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-- TED.com


Posted by tathi on Feb-28-2008 03:35:

TED.com

www.ted.com

What a fucking incredible site!!

I try and watch a new talk each day, i really liked the talks by john doer and Isabella Allende

its got something for everyone!


Posted by pkcRAISTLIN on Feb-28-2008 03:39:

cheers, looks interesting


Posted by robstar on Feb-28-2008 06:44:

Yes, awesome site for sure! Thanks for the reminder!


Posted by Omega_M on Feb-28-2008 13:42:

one of the most informative and interesting websites out there.


Posted by tathi on Feb-28-2008 15:09:

this TED prize winning talk is fucking incredible
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/56

some of those photos


Posted by infinity HiGH on Feb-28-2008 17:53:

Checkout Ray Kurzweil on there


Posted by Clovis on Feb-28-2008 18:48:

Awesome resource.


Posted by eROs.au on Feb-28-2008 21:01:

quote:
Originally posted by infinity HiGH
Checkout Ray Kurzweil on there


I've read The Singularity Is Near, definitely eye opening


Posted by josh4 on Feb-29-2008 20:49:

quote:
Robin Williams Saves the Day at TED When Tech Fails
By Kim Zetter EmailFebruary 28, 2008 | 11:15:41 AMCategories: TED Conference

You know your conference has hit the big time when Robin Williams steps up from the audience to fill the dead air during an embarrassing, show-stopping technical glitch.

The actor-comedian was in the audience at the TED (Technology, Entertainment and Design) conference in Monterey, Calif., last night when a technical glitch halted a panel discussion that was being recorded by the BBC. (Apologies for the blurry image at right; it was snapped quickly by my seatmate, Paul Holland, who graciously e-mailed me the pic).

Williams was sitting in the row behind me at the panel discussion on new media. Before the host, BBC World presenter Matt Frei, could finish his introduction of panelist Sergey Brin from Google, he announced the BBC was having a technical issue. Frei didn't quite know what to do with the empty air while waiting for a fix and joked that the voice in his earphone (the producer) was telling him a long, elaborate political joke about Poland.

That's when a voice behind me spoke up, presumably a heckler, and began speaking loudly as if he were conducting a live news feed, joking that he was reporting live from TED but "couldn't understand a fucking word" and was "wondering why at a technology conference everything is running so shittily" (at least that's the word I think he used; it was hard to hear the last word through the audience's laughter).

The crowd by then had realized it was Williams. Encouraged by their reaction, he continued reporting to some unseen BBC anchorman from his seat: "Well, they said they found the wire, but it's not plugged in."

Williams was then invited to take the stage and the crowd roared. He spent the next ten minutes or so riffing on Stephen Hawking (who spoke at TED earlier in the day from Cambridge, England) and the end of the universe -- which will take place "exactly in one hour," he said, looking at his watch.

He joked again about the technical glitch, indicating that although the BBC wasn't working, audience members "with their phones are going, 'I'm getting all of this!'" And it was true. Dozens of people were capturing the stand-up act on their phones.

He riffed about a new Apple product called the "iWhy?" and a few seconds later said, "I have just one question about the British royal family: All that money and no dental plan," which got a lot of laughs and a few sympathetic nods toward the BBC presenter sitting behind him (who appeared to have perfectly fine dental hygiene).

He didn't spare panelist Brin and Google, noting that if you walk into Google you see everyone in front of their computer sitting on exercise balls, "which I think is how they're hatching new employees."

And Israel got a mention as well, since it was launching a new internet service called "Net-'n-Yahoo" (riffing on Bibi Netanyahu's name).

The glitch was finally fixed but not before TED curator Chris Anderson asked Williams to come back the next day and lend the proceedings some more of his good cheer.

The panel discussion that ensued was interesting and included, in addition to Brin, Queen Noor of Jordan, Watergate-buster Carl Bernstein, Harvard psychologist Dan Gilbert and Ugandan journalist Andrew Mwenda. The BBC will broadcast the panel discussion sometime in March.

I'll report back with more from TED later.
http://blog.wired.com/business/2008...n-williams.html

To be able to just get up out of the blue and go into a routine thats wow.



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