Monday, March 17, 2008
2008 Jill Bolte Taylor
The more time we spend choosing to run the deep inner peace circuitry of our right brains, the more peace we will project into the world and the more peaceful our planet will be.
2008 Peter Schwartz
The future isn't what it used to be -- The three drivers of conflict (honor, fear, interest) are different in the new geopolitical reality
2008 Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Two worlds: mediocristan (average rules) and extremistan (outliers rule - never take advice from anyone in a tie). In extremistan the whole idea is to not be the turkey.
2008 Doug Wilson
Beware the downside of technology -- internet enabled opportunity to communicate out of repressive regimes is not as anonymous as you might think.
2008 A. Garett Lisi
E8 explains everything....either spectacularly right or spectacularly wrong. Download his paper at http://arxiv.org/abs/0711.0770
2008 Susan Blackmore
Evolution (Variation+Selection+Heredity) is a natural explanation for design out of chaos and the consequent "life" of memes
2008 Bob Geldof
All human progress depends on "unreasonable" people. Ted is the Olympics of unreasonable people.
Thursday, March 6, 2008
2008 Craig Venter
High concentrations in CO2 sequestration can be used for algae type conversions of CO2 into carbohydrates and with further bioprocessing into fuel
Introduction
Welcome to "TED talks in one line".
TED talks are amazing....and they can be overwhelming, especially when you listen to 50 of them in 4 days. I figured that it would be great if I could just remember the single most important learning from each talk.
So this blog is my collection of one liners. I'll add to them over time as I get a chance to revisit and reflect on each talk but more interesting than my takeaways will be your perspectives on the same talks.
All TEDsters are welcome to add their own thoughts as comments or if a talk is not yet covered with a new post. For consistency, I suggest naming each post with the year followed by the speaker name.
TED talks are amazing....and they can be overwhelming, especially when you listen to 50 of them in 4 days. I figured that it would be great if I could just remember the single most important learning from each talk.
So this blog is my collection of one liners. I'll add to them over time as I get a chance to revisit and reflect on each talk but more interesting than my takeaways will be your perspectives on the same talks.
All TEDsters are welcome to add their own thoughts as comments or if a talk is not yet covered with a new post. For consistency, I suggest naming each post with the year followed by the speaker name.
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