The benefits of not being a jerk to yourself

After more than two decades as an anchor for ABC News, an on-air panic attack sent Dan Harris's life in a new direction: he became a dedicated meditator and, to some, even a guru. But then an anonymous survey of his family, friends and colleagues turned up some brutal feedback -- … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

Work is not your family

You may need to hear this (if you haven't already): your job is not your family. While you can develop meaningful relationships with your colleagues, calling work your family can actually breed burnout and be detrimental to your mental and emotional health. Mental wellness educat … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

Andrew Ng: How AI could empower any business

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@ted.com | 2 years ago

How to build for human life on Mars

We're going to be building on the Moon this decade -- and next will be Mars, says space architect Melodie Yashar. In a visionary talk, she introduces her work designing off-world shelters with autonomous robots and 3D printers and explores how it might help uncover radical soluti … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

How to fight desertification and reverse climate change with livestock [video]

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@ted.com | 2 years ago

Trish Millines Dziko: How schools can nurture every student's genius

Forget home economics and standardized tests, education visionary Trish Millines Dziko has a much more engaging and fulfilling way for students to develop real-world skills. Get schooled by Dziko as she shares how project-based learning can transform public education and unlock g … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

David Dunning: Why incompetent people think they're amazing

How good are you with money? What about reading people's emotions? How healthy are you, compared to other people you know? Knowing how our skills stack up against others is useful in many ways. But psychological research suggests that we're not very good at evaluating ourselves a … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

Where on Earth will people live in the future?

From the return of nomadic living to a climate-disrupted world, author and global strategist Parag Khanna has some predictions for humanity. Get a fascinating glimpse at the future as he tackles an urgent question: Where on Earth will eight billion humans live in the uncertain ti … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

A new understanding of human history and the roots of inequality

What if the commonly accepted narratives about the foundation of civilization are all wrong? Drawing on groundbreaking research, archaeologist David Wengrow challenges traditional thinking about the social evolution of humanity -- from the invention of agriculture to the formatio … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

Alison Killing: How data-driven journalism illuminates patterns of injustice

A blank spot on a digital map can signal much more than a gap in data -- it can mean something is being intentionally hidden. Sharing the remarkable discovery of massive alleged detention camps in Xinjiang, China, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Alison Killing shows how governm … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

The blind spots of the green energy transition

The world needs clean power, but decarbonization calls for a massive increase in the mining and extraction of minerals like lithium, graphite and cobalt. Environmental peacemaking expert Olivia Lazard sheds light on the scramble for these precious mineral resources -- and how the … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

Head of Instagram Adam Mosseri: A creator-led internet, built on blockchain

As digital assets like cryptocurrency and NFTs become more mainstream, design thinker and head of Instagram Adam Mosseri believes that creators are uniquely positioned to benefit. These blockchain-enabled technologies could remove the need for a "middleman" in the form of large s … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

Animals that are also plants

The species of slug known as Elysia chlorotica may not look like much— it resembles a bright green leaf— but it's one of the most extraordinary creatures on our planet. Living in marshes along the coast of North America, it can go about a year without eating. During that time, it … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

TED Interview

Head of TED Chris Anderson speaks with some of the world's most interesting people to dig into the provocative and powerful ideas of our time.(ted.com) | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

Tom Oxley: A brain implant that turns your thoughts into text

What if you could control digital devices using just the power of thought? That's the incredible promise behind the Stentrode -- an implantable brain-computer interface that collects and wirelessly transmits information directly from the brain, without the need for open surgery. … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

WorkLife Podcast – Breaking up with perfectionism

Perfectionism is on the rise -- and not just in job interviews when people claim it's their greatest weakness. But the desire to be flawless is not always productive or healthy. As a recovering perfectionist, organizational psychologist Adam Grant dives into how he managed to aba … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

PhotoSynth can connect the world's images (2007) [video]

Blaise Aguera y Arcas leads a dazzling demo of Photosynth, software that could transform the way we look at digital images. Using still photos culled from the Web, Photosynth builds breathtaking dreamscapes and lets us navigate them. | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

Self-assembling robots and the potential of artificial evolution

What if robots could build and optimize themselves -- with little to no help from humans? Computer scientist Emma Hart is working on a new technology that could make "artificial evolution" possible. She explains how the three ingredients of biological evolution can be replicated … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

Dan Pallotta: The way we think about charity is dead wrong (2013)

Activist and fundraiser Dan Pallotta calls out the double standard that drives our broken relationship to charities. Too many nonprofits, he says, are rewarded for how little they spend -- not for what they get done. Instead of equating frugality with morality, he asks us to star … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

You deserve the right to repair your stuff

A self-declared "repair geek," Gay Gordon-Byrne is a driving force behind the right-to-repair movement, which aims to empower people to fix their stuff. She describes how the movement is gaining legislative momentum and breaks down how the global shift away from "throwaway societ … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

What makes a good life? Lessons from the longest study on happiness

What keeps us happy and healthy as we go through life? If you think it's fame and money, you're not alone – but, according to psychiatrist Robert Waldinger, you're mistaken. As the director of a 75-year-old study on adult development, Waldinger has unprecedented access to data on … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 2 years ago

Networking for people who hate networking

TED Talk Subtitles and Transcript: Ditch your business cards. There are more effective, less awkward strategies for building your connections. (Audio only) | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Brain hallucinates your conscious reality

Neurologist and author Oliver Sacks brings our attention to Charles Bonnet syndrome -- when visually impaired people experience lucid hallucinations. He describes the experiences of his patients in heartwarming detail and walks us through the biology of this under-reported phenom … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Brain Invents Your “Self”

Who are you, really? Neuroscientist Anil Seth lays out his fascinating new theory of consciousness and self, centered on the notion that we "predict" the world into existence. From sleep to memory and everything in between, Seth explores the reality we experience in our brains -- … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

A vision of sustainable housing for all of humanity

By 2100, the UN estimates that the world's population will grow to just over 11 billion people. Architect Vishaan Chakrabarti wants us to start thinking about how we'll house all these people -- and how new construction can fight climate change rather than make it worse. In this … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

How to end the pandemic – and prepare for the next

We will get out of this pandemic, says Maria Van Kerkhove, the COVID-19 Technical Lead of the World Health Organization (WHO). The question is how fast -- and if we'll take what we've learned from the past two years and apply it to the next emerging pathogen. In conversation with … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

How to Run a Company with Almost No Rules

What if your job didn't control your life? Brazilian CEO Ricardo Semler practices a radical form of corporate democracy, rethinking everything from board meetings to how workers report their vacation days (they don't have to). It's a vision that rewards the wisdom of workers, pro … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Remembering climate change a message from the year 2071

Coming to us from 50 years in the future, legendary sci-fi writer Kim Stanley Robinson tells the "history" of how humanity ended the climate crisis and restored the damage done to Earth's biosphere. A rousing vision of how we might unite to overcome the greatest challenge of our … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Jeff Dean: AI isn't as smart as you think – but it could be

What is AI, really? Jeff Dean, the head of Google's AI efforts, explains the underlying technology that enables artificial intelligence to do all sorts of things, from understanding language to diagnosing disease -- and presents a roadmap for building better, more responsible sys … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Great design is serious not solemn

Paula Scher looks back at a life in design (she's done album covers, books, the Citibank logo ...) and pinpoints the moment when she started really having fun. Look for gorgeous designs and images from her legendary career. | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

How much clean electricity do we need?

To fight climate change, we need to clean up the global electricity system by replacing fossil fuel power plants with clean generation -- right? Climate author Solomon Goldstein-Rose thinks we need to do much more than that. Replacement isn't enough, he explains in this compellin … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Inventor of the spreadsheet describes the design process [video]

Dan Bricklin changed the world forever when he codeveloped VisiCalc, the first electronic spreadsheet and grandfather of programs you probably use every day like Microsoft Excel and Google Sheets. Join the software engineer and computing legend as he explores the tangled web of f … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

How NFTs are building the internet of the future

In this revelatory talk, technologist Kayvon Tehranian explores why NFTs -- digital assets that represent a certificate of ownership on the internet -- are a technological breakthrough. Learn how NFTs are putting power and economic control back into the hands of digital creators … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

The art of spending time – Michael Tierney – TEDxAthens

TED Talk Subtitles and Transcript: Money comes and goes but time is non-refundable. Michael challenges us to consider if we are spending ours how we want and to start using time as our primary currency. He now travels the world full-time living out of a backpack aiming to inspire … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

TED: Life Lessons from an Ad Man

Advertising adds value to a product by changing our perception, rather than the product itself. Rory Sutherland makes the daring assertion that a change in perceived value can be just as satisfying as what we consider “real” value -- and his conclusion has interesting consequence … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

The untapped energy source that could power the planet [video]

Deep beneath your feet is a molten ball of energy the same temperature as the surface of the sun -- an immense clean energy source that could power the world thousands of times over, says technologist and climate activist Jamie C. Beard. How do we tap it? She lays out a surprisin … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Why arent there more Native American restaurants?

When you think of North American cuisine, do Indigenous foods come to mind? Chef Sean Sherman serves up an essential history lesson that explains the absence of Native American culinary traditions across the continent, highlighting why revitalizing Indigenous education sits at th … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

The scientist couple driving an mRNA vaccine revolution

As COVID-19 spread, BioNTech cofounders Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci had one goal: to make a safe, effective vaccine faster than ever before. In this illuminating conversation with head of TED Chris Anderson, the immunologists (and married couple) share the fascinating story of ho … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Paul Stamets: 6 ways mushrooms can save the world (2013) [video]

Mycologist Paul Stamets lists 6 ways the mycelium fungus can help save the universe: cleaning polluted soil, making insecticides, treating smallpox and even flu viruses. | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Max Hawkins: I let algorithms randomize my life for two years – Ted Talk

What if everything in your life was randomized: from the food you ate to the things you did and the places you traveled? Computer scientist Max Hawkins created algorithms to make decisions like these for him -- and got hooked on the experience for two years. He shares how relinqu … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Can we create new senses for humans? (2015) [video]

As humans, we can perceive less than a ten-trillionth of all light waves. "Our experience of reality," says neuroscientist David Eagleman, "is constrained by our biology." He wants to change that. His research into our brain processes has led him to create new interfaces -- such … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

An app that empowers people to solve their legal problems

If you can't afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you, right? Not in US civil court. From high legal fees to confusing paperwork and expensive lawyers, it can be difficult to settle civil matters. Entrepreneur and TED Fellow Rohan Pavuluri is working to streamline cumber … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

What's a snollygoster? A short lesson in political speak (2012) [video]

Most politicians choose their words carefully, to shape the reality they hope to create. But does it work? Etymologist Mark Forsyth shares a few entertaining word-origin stories from British and American history (for instance, did you ever wonder how George Washington became "pre … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Morphogenetic Code: The electrical blueprints that orchestrate life

TED Talk Subtitles and Transcript: DNA isn't the only builder in the biological world -- there's also a mysterious bioelectric layer directing cells to work together to grow organs, systems and bodies, says biologist Michael Levin. Sharing unforgettable and groundbreaking footage … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

How to empower people to solve their own legal problems

If you can't afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you, right? Not in US civil court. From high legal fees to confusing paperwork and expensive lawyers, it can be difficult to settle civil matters. Entrepreneur and TED Fellow Rohan Pavuluri is working to streamline cumber … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

Why Is 'X' the Unknown?

Why is 'x' the symbol for an unknown? In this short and funny talk, Terry Moore gives the surprising answer. | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

The electrical blueprints that orchestrate life (not DNA;D)

DNA isn't the only builder in the biological world -- there's also a mysterious bioelectric layer directing cells to work together to grow organs, systems and bodies, says biologist Michael Levin. Sharing unforgettable and groundbreaking footage of two-headed worms, he introduces … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago

The electrical blueprints that orchestrate life

DNA isn't the only builder in the biological world -- there's also a mysterious bioelectric layer directing cells to work together to grow organs, systems and bodies, says biologist Michael Levin. Sharing unforgettable and groundbreaking footage of two-headed worms, he introduces … | Continue reading


@ted.com | 3 years ago