Recently I downloaded all of the TED Talks from iTunes onto my iPod. The TED Conference (Technology, Entertainment, Design) is an annual conference that defines its mission as “ideas worth spreading”. The lectures, also called TED talks, cover a broad set of topics including science, arts and design, politics, culture, business, global issues, technology and development, and entertainment. Speakers come from a similarly wide variety of communities and disciplines and have included such people as former U.S. president Bill Clinton,Nobel laureates James D. Watson, Murray Gell-Mann, Al Gore, Internet entrepreneur Jimmy Wales,notable architect and urbanism critic James Howard Kunstler, and Google co-founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page. I enjoy watching them every year, and some day hope to attend the conference. What good I may do there, I don’t know; but I think it would be an interesting experience.
Anyway. I was watching the lecture by Professor Brian Cox (below) about the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) that was “switched on” on 10 September of this year. I now have a new hero of science. He is an advocate for raising the the awareness of science in the public eye, and is not afraid to call the naysayers out when they try to spread rumors about what the LHC is trying to accomplish (see the title quote). There is something about having particle physics explained to you in a Lancastrian accent that makes it…accessible and understandable. Granted, the lecture’s only about 16 and a half minutes long, and I don’t have to sit through university lectures and work out the Standard Model of Particle Physics, but I am a visual learner so I’ll take what I can get. I also enjoyed another video. I found this video to be very interesting, and has prompted me to think about crows in a much deeper sense. I also asked Vanessa last night if she would like to get some crows as a pet. Could be handy. P.S: The statement about students at the University of Washington is verified as true by Vanessa, who has seen the repercussions of this first hand. Watch the video to find out what I am talking about. Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you: Joshua Kline and The Amazing Intelligences of Crows.
October 23, 2008 at 9:01 am
I had a choice this morning of listening to McCain screaming on TV or listening to the above video. I chose the later. Very interesting Matt. Thanks
October 24, 2008 at 5:51 pm
I love TED! I showed some of the origami stuff to my pre-algebra students (it went over about how you’d expect, but my Assistant Principal loved it).