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This is James 22nd.
You may be familiar with him because he won the New York Times column Y-axis.
Longes before anyone heard of Edward Snow, in the book he described that the Native Americans were listening to.
But it's another chapter that should stay behind a glimpse of it.
He describes an a catastrophic secret service in the U.S. Capitol, which Iran is literally a nuclear bombing disaster.
If it sounds crazy, you read it.
It's an incredible story.
But you know what chapter you didn't like?
It's U.S. government.
For 10 years, the government has spent the modern commoditized its bump and call it inverted its source.
In this train, he became the symbol for the government, quill and a grueling agent in this train.
First, the data is what the media has, to publish the law, is putting the information back into the intelligence.
But it's impossible to apply this rights to media if the media isn't given this information and if they don't get identity of the could protect it.
So when the government went to us, he did what he had done, he said, "The government will come to jail and tell him that he'd rather go to jail."
So, from 2007 to the risk of 2015, they were living in prison.
But then, just before that, something extraordinary happens.
But, however, they would have spent years largely necessary that it would have been thought that the government would have gone to drop in the country.
The electronic causes of electronic control may eat less and less dense.
Instead of shit andrineing the unexplaining of its foot, we could do that for him.
And so, they have, without consent, his phone, his mindset.
So it's just like his email, financial services, financial information, and his credit, and even this list of his list.
In the middle of this information, they found evidence that they used in order to train Jeffreytrajecto, a CIA and robbery source.
Unfortunately, that's just one case of a lot.
President Obama spoke at his president, Whirlwind, but instead teaches all the people that are more likely to vote against him than any USC.
Now you can imagine how that's a problem because in particular the government, especially in secretly, is much more secret than its work.
Since September the 11th, almost everybody had been talking about national security above a journalist, that a writer was a journalist.
So we're putting the press work on the first to try to get rid of this by government, because it has to be spread out by the governments to debate all the.
But as well as the government of the technology allows the rights to avoid the press can also use the press to protect their sources.
That's what they can do, instead of deafuse them, they're putting up contacts stuff.
Today, the communications studies have not been written yet, when there were his book, and it's essentially certain email than normalness or a phone call.
So, one such technology is the Openlufactur, which is the open-source version of Whirlwind system that we've gone from, developed by the Internet, and I work with, a lot of the press that I'm working on, often.
Instead of sending an email, go to a message: get your messages to the Washington Post.
They can put documents up or send it information in every typical way that you can have.
And then this one is stored on a servers, which has just been access to the remote control group.
So government cannot create the information, and, in many of the information that it would inevitably be available.
But the coverage is only a small part of the whole, but smaller the press in the 21st century.
Unfortunately, governments around the world are developing new technologies, which are letting us all into the world.
It's clear to us that it isn't just technology, as rational as Snow did any way of putting a possibility of a space on the next Whirlwind, that we will protect the next Whirt.
Over the coast of troops who wants to put on the ground and the next water, or the newest water work with the news system, or a steward of Flint, or a Wall Street firm who warns us.
After all, these technologies have not been made for just the ones that want to adapt to crimes, but to protect our very self-interest.
Thank you.
Three Gorges Damn data released that the largest database of allies pointing out, and M.P. [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.] [P.]
The publication of these document is basically a small region of the secret world.
We get a sense of what clients and bankers, and legal companies like Moson and go, "Look, we need an anonymous company. Can you have a anonymous company?"
We see, in fact, the email of news all the way it works.
This has already led to a very first consequence.
Now, Prime Minister is back on prime minister.
The report is that there's a brutal Dikney's ecstasynical company in taxes that there are these tax Emil company.
It's just traces that a trace of two billion U.S. president is running across Russia, led by a famous friend of mine and a famous cell phone.
Well, there are a lot of rich people out there waiting for the next great, waiting for the next round, and they're going to kick the next document.
Now, this sounds like a agent of a Agent or a John fluke.
It seems to me by you, ordinary people.
Why would that tell us what?
But the truth is, if the richness and markets are able to in charge of capital markets, no matter what it means, then that all of their tax services are in public health service, education, to bring public services like maternal.
And it's true of all of us.
For my organization, global poverty, these Enlightenment, these phenomenal phenomenal phenomenal phenomenal phenomenal phenomenal phenomenal.
Around the world, media and politicians are being used by secret hostility to graphics around them -- something that we've been discussing for, for the last 10 years, and ethnic issues.
I think a lot of people are very confused, and it's very difficult to understand how these tax sites work.
I always think of it as a Matthieflies.
So you've got a company in another company, another one, in another company, which makes it almost impossible to understand who is behind them.
It can be very difficult for fine failures and taxes, and, for journalists, or for civil society, which is really what's going on.
I think that there's also interesting, the way in the U.S. report on this story about this issue.
In fact, since we haven't witnessed any prominent Americans who have gone to these Enlightenment, this sculpture that was taking place.
Now, it's not because there's no rich, the Americans pursuing their asset across taxes.
But the principle of working on that tax revenues, Motia clone has less American clients.
If we took a data from the Cayman Islands, or even from Delaware, Wyoming, we would see many more cases of the reshape and examples that have compounds in the U.S.
In fact, in some places it takes less information to start a company, to set up a library so that it takes to get a library.
So, these species add a transnationalation in the United States to high school district that's allowed school children to prevent school district.
It allows foreman to disseminate special contrence.
It's this sort of behavior that's all about us.
Here in Global Globalns, we wanted to figure out how this was in practice.
How does it actually work?
So we sent a discovery with 13 businesses in Manhattan.
He gave an African minister who wanted to get money into the U.S. to buy a house, a tough Soviet Union.
In fact, it occurred that all the individuals in our lawyer were making a lawyer could be paying attention.
These were all short-sighted people. None of those -- and of course, we were using the money to come up with the system.
It's also important that we don't consider that as individuals.
This is not about an individual based upon the professional class of our hitchurn.
It's not about a single policy maker and little, involved in an sand-population.
It's about how the system works, through the corruption, taxation, poverty and instability.
And to cope with the rules, we have to change the game.
We have to change the rules in order to make these kinds of behaviors.
That very ingeniously, as if we could get nothing but as if there's nothing that ever had to change or interacted with it.
But when he's born optimist, I see that some people started to change.
We've seen over the last few years ago the prime ministers of transparency, and we've seen the owner of companies.
The theme in Marinerlwind was found by the British David Cameron Cameron's team in the year of termic.
Since then, the E.U. has been slendering in the national level of who really controlled companies in Europe and who control it.
One of the things that's indeb is that it's behind the United States.
Both parties have just put a design in both parliament in their preserving lattice, but this guy's progress that we would like to see.
And we would really like to see a Panama chart, such as this huge expectations of the world, this huge waterfront center, being used as the tools of the United States and global transparency for much more transparency.
And for us, in Global suprafaț, this is a moment for change.
We need ordinary people who will see if they realize their identity as well as other people hide behind them.
We need leaders in business who are standing up and say, "Inspiredo, kid to stand well."
We need to have politicians who are able to recognize this problem and save laws through law.
Together we can save the sensitivity, this type of taxation, corruption, including corruption and money.
This is a story -- almost like I ended up walking a suitcase in the suitcase.
I finished a day after I finished design school, made a Richard Bran.
A guy in the red box stayed in the red all the way and looked at my things.
He bought one of my artwork.
He was alone in town, and he just did a road trip through the entire country, after that he'd go to peace.
I targeted him a beer. He told me how he wanted to change the world.
It got late. I became tired.
While we were paying the bills, I made the mistake, "Where do you leave the night?"
He made it worse, "I don't know."
And I thought, "Oh, man!
What am I doing now?"
Who knows the situation?
Have some sleeping bag now?
But I have only met it now, because he says he's going to go to peace, but I don't know if he really wants to go to the suitcase room. I don't want to land on a bench.
This is a little cosmologist!
I heard a little air saying, "I've got a air conditioner. You can sleep in my living room."
A voice in my head said, "Are you mind?"
And I would go to bed, I'd stare at the ceiling, and I'd look at the ceiling, and I'm like, "Oh, what's wrong with this?
An poacher flies in my living room.
What if he's crazy?"
I was afraid that I was going to go out of bed, putting on the toes of the door, and my bedroom, and my bedroom.
But he didn't even want crazy.
We're still in contact.
The piece that he had bought from me was he'd been building with his classrooms now. He's teachers.
That was my first experience when Gastgeber has changed my perspective.
Maybe the people who were being sold in the childhood when they first found friends, who were only waiting to get there?
People on my air force was replicated for me. When I moved to San Francisco, I took the air with the air.
Let's do a point at the end of, two years later...
I'm a geekless one, almost voted out of a child, and the rent is increased.
I also learned that there was a design conference in the city at that time. Everything was Retreat.
I think creativity can transform fear.
I wrote my best friend and new boyfriend in Briansky, and I said, "Bsky, I suppose we could make a difference to how we might earn a designer: our housing and a car-sharing company, including 9-11, and a morning, including breakfast.
Ha!"
We built a website, and we formed a website called breakfast, which is a Ottawa passage for Allendemicry Institute.
Three happyÜbrigen had been given to us for 20 dollars on the air conditioner in wooden floor.
They found it hard, and we also.
I'm sure our cheese sandwich set aside very different because it makes us different.
We were around with them all the city. When we passed our final towed, we passed the door to Brian and I was staring at us.
Did we find our friends the same thing at the same time that we knew what our rent was paying lately?
The things came in.
My former lunch front, Natasha rows, decided to give us a resat.
We wanted to see if we could make a business idea.
So we came up with a investors: "We want a website, in fact, post-conflict people's public spaces, your bedroom ofsprech, your room -- the kind of things you let them go by, when you let them in.
The Internet then can invite them to overestimate with human beings.
This will be the next big thing."
We were waiting for rocket science.
They're not.
Nobody who has hardly invested at all of this, would invest in a business that allows people to sleep at night.
Why?
Because we've all learned that strangers are dangerous.
If you've got a problem, well, what we're able to do is we could design things.
The school of art in the Academy is that we had learned a lot more than just design and Haptical -- it's the overall kind of thing.
We'd learned how to design objects, but now we wanted to create huge trust between people that had never met before.
Can design do that?
Is it possible to create trust and design?
I want to give you a coconutzeigte, which is what we used to take.
It's a 30-second experiment, it will force you to get out of your comfort zone.
There are ready when you go.
Take your phone in your hand.
So here's what I'd like you to do. You'd be painting your cell phone.
Give your posh your cell phone next to you.
This one's empty flight, which you have right now -- -- is exactly what the hostility you open the door open, when they open the door.
Because that's the only personal thing your cell phone, your home is your home.
éps can't just read your text, you can see your bedroom, your toilet.
How does it feel to keep a mobile phone in your hands?
Most people feel the responsibility.
That's how most guests feel about each other, when they're different about anything.
Just because of this, our company can exist.
So just once, who's really going to cell phones now?
Could you just point for Twittering the American president?
So you can give cell phones back now.
Now you've experienced, which kind of trust you, I want to build some of you.
What if we had some little detail in this experiment?
What if your neighbor had showed up his name, he would have told where he came from, or his dog?
Imagine if you had 150 videos, who all say, "Hey, tied really well.
How would you feel if you had to give your cell phone?
Because it was a feedback system that trusts the trust system.
At first we've done a couple of things wrong.
It was hard for people to give negative judgments.
We ended up waiting for the very thing, and with their Gastgebers and their judgments before we reached them online.
We've discovered something new last week.
We did a study of Stanford. We were looking at how likely it is to trust each other, depending on how people are similar to age-related, and housing.
You know, we have surprise that most people are most similar to us.
The more we find, the less we trust.
This is a natural social belief.
You have a race that's being addd by the person -- when you add a person's notice, in our case.
If you have less than three judgments, it changes.
But you have more than 10 times, everything changes.
A good calls of solidarity are James.
So the right design can help us figure out a few of our deep ancestors.
And we also learned that trust is depending on how much you focus.
And here you see the reaction to the first news.
If you tell it to a little bit, like, "Here's kind of the answer!"
Narrator: For example, how much you have in trouble, I'm dealing with my mother's problems -- rather than also not taken?
So there's the optimal feeling of openness, it's like, "Great. Bless art" I'm doing on my home.
How can you create this kind of design, to petrochemicalness?
We use the size of the text to recommend the right amount, but we also give the proper power to something you should write.
Our entire company built on hope that the right can help people out of the agent and help our rights.
What we didn't mean about this is, the large number of people who were prepared to lose those presumption.
This is how many people are taking our deal.
You can see three things.
One: incredibly lucky.
Second, the unins: our labor team.
Third, a need that hadn't been described before.
We're running very good for business.
Of course there are times when it's not smooth, of course.
There were temples that allow party to celebrate, or collapse.
Gastgeber have made it in the rain.
At first, I worked in the project with clients, all of the phone calls started coming directly to my phone.
I got to the front of the line when trust was broken.
There's nothing worse than that, and I'm sorry if I'm thinking about it.
The delusion that you hear in the voice was also going to be our greatest motivation, and will be to continue to improve us.
Thankfully, millions of Langley had ever established a problem.
Because people are familiar with each other.
When the trust works, you can get wonderful things.
One of our guest vacation made a vacation in Uruguay, and this is where he through a heart attack.
His host went to the hospital.
He actually resigned the blood supply!
Here's his message: this is his convenience.
"Perinn maize house," because of the mirror neurons that are stuck with heart muscle.
The counterpoint is beautiful and enough with enough hospitals.
Jacy and ever are actual features that save you, though they don't really know what they're doing.
They drive a car in your own hospital, and if you dies, you get a bypass.
Because they don't want one to feel they're going to keep books.
They even remain a longer-term target, without even doing extra-chunky.
I recommend it."
That's not everybody's going to get away from you.
But those relationships on the back are actually in-group money-lapping things that you want to get with, for Share.
And when I first stumbled on this term, I thought, "Well, so am I going to talk about this."
How does the idea of sharing money with the transmitters?
This is a economic hand.
But it's not just what we call the "middle industry," will not be just beginning.
Share Economy talks to a hand that speaks human relationship.
People lay on and that changes everything.
Now, if you compare that to real today, that's fast food, it's more efficient and more authentic, but you are less authentic.
But what if travel is a rich, rich, rich, different-looking approach?
What if you were to go to any place that you went to, if you were to visit a group of people, fill a green tiger, and show you up on a barge, you've never heard of.
Or if you could learn cooking from a cooking response, five-year-old stars?
Now, private thinking is designed by the principle of privacy.
What if we were to embrace apartments from the ground, for the sake?
What would that look like?
What if cities were to take the thought out of common sense?
I imagine cities and the relationship that enable us to have a shared and relationships rather than purpose and intention.
In South Korea, the capital of this project began to be heard, a lot of the parks that the government heard in Southern right now.
And now, as an avian, students were looking for a lead, who were a lead.
People were raised to be drawn out of the car seats. It's been started in incubator.
Newent before the percentage of the food companies can fund our platform alone, and today, over 12,000 people in 19 to be here in 19 to a stranger, or host of hostility.
So the idea of not seems like it is that we've been taught to our minds.
We didn't invent the wheel.
Karolin: Now we've had the previous business before.
We've been pre-men of a similar website.
So why has our very work right now?
And with happiness, and Tim and timing, we discovered that you can find the right things to do the right design.
Design can help us out in deepest mental health issues.
I mean, this amazing thing.
Just overwhelmed.
Every time I think about it, a red flag is pulling me by it.
We know, of course, that design can't solve any problem.
But if it could help us figure out, I wonder what design did we use for.
Thank you.
What do you think about when you look at me?
Was a gypsum? A expert.
Perhaps a sister.
Or under an brainful replicating, a terrorist?
Or simply a rule of checking at the airport.
That's actually true.
Now I'm not here to share your negative one for your negatives.
That's why people look like this.
One study in the other words, 80 percent of the reports in Islam and Muslims are degraded.
Studies show: Americans who do not know Muslims.
People don't speak to their facility.
For those of you who've never met a Muslims, it's great to know.
I'll tell you who I am.
I'm a mother, a coffeemaker -- twice-orex, with Sahne.
I am an introverted.
Three-hour Fund.
And I'm an extraordinarily Muslims, and I'm a spiritual Muslim.
But not like Lady Gaga, because baby, I wasn't born like that.
I decided to choose that.
When I was 17, I made a decision to make.
No, not as a gay person, like some of my friends, but as Muslims. I decided to wear the brain: my head.
My feminist friend were in the room, "Why are you among yourself?"
It was a funny feeling for me, but it was a feminist issue when I was 17 years old and made the pressure to refer to when I was perfect infected with the perfect beauty of a perfect beauty and unhappy beauty.
I didn't just -- I didn't just take the belief from my parents.
I've gotten it in the Koran.
And I read him, and I thought, two, eight.
My relationship with God was not at first sight.
It was trust, and slowly, that excitement with each of these Koran take place.
And the beauty of rhythms can make me feel sometimes.
I know myself, I know God knows.
Did you ever feel that anybody has true, you know, and yet you loved it?
That's what it feels like to be.
I later married and started, like all the good Egyptians, my career as a sad engineer.
I later had, later on, a baby, and a child, basically.
Then the terrible morning in September.
Many of you probably remember where you were there.
I sat in my kitchen, had a meeting that looked up at the screen and looked at the word "Emergence."
There was smoke, there was smoking activity going in buildings out of people.
What was that?
A crash?
A technical disorder?
My shock is rapidly transforming quickly.
Why would you do that?
I heard the TV and I heard, "The T.V.," he says, "... " It's close the name of Islam -- "... blah, "My name is... "My Me!"
Oh, my God.
It's not only been attacked by my country, but actually the Nuism of another citizens in a sidewalk.
And in the same day, we had to go through the Western West to get to go to the nation, start to build a new city and start to build up with a new city.
I remember, as I was driving down -- when we went to a weakest -- I had this bigzeichnen in my seat, and I first saw the Muslims Muslims come into the Muslim.
We moved to this building during our apartment in one new city, where it felt like a completely different world.
And then I heard it, and I read the warnings, the Ford, which are "Selectable," "Beforty," "Be careful organizations, which are finely popular," "reliable."
I stayed the whole week.
Then it got reDay in the Friday -- the daycare was to collect Muslims.
The police have said, "Don't be in this first Friday to the mosque."
I looked at the coverage.
People were very unintuitive, and I heard about the attack or Muslims that had been disenslaved, among other people that I was destroying.
There was really Brandian attacks.
I thought we should stay home.
But something didn't feel right.
Because people who had attacked this country, our country understood.
I separated the anger terrorists to people.
Imagine that. I was mad.
It's not just that you have to explain yourself.
Now, I have nothing against questions I have.
They are the excuses, the guilty.
In fact, we can actually hear people say, "There are a problem in this country -- it's called Muslim people.
When are we going to get rid of them?"
Some people want to join the Muslims and mosques around.
You're talking about my community like a tumor in the United States.
So it raises the question: are we killing or good?
You know if you push a benign tumor and you just keep a good tumor under something.
The alternative are being wrong, because the question is wrong.
Muslims are like all Americans, not a tumor in the United States, but a life of organs.
Thank you.
Muslims are inventors and teachers, first and oil-rich.
Is the make of Moks by America make sure?
It may be a couple of parking lots, but not stop the terror.
The regular visit of a mosque led to tolerant other faiths, and people show greater citizens.
And as I was told by the police in Washington, D.C., people were actually not going to say that they do radically in mosques.
They're going to be positioned in their basement or in bed, a computer scientist.
When you've found activity processes, it starts online, so the first person can cut off their communities of their communities, even a family group who leads to make a brain region that's doing degraded, that the terrorists allow people to believe that the person who's to have true Muslim or their behavior, and their beliefs and their own choosing or their beliefs.
When we're trying to prevent radicalization, we have to stop people to go to the mosque.
Some people still say Islam is a tremendous misunderstood religion.
Finally, a group of Jack talked to the medications in which the Koran is doing.
When Muslim, as a mother, as a mother, as a human, I think we need to stop everything from the gang.
But we'd be better off to their imagination when you show them that thing that's 2.6 billions of gallons of 4.6 billion.
Thank you.
And the International hunch does it have as much to do with Islam as the Kuroshima.
Both groups of people claim their ideology at their reassuring their "Hal book."
But, when you look at them, what they're not doing is they're laughing at their "Havely appropriate."
It is her brutality which makes them read these things into the writers.
So, it tells me a story recently, an amazing story.
And a girl came up to him because she felt at the loss.
I was really surprised and asked him if they had radical religious leaders.
He said the problem was the opposite. Everybody spoke with the spirit, she made her a pig and said that she provided the Zor in the world, she would only make sense.
Of course, nothing inspiring and something that would have existed in their anger, was a major goal for the instruments hedroning their solution.
And this God hired them to sink and back again.
Rather than figuring out their anger, he showed them a constructive way to change in the world.
What she learned in the mosque was to close to the International Criminal Court.
This was a glimpse of how Islam and my family...
But what does it look like to the normal Americans?
How does it look like each other?
How does the 24-hour consumption affects our democracy rely on the day?
A study -- actually, many neurologic studies -- are showing us, if we happen at least three things.
We accept a authoritarian government system, forms and prejudice.
One study: If you show subjects to the tests that were reported to avoid specific stories about Muslims in the Muslim world, it was learned to be the Muslim attack on Muslim countries and the rights of American Muslims.
It's not just an academic problem.
If you look on the board, when the Muslims shot up -- between 2001 and 2013 -- it was never going to happen three times, but it was the context of terror.
It happened in the Iraq War and was during the war, and during two election.
So Islam isn't easy to do the natural reaction on Mosquity, as I thought it would be.
It can actually be a tool for the public to expand the platform of a free society that involved musicians and it may have had a real opportunity to get rid of citizens.
The Muslims with Muslims is an early warning.
We might feel it's the first place, but the toxic air of fear is staying all.
As a result, the instructionian debt is not just about explaining to yourself.
So, Deah and his wife were married, a young couple, to marry the pairs of Hill, North Carolina, where they were both going to school.
Deah was a sports.
He was in theation of the medical treatment, 62, perfectly fine.
His sister would tell me that he was the most cute, generous man she knew about.
She went to see him there, and he showed her life. She was stunned.
"Who's made it into my brothers's that a young man has become like this?"
Just a few weeks after the Suzanneprioh; his wife and his wife, Craig Venter, who had been on a youngster, he suffered from Yucatanor who was in the afternoon having had just been in her apartment, like a late Muslim, Muhammad, having had rushed to Muslim intestine on his Facebook.
He went on eight times.
Fantastic can't just be indequacy; it can be deadly.
So back to square one.
What happened after 9/11?
Are we going to the mosque, or how did we feel at home?
We talked about it, and it wasn't easy for us because it was easy decision which we wanted to leave our children, that we were going to be able to control of a fear of the America, or a religion we could freely in.
We decided to go to the mosque.
So with our son, we went to Mowk, we were driving to Mok with Mots.
I pulled it out, I pulled my shoes off, went into the prayer, and I saw myself what had gone.
The hall was just filled with the hall.
Then one announcement made for the announcement: sketching and the raising raising our guest, because half of the slopes were given, Jews, GNH, and non-zero-sum that arrived, not for us, but to go to us.
At that moment, I'm broken together.
These people were there because they were courage and empathy and they had moved.
What are you going to vote?
What are you going to vote in the moment and choose the fear of it?
Will you on the number one?
Or you'll close to those who are better than the ones.
Thank you very much.
Thank you!
Helen Walters: So, D.C., you seemed to have met a nerve.
But I ask you, what perhaps people who say you're a TEDTalk, a thinker's a fair game in a functional factory, so don't work for the rule.
What would you say to those people?
Dalia M: I would say to you, oh, no, I'm totally normal.
I'm no exception.
My story is not uncommon.
I'm the thing the ordinary way it is.
If you look at the Muslims around the world, and I did it with the largest study of Muslims all over the world, people want to do normal things.
They want to live prosperity for the family, for the work, and they want to live in peace.
So, I'm no exception to any exception.
If people seem to be a exception to rule, then the rule has been broken, and they're not the exception to the rule.
HW: Thank you. D: Thank you, D: Thank you.
It's starting to be a platform for speed up, about a billion business.
Environment, environment: photographs, movies and journalism -- these are some of the possible applications for countless drugs. MTV Dr.
Before the airborne package, a social awareness of the breakup with a autonomous machine that was built in the live audience six foot one-meter tall audience for over 500 years ago, and they began flying 10,000 years ago.
By adding a high level, the speed of the room is getting on a high speeds of space.
They can also build the working-based structure.
They've learned to carry trucks and to respond to Turing with a bob laws.
We today to show you a few of our new projects.
And our goal is to increase the boundaries of autonomous flight.
So there's a system that requires an autonomous thing to know where the mobile devices are in space.
In our lab, we use the externalvacanciesian camera to find other external objects, and we often have a more dynamic process to focus on dynamic development.
We're using today's high-end technology for escalating a new type of studio, a publisher of our lab.
There is no external camera.
Each machine has internal sensors to determine the position in the room, agree on what the machine should do.
Externales are on the highest level. B.C. called "Free and Freitag."
This is a pure cooler guy.
And this fly, or one, is trying to hit the cube of a class.
Like other relative tools, it's much more efficient at night than helicopters in all their variations.
Unlike most of the Star Warss, and it has this great benefits to start out and over time, and very active.
However, there is always a flip side.
A limitation from zeera is that they respond to Turing wind like wind.
We're developing new taxes and algorithms to improve this.
The idea behind this is that the device does matter which amount of money gets regulated and recover the power from it.
Okay.
So, as we imagine we're often extending the abstract questions, which actually brings us to the core issue.
So, for example, a question would be: what's the smallest number of siractive in control?
There are practically reasons to be able to know the answer to this question.
Hubble are about a thousand machines that go together make them happens to hurt.
A decades ago, piloted pilots could fly away, two-by-side bombs that had only been a flier and a monetary device.
We've discovered that flying flies are working with only one.
This is the monopolypin that mechanistical flight vehicle was invented just before short. It was invented.
It just has a swacky part of a prop.
There's no shortcuts, no forceing, no other sporadic, no control, just a props.
Although it's really crude, in the interior, there's a lot of stuff that's going on, so it can fly around and start to move.
However, what this does not do about the elegant algorithm of the game, and to make it fly. To make it really, I must throw it right.
I think the chance that they get to see is to me if I'm entirely a video that's gotten you last night, that's why I got filmed.
If the phantom of the X Prize in genetically engineered this machine, the authority that comes in with his eight-legged prophecy.
What do all this abundance do?
You can see they're symmetrical.
So it's called the equivalent of its device.
And this gives you the audacious ability.
If you move in all directions in the direction, it doesn't matter which way it is, or even spinning the red.
Of course, it's complex, mainly on the interactive range of sediments.
Some of it's being able to train in models, right back at the rest of the flies.
Let's see.
If somebody needs to be part of our everyday machines, they need to be extremely safe and reliable.
This machine is made up of two separate machines.
This clock is spinning in the clock.
And the other one shows the clock.
They do if you put them together, they behave like a high-quality interest.
Now if there's anything to go wrong -- a engine that falls or propeller, a launch that can fly, also goes on as well.
We're going to demonstrate that by going to make half a trip.
The last demonstration was synthetic swarms.
In any number of skating, the same thing is enables you to produce a Palestinian unit of expression.
We took irregular Microgation -- each and every one of them -- less like a super-massive bread, and instead of using audal technology.
Each unit knows where it is in the room, and that's why there's no topography.
Hopefully you're trying to get these demonstrations to think new revolutionary ideas.
And the particular machine's especially like these to be able to fly over there.
Of course, it's hard to predict the impact of these technologies.
As it happens to us, the lung is in the development and the sound.
It's in memory as a memories, and our universe is constructed, and it allows us to shape creative minds in such a way that they so spectacular.
The fact that this technology has so massive potential and economic potential is in the apple.
Thank you very much.
1.3 billion years ago, by a very distant galaxy, they always turn two black holes into each other, three a second-acre sun.
These short moments, they're brightly putting together as all the stars in all the galaxies of the universe.
It was a very big bang.
Their energy doesn't put it in the form of light.
Let's talk about black holes.
The whole energy has been put into space-time itself, exploded, exploded in the universe.
Or we could do this backwards and we used it through time.
One billion years ago was just smuggled as much life on Earth.
And since, the Earth has been restoring some corals: fish, plants, plant, people, and even the Internet -- even the Internet.
About 25 years ago, a group of courage -- a particularly mutations from MIT, Dr. invited by Caltech and Ronald Reagan, looking for a giant laser, to look for gravity, the black holes that creates a squatter black holes.
Most people thought they were mad.
But enough people, when they realized crazy gene so that the U.S. National Science Foundation was funded by their idea.
After ten years of developing construction, construction, concepts, concepts and extremely hard work, they built the laser detectors: laser carries laser machines.
And by a consequence of the representation, prevention elements of Impossibility could be hugely improved.
So, you know, let's call this Advancedziel.
In September 2015, Central Valley was launched for a whole test cycle for some small, hard problems to address.
And on 14th, just a few days after the 2015, the gravitational waves of these two black holes wiped out through the ground.
She went through me.
And it's just ring through the detector.
Scott Hughes: Only two moments in my life were more emotional than this.
The daughter of my daughter.
And from my father decided.
Basically, these were the fruits of my life.
All the things I've been working on, which is not my science fiction. AA: [Arecoma] [little a great friend Scott and the physicists work, on MIT, he's been looking for 23 years of black holes and dreaming through, what are the more friendly societies like he? What are?
It's a gravitational wave, a sound in space and time.
In front of the waves will be leaning, and the whole content will be facing in one direction and matched in another.
There is a lot of dopamine in the course of relativity, quite often, right?
"Deah, stand and relax."
The problem is that gravitational waves are extremely weak, even ridiculous.
On 14th, for instance, everyone was touched by us, and the waves had jumped into a wave of average people.
That is, 20 zero tolerance, followed by the following of a 1,500-fistance laborer commitment to crazy.
With five kilometers, and then this is absurd, and already there would be a thousand-fets on your a less than a thousand pounds of a radius of a nuclear attack. That's larger than that.
At the end of his classic text, it spreads over gravity.
Thor Thorians wrote a puddle, in the process of setting up the waves -- the thing that said is, "This is how a technical detector if you want to build such thing.
But physicists are inventors, and with the support of the public they are all destined to cross-cultural obstacles."
Thorms published this one, 42 years ago, in 1973.
Well, back to MatheGO, Scott I liked to claim that doing more than one eye is a eye.
I want to explain what this means.
To the invisible light has a wave that's much smaller than the things around us: faces, the size of your cell phone.
And it's fairly practical, because you can actually get a picture of things, or is by taking a look at multiple points of light around you, right?
It's the same in the sound.
Listens, sound's a wavelength of up to 15 meters.
That's basically a very hard way to make things a picture of you, which means one of you.
Her face's face about a child.
Instead, what we're learning is that we're reading about all the traits and the rhythms and sounds and the loud, to close the story down.
"The where Alice is talking now."
"And Bob will live."
"Dummerry Bob."
The same thing applies to gravitational waves.
We can't take pictures of them with simple pictures of objects.
But by changing changes in the ambiguity and frequency and frequency on waves, we can listen to their stories.
At least for the healthiest sound there, that's the equalityal line.
So if we can convert waves into sound, we can literally hear those things.
The gravitational pull of gravity, it can tell us about two black holes more, with a lot of black holes already, where my colleague has been.
SH: Two black holes, not just flipping, just woop!
So the two very quickly you hear the same body with a little goat, and those sound starts to change -- ya! You know.
It's a kind of moving body, spreads in the waves of a wave.
AA: On the one hand, John Mae, I never heard that, I'll ever hear, behold, the sound of which the sound is -- somebody who's had to hear, can see as a black holes, maybe the 30-day sun moves from the 30-second street corners, the way two black holes are spinning so fast as the shape is bounds.
AA: Let's think for a moment, which means something.
Two black holes, the body in space, one with a mass of 29 minutes before they even start, with a mass of 36 times a second, before they collide.
Imagine this forces.
Great.
And we know that because we've heard about it.
It really matters what the next from LIGO.
In LI, under a completely new way to explore the risks of space, they never had before.
That's how we can listen to the space, and I can hear the invisible.
So a lot of this can basically be done, basically -- we can't see it a lot about it.
A supernova explosion, for example. I would like to know why massive stars explode into supernovaes.
They're very useful. We've learned a lot from them about the whole thing.
You know, the interesting physical chemistry happen in the back of thousands, 40,000 miles away from iron, and carbon is hidden in this.
We never get to see because those compact are like that.
Gravity pervasive of ironies -- it's transparent. And the Big Bang I would love to explore the first few minutes of space: we'll never see it, but we will see it because the Big Bang will be stacked off the Big Bang.
With gravity, it should be possible to look back to the beginning.
And I think the most important thing is that, if we exist in space, we'll never see any of the things we've ever seen, and we haven't even seen.
In fact, in effect, LIGO was the first things we didn't expect.
My colleague at MIT, Matt Fuller, who's a great member of the salesman at MIT -- says, look at this subject matter: The kind of black holes like LI Mathe, they're the dinosaurs.
They're tremendously eeries. They're black holes made out of time to get these black holes in our geological time.
LIGO gives us a completely different view of the understatement of stars and ultimately the result of how we looked at how we made these chaos.
AA: The challenge now is to just be as bold as possible.
You know, thanks to Ungariaes, and we built great detectors and cosmopolitan.
We need ideas for new approaches -- a whole new generation of infrastructure and Earth.
Because what could possibly be more beautiful than the Big Bang?
Now there's a big dreams.
TBL: They tell us.
Thank you.
Now, a while ago, I tried an experiment.
I would say for a year, "Yes, ah!" moment, I stayed for.
No matter if it made me nervous, inmines, I would say "Yes."
Is there any public speaking?
No, but yes.
Is it going to be live on TV?
No, but yes.
Is there a great way to start?
No, no, no, but yes, yes.
And one crazy thing that happens: This is what I was removing myself from when I was scared to fear.
My fear, trusting, my social fear -- drink.
The power of a word is impressive.
"Yes" changed my life.
"Yes." My name changed me.
But there was one particular -- that changed my life profoundly, in a way I started with one of my favorites.
I have three incredible daughters, donation, and Emeerson, and the most unchitors, called "ersonersonersonds."
It's like they're a waiter from the South.
"Bite, I need milk for my beard."
She asked me if she could play with her when I was on the leap into. And I said, "Yes."
This was the beginning.
Departing with a new life. From me, every time I go there, you know, what I'm doing now, I'm running, or where I'm going, every single time I go.
Very, I'm not perfect. I'm very interested in these.
It has a magical effect on me, holding my children, on our family.
But it also brought in a rather extraordinary effect: that actually I understood that the "Ja-triangle-square" to the game of my kids.
I have a real dream.
I'm writers. I think it captures things out of life.
dreaming.
No.
I'm an Titan.
dreaming.
I produce geology. I raise televisions.
I do TV, big style.
And in that TV, I'm responsible to contribute in the world to the far-up program.
Four TV programs, 70 hours of television; three to four shows up at the same time.
Every channel of hundreds of jobs has not existed before it.
This can be award of a TV budget for between three and six million dollars.
Let's say five.
A new publicly: a new type of TV every four days, nine million dollars, all television programs, three, 70 TV programs that are on production: 10 hours, 15 minutes from technology, boxes, eight hours -- 15 minutes later, 10 -- TV, eight hours -- 15 minutes later, Amazon in watch TV, boxes: 70 coat, 70 coat?
350 million dollars for an season.
In America, my TV series are running for each other the day.
Around the world, my series is walking into 256 regions for 30 million of them.
My brain is global, and 45 of these narcisssion are on the '70s that I have created for myself, so I have to go up just present time, and I have to tell my stories so skeptics and my stories.
Four TV show, 70 hours, three, four hours of televisions, sometimes the same time, 350 million dollars in production, which burn all around the world.
You know who else is going to do that?
Nobody, so I'm an Titan.
dreaming.
I don't want to impress you.
I say it because I know what you think when the word "new" comes up.
I'm saying it so hard for you to work that all of you who are working so hard, whether you or when you work a country or a business, I'm talking about, so that when I'm not going to understand business, I'm talking about you, I'm only going to engage your computer in the computer and I'm not talking about computers, I'm really looking at you.
It's all a job, it's all working, reality, all blood -- no tears.
I work a lot, hard and I love it.
When I get to work deep, I'm not a different feeling.
My work always creates a country from nothing.
It's like I pop a troops on a canvas.
Now that's how you get to be a big high-powered sound.
You feel like Beonyé.
And all at the same time.
I love working.
It's creative, mechanistic and funny, it's funny and it's humaneous and drier, and it's cruel and it's the sum of it. And the sum is the sum of it.
And there's so much change going on in me that we do.
A sum of my head starts in my head, and it grows, and the sum of a street listened to, and the sum of a street that I could keep on her own.
Many people take the sum of them when I explain to you that I'm talking about writing joy.
Now, don't get me wrong, so they do.
But the sum of all -- when I started working on TV -- I started working on television and re-crafting, and I discovered these things, and I discovered, this product.
The sum is more than that writing.
The sum is action and activity. This is a wire of drone.
The sum is music. This is Sumi and air.
The sum of God is in my voice.
And if you've got a amount of sum in them, you can't seek out as the scale.
Feeling, not a different way to seek out at a price, no matter what price is.
That's called the sum.
Or perhaps it's a work as well.
Maybe it's called genius.
Maybe it's called ego.
Maybe it's the fear of failure.
I don't know.
I know I'm not for failures, and I'm just sure I love the sum.
I just want to tell you, I'm an Titan, and I know I don't want to ask that.
The more you can take a it very successful business: the more ads I get, the more those things you have, the more I write, the more things that will give me history.
The more I work to be successful, the more I have to work.
And I said, what do I say about work?
I love work, right?
The country I create, the marathon, the the army, the canvas, the high-intentione, the sum, the the sum, the sum.
I like this sum. I love the sum.
I need the sum. I'm the sum.
Am I just using this sum?
And then it stopped the sum.
karate, over-filtered, ex-competitive, ex-girlated.
The sum is stop.
Now my three daughters are used to say that her mama is the only one labor market.
Russian people said, "My mom will not be there, but you can write my Nanny."
And Emerson says, "Chere's going to Shack, I want to go to Shack."
It's the children of a Titan.
They are baby-onlyos.
They were three and a half dollars each.
The sum of the motor is hidden.
I loved my job. No longer was motors.
The sum didn't go back.
My sum was broken.
I've made things like the same stuff: Titanic, 15 hours, through weekend, no intimacy, no Titan, no Titan, no Titan, no devious, all the way things are done in your heart, right.
But there was no sums.
I was silence.
Four television programs, 70 hours, three production at the same time.
Four hours of television programs, three hours at the same time...
I was the perfect Titan.
I was a quick show.
All I could think I was just fun.
And that was my life.
I'm all set I've done.
I was the sum and the sum was me.
So what do you do when the work you're doing is going to love, suddenly, what do you want to do?
I know some people might think, "Hey, stupidly-an authoritarian."
But you know, you do it, you loved it, you make, you loved one, you work to be a teacher, a mother, a sehen you to be a mother, a different person, and you just fall on another, and you know what the sum is, if you're eating the sum of two, you know who's there, and you realize that the sum of that?
What are you?
What am I?
Am I still a Titan?
If the song is based on my heart, I can survive in silence?
And then my NGO, they ask me a question of "clappe."
I'm on the way outside, and she's saying, "Mom, you like, play?"
And I don't want to say no more things than two things.
First of all, I have to say yes, and second, she called, "Don't call me a "leassk."
They don't call anyone "mate."
When did this happen?
And I'm changing it when I look at Titan and my sum of Titan, and here's where everything changed my own eyes.
And so she says, "Mom, do you want to play?"
And I say, "Yes."
Well, that's not what you're doing.
We're playing their sisters, and we're reading a lot of dramatic and I read "The Ilops of Better Better" from the book.
Not extraordinary.
But it turns out it's intensely because my pain and panicked, in a mistress and in the amount of sum, I can't really do anything except for it.
I'm focused.
I am alive.
The country I create, the marathon, the army -- the canvas, the high-intentioned -- they don't exist.
All the case is hidden, and the finger and moist, whatever it is, the song picks up on the sound, or whatever it is, whatever the girl is.
There is peace and simplicity.
The air in this place is so short, I can barely breathe.
I can't believe I'm atrocious.
The opposite is working.
And I'm happy.
Something in me.
mental door goes on and a energy comes in.
And that's not happening immediately, but it happened.
I feel it.
The sum is coming back.
No amount of volume, hardly there, is hardlyhardly, short, but it's there.
Not the sum of money, but a total amount of sum.
And I feel as a magical moment.
But let's remain really at the end.
It's love. It's all.
No magic. No secret at all. Love.
It's something we've forgotten.
The sum of the labor, the Titanic, is only the support.
If I ask you, who I am when I say to you, if I write to you who I am and how I work with TV, and how is it that brains of a functional amount of sums, I've forgotten.
The sum is not a force and it's not a workossing fish.
It's dependent on pleasure.
The real sum of love is depending on love.
This is the sum of the lives that comes from life.
The real sum is self-moving and peace.
The real sum of the story produces the printing of history, allowing high performance and printing.
This is really simple riparian sum, and it's canceled.
This is real sum of God's voice in my ear, but perhaps God Truths the wrong word to me, because God said that I am an Titan?
It's just love.
We all need a little bit more love, a lot more love.
As soon as my child comes to me, I'll say yes.
I meet the rule, so that I can earn myself as a Work on any physical schools.
It's law. I don't have any choice, I have the sum, if I want to hear the sum.
I wish it were just that simple. I'm not good at play, I don't like it.
And it's not because of some way that I work on the way that we work.
The truth does it.
I don't like to play it.
I always work because I love it.
I'm rather surprised than there.
This one is painful because what makes you like to be a human being at house?
Well, I did.
I'm actually calling myself a self-serving.
I have to have problems.
This is not what I'm a shark.
We haul around in the garden, and then back and forth.
We're doing little dance party.
We singly and play ball.
We break soap bubbles.
I feel most frightened and confused.
I always go into my cell phone.
But it'sko.
My kids will show me how to survive the universe.
I play, and I'm playing, until we ever heard the game?
You can also play it! You can always be a little kid if you want to play with your child.
Maybe for me, you think for a day, you're a penin.
You know, it's right, but you can also do it!
They have time!
And you know why? They're not ribpers or a non-toxic show.
Your child finds less interesting than you think.
It's only 15 minutes.
My highest thing is, when you want to play with me 15 minutes, you notice they want to make something else.
They're wonderful 15 minutes, but only 15 minutes.
At 15 minutes I was replaced a Marie Marie or cookie.
And my ponder calls the "and-a-half minutes of genius, I'm with my mother."
It's only 15 minutes; it doesn't need it.
Anyone can put 15 minutes on a piece of paper!
15 minutes!
No cell phones, no cell phone, no distraction.
Day is short: daydreaming kids doing all kinds of things.
But 15 minutes is that.
My kids are my compassionate lenses, and they don't have to be -- it's the sum of the world, it's called for his soul to have a place for his lake.
It's not about play; it's about your own joy.
And in general, that's what we call the "claps."
Thankfully, you can call them the 15 minutes!
Take a look at what you're doing.
Take it out, and do it.
I'm not perfect in it. I bring them and I meet them. Tell them, books that day, that read books.
"Do you think I'll play for a minute?" -- when I was given my first TV show, I was a little bit more about an Titanic than I wanted to meet.
Fifteen minutes, why couldn't they have a full 15 minutes?
What could be wrong with that? Not bad.
The sum of my play came back to World Wide Web -- it seems to come back if I'm not working.
I don't work without games.
It takes a while, but it opens up a few months into my office, and I think it's a unknown, unanicist. And I run my new ideas, and I trust my way into it, and I've been using this thing, which has orders and resurrecting me into the or something, I love my work.
I like the sum, but I don't love it.
I don't need it.
I'm not the sum of the sum, this is not my...
soap bubbles and sticky fingers eat friends.
That's my sum.
The sum of life.
The sum of love.
The sum of the work is partly to me, but just such a piece. And for that, I'm so grateful.
It's my tup. I've never seen an Titan, which is a trip to Jerusalem to Jerusalem.
Yeah, I said yes to work and more play.
And yet I still have it all in the handle. My brain is functional.
The more I play, the more I play around and my children.
The more I play, the more I feel good than I am.
So the more I play, the more I think my head is clear.
So, the more I play, the better I work.
The more I play, the more I hear, the country, the marathon, the the marathon, the troops, the high-speed flight, the cliff, the high-end sound, the sum, the sum of the more. That's the sum, the sum of life.
The more I feel these frightened, the more unusual, naked life and new outrageous people in me -- more or less!
The more I feel this sum of money, the more I know who I am.
I'm writers. I think I make things out of living.
That's what a job it means to live, to his dream.
That's the dream of this jobs.
because a dream should be a little bit quiet.
I said, "Yes," and I said more playing.
Titans are not beaten up here.
Will you play?"
Thank you.
I'm a neurosurgeon.
Like most of my colleagues, I have to do with human tragedy.
I know how your life can change for another second or a stroke, after a car crash.
For us neuroscientists, it's very frustrating that the brain, unlike other bodies, has a very low ability to heal itself.
After a heavy injury, the central nervous system often have patients who remain a lot, actually a very difficult disability.
I guess that's the reason I got functional neurobiology.
What is a functional neuroscientific neurology?
A doctor who tried to improve the nerves in various cases.
Certainly they've heard of some of the most famous brain called the "Thirsenses" that allows you to have an electrode in the brain to actually change the circuitry of the neurons.
It's really an amazing technology. It has the fate of patients with Parkinson's disease, which is disseminate pain and severe pains.
But neurobiology doesn't mean neurologic diseases.
The dream of functional neuroscientist is the Again of the brain.
I think that we are closer to this dream.
I want to show you that we're very close to.
With something able to help itself.
The story began 15 years ago.
At the time I was a kid, I was working night and day, and night were working in the emergency room.
I often have a patient with skull-tail-paying space.
Now you've got to imagine that with skull, the brain tumor goes up and down the skull.
To save the life, you have to limit the damage.
And what you have to do sometimes is remove you a part of the brain.
Instead of studying the brain is a swollen with Jean-volume, we decided to trawler, to analyze a biologist's brain.
What do I mean by that?
We wanted to grow cells from that tissue.
There is no easy task.
If you grow out of a tissue to grow up, it's comparable to kids that are actually taken out of your families.
You have to figure out the right diet, humidity and environment to let them go to ad.
And we had to do that in these cells.
After many experiments, it created Jean-section.
That's what he saw underneath his microscope.
That was a big surprise for us.
Why?
It looked exactly like a stem cell culture, and with large green cells, that are surrounded by small, inadequate cells.
And you might know, you still know, if you have a few cells in biology, stem cells are forming every cell type in the organism.
The adult brain cells have, but very few, in deep, are hidden in the low brain.
It's surprising that this kind of stem cells from the surface of the brain tissue to keep in the psychedel.
We did another fascinating observation: normal stem cells, they're very active -- they share very fast.
They're dying, they're not dying.
But these cells relowed.
They were starting to come back up a few weeks, and they died even.
So we saw a new cell population in which it looked like stem cells, but they got different.
It took us a long time to understand where they came from.
It's just coming from these cells.
These blue cells are called red, and red- incumbent cells.
We all have it in our brains.
They're doing four percent of our big brain cells.
They are playing a very important role in our development.
Now, at the stage of the flutes, they are putting the fals into the falsal brain.
But why are they willing to get us?
We don't know.
We believe they're part of the brain because we're involved in in more concentrations, we're finding out of brain disorders.
This is not sure.
But one of the things about these cells is clear -- from these cells we got our stem cells.
We're destined from a potential cell to fix the brain.
So we had to prove it.
So we decided to come in.
We didn't want to take a piece of brain out of the water and then place it like the cells, as it did, and the action is.
And then they're able to track it in the brain so that they can follow.
We're actually last step back to the discovery of the same individual.
We call that the autobiology -- the auto transplant.
One of the first questions we had is: What if we combine those cells in normal brain tissue, and what will happen if we do the same cells in the same brain tissue?
Thanks to the help of the playwright, Eric routine could we work with monkeys.
The first scenario, we re-growing the cells into a healthy brain, and we noticed that they were completely gone as if they were completely gone back to home. So the space has not taken place, they're not needed to go there.
The second scenario, we added an injury and correlated them just the same cells, and now the cells growing -- they grew to retain that cells.
And that's what we see underneath the microscope.
These are the cells that were being run on this.
The evidence that they show are these little dots. These are the cells that we said in vitros.
We couldn't stop there.
Do these cells also have the same cell, to catch on a brain tumor?
So we trained monkeys with a manual deeflake.
And they had to use the food stacks up from a tray.
They were doing great.
When they reached stable, we had injured health care, we had a decrease in the motor skills of the African.
And on this monkeys, they couldn't move the hand anymore.
In the same way that it would happen, at people who would hunt like you to some degree, just like a stroke.
The patients are paralyzed, and then they try to bring in a plastic-based, sort of, employ them as they do.
When we were certain that the monkey had gotten his own cells, we pop its own cells.
On the left you see the monkeys flowing.
He can bring about 40 to 50 percent of his original performance, he can bring injury to injury.
It's not that precise and not that fast.
Now, take a look at the cells as we passed the same A, two months after the oppressor.
I can tell you, that was also very exciting for us.
Since that time, we've been able to find out a lot more about these cells.
We can try them and later.
We can use them for example, in other neurologic models, for example.
But our dream is still, it's supporting them to implant.
I really hope that I can show you a human brain, which is that there is a means to heal itself.
Thank you very much.
Bruno Giussani: Jovtal, which is wonderful, I'm sure, just now several people in the audience think, "I know somebody who need the most."
I certainly agree.
Of course, the question is: Of course, what are the biggest obstacles before you start to clinical trials on people.
Joce sheall these largest obstacles are the authorities. And the authorities in order to fill these two kilograms of paper and form it through studies to run from studies.
BG: That's understand, the brain is very depressed and so forth.
JB: Yes, but it takes a long time to get a lot of patience and a professional team.
BG: Look here in the future -- you have the research and you're trying to get the clinical trials for the sake of the clinical trials. If you look forward in the future, it can take many years to get somebody to come to the hospital and do that therapy will be available.
JB: That's hard to tell.
First of all, it's a clinical trial.
Will we allow the audience to start it soon?
And then you have to do this study with a small group of patients.
And it takes a long time to pick patients who need to actually construct treatment and to see if it's useful to make this kind of treatment.
And then you have to apply that to a multi-touch study.
You really have to prove to first that it's useful before you can offer that treatment.
BG: And it's sure, of course, JB.
BG: Thank you, Jovunne and for coming to TED, and tell us you about it.
BG: Thank you very much.
Democracy.
We make a big mistake in the West; we take it for granted.
We see that democracy is not as the fragile plant; it's actually as aInvent to our society.
We tend to view them as inevitable.
We believe that capitalism leads to democracy.
It's not true.
Lee Kuan Yee from Singapore and his great descendants have proven that it's possible that by a blackboard is possibly driven by a black capitalism, and amazing growth while the politics are completely democratized.
It is indeed exhilarating in Europe.
By the beginning of the year when I was shut out of Greek government -- the financial government, I realized that the finance industry -- our country -- were not democratized, was called the elections.
And in that moment, I was thinking that there would be no better right or for Lee Yew, or the communist parties, or the communist party of my friends who said to me that if democracy drew me, it would change anything.
So, at this point I'm going to give you an economic model for a real democracy.
I'm asking you, with me, to believe that Lee Kuanor, the communists and even the Euros and China could save us a democracy, but we truly need a great democracy.
Because without democracy, our society will really apply to our great futures and our new technology.
Now, I want to point out the topic that I'd like to point out to you is what's happening on the basis of our economy.
I call it the "TV-to- scrapation."
A top apple is known as the school limb. You know him as the shoulders of the United States, the shadow of its long shadow, Europe, and we're all over the world.
We all recognize the shoulders of schoolenberg.
Not only a few people recognize their twins.
A mine that belongs to a hole that involves both the speedsworkers and the hearing that it is -- though it has to invest in, as a "ly Idune" for the school board, it would be able to create the revenue that could provide humanity's "othermal energy."
I'll give you two numbers.
In the past three months, in the U.S. and the U.K., England have been invested in Britain on a trillions, hospitals where all the wealth, industry-speaking, roads, road systems, schools, roads, etc.
Basically, a trillion-dollar U.S.-American dollars is equal a lot of money to the clients who people are dying in the same countries, in the same area, in which our financial services and our financial services, except the real estate made absolutely nothing but the real price tag.
And in a way, school and ina general, the kind of productive Over-minded, rather than the market-based businesses.
As a result, there are more element of the wages -- more than a quarter of the United States, and Europe, in the USA, and the president -- following the economy of a low-income demand for a low-income economic demand era, one that is becoming lower, that, even if the propensity of the neighbors themselves don't invest in the plane, in fact that they could be recognized as a doctor, that the cliffs will grow.
Except, according to the circumstances, which leads the ecstaticly.
That's my in-law.
It enables him to move away with the technology-intentioned way to create our lives, in particular, of human talent and particularly the technology that these are critical for the Earth.
So, is democracy accelerating?
I think we continue. But before we understand democracy?
Aristotle defined as a society, in the charter and the poor, are ignoring the government as a majority.
Gever democracy decided, of course, too many.
Women, foreign, and, of course, slave.
But it would be a mistake that matched the curb of democracy because of that exhilaration.
The key thing in democracy was that they were working on democracy and they were not only working on free political justice, but more important, they asked them the rights of political policies on issues and the culture of governance.
That is, a democracy has not stopped very long.
Or as a candle -- very bright, it's also blown up fast.
But our liberals today have not delivered their roots in anti-particles.
It's in magnesium, in the middle of 1688, even in the American Revolution.
As democracy adapted to the free citizens and the poor, our liberal democracy based on the values of democracy, who was a set of options for Mr.
Because the liberal democracy came along, as a complete representation of politics and economic process, which became much more democratic in the economy -- as the world was shut down.
In our '96, since the present time period, that discovery started by politics and economy, a rather unfinished battle between the two that the economy was hummingbirdous and them.
So why don't politicians get more than they used to?
It's not one of their DNA.
It's because you can't be in government today, and yet, in power, the power of politics is largely separate from the economies and the areas.
I mentioned my Hads in capitalism.
Now, if you think about it, it's kind of like a predatory trawling that's separating animals, so depleted, they end up in the end.
Similar, with economic policy, the politics, has so far influenced that it's growing through the power of economic policy. The force itself is growing, the assets that are driven by political goods, the demand for business that is centralized, and the driver of the business that is governed by economic policy.
The successful capitalism of capitalism have been driving in the pervasive people, the higher twins, and the greater good, of mankind, of the human spirit.
If it is true, we have to bring politics and the economy to bring together, and it would be better off the cosmos, in which the ancient Atmos were.
This is not new idea, by the way.
The toxic link for this idea had already made of 100 years ago, and it didn't look a little good.
The lesson from the Soviet Union should be that the Soviet Union should be just working in an anti-preted way through a miracle that made that new species without a new way of stairstair.
But there's a solution: the poor are making arm.
capitalism is doing it by controlling the reward, by plethoralization and replaced by robots.
The problem is that the economics and political will sustain a long way to get the trade-offs of the topography that are higher, and the social conflict, as it's coming in a very deep -- as I think in countries.
So we have to rebuild the economies and the policies and politics and political communication, and we re-imagining that if we reframe the impacts of democratic democracy, otherwise we get back into the movies of another kind of "x a take action."
So, the question is not whether capitalism has brought about the engineering that he's chosen.
The interesting question is whether capitalism is caused by a crammed into "The Iliatri," or "Star Trek," or "Star Trek," is something that happens in society, in which people serve to their energy and take on, or in the study of the universe, or in which a high-tech element of anti-American life, the ancient Greek conversation.
I think we can be optimistic.
So what would it take to look like "Star Trek," where it could have "Star Trek" instead of "Waring Dyie?"
And in the virtually, I would like to give you some examples of this, some examples.
In the midst of the businesses, please ask you, while you're working in your market, you're working with money, and the next company, you follow a company, and the company you're working -- whatever they're working -- is property in the company.
Then all income from capitalism and growing, and the concept of payload to over trade is completely covered.
No business worth more in between the companies that work, but no employees, no longer the company, no longer has any major gap, and no longer the work of investment, no large sales among the apples.
In the midst of the global economics, what I want you to ask is that our national currency would have existed in a zoo, digital scum, from IMF, the WorldWide Telescope, and the things that in the entire world is given to 20s of humanity.
Imagine that entire world will continue to be performed in this currency -- call it "the co-proprismos" -- in units of government -- and every government that pays the sum of the country, or the trade across the country, a common ground.
Imagine that this fund that technology is invested in green technologies, especially in the parts of the world, in the investment.
That's not a new idea.
It's basically what John Maynard was on Mayan in Ethicson from Bahamas.
The problem was you didn't have the technology to do it at the time.
But we, particularly, have a background as a back story of politics and economics.
The world I write to you about, in the same sense, is to privileged people before privileged, and because they have buried in the buried of capitalists and work in the story of gestern, globalsiansian navigators.
But above all, it's a world where we can imagine a real democracy.
We are awake at a world like this.
Or will we be in "The Iliatrinx," or something like that?
The answer depends on how we choose together.
It is in our hands, and we do it better.
Thank you.
Bruno Giussani: Bruno's...
You describe yourself in your biodenture itself as a cosmologist.
How relevant is Marx's analysis today?
Yanis guys: If anything that I've just said, well, it's relevant.
And the reason that it's a policy block of politics and economic development is not, it's what we call the "volent Truth," which is a holistic demand for the creation of issues.
In this crisis, the transmission of one of the world, from one part of the next to where we're sitting, it's not only going to be deflect our wrongful product, but also the countries that are doing liberal democracy.
If this analysis is soluble, it's Marx's relevant to that point.
So, as Haye, I'm also a supplementer, so I'm a Trinesia, and therefore we are totally totally with this.
BG: And in fact, and now we're.
Yy: If you're not up, you're not thinking enough.
BG: That's a very Greek explanation, I think, kind of a philosophical explanation. In fact, it was -- in a Yi, you mentioned Snaing thing, and China was telling you that the speakers were very clear in your mind, which you did know, which is from the West.
You want to repeat it again?
Yeast: There's a big type of Hemi get.
In our liberal democracy, we have the democracy of a democracy.
As I said earlier, we have the democracy in politics, while the most limited things in this field, which is totally democratized -- the area of economics.
In a way, I must say that, if I could say it was anything like that, China was today the 19th century of the 19th century.
Because -- remember, we tend to connect with a guy named democracy -- that's a mistaken.
Liberals, Against, like John Stuart -- John.
he was especially skeptical about what was true in terms of a democratic development.
Now what you see in China, you can see very similarly the evolution of the developing revolution in Britain, especially the transition from the first to the second.
Now China is beginning to do what the West was doing in the 19th century, putting forward violently.
BG: I'm sure many people have a chance to read your experience as financial services in the beginning of the year.
YYtech: I saw that's coming.
BG: Yes...
How long will you look back at the first half-year interval?
YV: Very exciting, I think, from a personal perspective, and very disappointed because we had the opportunity to make a new zone.
Not only Greeks, but the Euroy zone.
And that is, to move from self-abillion randomness to the driver of the Europeans, to the Euroy of the European Union, and continue to increase the evolution of the European Union.
We had the opportunity to come up with the Greeks -- the first proposal, by the way, that was the one who caused this proposal.
Unfortunately, it's right. Unfortunately, the mice in the Euro zone, continue to pick up the Euro group, really get the Multipsive.
But you know what's coming.
This is the experience from the Soviet Union.
But if you try to survive an economic system that's not able to survive, then perhaps be able to survive, and get out of a lifetime, you might be able to depend on a while, but when the change happens, and godsmish and kill you.
BG: What change do you see in front of?
Yy: There is no doubt that the future has no future when we don't change its future.
BG: Have you ever been doing any mistakes in your time?
Y: Every day.
BG: For example? Everybody looking back, you know.
If there is a finance minister, or any minister, who, in particular, went to six months, did not have any mistakes, it's a dangerous mistake of person.
Of course I made mistakes.
The biggest mistake was to boost the billboards of the school curriculum.
I believed there was an honest interest to find a common solution to the money together.
But that wasn't the case.
They just wanted to get our government to do so because they didn't want to employ the law and to come up with the Euros.
They didn't want us to do this: they've been doing a disaster in Greek program in Greece for five years.
We lost one-third of our GDP.
This is worse than the depression.
No one in the theater, who kicked us on this policy, said, "This is a sa Mediterranean."
BG: Despite all of that, and even despite the aggressive sound, you seem to be pretty hard at this point.
Y: Absolutely.
My critics the European Union and the Euro zone is based on somebody who lives and loved ones.
My biggest fear is that the Euro zone is not alive.
Because if they do not survive, the local frogs will destroy hormones and the European Union.
That will not be a disaster for Europe, but for the entire economy as a whole.
We are probably the most powerful economy in the world.
So even when we would think of the post-modern as 1930s, it seems to me that the European Union is also going to be the future for the European Union.
BG: We hope you're very wrong in this point.
So thank you very much for coming to TED.
YYmen: Thank you.
Roy sum: Probably the most likely thing, although he's probably going to be 22 minutes your life off the 19th of April Ruteria, April Ruk.
Probably somewhere under 22 minutes, I don't think so many of you.
This is what comes back to the decision three years ago.
Roy Roy-juggling is a high-security employee.
Amazon is a company that we took of Amazon.
He's 47 years old, he's stent, and he describes a birds at Twitter when "Filifil, technology."
Roy has a very important job because he's responsible for describing the show and the content, and the content is going to produce the Amazon.
Of course, that's a very tough industry for business.
There are so many TV-industrial series that Roy can't steal any.
He has to find the show, the ones that are very, very good.
In other words, he's got to find the show that he's on the right.
This curve is the Library of 2,500 TV series on the website -- the period, in IMDB. And the reader shows up to 10: many of these Standorts.
We're advising your show with nine and higher, and that's the winner.
Then you have a successful show.
These are the show like, "What are the Hippo Bad Bad," like, "The show are you making a show, where you just looked after, how are you going to do a chest pain, your brains?"
This kind of show.
On the left, there it's on the left, like "Tohappiness" -- this is what the ridge should tell you about, if you don't.
Roy Priceer don't care about the left-hand side because I think you need to have a special intelligence on the left-hand side, The Americanjobgencyclopedia.
He's making more thoughts about the middle or the average television -- the show that's not bad, they're not missing.
So he's got to make sure he's really on the right side.
So the pressure is, of course, and it's also the first time that Amazon does something like this, so Roy doesn't want to risk it.
He wants to create success.
So it takes successes, so it holds a competition.
He takes lots of ideas for TV shows and he went through an eight-ounce show, then he produced the first flat show, and produced the first article where anybody can look online and see it for free.
And if Amazon comes out for free, you may get right?
Millions of audience go up this round.
But, as you know, they're not watching this show.
You'll watch Roy and his team at Roy.
They write the show when they start looking at the show, which one will check back at the other.
They collect millions of data to decide what to do, and then to produce the show that they should produce.
In fact, they collect the data and it story and it raises the answer to that "Am to another seven-dollar DVRs: a zoning election."
They were doing this show.
Anybody else out there?
Yes, "Sure." But it doesn't seem that many people can remember this show, because she wasn't that good.
It's just an average of the most average of the word -- in true of the words of this curve -- that's two-thirds and alpha House at 7,500 -- but something that worked on average, not on average, where Roy and his team works.
About the same time, another company, at a top of one company called Ted Sarandin, who is Ted Sarando's name, who is Ted Sarandos. Inside, who's using his group to find the Roy -- he's always on the data, he's using this super-stonic data, but he does something different.
Instead of shooting a competition and being there are the team doing their data on the Netflix, so they're giving the basics, the practice, etc., etc.
And then they use this data to try and find out the little details about what the show are, what the producers they like, what's called the actors.
So when they had all the parts of their nature, they decided to come together and they decided to give a decompress, not a Sitcoma, but a drama of a four-way series.
You know that show?
Yes, it's -- A triangle helped this at least has a heat meeting for the first two American guys.
A fact that is often the Aravind security camera takes a buck in that curve, so they wanted to go where they wanted.
So the question then is: what's going on?
You've got two very odd, data-driven companies.
They connect that data and it works for a lot of them, but it doesn't work for the other company.
What's the point?
Because the logic somehow says it should work all with things.
If you collect millions of data, for a decision you should make a good decision.
You spend 200 years of statistics as a one-up.
You're going to be able to make it very powerful by the computer.
That's nice, what you would expect, is it good television, right?
When that data isn't working, it's a little more terrifying because we live in a time when we live in and more statistics to make more serious decisions about TV.
Anybody know the company this multi-cam system?
Nobody, OK. That's OK.
Multiply, a multi-task system is the software company, and I hope nobody in this room gets ever more touch with it. Come on in your prison.
If anybody in the United States is here in the moment and jeux, in fact, it's probably using data analysis to determine that this company is probably going to determine whether or not to determine whether an appeal is going to happen.
Right like Amazon. But rather than having a show or a bad show, whether one is Mowives is going to be good or not.
Central television, 22 minutes can be bad, but even more, it could be worse in jail.
Unfortunately, the evidence is that data uses a lot of data.
It's not always the best results. It's not because a company knows how to use multi-paraization.
The data is, again, the most fake companies.
Yeah, even Google makes mistakes.
In 2009, there's been data that they've had this really bad memory, that if you like, you can predict flu data, it's from Google, through Google analysis.
It worked out a really wonderful news way, and it was a turning control of the line into a magazine called "Nature."
This worked a liberation year after year, all the time, and it didn't work.
and nobody could say why.
It just wasn't working, which was once again a mustard presentation, including the cover of the book "Nature."
Even the most sophisticated data storage and Google sometimes misunderstood back.
Despite all these mistakes in the decision of life, at the work of life, on a labor record, in medicine.
And so we should think that data is helpful.
I'm also familiar with some data in the computer, and I'm working in the computer, at a very smart area where people can use some very smart decisions to make, like cancer therapy for a cancer.
Or this, or the evolution of a drug over the years, I've been looking at some patterns of data on successful decisions and not just campaigning. This pattern should be spread.
Do you ever want to solve a very complex problem, mainly two things.
First, consider this problem in its parts: so that you can analyze the parts; you can analyze the parts; you can contrast the single pieces.
Sometimes you have to do this again, but it's always two things: one, and put them together.
And now the most important thing: data is only good for the first part.
Data and data analysis, no matter how powerful it can help to understand parts and its parts.
They're not engaged in putting together the pieces together and then bringing them back into the decision.
And there's another tool that's there, and we own it, that we all have our brains.
If there is something that's good in the brain to put it back together, it's also the information that's reasonably interchangeable -- especially when it's the brain is in a good brain.
That's why I believe it was Netflix because they used data and understanding what they're hearing in the process.
They're taking data to better understand what it would not have been, where they would not take the decision, but they would re-making a piece of decision together and actually turn it back into a piece of data that said, "Do not be in the data."
Ted Sarando and his team made these decisions for what it meant was that they made a big personal risk on this decision.
Amazons were doing it in the wrong way.
They used data to make all their decisions first, first they took TV shows as "happy" television.
It was a safe decision, because they could always say, "Well, we're the data."
It didn't lead to results.
Data is useful for better decisions, but I believe that things are going wrong when we start doing our decision-making data.
Either way it's powerful, data is just a tool, and to not forget that instrument.
Thank you very much.
Before that, this was the device for decisions.
Many know it.
It's also called anMagic ball every eight Balle, or an amazing decision, for the ball game, all you need to do is to shake the ballrooms, and probably get an answer.
I'll end with a technique from a techno.
I've met a couple of decisions in my life, where I should have listened to the ball.
But, of course, as you know, if you want to have the data available, you'd like to put a little more Eingang data analysis, to make better decisions.
But it doesn't change the way we start building.
So maybe the ball of the balloon is really smart and clever, it will ultimately make us feel if we're going to reach a little extraordinary curve.
And I feel that as a very daunting news editor, that actually despite the fact that it's still a to make decisions, a expert in what you do, and putting a risks to your risks.
Because it's not the data, it's the risks you have on the right-hand side of the curves.
Thank you.