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November 07, 2011

TED: Martin Hanczyc: The line between life and not-life - Martin Hanczyc (2011)

In his lab, Martin Hanczyc makes "protocells," experimental blobs of chemicals that behave like living cells. His work demonstrates how life might have first occurred on Earth ... and perhaps elsewhere too.


November 04, 2011

TED: Marco Tempest: Augmented reality, techno-magic - Marco Tempest (2011)

Using sleight-of-hand techniques and charming storytelling, illusionist Marco Tempest brings a jaunty stick figure to life onstage at TEDGlobal.


November 03, 2011

TED: Daniel Wolpert: The real reason for brains - Daniel Wolpert (2011)

Neuroscientist Daniel Wolpert starts from a surprising premise: the brain evolved, not to think or feel, but to control movement. In this entertaining, data-rich talk he gives us a glimpse into how the brain creates the grace and agility of human motion.


November 02, 2011

TED: Anna Mracek Dietrich: A plane you can drive - Anna Mracek Dietrich (2011)

A flying car -- it's an iconic image of the future. But after 100 years of flight and automotive engineering, no one has really cracked the problem. Pilot Anna Mracek Dietrich and her team flipped the question, asking: Why not build a plane that you can drive?


November 01, 2011

TED: Paul Zak: Trust, morality -- and oxytocin - Paul Zak (2011)

What drives our desire to behave morally? Neuroeconomist Paul Zak shows why he believes oxytocin (he calls it "the moral molecule") is responsible for trust, empathy and other feelings that help build a stable society.


October 31, 2011

TED: Hasan Elahi: FBI, here I am! - Hasan Elahi (2011)

After he ended up on a watch list by accident, Hasan Elahi was advised by his local FBI agents to let them know when he was traveling. He did that and more ... much more.


October 28, 2011

TED: Béatrice Coron: Stories cut from paper - Béatrice Coron (2011)

With scissors and paper, artist Béatrice Coron creates intricate worlds, cities and countries, heavens and hells. Striding onstage in a glorious cape cut from Tyvek, she describes her creative process and the way her stories develop from snips and slices.


October 27, 2011

TED: Jay Bradner: Open-source cancer research - Jay Bradner (2011)

How does cancer know it's cancer? At Jay Bradner's lab, they found a molecule that might hold the answer, JQ1 -- and instead of patenting JQ1, they published their findings and mailed samples to 40 other labs to work on. An inspiring look at the open-source future of medical research.


October 26, 2011

TED: Malcolm Gladwell: The strange tale of the Norden bombsight - Malcolm Gladwell (2011)

Master storyteller Malcolm Gladwell tells the tale of the Norden bombsight, a groundbreaking piece of World War II technology with a deeply unexpected result.


October 24, 2011

TED: Richard Wilkinson: How economic inequality harms societies - Richard Wilkinson (2011)

We feel instinctively that societies with huge income gaps are somehow going wrong. Richard Wilkinson charts the hard data on economic inequality, and shows what gets worse when rich and poor are too far apart: real effects on health, lifespan, even such basic values as trust.


October 21, 2011

TED: Nathalie Miebach: Art made of storms - Nathalie Miebach (2011)

Artist Nathalie Miebach takes weather data from massive storms and turns it into complex sculptures that embody the forces of nature and time. These sculptures then become musical scores for a string quartet to play.


October 20, 2011

TED: Todd Kuiken: A prosthetic arm that "feels" - Todd Kuiken (2011)

Physiatrist and engineer Todd Kuiken is building a prosthetic arm that connects with the human nervous system -- improving motion, control and even feeling. Onstage, patient Amanda Kitts helps demonstrate this next-gen robotic arm.


October 19, 2011

TED: Guy-Philippe Goldstein: How cyberattacks threaten real-world peace - Guy-Philippe Goldstein (2010)

More and more, nations are waging attacks with cyber weapons -- silent strikes on another country's computer systems that leave behind no trace. (Think of the Stuxnet worm.) At TEDxParis, Guy-Philippe Goldstein shows how cyberattacks can leap between the digital and physical worlds to prompt armed conflict -- and how we might avert this global security hazard.


October 18, 2011

TED: Justin Hall-Tipping: Freeing energy from the grid - Justin Hall-Tipping (2011)

What would happen if we could generate power from our windowpanes? In this moving talk, entrepreneur Justin Hall-Tipping shows the materials that could make that possible, and how questioning our notion of 'normal' can lead to extraordinary breakthroughs.


October 17, 2011

TED: Bunker Roy: Learning from a barefoot movement - Bunker Roy (2011)

In Rajasthan, India, an extraordinary school teaches rural women and men -- many of them illiterate -- to become solar engineers, artisans, dentists and doctors in their own villages. It's called the Barefoot College, and its founder, Bunker Roy, explains how it works.


October 14, 2011

TED: Jae Rhim Lee: My mushroom burial suit - Jae Rhim Lee (2011)

Here's a powerful provocation from artist Jae Rhim Lee. Can we commit our bodies to a cleaner, greener Earth, even after death? Naturally -- using a special burial suit seeded with pollution-gobbling mushrooms. Yes, this just might be the strangest TEDTalk you'll ever see ...


October 13, 2011

TED: Pamela Meyer: How to spot a liar - Pamela Meyer (2011)

On any given day we're lied to from 10 to 200 times, and the clues to detect those lie can be subtle and counter-intuitive. Pamela Meyer, author of Liespotting, shows the manners and "hotspots" used by those trained to recognize deception -- and she argues honesty is a value worth preserving.


October 12, 2011

TED: Ian Ritchie: The day I turned down Tim Berners-Lee - Ian Ritchie (2011)

Imagine it's late 1990, and you've just met a nice young man named Tim Berners-Lee, who starts telling you about his proposed system called the World Wide Web. Ian Ritchie was there. And ... he didn't buy it. A short story about information, connectivity and learning from mistakes.


October 11, 2011

TED: Richard Seymour: How beauty feels - Richard Seymour (2011)

A story, a work of art, a face, a designed object -- how do we tell that something is beautiful? And why does it matter so much to us? Designer Richard Seymour explores our response to beauty and the surprising power of objects that exhibit it.


October 10, 2011

TED: Alison Gopnik: What do babies think? - Alison Gopnik (2011)

"Babies and young children are like the R&D division of the human species," says psychologist Alison Gopnik. Her research explores the sophisticated intelligence-gathering and decision-making that babies are really doing when they play.


October 07, 2011

TED: Charles Hazlewood: Trusting the ensemble - Charles Hazlewood (2011)

Conductor Charles Hazlewood talks about the role of trust in musical leadership -- then shows how it works, as he conducts the Scottish Ensemble onstage. He also shares clips from two musical projects: the opera "U-Carmen eKhayelitsha" and the ParaOrchestra.


October 06, 2011

TED: Mike Biddle: We can recycle plastic - Mike Biddle (2011)

Less than 10% of plastic trash is recycled -- compared to almost 90% of metals -- because of the massively complicated problem of finding and sorting the different kinds. Frustrated by this waste, Mike Biddle has developed a cheap and incredibly energy efficient plant that can, and does, recycle any kind of plastic.


October 05, 2011

TED: Graham Hill: Less stuff, more happiness - Graham Hill (2011)

Writer and designer Graham Hill asks: Can having less stuff, in less room, lead to more happiness? He makes the case for taking up less space, and lays out three rules for editing your life.


October 04, 2011

TED: Christoph Adami: Finding life we can't imagine - Christoph Adami (2011)

How do we search for alien life if it's nothing like the life that we know? At TEDxUIUC Christoph Adami shows how he uses his research into artificial life -- self-replicating computer programs -- to find a signature, a 'biomarker,' that is free of our preconceptions of what life is.


October 03, 2011

TED: Yang Lan: The generation that's remaking China - Yang Lan (2011)

Yang Lan, a journalist and entrepreneur who's been called "the Oprah of China," offers insight into the next generation of young Chinese citizens -- urban, connected (via microblogs) and alert to injustice.


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