Talks at Google2016.5.19---Chris Anderson:TED演講指南



Talks at Google2016.5.19---Chris Anderson:TED演講指南
發佈日期:2016年5月19日
Chris Anderson, Head of TED, stops by Google Chicago for a fireside chat with Google's Jim Lecinski, VP - Sales & Service.
Since taking over TED in the early 2000s, Chris Anderson has shown how carefully crafted short talks can be the key to unlocking empathy, stirring excitement, spreading knowledge, and promoting a shared dream. His exciting and informative new book TED Talks: The Official TED Guide to Public Speaking serves as Anderson’s instruction manual from his 15 years of working with many of the world’s most impactful speakers.
Jim Lecinski, Vice President, leads Google's Brand, Performance, Platforms and Creative solutions teams in the Americas. His focus is product commercialization-- developing the go-to market strategies and initiatives for Google’s product lines that help major marketers adapt to the new digital marketing realities.
克里斯·安德森,TED负责人,停止由谷歌芝加哥与谷歌的吉姆Lecinski,副总裁一炉边谈话 - 销售服务。
自从接管TED在21世纪初,克里斯·安德森已经显示出精心打造的短讲怎么能是关键解锁同情,搅拌兴奋,传播知识,促进共同梦想。他的令人兴奋和翔实的新书TED演讲:官方TED指南公开演讲作为安德森的说明书从他15年许多世界上最具影响力的音箱工作。
吉姆Lecinski,副总裁,领导谷​​歌的品牌,性能,平台和美洲创意解决方案团队。他的工作重点是产品开发commercialization--谷歌的产品线,可以帮助营销人员主要适应新的数字化营销的现实去到市场战略和举措。




==========Google 翻译==========

0:00well good friday afternoon everyone and welcome to another exciting addition of 0:06authors at Google where originating today from our wonderful Google Chicago 0:11office round of applause I will be your presumptive moderator for the day 0:21using the zeitgeist word of the day and Jim Liske 0:24and our guest today is with us Chris Anderson chris is the curator of the tip 0:30conference and has been since 2002 following a long and successful career 0:35in the publishing industry and we'll talk a little bit about that today 0:39chris has developed head into a global platform for identifying and 0:45disseminating ideas worth spreading welcome Chris 0:53so great to have you with us I wonder if maybe we could get started if you tell 0:59us a little bit about your background I i mention the publishing how does a 1:04philosophy major and publisher come to lead and transform of the world's great 1:09digital brands differently long twisting journey is the journalists region as 1:15soon as I get out of university and I made the mistake of buying one of the 1:20early computers like a Tandy TRS 80 clone and I was awed by this thing I 1:27could have completed a level that and and Columbus to a short fuse later early 1:33computer magazines and I love that and then I decided this is a public service 1:39company published magazine bizarrely it worked and understanding took off and 1:44and so it's like the publishing part was just building lots and lots of these 1:48Nishi hobbyist magazines that were deeply bring to everyone the people they 1:53were targeted at them so we had this we did this to us that she media with 1:59passion and that's that's always been my my mantra as a as an entrepreneur is the 2:05passion you can find something that people are really passionate about that 2:09seal clue that there's that kind of the proxy for potential and so when I first 2:15came to ted in 1998 2:18back then you know is the starting 84 nothing on the internet of course it was 2:24it was an annual conference that is it and why I went there in 98 was bringing 2:29together Technology Entertainment Design GED and come home and what I saw was 2:37this passion people were so passionate about it was like this is my best week 2:42of the year but but that was the clue and so when there's a chance to buy from 2:49its found over 65 and you know I loved it 2:53and so that happened in 2001 and it's the journey since then has been a long 2:57journey of its own but that's like that and we'll talk about their journey since 3:00then in some sense it's been said that it was the power of what was then new 3:06media back in 2006 online video in particular that really gave tenets boost 3:11was that's the case and that's absolutely the case we you know when I 3:15bought it I bought it with a non-profit foundation I had and so that the the 3:21intention was always it felt like those of this inspiration you know it was 3:25supposed to be for the public good somehow doubt the knowledge that was at 3:29this private conference to the world and our first attempt was to do that was on 3:33TV and TV wasn't interested 3:36elections you know their lectures that kinda boring boring as you listen to 3:41them but they were interested and and so yes sir when this weird technology 3:47called online video with its shaky little kittens and all these other 3:51things happening came along maybe we could as an experiment put some TED 3:56Talks up probably won't work 3:58the too long for the internet you know it's gonna be their lives on video to 4:03our movement these things went viral and so that was in 2006 we decided we had to 4:08flip Ted on its head when no longer just a conference where media organization 4:14devoted to sharing ideas and so let's build on that a little bit you know you 4:19describe what it stands for T ed but how do you talk about its meaning its 4:24purpose is the brand stand for 4:28stands for the bringing together of knowledge in ways that people can 4:32understand you know the world's really complicated and most of the time we go 4:37deep you know you have to know something of a chance of exceeding you dig deep 4:41you learn your speciality well and that's how most things operate that 4:44summer's conferences operate you know as university courses whatever that's what 4:48you have to do but there's a place for context to actually understand the world 4:55wherein you need to go abroad in that 4:57and actually lots of other things happen when you bring together knowledge from

5:01different areas you get the catalyzing of new ideas you get the possibility of 5:06collaboration and I think that's what that's what me suddenly was why ted had 5:13a role to play there's just not much of that happens and so if you can persuade 5:17people to come together from these two fields and explains that passionate 5:21about in ways I can actually understand that that I think you know that 5:25different few days for example that had the effect of sending these spots your 5:29brain you just thought it's up to you hadn't thought of before and that's what 5:34it stands for come back and chat a little bit in a second about you know 5:38the power of how those talks are built on understandable ideas but i wanna 5:42pursue you mention the word collaboration you know most of the most 5:47of our audiences is not had the pleasure of actually attending the conference 5:50when they were in Long Beach are now back in Vancouver so could you may be 5:53paying a little picture about not just the speakers on the stage that we can 5:57see by watching the video but it's a full Ford a collaboration of event with 6:02the dinners and and key maybe a picture of what happens during that week so yes 6:07so it's it's it's four and a half ish days they're busy 12 main sessions of 6:13Ted each session is an hour and 45 minutes and it's five to six speakers + 6:18other performances and things thrown in there so it's quite fast moving what's 6:24what's unusual about it is that everyone sees every speaker it's one track and 6:29that doesn't usually happen but the hope that it is the whole point of it is you 6:33are supposed to be exposed to stuff you had no idea you were interested in and 6:37it's it's it's become a truism that ted that the session that you think is gonna 6:40be most boring as the one that blows you away and so amazingly people do commit 6:45to coming to each session and that means that you cannot be shared conversation 6:50in the in the corridors after and the collaboration is we we stay just it just 6:56happens that the combination of that exposure to these different speakers and 7:01ideas it's a spot rings and people and 7:05in a weird projects in my job now is it the case I I had heard that you 7:11discouraged or don't allow digital devices or live tweeting or cameras are 7:17these kinda things in the rooms that that is the case apart from the back two 7:21rows where people can do it if they if they want to you know more in the summer 7:25cost basis but in the main theatre we say now because one of life right now is 7:32this attention war and talks are weird things you know they they often take a 7:39while to build to share a really big idea of certain that really matters you 7:44sometimes have to build context you have to go through cash ninety seconds what's 7:48a bit challenging boring for a minute if people are just going to check my email 7:53just for this moment they miss a couple of key contacts and gone and then the 7:58talk never lands and what's more the five people behind them as sort of 8:01annoyed and and it's sending a signal that this isn't that interesting so 8:05everyone else decides it's not that interesting you are right now you are a 8:09super organism you'll actually they don't clean conscious of it you're 8:13you're feeding off each other you take cues from each other and that's what 8:17happens in all I think so 8:18so we tried to have a different contract from the normal contract audience you're 8:23actually gonna try you can give your full attention to the speaker for 18 8:27minutes speaker 8:28bloody hard for several months to produce the talk of your life and make 8:32it worth it and that's the deal you know actually asked that question is just a 8:36not so subtle hint to our audience today 8:38I'm coming to Google 8:49so maybe a little bit about the simple question of who gets to do a 10 talk how 8:55do you decide 8:57someone who is doing amazing work that other people need to know about the rest 9:02is detailed it is hard to decide who those people are right we get 10,000 9:06suggestions from a year from people around the world we have a curation team 9:11were trying to for a conference were trying to weave a sort of a mix of 9:15people together around a theme of this is the dream of a big bowl dreams but 9:21there's no algorithm to it yet it's a sort of cos we want the program to 9:31another I think a lot of events still to do this we want to poke at every 9:36different part of people's minds you know it can't just be about you know 9:40political or storytelling whatever it's it's their different parts of Mines 9:46engaged when you start to go to the aesthetic or two 9:49inspiring story water here's a complex you know scientific issues that were 9:54tackling in there's there's there's energy that comes from that and so it's 9:59not just who you bring its then trying to sequence them in a way that I heard

10:05you once say that it is a filter screen how you put it but one consideration 10:10that you look at is in deciding on a speaker is who would benefit from 10:15hearing this idea is it just you is it just your team's adjust your 10:19organization or right so that that is actually I would say that is the number 10:24one advice to a speaker thing that's that's in the book is it's so tempting 10:30as a speaker you think hey I got an opportunity so I'm going to use it to 10:35promote my organization my clothes and in the process I'm gonna take the chance 10:41to be a cause I can 10:44and and that's that's the trap that so many people fall into and it's and it's 10:48very counterproductive because it actually shut down the audience people 10:53don't know if you can do it the other way around if you can make clear from 10:57the start that your purpose in being on stage is to give something to give 11:02people a gift I get to something that you know that if they knew it would make 11:06a difference to their lives are built around our world views different 11:13knowledge means a different life means doing things differently maybe years 11:16into the future so so come with a gift and I think if we if we don't see that 11:22in a speaker if we still for a minute that they're in it for self promotional 11:26purposes 11:27primarily interested right and that's good advice not just on stage in your 11:31conference in general I suppose I think in general I think absolutely in general 11:35even frankly even if you want to sell something the best sales people don't 11:40come on and say hey here's what I got 11:42they say what are you passionate about what's what do you think about what you 11:48need when you can see how can I help and you know so absolutely every every 11:54speaker should be thinking about the audience and and what they can offer in 12:00terms of speaking delivery in speaking ability you describe yourself and I 12:05think greatly under selling your powers as not a natural charismatic speaker in 12:11some senses in some senses your predecessor was a charismatic outgoing 12:15but you've had this awesome ringside seat for the past dozen or so or more 12:21years watching great speakers so what if you observe about you know the perennial 12:27debate of you know you're a natural at it or not or you can learn it or not 12:33some people you know can only get so far being a good speaker what's what's your 12:37point on against nature nurture and I'm convinced that the only thing that you 12:42need to give a great talk is something you need knowledge 12:48you need you need to have done some work that deserves a wider area the rescue me 12:57talk honestly can be taught because the way the last thing you want is for 13:02everyone to learn some sort of style of speaking we don't want to think of 13:06speaking as a performance that definitely are some people who are 13:09natural performers and who can in the moment in a smoothly in a beautiful 13:17elegant phrase is out of nowhere and pass them on so that there are there are 13:21not everyone probably can do that but that's a good thing we don't want to do 13:26that it would get exhausting honestly what what what you want is a variety of 13:30different people different skills different stop points difference 13:34speaking styles you want is authenticity you want people who care about something 13:39and even if they have stomach their way through at all if you're learning 13:43something that is fantastic so i i i just feel passionate about this that 13:48that it's a it's a tragedy that there are so many people out there in the 13:52world and I bet there are people here in this you know we are leading company 13:56under confident when it comes to public speaking 14:00despite having something really valuable to to share something that if if the 14:05rest of the world and so maybe if you tell us a little bit about two people 14:14who I guess fit both of those profiles are archetypes that you just outlined 14:18maybe Sir Ken Robinson is a naturally gifted one of those who can plug things 14:23out and maybe someone was little more hesitant like monica lewinsky maybe just 14:27tell us a little bit about you know those two examples to illustrate your 14:30point i mean second one person came to tell in 2006 14:35you know he already had been voted Europe's best because that I was a 14:40little suspicious because I thought he was gonna get here but you know he 14:46shuffled onto the stage he said you know doesn't it have been blown away in fact 14:54I'm leaving and capacity and giggled and then they over the next 10 minutes they 14:59just didn't start laughing

15:01he just told story after story about kids and and we all wanted it to go on 15:06forever and having one or that affection he was able to give us this very 15:10inspiring story an argument that creativity is completely and taught in 15:17schools undernourished and and that resonated with so many people so deeply 15:21and so does 2006 and you know it was told to a hundred people and now a 15:27hundred people every hour watch that talk online you know all these years 15:31later and he's up to 38 million or whatever it is 15:34monica lewinsky was terrified for obvious reasons coming to you know she'd 15:40she'd had been steadily invisible for best part of a decade and and she she 15:47felt passionate about certain things but this issue of cyberbullying but it took 15:51a lot of courage for her to come and raised her voice and naturally come into 15:55the conference 15:56gosh what if you know this is a big public stage 1 videos is really hard 16:01that I think she almost pulled out a couple of times but what held her there 16:05was a mean shit she wrote on her script in this matter you know and returning to 16:14sort of giving this in the service and/or idea made a big difference to 16:17diffuse things physically in terms of exercises breathing whatever before 16:22communes day and she had in her talk she had 16:25structure that cleverly so that our friendship a very disarming personal 16:29story right in the first minute or two that had everyone laughing and at that 16:35moment you tell me you know she just relaxed and knew that she she had it and 16:38so that talk was extraordinary that that's been seen by eight million people 16:42now and it it really changed a lot of people thought of her and a lot of 16:46people thought about this issue so I definitely said that she can overcome 16:50her fear anybody here who is fearful of speaking could you talk about some of 16:55those conventions that she used some great sticky phrases I remember one that 16:59that that hangs with me she called herself I think patient zero of cyber 17:04bullying 17:05so that brings up the natural question of new coach the speakers do you write 17:11the scripts do you edit the scripts to review them or are in our their scripts 17:16or is it all improvised so it's different in a case in the majority of 17:21cases there are secret and we don't write them in the first place we invited 17:26draft if we don't think that it's quite that we may suggest changes usually 17:32broadly occasionally line-by-line and you know i mean the hardest thing for 17:39speakers is actually to adjust the scope of the talk to fit 18 minutes or so 17:44people say it's coming to the big talk I so many things in my life I'm so proud 17:49of and I want to share with his group general morillon's somehow or other and 17:54that that means that everything gets dealt with you know the jammed under 18:00explained so that the hardest thing as too as a disparate of cutting it out 18:04cutting it out focusing on the one idea that you're most passionate about and 18:09therefore giving us enough time to unpack it properly you know to set up 18:13the context why does this matter why do I care about it why should you care 18:16about it how's the spin tackled historically why didn't that work what 18:20could work now here's an example of that is what we gonna do this all those 18:25things are what make the idea of vivid and actionable and so that's that's the 18:31hardest places people just coming with too much usually say that this is the 18:37famous if if I have touch if I had had time I would have written exactly 18:43exactly so in terms of of presentation styles 18:48me give you to sort of poles of course as many shades of gray in between but 18:52there are the speakers I managed to come in with the full script everything 18:58written practiced in timed fully memorized 17 minutes and 59 seconds and 19:04its recall push the button and all thousand words come out and they're 19:08probably others who come in with a series of stories or bullet points or 19:12sketches that they kinda know they want to cover and 10 leaves room for some 19:15spontaneity Dec both to encourage both can both work we see both we encourage 19:22both and both can work the Xpress trap the trap is going in the middle between 19:31the two cells so that the the the type of talk that I think we try and 19:36discourage is the I'm planning to memorize this but I'm still a little bit 19:42stressed I'm not quite there and the audience can share that like if you 19:46start giving your talk and and then your eyes roll up a bit and then let me just 19:54start that paragraph again and suddenly people have the sickening feeling oh my 19:58goodness is reciting and and and the life in a way it goes out of it because

20:03what you want is this live human moment in a way here you know it's it's a 20:09lovely you know like I feel that this this happens live in and people want to 20:15decode that i'm looking at a live human mind making a judgment right now and 20:21it's hard to look at my Shona here but you know make a judgment right now about 20:24whether you can trust me it's hard to do that if you think someone's resizing you 20:30actually can't so if you're in that mode his what you have to do you don't tear 20:36it up and go back to notes you double down on your rehearsal and you you own 20:41the talk you make it part of you so that when you're on the run 20:44you know it's not easy it's not at all apartment remember you say you know 20:48what's coming next it's it's right there and you can focus again on the meaning 20:52wanting to connect with with you because passing another I think of it this 20:56particular idea is right for you right now and speakers can get to the point of 21:01doing that and I think probably the majority TEDTalks are memorized a small 21:05number of them do sound a little bit robotics and and you know people push 21:11back against that most of them you know you really feel the presence passion and 21:16it's in its ruling the danger of going the other way is that you can ramble you 21:22can go over you can miss out some of the key things that you want to say well you 21:26could miss the chance to really use the best language to say that they want to 21:29really clearly explain something on the other hand it can be live in fashion 21:34some people really can do that very well but I'll say to someone who was planning 21:38to speak from bullet points is it still was rehearsing it you know bye bye 21:44rehearse it three or four times even if it's just in your bedroom with the south 21:49on their recording you know you'll find out the moments in it and and it'll 21:55change your and your move from owning the talk go either way and get to the 22:02point where you feel like you really know that you know you just know it and 22:07then then you can focus on meaning in connection so let's get into the book a 22:13little bit more I mean this is some of the content in the excellent book that 22:17that that you've released you said that the goal of every 10 speaker is to plant 22:22the seed of a powerful idea yes and the book starts to unpack ways to do that 22:27let's I guess tackle the first elephant or monkey here which is is there a 22:31formula to plant that seed now there's no formula I think I think the first 22:36thing to note is that it's a miracle that you can do it what is an idea I 22:40could you could you could take like the idea 22:42democracies fragile right if you could if you could look if you could color 22:46code that in your brain look at what actually concludes that in in human 22:50brain I would guess that involves literally millions of your on the 22:53fantastically complicated pattern yet somehow in an 18 minute talk or less a 22:59speaker can transfer the entire pattern 23:02into our minds seems like an impossible thing only when it happens it can do is 23:08because we shall language rightly so so you're building this pattern elements 23:13that already exist in the minds what your treasure is to put them together 23:16but to do that you have to be incredibly disciplined about remembering that it's 23:22it's their language their concepts that you're building from not not yours so 23:26your jog on your assumptions that's that's what can kill an explanation and 23:34and there's this cognitive bug because of knowledge which pretty much everyone 23:39suffers from and which is the tendency to forget what it's like not to know 23:43something you know you guys hear you live in a world where you know it's 23:47natural outgrowth and coding you know whatever you took a conversation with 23:53people somewhere else and use only one over such as you're boring person 23:58because you missed out something that they didn't understand why this matter 24:03what the context was we do this all the time and so so as a speaker trial talk 24:10out on someone who isn't in your normal circle but who might be like the people 24:14in the audience if they got it you kind of have to do that and so you've talked 24:18a little bit about how using familiar concepts metaphors as a bridge to get a 24:25complex topic across can be effective right so I think the metaphor is kind of 24:30like a template you've got these different elements are ideas in 24:34someone's mind and a metaphor shows how they connect together in a shape that 24:38familiar so that you get it so you know Jennifer Cohn science writer was trying 24:43to explain to us that the last head and we've had some scientists trying to 24:47explain that they got terribly complicated enormously complex science 24:51of DNA and so forth 24:53she said no looks like a word processor for the Gina you couldn't use 24:58Christopher to cut and paste any gene any part you want or indeed any latter

25:02ago wow what process to the gym I get it 25:07powerful and examples of powerful as well to make sure that you're sort of 25:12your commenting in the knowledge so this is what I mean one of the other 25:17conventions are devices that you talked about in the book is getting personal 25:23you mentioned monica lewinsky opened her talk with a with a personal story what's 25:27been your experience for your advice on using personal anecdotes or personal 25:31experience is often the advices you know speakers come up and say I i me me me 25:35turns off the audience yes it is if you think the speaker saying it's all about 25:41me that is a turnoff but I think there is there is a case to try to defuse 25:47skepticism and mistrust if you think about it if this agenda of trying to 25:53build an idea in someone's mind very intimate that people are skeptical about 25:58letting a stranger can poke around inside their brand lab mission and so 26:02first of all there's a sort of the process of learning to trust and saying 26:08do I do trust this person died like this person I want to open up to this person 26:12and you need that opening up to happen if explanation as to happen you can't 26:18push knowledge into a brain has to be pulled in and so the personal is the way 26:24to build that trust and so it's not so only person that's not saying let me 26:29tell you all about me it's more it's more saying in a personal way why this 26:35not isn't showing but just but just showing it in a sort of an informal way 26:40running starting at a conceptual level it's it's like saying hey we're gonna go 26:44on a journey together you know like to go and by the way it's going to be fun 26:50you should come with me and I'm just trying to convince people off that I 26:55remind our audience in a few minutes we'll be taking questions at the 26:58microphones here so have your questions ready in a couple of minutes when the 27:02concepts that they're really resonated powerfully with be in the book is this 27:06notion of the through life 27:08explained that 400 if it's right that a talk should be about building an idea in 27:16people's minds then everything in the talk needs to connect to that idea you 27:21think of it as your through line and so things that aren't part of that get cut 27:26out but then everything else connected to that when you think about what's 27:31happening in a talk you're taking this very complex three-dimensional object of 27:35an idea and you're trying to transfer that your means to do it as a 27:39one-dimensional stream of lads so it's it's it's inherently high what you have 27:43to do that for his tooth read those words in a way where it's clear how each 27:48part related so if you're going to give a counterexample that needs to be clear 27:52that that's what you doing a concert 27:56contacts show that that's what it is you know it's an anecdote people need to get 28:02a sense of how this relates to what was happening otherwise against like I like 28:07the sound of your voice and this is kinda makes sense but these pieces fit 28:12together now lost dogs feeling that they'd feel the pieces are there but it 28:15doesn't quite well and the book are in the book you also talked about a 28:20powerful speaking device is to uncover and explore a disconnect or is seeming 28:27disconnect in a common worldview yes persuasion to persuade persuade someone 28:34or something you first have to show them that what they believe right now doesn't 28:39really make sense like this we can block someone's worldview need to adjust 28:44you know you do you really want to believe this how is that consistent with 28:49it and said that this wonderful feature some talks in innocent of teasing 28:54friendly but in a powerful way just reveal you know that this has got to be 28:59observed and that that Stokes curiosity and once you know once this concept of 29:05the knowledge gap once you're aware of this knowledge gap in your mind you 29:09instinctively just you want to close it out I don't like this in addition to the 29:18talks themselves you've done a wonderful job of extending the brand we've talked 29:24about putting those talks in those videos online certainly the book that 29:27we're talking about today but there's ted X Ted aired some of these other 29:33brand in line extensions and if you do maybe talk about some of the some of 29:36those and how you see those fitting in Phoenix accessories just giving away 29:42that the content we've become obsessed with giving things away in the power of 29:46that in the connected age and so we thought we'd give you a brand you know 29:51doesn't seem like that bright idea at first glance but she added an extra tags 29:57extant for self-organized and if you would like to do a double date like

30:01events around the world you know we'll give you a license to do it it's over to 30:04you and amazingly the three thousand of these now a year so there's nine every 30:09day or so and and obviously we we can do this like I got fifteen people in New 30:15York who are overseeing three thousand of the year it's because of the power to 30:21exercise so these events go from filling out the Sydney Opera House to eventually 30:26jail or dad or whatever absolutely is and I we just love seeing what happens 30:35that there's about YouTube thank you very much is the main distribution 30:39vehicle for this more than 60,000 talks on there and and many of them getting a 30:44lot of use that that's been a thrilling its founding 30:47and Internet is just are are reaching out of the brand to a youth audience and 30:52instead of talks on a stage where we're saying teachers that have your best 30:57lesson five or six minutes to spark curiosity no thanks to Google knowledge 31:03is no longer a problem right 31:06everyone has access to all the world's knowledge for some reason educators 31:10haven't quite come to terms of this year we still think of education is trying to 31:15jam knowledge into a brain fill it up 31:18shouldn't be it should it should all be about nurturing the right kind of 31:21curiosity in the right way to ask questions the right way to bring in the 31:24right knowledge that these are curious parking and the animated but but from a 31:31teacher's best words and so we have the thrill of a great teacher who during the 31:35whole career has reached 5,000 kids at most and suddenly in in the first hour 31:41of their talking online they reach 50,000 and its suffering for them and 31:45it's fun to treat and education and learning has been long part of I would 31:51suggest one of the core tenants or essences of of ted i mean obviously 31:54since the beginning but perhaps sell Khan Salman Khan was was one of the most 32:00preeminent that came and talked about education one of your experiences with 32:04with him and what he's done and it's so common in my opinion is that you know is 32:08a true global hero I mean for hedge fund manager to you know give up his life to 32:14educating his nephews and then the world and it's it's it's really incredible 32:20that one person could do that and he's he's starting with just the power of 32:26video and then adding in this idea of mastery so that people can learn at 32:31their own pace that's the real power of video is that it makes no sense to force 32:36a budget kids to learn the same speed there are different in a video allows 32:39them to decouple from time and find their own rhythm and that that allows 32:44people who would never expect to muster topics in their own time so it's 32:48incredible he gave a very inspiring talk at TED and by the way he's got the best 32:52single quote in the book which is 32:55you know when you when you get at all just be yourself you know like if you 32:59are creative person be a creative person if you are a human specimen humorous 33:03person you know if you're an awful person however that is good advice and 33:10and in a sense I mean what what started on your stage there has been a 33:13revolution in learning there are more than a few school districts who have 33:17so-called flip the classroom and you know the homework is watching celkon to 33:23absorb the information and then the class itself is the practice as opposed 33:27to what we all learned was you learn during the day go home and practice at 33:30night 33:30yeah that has to be very gratifying that kind of thing when you talk about ideas 33:34worth spreading yeah I think that is a powerful I think it's still early days 33:38and there's lots of versions of that being bored I think it's very exciting 33:41has there been any topic area that you would very much wish to have explored 33:47throughout the Ted processor on stage but you haven't just found the quite 33:51right speaker or maybe an area that you thought about diving into I haven't been 33:56comfortable bringing to the stage there are not any in like manner with us you 34:03know just as a as a sort of those who used to lie on the floor of his student 34:09room trying to understand the world with ailing consciousness you know who the 34:15hell are we know it doesn't make anything it doesn't make any sense then 34:19by all by all the author of scientific definitions of consciousness that you 34:24get to a certain level of complexity in decision-making Google itself is 34:27conscious right now maybe it is we don't we don't know but I mean what is it you 34:32know i i is a very difficult questions and we've we've had a few speakers in 34:36but I would I would love more of that that's a little little selfish I mean 34:40what politics is hard right we we in many ways Ted is this sort of the escape 34:46from the ranting that we hear 24 7 on cable that there's something about 34:52certain topics that force people into a tribal mode and it's very distressing 34:56will be stopped 34:57reasoning with each other and sharing I D

35:00Diaz and start shouting at each other on and just taking up positions and so we 35:05don't have traditional political type talks I would love to find more people 35:09who can frame ways to bridge and different ways of looking at politics 35:15and so what we're constantly look out for that but it's hard it's hard to do 35:19let's invite our audience to come up to the microphone and ask some questions 35:23and as they do that you mentioned scientific you know there's quite a lot 35:29of his you use the example here today they're quite a lot of heavy duty 35:32scientific topics but then there's a lot of different points of view we can pick 35:38global warming is it isn't it these kinds of things do you have a scientific 35:42body that reviews the sort of realness of the science or how does one know into 35:47these deep topics if it's real science or skewed science or personal point of 35:52view I mean we're committed to real sign in principle what real Sciences is a 35:58matter of debate even among scientists yeah we don't have a formal process for 36:02doing it we're constantly think about this in the process of hiring a science 36:08curator and that person will have a group of advisers as well you know the 36:16the week we certainly see the science I think doesn't have a place on the 10th 36:22stage there's another amazing this happening inside so many brilliant 36:25scientists out there who have incredible knowledge sharing without needing to go 36:30to people public probably going to end up misleading but what the line is 36:35between the two is just a matter of judgment yeah when one of my favorite 36:39talks was a young ten year old I think that you had from africa wonder if you 36:45would tell that story the audiences and seen his amazing boy Richard to Harry 36:52think about twelve of the time we got to the test page but but earlier he had 36:57done he taught himself electronics by taking apart his parents radio is a must 37:03like it he lived in little settlement outside Nairobi trying to protect 37:09cattle from from lions and and he figured out that moving lights terrified 37:17these lines are somehow he pulled from parts that he found a solar-powered 37:22lights flasher and would scare away the Alliance and you know 37:28environment so happy because the villages weren't going out and killing 37:31the Lions and this invention spread across that area Kenya but when we met 37:36this kid in Nairobi he could hardly speak you couldn't get the story out a 37:43terrified and and the process of bringing him to the point where he got 37:49on a plane for the first time in his life came to California and somewhere 37:52between 37:53will give a talk about about his invention and it was he was so great as 38:04smile lit up the entire place and he told the story beautifully and it was 38:08just about getting comfortable and rehearsing and believing in what he had 38:11done and I think that continually illustrates the point that it's not 38:15always just the big names who can deliver a great talk right on the 38:18unexpected people are often the biggest surprises absolutely 38:22talks are you recruited this kid from Kenya supplies you mentioned you get 38:3210,000 ideas you know any other basis how often are you like we need to get 38:37this person because they have an idea that we want to see on the 10th stage I 38:41think it's not about 60 40 that we sixty we recruit author and identify 40 mister 38:49that forty come from people saying you know I saw this person and they're 38:53amazing you must bring them too tired and probably five percent of people who 38:58say hey i'm ready for the 10th stage and some of those are great 39:01but some of those are and that makes you so much for being here and sharing with 39:10us I loved had it's one of my personal goals to actually take time out of my 39:16day to do that because I find them to be so valuable I'm curious if you're able 39:20to share any sneak peaks are what we can expect this year at TED or just some 39:26ideas for topics that might be new incoming that we can expect when next 39:32year's Ted is that the team is the future you and so it's going to be more 39:37personal than some more secure personal take away how you can use it so but it's 39:42everything from the technologies that are going to be very cool coming up too 39:47literal sort of life hacks that that you can use to navigate the challenging 39:52world that were in no medical advances and so forth so that that's that's the 39:58direction it it it doesn't themes are sort of like a tweaked unusual

40:03content it's not you know it's it's dole you know from the same type of palate in 40:09terms of other talks from the last 10 that are that are coming up 40:13well let's see Jennifer cons to Kris Bernal gene drives is coming out soon 40:21and I think that's that's an incredibly beautiful explained in a very powerful 40:26issue that we all need to be thinking about this wonderful talk about misfits 40:30coming out if you haven't seen it to watch the urban talk on procrastination 40:39you know we all do you get to that one 40:44he procrastinated right up to like the week before the conference then realized 40:59it wasn't there 41:00flew into this panic and ended up coming up with a masterpiece was when it was 41:05very good it's got here I wanted to become a media in general is being 41:10questioned about the discourse in general and social media and news 41:13channels and it's almost like this and if they're encouraged extremists 41:17thinking and not no one's thinking because of limits and unacceptable in 41:22two ways the European Union and even for news channel like snippets and almost 41:29falls new sales more ads done and this is the biggest media 626 select how do 41:41we get this nuanced discussion out to everyone and the channels that reach 41:46more than that right to do you have to talk about this problem is a problem and 41:51now it's a problem and I think it's it's it's a it's constantly moving right i 41:58mean there's many conversations we had been one of the things I think about 42:02which i think i'm hopeful that is that the world we're moving to is you know I 42:07think videos gonna play a bigger bigger role with got if you believe your 42:12founders and Cobourg and have low band low-cost broadband across every square 42:19inch of the planet and and I think you can imagine a future where where people 42:24yes they're still here 42:25screens but what they're seeing as another human face looking back at them 42:29and that some but they are perforce when that happens some of the traditional 42:33standards and and you know things that run very deep in how we look at how we 42:40interact with each other in a makeshift you know that there's a bigger premium 42:44on trust and on respect and so forth but I don't know I think it's all to play 42:50for and I i i do think 42:53I think the one of the things that I I see some hope in is that when when you 42:58went when the battle is about what will people click on that drives a certain 43:03type of behavior it drives like an extremist if you like my lizard brain 43:07behavior 43:07the dramatic and you know whatever and that that leads to you know five 43:14celebrity sexy secrets that did you know frankly destroying the internet if you 43:19guys could please google them out but when when you go to sharing in a social 43:27media sharing their it's more about someone's identity and I think that 43:32triggers a different part of people's minds it it's more reflective choice and 43:38and I think that type of content that how helpful stories and stuff do end up 43:43circulating on social media beautifully so you know it's not an answer question 43:48but it's important it's a very long conversation kinds of behavior and I 43:54mean maybe a technologist we don't think innovating technology is good but 43:56perhaps technologies all sorts of things and it is absolutely possible that we 44:05end up racing technologies that were sleepwalking into a future we don't 44:11actually want and you guys more than any other in the world need to think about 44:15that every day is just because something works in the moment and people want it 44:20like it doesn't mean that there are going to be terrible unintended 44:23consequences of being here this is such a fun way to spend an afternoon my 44:29question is I think we all have stories that we reread and had talked to you 44:34revisit to be inspired to my question to you have any TED talk at you find 44:40yourself free watching over and over again that's really moved you in some 44:43way and then are there any other storytellers maybe even outside of ted 44:48that you really admire 44:51so that that's why I'm not sure if I don't see you in the second I do have a 44:56good answer on the phone the first one I actually talked by David Deutsch that I

45:02really like so there is a physicist he's very pleased and he gave this this talk 45:08basically arguing that we're not chemicals come on a random planet in the 45:13universe as Stephen Hawking said but the actually knowledge is is the force of 45:20potentially universal reach and so that's powerful and he has this 45:26wonderful statement at the end of it as saying that is is a common definition of 45:30of optimism I think he says look carved in stone tablets one of them says 45:34problems are inevitable one of them says problems are solvable and and i think 45:40that what that says is that not the sort of the cliche that there's a 45:45technological solution to every problem which i think is really annoys people 45:50what it says is that it's right take the stance in the world not to be beaten by 45:58stuff that ok there are problems that there will always be problems we 46:01actually can't do have a crack at solving them if it was as if we keep 46:05thinking and keep keep at it very nuanced and beautiful message night and 46:12on the storyteller 46:13you know you've all her areas book sapiens is astonishing he tells a story 46:17of us as a species and he tells it an extraordinary language and connects 46:22things that you would never imagine connecting and I wouldn't recommend it 46:26strongly thanks for coming so in the algorithm has mentioned world we live in 46:35I find it hard for an individual to have a sense of the actual truth or reality 46:40of certain things so for example when I watch ted talks on YouTube is it over 46:45index towards technology or is it just i happen to have watched several 46:49technology TEDTalks that's what YouTube recommends for me so I might my question 46:55is yes with your inside perspective that Ted is over index and certainly 47:01100 X and others and then just sit back and let you know the masses order this 47:07is this is YouTube's our lives entirely to blame here you know YouTube is a 47:15brilliant job of personalizing stuff and so what you watch that's what it will 47:19offer you if you if you were to go to ted.com and type in the word happiness 47:24example you'd see a ton of talks about happiness which which I would if 47:28anyone's going to tell you the first time I would say start their one 47:31happiness not as to those that a dozen different approaches to it that are 47:35different and you know and I i love this talks and the personalization thing by 47:40the way you know I wish there was a default setting on YouTube where you 47:45could say actually I want to be catalyzed you know i i don't i don't 47:50want you to assume the only who I click on I want to be catalyzed 5 a broad 47:56knowledge could you do that for me and I i think a lot of people would think that 48:00that setting thank you thank you very much for coming I'm sure you've heard 48:11incredible stories from people all around the world community's groups of 48:15how ted has impacted them do you have a favorite kind of story that you've heard 48:21that there are many many of them just happen on a personal level 48:28Ted Ted newspeople from being skeptical observers to being engaged agents and I 48:37love seeing that there was there was one where the waitress serving us a 48:44whispered in my ear that she should watch ted talks in attendance this year 48:47was I think she was a Polish immigrant and she she coming to the USA been 48:53homeless for a while and and her son had introduced her to dad and it's almost 49:00like she she was sort of sneaking hours in a homeless shelter for a while 49:05somehow watching you know ted talks on a borrowed iPad or something and and and 49:10she was she was crying and so we were crying and it's not like I i I love the 49:15spread of this that there's so many people who you want to learn how she 49:19felt about what she got from that was the sense of empowerment I'm homeless 49:23now but that's not who I am i can i can be a lot more than that and I think 49:28they're a lot of stories like that individual level that is why we do what 49:33we do and that brings us to our final question which is the traditional 49:38question we always ask our guests at these authors at Google talks would you 49:43be willing to share with our audience a start-stop continued something that they 49:47would suggest that they start doing stop doing continue doing 49:51to learn to be better speakers into plant those seeds of ideas that man stop

50:01being daunted by your nervous about it it's there for a reason is that motivate 50:06you to put the work in to produce great talk starts picking up everyone needs to 50:13the world's too complicated for single experts to solve these problems that 50:19needs lots of us to participate please be part of that continue continue 50:27first we'll continue doing what you're doing I mean this is one of the world's 50:30great companies and you're empowering literally now billions of people around 50:35the world to find knowledge more quickly I mean it's up to the double incredible 50:42what has been created it in this organization so so keep doing that 50:48continue being not evil it's hard actually when you become a when you're 50:52become public company and stay curious that's the single biggest thing I just 50:58passionately believe in the power of curiosity 22 to lead things that are 51:04special I mean the more you know the more interesting the world gets to stay 51:09curious Chris thank you for the gift of Ted and thank you for being with us here 51:14today


0:00以及良好的周五下午好,欢迎你们到另一个令人兴奋的加入 0:06在谷歌的作者今天在这里我们从谷歌的精彩源自芝加哥 0:11办公室掌声我会是你一天推定主持人 0:21使用一天,吉姆Liske的时代精神字 0:24而我们今天的嘉宾是我们克里斯·安德森Chris是尖端的馆长 0:30会议并已自2002年之后漫长而成功的职业生涯 0:35在出版业,我们将讨论一点点关于今天 0:39克里斯已经发展成为头一个全球性的平台,识别和 0:45传播理念值得推广的欢迎克里斯 0:53如此之大,让您与我们不知,也许如果你告诉我们可以上手 0:59我们介绍一下你的背景我一点点我提出版如何做了 1:04哲学专业和出版商来引领和世界上最伟大的转变 1:09数码品牌不同的长扭曲的旅程是一个新闻记者地区 1:15当我走出大学和我做了购买的一个错误 1:20早期的计算机就像一个坦迪TRS 80克隆,我被这件事情我镇住 1:27稍后可以早日完成水平和和哥伦布,以很短的导火索 1:33电脑杂志,我喜欢这一点,于是我决定这是一个公共服务 1:39公司出版的杂志奇怪的是它的工作和了解起飞 1:44所以它就像出版的部分只是建立很多很多的这些 1:48西爱好者的杂志是深深地给大家带来了他们的人 1:53是针对他们的,所以我们有这个,我们这样做是为了我们,她与媒体 1:59激情就是这样一直是我的我的口头禅作为一个作为一个企业家是 2:05激情,你可以找到的东西,人真的热爱这 2:09密封线索,有那种代理的潜力,所以,当我第一次 2:15来到特德于1998年 2:18那时,你知道是开始84没什么,当然互联网是上 2:24这是一个年度会议就是它了,为什么我在98去那里带来了 2:29在一起科技娱乐设计的盖德和家庭来和我看到的是 2:37这种激情的人是如此热衷于它像这是我最好的一周 2:42今年但却是这样的线索,所以当有机会从买 2:49它的发现,65岁以上的,你知道我爱它 2:53并且使发生在2001年,它的旅途此后一直长 2:57其自身之旅但这是这样的,因为我们将谈论他们的旅程 3:00那么在某种意义上,有人说,这是就当时的新动力 3:06媒体早在特别是2006年在线视频,真正让信条提振 3:11是这样的话,这就是我们绝对知道的情况下,当我 3:15买的时候一个非营利基金会我买了它,从而使该 3:21意图总是感觉就像与本灵感,你知道这是 3:25应该是为公众利益在某种程度上怀疑是在知识 3:29本次非公开会议上向世界和我们的第一次尝试这样做是在 3:33电视和电视不感兴趣 3:36选举你知道他们的讲课这有点儿无聊无趣,你听 3:41他们,但他们有兴趣和等是的,先生,当这种怪异的技术 3:47所谓的网络视频凭借其摇摇欲坠的小猫和所有这些其他 3:51事情发生走过来,也许我们可以作为实验把一些TED 3:56会谈起来可能不会工作 3:58在互联网的时间太长,你知道这会是他们的生活视频 4:03我们的运动这些东西去病毒等那是在2006年,我们决定,我们不得不 4:08泰德翻转其​​头部时,不再只是一个发布会上,媒体机构 4:14致力于分享想法和所以我们在这个基础上一点点,你知道你 4:19描述一下它用于T ED但你如何谈论它的意义了 4:24目的是品牌的立场 4:28代表中的方式将知识的同时,人们可以 4:32理解你知道这个世界真的很复杂,大部分的时候,我们去 4:37深,你知道你必须知道你深挖超出的机会的东西 4:41你了解你的专业很好,这就是大多数事情是如何运作的 4:44夏天的会议操作,你所知道的大学课程,无论那是什么 4:48你所要做的,但有上下文的地方真正了解世界 4:55其中你需要去国外在这 4:57实际上当你从汇集的知识很多其他的事情发生 5:01不同地区你得到的新思路催化你得到的可能 5:06合作,我认为这是什么那是什么我突然就是为什么特德 5:13发挥作用但只是没有太多的这种情况发生,因此,如果你能说服 5:17人们从这些两个领域走到一起,并​​解释说,激情 5:21关于如何其实我可以理解,我想你知道, 5:25不同几天的例子,有发送这些斑点的效果的 5:29脑你只是认为这是给你没有想到过,这也正是 5:34它代表了回来和聊天一点点的在第二个关​​于你知道 5:38这些如何谈判的权力是建立在理解的想法,但我想 5:42追求你提到你知道大部分的多数协作字 5:47我们的观众是没有实际出席会议的快感 5:50当他们在长滩现在又回到温哥华,以便你能可能 5:53支付的不仅是舞台上的音箱小图片,我们可以 5:57通过观看视频中看到,但它是一个完整的福特事件的协作 6:02在晚宴和和关键也许那一周,以便在发生什么的图片是 6:07所以这是它的它的四个半十岁上下的天他们繁忙的12个主要会议 6:13泰德每个会话是一个小时45分钟,它的五至六个扬声器+ 6:18扔在那里等表演和东西,所以这是相当快速移动的什么 6:24什么是不寻常的是每个人都看到每一个扬声器是一个轨道和 6:29这通常不会发生,但希望这是它的全部意义就是你 6:33都应该接触到的东西,你不知道你有兴趣和 6:37这是它的它已经成为老生常谈特德说,你觉得会是要去 6:40最无聊的那个吹你走一个,因此令人惊讶的人都犯 6:45在来每一届会议,这意味着,你不能共享的对话 6:50在中后走廊和合作是我们,我们只是停留它只是 6:56恰巧,暴露于这些不同的扬声器的组合和 7:01想法是一个点圈和人 7:05在我的工作,一个奇怪的项目,现在是II早就听说你的情况下, 7:11劝阻或不允许数字设备或现场啁啾或摄像机 7:17这些东西还挺在客房,是分开的情况下,从背面有两个 7:21行,如果他们,如果他们想你的人能做到这一点知道更多在夏季 7:25成本基础,但在主剧场现在我们说,因为生活中的一个,现在是 7:32这种关注战争和谈判是奇怪的事情你知道他们往往采取 7:39同时,建立共享的某些真正的大想法,真正重要的你 7:44有时必须建立环境你必须去通过现金90秒什么 7:48一个有点挑战性无聊了一分钟,如果人们只是去检查我的电子邮件 7:53只为这一刻他们错过了几个关键的接触和消失,然后 7:58说话从来土地,更重要的是他们身后的五人作为排序 8:01恼火和它发出的一个信号,这是不是很有趣所以 8:05其他人决定是不是很有趣你现在你是一个 8:09超个体您实际上他们不干净意识到这一点你 8:13你喂养过对方你从对方采取的线索,这就是 8:17发生在所有我想是这样 8:18所以我们试图具有正常的合同观众你是一个不同的合同 8:23其实要去尝试,你可以给你的充分重视扬声器18 8:27音箱分钟 8:28连续数月的血腥很难产生你的生活的谈话,自己 8:32是否值得,这就是你知道其实问这个问题的处理仅仅是一个 8:36不那么微妙的暗示我们今天的观众 8:38我来到谷歌 8:49所以也许关于谁得到简单的问题一点点做10怎么说话 8:55你决定 8:57有人谁在做惊人的工作,其他人需要知道休息 9:02详细介绍了这是很难决定谁的人是正确的,我们得到万 9:06从去年的建议来自世界各地的人们,我们有一个团队策 9:11试图参加一个会议试图编织形式的混合 9:15周围人的这个主题是一起一大碗的梦想,但梦想 9:21有没有算法,它但它是一种COS的,我们希望程序 9:31另外我想了很多的事件仍然要做到这一点,我们要捅在每 9:36人们心目中的不同部分,你知道它不能只是你知道 9:40政治或任何评书这是它自己的矿山的不同部位 9:46当你开始去审美或两个经营 9:49鼓舞人心的故事在这里的水是一个复杂的,你知道是科学问题 9:54在解决有有有来自能源,所以它的 9:59不只是你把谁的话想的方式,我听到他们序列

10:05你曾经说,这是过滤网你怎么把它但一考虑 10:10你在决定一个扬声器看看谁是将受益 10:15听到这个想法是,它只是你的是,它只是你的团队的调整 10:19组织或右侧,这样,实际上是我会说,是多少 10:24一个通知到扬声器件事是这本书是它的如此诱人 10:30作为演讲者你觉得嘿,我得到了一个机会,所以我打算用它来 10:35宣传我的企业我的衣服,在这个过程中,我要抓住这个机会 10:41是一个原因,我可以 10:44而就是这样的,所以很多人落入陷阱,这是和它的 10:48非常适得其反,因为它实际上是关闭了观众们 10:53不知道你是否能做到这一点的其他方式,如果你可以从明确 10:57一开始,你在正对舞台目的是给东西给 11:02人的礼物,我得到的东西,你知道,如果他们知道这会使 11:06他们的生活带来变化都围绕我们的世界观不同 11:13知识是指不同的生活意味着做不同的事情,也许几年 11:16进去以后让这样一来的礼物,我想,如果我们如果我们没有看到 11:22在扬声器,如果我们还在为一分钟,他们是在它自我宣传 11:26目的 11:27主要感兴趣的权利,这是很好的建议不只是在你的舞台 11:31会议一般我想我想一般,我认为绝对一般 11:35甚至坦言,即使你想卖的东西最好的销售人不 11:40来吧,说嘿这里是我得到了什么 11:42他们说什么,你热爱的事的,你想想你是什么 11:48需要时,你可以看到我是如何能帮助你知道这么绝对每家每户 11:54扬声器应考虑观众和以及他们能够提供在 12:00在口语能力来说交付方面你如何评价自己和我 12:05极大地认为在卖你的权力在不自然的魅力扬声器 12:11在某种意义上某种意义上你的前任是一个有魅力的外向 12:15但你已经在过去的十几个或更多这真棒场边座位 12:21看着年伟大的演说家,所以如果你看到什么,你知道常年 12:27你辩论,你知道它是一个自然的或没有,或者你可以学习与否 12:33有些你认识的人只能得到到目前为止是一个很好的演讲者什么是什么是你的 12:37点上违反自然培育和我相信,唯一的事情,你 12:42需要给一个伟大的谈话是你需要的知识 12:48你需要,你需要做了一些值得更广阔的领域我救援工作 12:57老实说,谈话可以传授,因为你想要的方式的最后一件事是 13:02大家学习某种来讲,我们的风格不希望想起 13:06说作为绩效那肯定是有些人谁是 13:09自然的表演和谁可以在瞬间在顺利在一个美丽的 13:17优雅的一句话是从哪儿冒出来并通过他们,以便有有 13:21不是每个人大概可以做到这一点,但是这是我们不希望做一件好事 13:26它会得到耗尽老老实实什么什么,你想要的是各种各样的 13:30不同的人不同的技能不同的停​​止分差 13:34说话的风格你想要的是你要谁在乎什么人真伪 13:39即使他们有通过在所有胃病的方式,如果你正在学习 13:43东西是如此梦幻般的三只觉得激情这一点, 13:48这是一个这是一个悲剧,有在这么多的人在那里 13:52世界,我敢打赌,在这里还有人在这,你知道我们是领先的公司 13:56在自信,当谈到公开演讲 14:00尽管有一些真正有价值的分享的东西,如果当 14:05世界其他国家,因此也许,如果你告诉我们关于两个人一点点 14:14谁我猜适合这两方面的配置文件是您刚才介绍的原型 14:18也许肯·罗宾逊爵士是那些谁可以塞东西的天赋的1 14:23出来,也许有人小时候比较犹豫像莫妮卡·莱温斯基也许只是 14:27告诉我们一点关于你知道这两个例子来说明你的 14:30点我的意思是第二个一人出现在2006年告诉 14:35你知道他已经被评为欧洲最好的,因为我是一个 14:40有点怀疑,因为我以为他会来到这里,但你知道他 14:46拖着走上舞台,他说你知道不就已经吹走其实 14:54我要离开和能力咯咯地笑,然后他们在接下来的10分钟,他们 14:59只是没有开始大笑 15:01他只是告诉故事关于孩子的故事,之后,我们都希望它去 15:06永远有一个或感情,他能够给我们这个非常 15:10鼓舞人心的故事的说法,创造力是完全和教 15:17学校营养不良,而且有这么多的人产生共鸣这么深 15:21因此2006年不,你知道它被告知有一百多人,现在是 15:27百人每隔一小时手表在网上谈论你知道这些年 15:31后来,他的高达38万元不管它是什么 15:34莱温斯基吓坏显而易见的原因来你知道她会 15:40她一直稳步看不见了十年的最好的部分,并与她,她 15:47充满激情对某些事情,但网络欺凌的这个问题,但它采取 15:51很大的勇气让她来提高她的声音,自然进入 15:55会议 15:56天哪,如果你知道这是一个很大的公共舞台1视频是真的很难 16:01我认为她几乎拉出了几次,但什么握着她的存在 16:05是一个平均狗屎,她在这件事上,你知道回到她写剧本 16:14那种在服务和/或想法给这个做了一个很大的区别 16:17在练习呼吸之前的任何物理方面的东西漫 16:22公社一天,她在她说话她 16:25结构巧妙,使我们的友谊非常个人解除 16:29在第一分钟的故事右或两个有每个人都笑了,并在该 16:35那一刻,你告诉我,你知道她只是放松,知道她她有它, 16:38这样的谈话是不平凡的一个已经由八百万人看到 16:42现在,它真的改变了很多人都以为她和很多 16:46人想过这个问题,所以我肯定地说,她可以克服 16:50在这里她的恐惧任何人谁是害怕说话你能不能谈一些 16:55那些她用一些伟大的粘短语约定我记得一个 16:59这与我挂她自称我觉得网络的病人零 17:04欺凌 17:05因此,带来了新的教练自然的问题扬声器做你写 17:11脚本你编辑的脚本对其进行审查,或在我们他们的脚本 17:16或者这一切即兴所以它在不同的情况下,在大多数 17:21情况下,有秘密,我们没有在我们邀请的第一个地方把它们写 17:26草案如果我们不认为这是相当,我们通常可以修改建议 17:32广泛偶尔行由行,你知道我的意思是最难的事情 17:39音箱实际上是调整谈话的范围,以适应18分钟左右 17:44人们说这是未来的大谈我所以在我的生活中许多事情我很自豪 17:49的,我想与他的小组一般莫瑞兰共享以某种方式或其他与 17:54这意味着,一切都被处理了,你知道卡住的下 18:00解释说,这样的最难的事情太过切割出来的不同 18:04切割出来重点放在你最热情的和一个想法 18:09因此,给我们足够的时间把它解压到正常,你知道设置 18:13的背景下,为什么这件事情为什么我关心它为什么要你照顾 18:16它是如何在历史上的解决,为什么这项工作没有自旋什么 18:20可以工作,现在这里有这样一个例子就是我们要做到这一切的 18:25事情是什么使生动的和可操作的想法,所以这是这就是 18:31最难的地方,人们只是来太多通常说,这是 18:37著名如果,如果我有联系,如果我有时间我会写准确 18:43的呈现方式正是这样的条款 18:48我给你排序,当然极的灰色之间,但许多阴影 18:52还有我设法进来与完整的脚本一切音箱 18:58在赋时完全记忆17分钟59秒写好实践和 19:04其召回按下按钮,所有千言万语出来,他们是 19:08可能其他人谁了一系列故事或要点或进来 19:12草图,他们还挺知道他们想掩盖和10留有一些 19:15自发性月双方鼓励双方既可以工作中,我们同时看到我们鼓励 19:22无论而且两者可以同时工作随心陷阱陷阱在中间之间发生 19:31两个单元格,这样,我认为我们尝试和谈话的的类型 19:36鼓励是我打算记住这一点,但我还是有点 19:42强调我不太那里,观众可以共享一样,如果你 19:46开始给你的谈话,然后你的眼睛卷起了一下,然后让我 19:54重新开始的那款,突然人有令人作呕的感觉哦,我的 19:58善良是背诵和和和的方式生活就熄灭它,因为

20:03你要的是这个人活在此刻此地的方式,你知道这是它的一个 20:09可爱的你知道像我觉得这发生这种情况在生活和人民希望 20:15我是在看一个活人的头脑作出判断,现在和解码 20:21很难在我的绍纳语看这里,但你知道做一个判断,现在大约 20:24你是否能信任我,这是很难做到的,如果你认为有人调整你 20:30却不能,所以如果你在该模式下,你自己必须做什么,你不撕 20:36它并回到你双降在你的排练笔记和你自己 20:41谈话你让你的一部分,这样当你在运行 20:44你知道这是不容易的它不是在所有的公寓还记得你说你知道 20:48接下来会发生什么它它就在那里,你可以再次聚焦意义 20:52想与你连接,因为通过另一个我认为它这个 20:56特别的想法是正确的,你现在和扬声器能得到点 21:01这样做,我想大概大多数TED演讲被存储小 21:05他们中的一些不听起来有点机器人和你认识的人推 21:11回防,他们大多数人都知道你真的觉得在场的激情和 21:16它在其执政的走另一条路的危险是,你可以,你絮絮叨叨 21:22可去了,你可能会错过一些,你要说好你的关键的东西 21:26可能会错过真正使用最好的语言说,他们希望有机会 21:29真正解释清楚,另一方面的东西也可以是生活时尚 21:34有些人真的可以做到这一点非常好,但我会说的人谁是策划 21:38从要点说话是它仍然排练它,你知道再见 21:44排练,即使它是三四次就在你的卧室与南方 21:49在他们的记录,你知道你会在那里找到了的时刻,它会 21:55改变你和拥有的谈话你我的行动无论哪种方式,并获得了 22:02地步,你觉得你真的知道你知道你只是知道它, 22:07然后,那么你就可以专注于连接意味着让我们进入书 22:13多一点我的意思是这是在优秀的书的一些内容是 22:17那你已经发布,你说,每10个扬声器的目标是种植 22:22一个有力的想法是和本书的种子开始解压的方式来做到这一点 22:27让我想解决的第一个大象和猴子在这里是有一个 22:31配方植物种子现在有没有公式,我认为我认为第一 22:36需要注意的是,这是一个奇迹,你可以做什么是我的想法 22:40可以,你可以,你可以采取喜欢这个主意 22:42民主国家,如果你可以,如果你可以看看,如果你能颜色脆弱的右 22:46在你的大脑看看什么是真正的结论是,在人的代码 22:50大脑我猜想,包括对数以百万计的你 22:53奇特的复杂格局但不知何故在18分钟的演讲或更低 22:59音箱可以将整个模式 23:02进入我们的脑海中似乎是一件不可能的事情,只有当它发生它能做的是 23:08因为我们要的语言确实如此,所以你正在构建这种模式的元素 23:13在头脑中已经存在你的财宝就是把它们放在一起 23:16但要做到这一点,你必须是令人难以置信的纪律有关记住它的 23:22这是他们的语言观念,你不能从你不那么建设 23:26你对你的假设慢跑那是那是什么可以杀死一个解释, 23:34而且也因为知识,几乎每个人的认知这个错误 23:39患有并且是忘记什么感觉不知道的倾向 23:43一些你知道你们听到你生活在一个世界里,你知道这是 23:47天然产物和编码你知道无论你花了谈话 23:53人在其他地方,并且只使用一个比如你无聊之人 23:58因为你错过了一些东西,他们不明白为什么这件事情 24:03什么背景是我们做这一切的时候,因此使扬声器试谈 24:10出来的人谁是不是在你的正常循环,但谁可能是喜欢的人 24:14在观众如果他们得到它,你种得做到这一点,所以你交谈 24:18有关如何使用熟悉的概念隐喻为桥梁,以得到一点点 24:25复杂的主题横跨可以有效的权利,所以我认为这个比喻是怎么样的 24:30就像一个模板,你已经有了这些不同的元素都在想法 24:34一个人的头脑和一个比喻说明他们是如何连接在一起的形状 24:38熟悉的,让你得到它,所以你知道詹妮弗·科恩的科普作家试图 24:43向我们解释,最后头,我们已经有一些科学家试图 24:47解释说,他们得到了非常复杂的极其复杂的科学 24:51的DNA等 24:53她说没有看起来像一个字处理器的吉娜,你不能使用 24:58克里斯托弗剪切和粘贴任何基因任何你想要的部分或任何后者 25:02前哇什么进程去健身房,我得到它 25:07功能强大,强大,以及例子,以确保你的排序 25:12你在知识评论,所以这是我的意思对方之一 25:17惯例是,你在书中谈到了越来越个人设备 25:23你提到莱温斯基开了她的谈话与一个人的故事是什么 25:27是你的经验,你的建议使用个人轶事或个人 25:31经验往往是你知道的扬声器上来,说我我我我我的建议 25:35关闭观众是的,如果你觉得喇叭说这是所有关于 25:41我是一个倒胃口,但我认为这是有设法化解案件 25:47怀疑和不信任,如果你想想看,如果试图以这一议程 25:53建设一个想法在别人的心里很亲密的人持怀疑态度 25:58让一个陌生人可以闲逛自己的品牌实验室的使命等内 26:02首先有一种学习信任和说的过程中 26:08办信任这个人死于类似这样的人,我想开到这个人 26:12你需要一个开放的情况发生,如果解释发生不能 26:18推动知识转化为大脑中被拉出,因此个人是这样的 26:24建立这种信任,所以它不是那么仅这不是说让我的人 26:29告诉你关于我的它更是在多个人的方式说为什么这个 26:35不是没有显示,但仅仅只是显示一种非正式方式, 26:40运行起始于概念层次是它好像是说嘿,我们马上去 26:44在旅途在一起你知道喜欢去的方式它会很有趣 26:50你应该跟我来,我只是试图说服人们离开我 26:55提醒大家在几分钟之内,我们将采取在问题 26:58麦克风这里,所以有您的问题准备好一两分钟的时 27:02他们真的是有力的共鸣与概念在书中是这样的 27:06贯穿生活的概念 27:08解释说,400如果它是正确的谈话应该是关于建立一个想法 27:16人们心中的一切,然后在谈话需要连接到你的想法 27:21把它当作你的通过线等事情是不是那得到削减部分 27:26出来,但随后一切连接,当你想到什么 27:31在一次谈话发生的事情你正在做的这个非常复杂的三维物体 27:35一个想法,你试图转移你的方式做到这一点作为一个 27:39小伙子一维流所以它是它固有的高,你有什么 27:43要做到这一点,他的牙齿阅读的方式这些词在这里很清楚了每个 27:48部分相关的,所以如果你打算给需要明确一个反例 27:52那这就是你做什么演唱会 27:56联系方式显示,这是它是什么,你知道这是一则轶事的人需要得到 28:02这是如何感涉及什么样对我很喜欢,否则发生 28:07你的声音,这是还挺有道理,但这些作品适合 28:12现在一起丢失的狗的感觉,他们会觉得作品是有,但它 28:15不得很好,这本书是你也谈到了这本书 28:20强大的演讲设备发现和探索断开或似乎 28:27断开在一个共同的世界观是劝导说服说服别人 28:34或者你首先要告诉他们,他们认为现在不 28:39真正弄懂这样我们就可以阻止一个人的世界观,需要调整 28:44你知道你做你真的愿意相信这是怎么了一致 28:49并说,这奇妙的功能无辜挑逗一些会谈 28:54友好的,但在强大的方式只是显示你知道这一定是 28:59遵守,即斯托克斯好奇心,一旦你知道的,一旦这个概念 29:05知识差距一旦你知道在你的心中这方面的知识差距,你 29:09只是本能地要关闭它,我不除了喜欢这个 29:18谈到自己,你已经做了扩展,我们已经讨论过这个品牌的出色的工作 29:24有关投入这些视频这些会谈网上肯定是书, 29:27我们今天要谈的,但有特德点¯x特德播出一些其他的 29:33品牌线延伸,如果你也许谈一些的一些 29:36这些你怎么看这些配件在凤凰城的配件只是放弃 29:42这些内容我们已经成为痴迷于电源送东西给别人 29:46在所连接的年龄,所以我们认为我们会给你你知道一个品牌 29:51似乎并不像乍那璀璨的想法,但她增加了一个额外的标签 29:57现存的自组织,如果你希望做一个双象日期

30:01世界各地的事件,你知道,我们会给你一个许可证做它的到 30:04你和惊人的三千这些现在每年所以是九每 30:09一天左右,显然,我们就可以做到这一点像我有十五个人新 30:15纽约谁是监督三千今年这是因为权力的 30:21运动使这些事件从填写悉尼歌剧院最终去 30:26监狱或爸爸或任何绝对是我我们只是喜欢看发生了什么 30:35这有关于YouTube非常感谢你的主要分布 30:39车辆在此有超过60,000会谈,并和许多他们得到一个 30:44大量的使用了这一直是一个惊心动魄成立 30:47和互联网只是被臻于出来的品牌,以青年观众, 30:52而不是在一个阶段的谈判,我们是说,有你最好的老师 30:57教训五,六分钟,以激发好奇心并非由于谷歌的知识 31:03不再是一个问题的权利 31:06每个人都可以访问世界上所有的知识,由于某种原因,教育工作者 31:10还没有完全走到今年而言,我们仍然认为教育是试图 31:15果酱知识转化为大脑填满它 31:18应该不是,应该是都应该是关于培育正确的那种 31:21以正确的方式好奇提问中带来的正确方法 31:24正确的知识,这些都是好奇的停车场和动画但却从 31:31老师的话最好,所以我们必须在一个伟大的老师谁的快感 31:35整个职业生涯中的第一个小时已经达到5000孩子在最突然的 31:41他们的在线交谈,他们达到50000及其对他们的痛苦, 31:45它的乐趣,治疗和教育和学习已久的部分我会 31:51建议的核心租户或精华之一的泰德我的意思很明显 31:54从一开始,但也许卖汗萨尔曼·汗是是一个最 32:00卓越的来了,谈到了教育的经验之一与 32:04他和他做了什么,它是在我看来,如此普遍的是,你知道 32:08一个真正的全球性的英雄我的意思是对冲基金经理你知道放弃他的生命 32:14教育他的侄子,然后世界,这是它的它真是不可思议 32:20一个人可以做到这一点,他的他开始与一个只有电源 32:26视频,然后在这个理念的掌握,使人们在学习的加入 32:31自己的节奏这就是视频的真正威力在于,它是没有意义的给力 32:36预算孩子学习同样的速度有不同的影像,可以使 32:39他们不时脱钩,并找到自己的节奏,并且允许 32:44人谁也休想鼓起主题在自己的时间所以它的 32:48令人难以置信的,他给了一个​​很有启发谈话在TED顺便说他有最好的 32:52在这本书是单引号 32:55你知道当你当你得到所有只要做你自己,你知道的一样,如果你 32:59有创造力的人是一个创造性的人,如果你是一个幽默的人体标本 33:03你知道,如果你是一个可怕的人,但是人是很好的意见和 33:10在某种意义上我的意​​思是什么什么在你的舞台开始出现了 33:13革命在学习上有超过几个学区谁拥有更多 33:17所谓翻转课堂,你知道作业是看celkon到 33:23吸收信息,然后在类本身就是实践相 33:27什么,我们都学会了你白天回家,在实践学习 33:30晚 33:30是的,这必须要非常喜人之类的话时,你谈论的想法 33:34值得推广是的,我认为这是一个强大的,我认为它仍然是初期 33:38并有大量的无聊版本,我认为这是非常令人兴奋 33:41已经有过,你会非常希望有任何探索的主题领域 33:47整个舞台上的特德处理器,但你有没有刚发现相当 33:51右扬声器或者你想过潜入我没有一个区域 33:56舒适为大家带来的阶段没有任何以类似的方式与我们你 34:03知道就像作为一种那些谁使用趴在他的学生的地板 34:09房间试图了解与生病的意识世界,你知道谁是 34:15到底是我们知道它没有做任何事情,它没有任何意义,然后 34:19所有通过意识科学定义的所有作者,你 34:24得到的复杂性一定程度的决策谷歌本身就是 34:27有意识的,现在也许是我们没有,我们不知道,但我的意思是你 34:32知道II是一个非常困难的问题,我们已经我们已经在几个音箱 34:36但我想我会更爱那这有点自私一点我的意思 34:40什么是政治正确的辛苦我们,我们在许多方面泰德是这种逸出 34:46从我们在有线电视听到24 7咆哮,有一些关于 34:52某些主题,迫使人们进入一个部落的模式,这是非常令人痛心 34:56将被停止 34:57相互推理和共享I D 35:00迪亚兹并开始互相喊,只是占用的位置,所以我们 35:05没有传统的政治会谈型我很想找到更多的人 35:09谁又能框架看政治的方式来弥补,不同的方式 35:15还等什么,我们一直在寻找出这一点,但它很难很难做到 35:19我们请我们的观众拿出麦克风,问一些问题 35:23和他们做你提到的科学你知道有不少 35:29他对你用今天的例子中他们是相当多的重型 35:32科学主题但有很多不同的观点,我们可以挑 35:38全球变暖是它是不是这样的东西你有一个科学的 35:42身体评论排序科学的真实性,或者一个人如何知道成 35:47这些深层次的话题,如果是真正的科学或歪斜科学或个人点 35:52查看我的意思是我们致力于真正的标志原则上什么是真正的科学是一 35:58即使是科学家们争论的事啊,我们没有一个正式的流程 36:02这样做我们一直在思考这个在雇用一个科学的过程 36:08策展人和那个人就会有一批顾问,以及你知道 36:16本周我们当然看,我认为科学没有10号的地方 36:22现阶段还有另一个惊人这种情况发生里这么多辉煌 36:25科学家在那里谁拥有令人难以置信的知识共享,而无需去 36:30人们也许公众会最终误导但什么线路 36:35两者之间仅仅是判断事情啊,当我最喜欢的一个 36:39会谈是一个年轻十岁,我认为你从非洲就不知你 36:45会告诉这个故事的观众,看到他惊人的男孩理查德·哈利 36:52想想我们到了测试页,但当时12,但早前他 36:57做他自学了电子通过拆开他的父母收音机是必须的 37:03就像他住在小定居内罗毕以外试图保护 37:09从石狮牛和他想通了,摇头灯吓坏了 37:17这些线路不知何故,他从零件拉,他发现了一个太阳能供电 37:22灯闪蒸器,并会吓跑联盟,你知道 37:28环境太高兴了,因为村庄没有走出去,杀 37:31狮子和跨区域肯尼亚本发明蔓延,但我们见面时 37:36这小子在内罗毕,他几乎说不出话来,你不能让这个故事了 37:43吓坏了,并把他的地步,他得到的过程 37:49对他生命中的第一次飞机来到加利福尼亚州和地方 37:52之间 37:53将给一说起他的发明,这是他那么大作为 38:04笑容照亮了整个地方,他把这件事告诉了精美的,这是 38:08只是让舒适和排练,并相信在他有什么 38:11做,我认为不断说明,这不是问题的关键 38:15永远只是大牌谁可以在右侧提供一个精彩演讲 38:18意想不到的人往往是最大的惊喜绝对 38:22会谈是你找来来自肯尼亚的这个孩子提供你提到你 38:32万想法你知道任何其他基础多久你喜欢,我们需要得到 38:37这个人,因为他们有我们希望看到在第10阶段,我的想法 38:41认为这不是60 40,我们60,我们招募的作者,并确定40老总 38:49有四十来自于人们说你知道我看到这个人,他们是 38:53惊人的,你必须把他们太累了,人大概百分之五谁 38:58说嘿,我已经准备好了第10期和其中的一些是巨大的 39:01但其中一些是,这让你这么多,在这里和共享 39:10我们我爱过的人这是我个人的目标之一,真正抽出时间我 39:16一天这样做,因为我觉得他们是如此宝贵的我很好奇,如果你能 39:20分享任何最新发展动向是什么,我们可以期待在今年的TED或只是一些 39:26想法的话题,可能是新进入的,我们可以期待下一次的时候 39:32今年的泰德是球队未来的你,所以这将是更 39:37个人比一些更安全的个人带走,你如何使用它,但它 39:42一切事情,从将是非常酷上来太技术 39:47文字排序生活的黑客,你可以用它来度过这一充满挑战 39:52世界上是没有在医学进步等,使这是这样的 39:58它的方向就不会主题是有点像一个不寻常的调整

40:03内容是你不知道这是它的施舍你在同类型腭知道 40:09从上其他10个谈判条款被认为是即将到来 40:13那么让我们来看看詹妮弗利弊克里斯·贝尔纳尔基因驱动器即将现身 40:21我认为这是这是一个令人难以置信的美丽在一个非常强大的解释 40:26的问题,我们都需要被考虑这个奇妙谈格格不入 40:30未来,如果你还没有看到它上观看拖沓城市谈话 40:39你知道我们都这样,你得到一个 40:44他一拖再拖直到喜欢前一周则实现了发布会 40:59它不存在 41:00飞进这种恐慌,最终想出一个杰作是当它是 41:05非常好它这里得到了我想要成为一般媒体正在 41:10被问及一般的话语和社交媒体和新闻 41:13渠道和它差不多是这样,如果他们正在鼓励极端分子 41:17思考,而不是任何人的,因为极限思维和不可接受的 41:22两种方法欧盟,甚至像段和新闻频道几乎 41:29落在新的销售更多的广告做,这是最大的媒体626选择怎么办 41:41我们得到这样细致入微的讨论出来给大家,并且到达通道 41:46更重要的是正确的你有没有谈论这个问题是一个问题, 41:51现在是一个问题,我认为这是它的一个它的不断移动我的权利 41:58意味着有很多的对话,我们一直是我想的事情之一 42:02其中我想我希望的是,我们正在这个世界是你知道我 42:07认为视频会发挥更大的作用更大了与如果您认为您的 42:12创始人和科堡,并有跨越每平方低频段的低成本宽带 42:19地球和和英寸我想你可以在那里人们想象未来 42:24是的,他们还在这里 42:25屏幕但他们所看到另一个人的面孔在他们回头看 42:29当这种情况发生了一些传统的一些,但他们的Perforce 42:33标准,而你知道,我们如何看待我们如何很深运行的东西 42:40与对方在一个临时搭建的互动,你知道,有一个更大的溢价 42:44信任和尊重等等,但我不知道,我想这是所有玩 42:50为我做二认为 42:53我想起那个II看到了一些希望的事情之一是,当你的时候 42:58又当战斗是关于什么的人会点击驱动一定 43:03行为的类型的驱动它像一个极端,如果你喜欢我的大脑蜥 43:07行为 43:07戏剧性的,你知道什么,而且,导致你知道5 43:14名人性感的秘密,你知道吗?坦率地摧毁互联网,如果您 43:19你们可以请谷歌出来,但是当,当你去共享的社会 43:27媒体分享他们的是更多人的认同,我认为 43:32引发人们心目中的一个不同的一部分,它更多地反映和选择 43:38我认为这类型的内容是多么有用的故事和东西做结束 43:43流传在社交媒体上精美的,所以你知道它不是一个问题的答案 43:48但重要的是这是一个很长的谈话种行为和我的 43:54意思是,也许一个技术专家,我们并不认为技术创新是好的,但 43:56也许技术各种各样的事情,这是完全可能的,我们 44:05最终那名梦游到未来我们不这样做的赛车技术 44:11其实是想和你们比任何其他在世界上更需要思考的问题 44:15每一天都是仅仅因为一些作品在当下,人们希望它 44:20喜欢它并不意味着有将是可怕的意外 44:23生活在这儿的这种后果,就是这样一个有趣的方式来度过一个下午我 44:29问题是,我想大家都有,我们重读故事,并跟你 44:34重温得到启发到我的问题您有任何TED演讲在你发现 44:40自己自由观看一遍又一遍,这真的感动你在一些 44:43顺便再有什么其他的说书人甚至外特德 44:48你真的很佩服 44:51使这就是为什么我不知道,如果我没有看到你在第二个我有一个 44:56在手机上很好地回答我第一个真正由大卫德语交谈,我 45:02真的很喜欢所以是一个物理学家,他非常高兴,他这给了这次谈话 45:08基本主张,我们是不是化学物质来对一个随机的星球在 45:13宇宙霍金说,但是实际的知识就是力量 45:20潜在的普遍影响力和所以这是强大的,他有这个 45:26在它结束的话说,是美妙的语句是一个共同定义 45:30乐观的,我认为他说,在石牌刻看其中一人说: 45:34他们的问题是不可避免的一个人说的问题都是可以解决的,并和我认为 45:40什么,说的是不是那种俗套的,有一个 45:45技术解决方案,以每一个问题我认为这是真的惹恼人 45:50它说的是,这是正确的采取的立场没有在世界上被殴打 45:58的东西,确定有问题,总是会有问题,我们 46:01实际上无法做到在解决这些问题的产生裂纹,如果它是因为如果我们继续 46:05思考和保持它非常细致和华丽的祝词晚上守和 46:12在讲故事的人 46:13你知道你的所有领域她的书智人是惊人的,他讲述了一个故事 46:17我们作为一个物种,他告诉它不平凡的语言,并连接 46:22的事情,你永远不会想象连接,我不会推荐它 46:26强烈感谢的算法来使提及我们生活的世界 46:35我觉得很难为个人拥有的实际真相或现实感 46:40某些东西,所以例如,当我观看YouTube上的TED演讲是过来 46:45对技术指标,或只是我碰巧看了几 46:49技术TED演讲,这就是YouTube建议我,所以我可能我的问题 46:55是肯定你的观点里面特德超过指数和肯定 47:01 100 X和其他再坐视不理,让你知道群众订购 47:07请问这是YouTube的我们的生活完全在这里怪你知道YouTube是一个 47:15个性化的东西,所以你看什么辉煌的职业就是它会 47:19如果你如果你去ted.com并键入单词幸福为您提供 47:24例如,你会看到一个吨左右,幸福会谈这其中我想如果 47:28任何人的告诉你,我第一次要说开始其一端 47:31幸福不是那些十几种不同的方法来它是 47:35不同的,你知道,我我喜欢这个会谈和个性化的东西通过 47:40你知道的方式,我希望能有一个默认的YouTube上,你的设置 47:45可以说,其实我想被催化你知道我...我不是我不 47:50希望你能承担的唯一谁我点击我要催化5广阔 47:56知识你能做到这一点,我和我我想很多人会认为, 48:00该设置谢谢非常感谢你的光临我敢肯定,你听说过 48:11从让人匪夷所思的故事各地世界社会团体 48:15泰德是如何影响他们做你最喜欢样的故事,你听说过 48:21有很多很多人只是碰巧在个人层面上 48:28被怀疑观察员是从事代理和我泰德泰德newspeople 48:37喜欢看,有有一个那里的女服务员服务我们 48:44在我耳边低声说,她应该看在出席TED演讲,今年 48:47是我认为她是一个波兰移民和她,她来过美国 48:53流浪了一段时间,和她的儿子已经把她介绍给爸爸和它几乎 49:00像她她是那种偷偷小时在无家可归者收容所一会儿 49:05某种程度上看,你知道借来的iPad TED演讲或东西,以及和 49:10她是她哭了,所以我们都哭了,它不喜欢我我我爱 49:15这种传播是有你想要谁这么多的人去学习她如何 49:19觉得什么,她从得到的是权力的我无家可归感 49:23但现在这不是我是谁,我可以,我可以比这多很多,我想 49:28他们很像是个人层面的故事,这就是为什么我们做什么 49:33我们这样做,并且引出了我们的最后一个问题是传统的 49:38问题,我们总是问我们的客人在这些作家在谷歌谈判将您 49:43愿意和大家分享的启动停止持续的东西,他们 49:47建议他们开始做站做继续做 49:51要学会更好的扬声器到植物的想法这些种子那个男人站

50:01通过你的神经被吓倒了解它的存在是有原因在于促动 50:06你在把工作产生巨大的谈话开始拿起每个人都需要 50:13世界太复杂了单一的专家来解决这些问题, 50:19需要大量的我们参与请的那继续延续部分 50:27首先,我们将继续做你正在做什么我的意思是,这是世界上的一个 50:30伟大的公司和你从字面上现在各地授权数十亿人 50:35世界找知识,更迅速地我的意思是高达令人难以置信的两倍 50:42什么在这个组织中创建它,所以记住这样做 50:48继续是不是邪恶的,很难真正当你成为当你 50:52成为公众公司,并保持好奇,那是一个最重要的事情我只是 50:58热忱地相信好奇心22的动力,引领事情是 51:04特别我的意思是你越了解更有趣的世界变得留 51:09好奇的克里斯感谢您对泰德的礼物,感谢你在这里和我们在一起 51:14今天


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