Blog posts
931 - 960 of 951 results
Working for the health of the many: How Asher Hasan is bringing insurance coverage to Pakistan's low-income workers
Growing up in the UK and coming of age in Pakistan, TEDIndia Fellow Asher Hasan observed a vast discrepancy: those with and without access to basic healthcare, and the devastating social consequences of this disparity. He tells TED Blog the story of how he witnessed a single health disaster ruin the hopes of his childhood friends, and how this...
Posted February 28, 2014
Ingenuity starts with a spark: The talks of TED@IBM
From artists to scientists, mothers, mathematicians and business visionaries, people in every corner of the world are dreaming up solutions to our most pressing problems. Whether tackling war and peace or the principles of machine learning, ingenuity starts with one thing: a spark.
And regardless of where the spark takes hold, inspiration...
Posted November 16, 2016
We don't have to give up liberty to have security: Edward Snowden at TED2014
So here's a surprise. Chris Anderson takes the stage to introduce a very special guest -- who's not actually here. Beaming in from a remote location in Russia, controlling a bot he can wheel around the stage to see the assembled audience, here's arguably the most controversial figure in contemporary culture: Edward Snowden. As he wheels slowly...
Posted March 18, 2014
Gaza's only female photojournalist, Eman Mohammed, shows the devastation of war on private lives
At the age of 19, Eman Mohammed became the only female photojournalist based in Gaza, breaking longstanding cultural taboos around the role of women in society. Three weeks into her career, the Gaza War began. Now 26, Mohammed continues to document harrowing and intimate stories of war and its aftermath in Gaza and beyond. Here, Mohammed tells...
Posted April 25, 2014
26 ideas from the future
At TED2014, we asked speakers and attendees to riff off the conference's theme ("The Next Chapter") and tell us what might radically change society, life, technology and so on in the next 30 years. From funny and wry to deeply insightful, the answers will surprise you.
"One of the things about learning how to read -- we have been doing a lot ...
Posted March 24, 2014
Catalyze: The talks from TED@NAS
Science catalyzes progress. It allows us to explore our biggest questions, generate new ideas and seek out solutions. At TED@NAS, 19 speakers and performers explored how science is igniting change and fueling our way forward -- through radical collaboration, quantum leaps and bold thinking.
The event: TED@NAS, for which The National Acade...
Posted November 6, 2019
Two giants of online learning discuss the future of education
Scratch the surface of online education, and you’re destined to run into the names of two men. The first, Salman Khan, never intended to be an education icon. Instead, he simply watched with increased interest as videos he had uploaded to YouTube to help his cousin learn math were seized upon by a world apparently eager to learn via his thou...
Posted January 28, 2014
Fellows Friday with Gavin Sheppard
Growing up amidst the violence of inner city Toronto, Gavin Sheppard started The Remix Project to catapult creative young people from troubled neighborhoods into lucrative careers. From presidential meetings to local crime scenes to celebrity parties, Gavin stays focused on finding new ways to keep The Remix Project evolving, and improving you...
Posted December 17, 2010
Why not? Pushing and prodding the possible, at TED@IBM
We know that our world -- our data, our lives, our countries -- are becoming more and more connected. But what should we do with that? In two sessions of TED@IBM, the answer shaped up to be: Dream as big as you can. Speakers took the stage to pitch their ideas for using connected data and new forms of machine intelligence to make material ch...
Posted December 9, 2017
How can we talk about climate change? (Or can we?)
It's tempting to argue about climate change — but this fascinating dialogue suggests that sometimes, the debate is just not worth your time. Climate expert Vicki Arroyo and risk analyst Dan Kahan discuss.
Vicki Arroyo: You’ve been working in Florida recently and that makes me wonder: Can you tell me a little bit about what you’ve learned ...
Posted May 2, 2014
What is it about bees? Three experts on why they’re fascinating, why they’re dying, what can save them
In 1945, there were 4.5 million hives of bees in the United States. Today, there are just about 2 million. It’s been a subtle decline over time, but one that has dramatically accelerated over the past seven years. And this should be extremely alarming, given that bees pollinate one-third of the world’s crops.
In today’s talk, given at TED...
Posted September 17, 2013
Symbiotic: The talks of TED@BCG 2020
How can we make advances in technology that don't require massive job losses? Work with nature to protect both the planet and humanity? Ensure all people are treated equitably? In a day of talks, interviews and performances, 17 speakers and performers shared ideas about a future in which people, technology and nature thrive interdependently....
Posted October 23, 2020
Rise of a gangsta nerd: Fellows Friday with Hakeem Oluseyi
Astrophysicist, educator, and humanitarian Hakeem Oluseyi trounced race and class to become an important contributor to computer technology and space research. Back on Earth, he's doing all he can to give young and underfunded scientists a chance to reach for the stars.
Yours is an extraordinary story. You grew up impoverished -- moving frequ...
Posted October 5, 2012
"Uncertainty touches the best of what is human in us": Q&A with Lesley Hazleton
In her luminous TEDxRainier talk, Lesley Hazleton, a writer and “accidental theologist,” described herself as “a tourist” in the Koran, and shared her discovery of the musicality, ambiguity, and depth of a text known by name to billions, but read intimately by far fewer. We met Lesley by phone and asked her to share more of her impressions o...
Posted February 15, 2011
How we can help end domestic violence
Esta Soler helped pass the Violence Against Women Act, 20 years ago. Leslie Morgan Steiner had just left an abusive husband at the time, and now tells her story widely. They talk about the NFL, the hashtags #WhyIStayed and #WhyILeft, and what we can all do to end domestic violence.
Esta Soler and Leslie Morgan Steiner know exactly how to ...
Posted September 12, 2014
Dazzling in the deep: A Fellows Friday conversation with Asha de Vos, Kristen Marhaver and Colleen Flanigan
We asked three TED Fellows who work in the briny depths -- whale researcher Asha de Vos, coral reef biologist Kristen Marhaver and artist Colleen Flanigan -- to discuss how science and art are working in tandem to help the world fully appreciate our vanishing marine life.
Describe what you do and what you’re working on. And where are you on...
Posted January 11, 2013
How America's justice system failed our children
In 1989, children younger than 16 could be sentenced to die in the United States. Lawyer Bryan Stevenson (TED Talk: We need to talk about an injustice) represented some of these juveniles in Alabama, the state with the most children sentenced to death per capita. Read his chilling account of meeting Charlie, a 14-year-old tried as an adult for c...
Posted October 29, 2014
Two giants of online learning discuss the future of education
Scratch the surface of online education, and you’re destined to run into the names of two men. The first, Salman Khan, never intended to be an education icon. Instead, he simply watched with increased interest as videos he had uploaded to YouTube to help his cousin learn math were seized upon by a world apparently eager to learn via his thou...
Posted January 28, 2014
Why belonging matters: Fellows Friday with Chelsea Shields Strayer
How did human emotions evolve to help us survive? For the last decade, cultural anthropologist Chelsea Shields Strayer has studied the indigenous healing practices of the Ashante people of Ghana, discovering that emotional pain serves useful purposes -- including the relief of physical pain. In this conversation with the TED Blog, she tells th...
Posted November 15, 2013
Are we irrationally pessimistic? A deep-dive Q&A with Steven Pinker
After his mainstage talk on the opening night of TED, psychologist Steven Pinker sat down with Chris Anderson to dive into his new book, Enlightenment Now. The two examined some criticisms of the book and the thesis behind it, dug into the data, and then threw the floor open for questions, in a session that offered the luxury of time to real...
Posted April 13, 2018