TED Talks Daily show

TED Talks Daily

Summary: Every weekday, TED Talks Daily brings you the latest talks in audio. Join host and journalist Elise Hu for thought-provoking ideas on every subject imaginable — from Artificial Intelligence to Zoology, and everything in between — given by the world's leading thinkers and creators. With TED Talks Daily, find some space in your day to change your perspectives, ignite your curiosity, and learn something new.

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  • Artist: TED
  • Copyright: Creative Commons: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Podcasts:

 TED: Nicholas Negroponte: A 30-year history of the future - Nicholas Negroponte (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:19:43

MIT Media Lab founder Nicholas Negroponte takes you on a journey through the last 30 years of tech. The consummate predictor highlights interfaces and innovations he foresaw in the 1970s and 1980s that were scoffed at then but are ubiquitous today. And he leaves you with one last (absurd? brilliant?) prediction for the coming 30 years.

 TED: Joi Ito: Want to innovate? Become a "now-ist" - Joi Ito (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:12:31

“Remember before the internet?” asks Joi Ito. “Remember when people used to try to predict the future?” In this engaging talk, the head of the MIT Media Lab skips the future predictions and instead shares a new approach to creating in the moment: building quickly and improving constantly, without waiting for permission or for proof that you have the right idea. This kind of bottom-up innovation is seen in the most fascinating, futuristic projects emerging today, and it starts, he says, with being open and alert to what’s going on around you right now. Don’t be a futurist, he suggests: be a now-ist.

 TED: Paul Bloom: Can prejudice ever be a good thing? - Paul Bloom (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:16:23

We often think of bias and prejudice as rooted in ignorance. But as psychologist Paul Bloom seeks to show, prejudice is often natural, rational ... even moral. The key, says Bloom, is to understand how our own biases work -- so we can take control when they go wrong.

 TED: Simon Anholt: Which country does the most good for the world? - Simon Anholt (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:17:54

It's an unexpected side effect of globalization: problems that once would have stayed local—say, a bank lending out too much money—now have consequences worldwide. But still, countries operate independently, as if alone on the planet. Policy advisor Simon Anholt has dreamed up an unusual scale to get governments thinking outwardly: The Good Country Index. In a riveting and funny talk, he answers the question, "Which country does the most good?" The answer may surprise you (especially if you live in the US or China).

 TED: Sara Lewis: The loves and lies of fireflies - Sara Lewis (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:13:51

Biologist Sara Lewis has spent the past 20 years getting to the bottom of the magic and wonder of fireflies. In this charming talk, she tells us how and why the beetles produce their silent sparks, what happens when two fireflies have sex, and why one group of females is known as the firefly vampire. (It's not pretty.) Find out more astonishing facts about fireflies in Lewis' footnotes, below.

 TED: Chris Domas: The 1s and 0s behind cyber warfare - Chris Domas (2013) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:16:45

Chris Domas is a cybersecurity researcher, operating on what’s become a new front of war, "cyber." In this engaging talk, he shows how researchers use pattern recognition and reverse engineering (and pull a few all-nighters) to understand a chunk of binary code whose purpose and contents they don't know.

 TED: Ge Wang: The DIY orchestra of the future - Ge Wang (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:17:36

Ge Wang makes computer music, but it isn’t all about coded bleeps and blips. With the Stanford Laptop Orchestra, he creates new instruments out of unexpected materials—like an Ikea bowl—that allow musicians to play music that’s both beautiful and expressive.

 TED: Naomi Oreskes: Why we should trust scientists - Naomi Oreskes (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:19:14

Many of the world's biggest problems require asking questions of scientists -- but why should we believe what they say? Historian of science Naomi Oreskes thinks deeply about our relationship to belief and draws out three problems with common attitudes toward scientific inquiry -- and gives her own reasoning for why we ought to trust science.

 TED: Lorrie Faith Cranor: What’s wrong with your pa$$w0rd? - Lorrie Faith Cranor (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:17:41

Lorrie Faith Cranor studied thousands of real passwords to figure out the surprising, very common mistakes that users -- and secured sites -- make to compromise security. And how, you may ask, did she study thousands of real passwords without compromising the security of any users? That's a story in itself. It's secret data worth knowing, especially if your password is 123456 ...

 TED: Shaka Senghor: Why your worst deeds don’t define you - Shaka Senghor (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:12:00

In 1991, Shaka Senghor shot and killed a man. He was, he says, "a drug dealer with a quick temper and a semi-automatic pistol." Jailed for second degree murder, that could very well have been the end of the story. But it wasn't. Instead, it was the beginning of a years-long journey to redemption, one with humbling and sobering lessons for us all.

 TED: Billy Collins: Two poems about what dogs think (probably) - Billy Collins (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:04:02

What must our dogs be thinking when they look at us? Poet Billy Collins imagines the inner lives of two very different companions. It’s a charming short talk, perfect for taking a break and dreaming …

 TED: Jamila Lyiscott: 3 ways to speak English - Jamila Lyiscott (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:04:29

Jamila Lyiscott is a “tri-tongued orator;” in her powerful spoken-word essay “Broken English,” she celebrates — and challenges — the three distinct flavors of English she speaks with her friends, in the classroom and with her parents. As she explores the complicated history and present-day identity that each language represents, she unpacks what it means to be “articulate.”

 TED: Ruth Chang: How to make hard choices - Ruth Chang (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:14:41

Here's a talk that could literally change your life. Which career should I pursue? Should I break up -- or get married?! Where should I live? Big decisions like these can be agonizingly difficult. But that's because we think about them the wrong way, says philosopher Ruth Chang. She offers a powerful new framework for shaping who we truly are.

 TED: Anne Curzan: What makes a word "real"? - Anne Curzan (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:17:13

One could argue that slang words like ‘hangry,’ ‘defriend’ and ‘adorkable’ fill crucial meaning gaps in the English language, even if they don't appear in the dictionary. After all, who actually decides which words make it into those pages? Language historian Anne Curzan gives a charming look at the humans behind dictionaries, and the choices they make.

 TED: Kwame Anthony Appiah: Is religion good or bad? (This is a trick question) - Kwame Anthony Appiah (2014) | File Type: audio/mp3 | Duration: 00:14:40

Plenty of good things are done in the name of religion, and plenty of bad things too. But what is religion, exactly — is it good or bad, in and of itself? Philosopher Kwame Anthony Appiah offers a generous, surprising view.

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