminic transition .
we &apos;re interested in whether we can tell ourselves about ambiguity versus agreements .
they &apos;re still our closest genetic relative .
he thought maybe thought , well , maybe they have more brains that they gain for something very important , negotiating status , comparable with strategic thinking in a contest .
how do you feed a city ?
and at the end of this long process , we &apos;re not even able to feed the planet properly .
in the old world , it was the only way to do something because it was hard to transport food over the streets because they were bad .
christmas street was where she brought the fish on the fish .
buying food buy and sell was a social event .
it doesn &apos;t mean a good place or anything .
this is a community project . last , i was in toronto .
carolyn steel : how food shapes our cities
it &apos;s the source of all morality , this fantasy full act of empathy , to put himself in a different way .
i want the youth to have a sense of the dynamics and the challenge of a compassionate lifestyle .
i &apos;d like to show you today how we &apos;re going to make things in the future .
these are brilliant scientists , engineers , designers who worked on this project .
so you could have something that comes up with it and you might have noticed and give you an output from one .
i was in beloit , wisconsin .
beijerinck discovered viruses about 100 years ago .
and i &apos;m looking forward to announce that , combined with colleagues of stanford , caltech and queens , right now a initiative to explore the study of biological dark matter for new forms .
and they are . let me start with the second one : usually . so , is this a generic place ? look at us , and in which direction we &apos;re looking at , we see a wall and chemical outhaul -- -- and that &apos;s not unique for all the universe at all .
and what does this mean now ? well , look at , look at the same way -- from here , from here , i mean , with a telescope -- and you &apos;re going to look at celestial bodies that look like stars .
the place where we are , is with evidence of evidence , and also with matter and energy .
so far as i know , it &apos;s going to be later in the course of the journey .
and problems that we don &apos;t even know is this ability to get you into the handle -- -- and not the happy chance of avoiding it is always to avoid -- our only hope is not just for the solution of problems , but for our survival .
this is the kind of laws that allows the mobile phone to help nelson buy his phone .
haiti is haiti , haiti that can be bad because the government is weak .
one of those zones to hong kong is a shenzhen .
people can come to live under the charter , but nobody is forced to do it .
now , where do you test this model ?
professor majors could write some details that come into the towel .
how can a developing country go from poverty , if it &apos;s in a system of bad rules ? economist &apos;s paul roters unveiled a bold idea ; it led cities , more inclusive , from a coalition of a coalition of countries . could guakh o bay on the next hong kong ?
but it turns out that almost any species in the upper ocean charges in the warm parts of the world has the same photoreceptors and the sunlight as a source of information .
so we started thinking about synthetic genomes , when we published the second genome in 1995 , which was called mycoplasma .
basically , the genome can be used every virus that &apos;s sequenced today .
we now know different molecular ways , and thousands of different ways , need carbon to live , and can be able to absorb the environment .
fifteen seconds , studio .
timesspective is a lesson that deals with it , as individuals , we all share the flow of our human experience or time-categories categories .
now , really quickly , what is the best time to profile ?
reuters takes three and a half million messages each year .
bill gates kindly stole a billion into the agricultural economy .
so i &apos;m focused on two of the exciting stories that have come out in these great research expeditions that we &apos;re doing in saturn for two and a half years ago .
and for us , this is the cassini team , it was like a burnman adventure .
i can &apos;t tell you how that was the first pictures of the spacecraft of titans , this was what we saw .
so here we see a film of the equatorial graph that shows this strand of sand , and that sand is 100 meters tall , a distance from a few kilometers and disspread apart and cut .
because if we could show that the emergence of life is not only going to happen twice independently in our solar system , it means that it &apos;s going on in line , it &apos;s in shocking numbers of all the universe in the course of the 13.7 billion years .
let me illustrate that by this by taking it to this village called budrus .
but around me , others who didn &apos;t even miss themselves .
they should be surrounded , lose a lot of their country , and don &apos;t have their own freedom anymore , not to the western bank nor to jerusalem .
but there were no maps , no maps of roads , no maps with hospitals , no possibility for help to reach their bones .
here &apos;s homer in with this problem .
the one of the upper between the walls of the box in which the rat is located .
so the red ones fire in this lattage and the green in those and the blue in this .
neil burs : how your brain is telling you where you are .
why ? what ? what ?
here is our new legal mazene . we have taught the best lawyers with the size of it , and we always bring power to our clients that make deals with us .
the fact is , if we &apos;re talking about it right now , we can &apos;t even imagine an mp3 player from a cash player .
now , i suspect i &apos;m giving it to you to tell you , these are not other body parts that determine your behavior .
they were convinced that if you could build this aircraft machine , it would change the course of the world .
well , you can take over 10 percent of your customers .
the market conditions were fantastic .
he didn &apos;t go around and told people what needs to change in america .
simon &apos;s ek : how big leaders are inspired for action
the real problem is that the child living with 12 other people living in a two-room apartment apartment .
how can it be that for decades since decades , we had an absolutely easy position to keep patients -- especially at the bottom of the bottom income levels -- in health , to keep that ?
it doesn &apos;t just lead to better medical decisions , but the doctor can also offer the things for his patients and health leads to how every other over-behaves to a specialist .
and of course , it requires a very broad workforce .
if i make a recipe , i wonder if the family can read this recipe !
thank you .
also in the caribbean .
now we bring it all together in afghanistan today .
because we teach them to read , in literacy imaging , lebanon , in partnership with private economic enterprise and development agencies .
they &apos;re the young men and women &apos;s own role models for fitness and for the kind of life that i think is contributing to the security .
so ...
how many of you see the dolphins ? raise your hand when you see dolphins , ok , the ones that interloaded their hand ; the rest of the audience should be talking to them , yes ? this is really the best example of use of occupations that i know .
ken by lton created beautiful mosaic footage , like jacques cousteau from museau , only through new dimensions , right now , because einstein said , &quot; oh god doesn &apos;t doubt . &amp; lt . &amp; lt ; john cederd is a serious trumct agent , cabinet cabinet .
i &apos;m going to try to be something more accurate when i show you how things really changed .
the last century , 1870 , was bad for the children in europe , because most of these statistics show europe .
in some years , chile could have less child mortality than the united states .
and here was my grandmother born , 1891 .
and we don &apos;t have any of the data on top of the last , because this data is really brisar today .
i was speaking in ikea in ikea , i wanted to see the couch .
technology can lead from poverty , but there must be a market to come out of poverty .
i have to become serious . and how will you be serious ?
it &apos;s the most powerful means , but i give him zero as a goal .
and i &apos;m going to take these pieces cracks , and i push it from the flesh of flesh and blood and proving that this seemingly impossible is possible .
&quot; build your stuff in my voting district ? &quot;
for example , through non-lethal technology , if you get a meuick ammunification , women and children , you &apos;ll lose quickly friends .
it doesn &apos;t exist , and that &apos;s the problem .
&quot; we &apos;re going to the tuesday , and it will cost it 20 billion dollars . &quot;
&quot; you &apos;re america . &quot;
if you don &apos;t have , you have to look at a look .
the empire doesn &apos;t just a minimum standard , so what can &apos;t happen , but a full behavior of behavior .
otherwise we would all be gay .
what we need is cooperizing authorities , and by creating condi rice from congress .
so the marines : little wars , mild wars .
ag vite : almost only sys the sys admin .
last decade , we &apos;ve been talking about it .
it &apos;s the area here in the middle , which shows what happens when you don &apos;t stop the emissions very fast enough .
it &apos;s very important . a lot of other things that we have to do is to get the lower emissions down , to work very slowly because we need time to build the hardware that reduces emissions .
it &apos;s just suns , we were not allowed to talk about it .
it looks like we can get a long atmospheric life cycle -- longer than before before , because it &apos;s up up .
it forms a science that makes it easier and easier .
there are all sorts of uncertainty about how much climate change is acceptable .
now , i think there &apos;s a big problem , if you think about it , people think they don &apos;t have to care about reducing emissions .
we &apos;ve seen the highest mountains , the deepest valleys , undersea lakes , many of them have shown them here .
here &apos;s an octopus . sometimes you don &apos;t want to be seen if you &apos;re moving , because the predators you can see .
and you see a few pictures that i &apos;ve been lucky to see there .
some people are luck in the moment ; it &apos;s the power of the full heating .
can we learn this kind of well-being when we &apos;re sad ? in some way , why not ?
one night he said , &quot; look , you &apos;re doing all these things , but is it not too beautiful ? &quot;
so there is equally , there behind every single thought , which is the mere consciousness that recognize .
and finally , even though , when the anger comes out , he &apos;s just going to take away their mind , like a bird that flies the sky without leaving a trace .
of course , we do this in training with objects .
we &apos;re ready to turn up for our education for 15 years .
it &apos;s a huge problem for us .
we need better places in this country .
so the whole course , this weather problem .
of course , it will never give you here until that is in this condition .
basically a house without something on the pages , because this house wants to say , &quot; i &apos;m a little hut in the woods . there &apos;s nothing left or right .
forget it . that won &apos;t work .
we sleep in the future .
and although our expectations does not , as usual , is like nasa , it &apos;s carefully .
i think that &apos;s a mission for a long time .
this is one of the places where planetary researchers have the highest chance of the discovery of the first extraterrestrial life , in the ocean , in the ocean .
when we see something interesting , we pull it into the microscope .
first of the hotel , but after course , jobs for the rest of us .
we can go and reconburn systems for all pretty much .
we &apos;re seeing how personal wealth and ingenuity for access to access to each other is going to continue .
the next morning we had to go to a jewelry store and cut it up .
rb : well , it turns out as a reality step .
what &apos;s the whole budget ?
god was god and they got their obliving reward .
they &apos;ve always had something of a gang explorer .
but it was such a wonderful feeling in the water , and what was she writing about their family ?
here &apos;s a forest web in the sea , and the fish went out of the sea in the net .
so , knock the police on the door and threats to break us , if we continue to mention it .
do you think of life &apos;s life ?
when people get to africa to help them , they shouldn &apos;t just come back and go back a few years .
i want to thank you for this inspiration , and that &apos;s what you &apos;ve come to ted . thank you .
