Este 2023 he visto 47 TEDTalks, no muchas más ni muchas menos de las habituales. en años precedentes.
Aunque la motivación principal para visionar TED Talks, cuando empecé, era fundamentalmente practicar mi inglés, pronto se unió una segunda motivación, a saber, observar a los grandes 'speakers' actuar, y estudiar cómo contaban sus historias.
Sin embargo, un tercer objetivo, que pronto se manifestó, a saber, aprender de diferentes temas o descubrir nuevos temas o conocer, o 'qué se está diciendo' de temáticas que me interesan, ha sido casi la motivación principal para ver estas TED Talks en los últimos años y, en concreto, en 2023.
En ese sentido, este año he buscado más el tema, el contenido, que el speaker u otros criterios, aunque la temática en sí misma nunca es un objetivo completo por si mismo, sino solo la motivación principal siempre aderezada por el conferenciante o por la originalidad de la propuesta
Las #TEDTalks de 2023
En cualquier caso, y siguiendo esos criterios, éstas son las 47 charlas que al final he visualizado este año:
- Sutu: Everyone can participate in building the metaverse
- David Lee: Why jobs of the future won't feel like work
- Robert Kaztschmann: The future of machines that move like animals
- Michelle Kuo: The healing power of reading
- Naddjia Yousif: Why you should treat the tech you use at work like a colleague
- Robin Murphy: These robots come to the rescue after a disaster
- Sofia Crespo: AI-generated creatures that stretch the boundaries of imagination
- Paul Tasner: How I became an entrepreneur at 66
- Jeff Dean: AI isn't as smart as you think -- but it could be
- Greg Gage: How to control someone else's arm with your brain
- Jeanette Winterson: Is humanity smart enough to survive itself?
- Frances S. Chance: Are insect brains the secret to great AI?
- Christoff Keplinger: The artificial muscles that will power robots of the future
- Craig Richard: The brain science (and benefits) of ASMR
- Emma Hart: Self-assembling robots and the potential of artificial evolution
- Giada Gerboni: The incredible potential of flexible, soft robots
- Leila Takayama: What's it like to be a robot?
- Anil Ananthasgamy: Where does your sense of self come from? A scientific look
- Kriti Sharma: How to keep human bias out of AI
- Debbie Millman: How symbols and brands shape our humanity
- Ordinary things: Who owns the internet of the future?
- Lemon Andersen: Please don't take my Air Jordans
- Catherine Price: Why having fun is the secret to a healthier life
- Ayanna Howard: How to make our robots smarter
- Mehdi Ordikhani-Seyedlar: What happens in your brain when you pay attention?
- Greg Brockman: The inside story of ChatGPT's astonishing potential
- Show Chew: TikTok's CEO on its future — and what makes its algorithm different
- Yejin Choi: Why AI is incredibly smart -- and shockingly stupid
- Katherine James: How agri-robotics will change the food you eat
- Sal Kahn: How AI could save (not destroy) education
- Gary Marcus: The urgent risks of runaway AI -- and what to do about them
- Hod Lipson: Building "self-aware" robots
- Tom Graham: The incredible creativity of deepfakes -- and the worrying future of AI
- Yuval Noah Arari: The actual cost of preventing climate breakdown
- Nita Farahanny: Your right to mental privacy in the age of brain-sensing tec
- Alona Fyshe: Does AI actually understand us?
- Michael Kenedy: A new way to finance renewable energy
- Imran Chaudhri: The disappearing computer -- and a world where you can take AI everywhere
- Connor Russomanno: A powerful new neurotech tool for augmenting your mind
- Ian Bremmer: The next global superpower isn't who you think
- Bilawal Sidhu: The AI-powered tools supercharging your imagination
- Terry Moore: A mysterious design that appears across millennia
- Emmannuel Acho: Why you should stop setting goals (yes, really)
- Eileen Ysagon Skiers: In the age of AI art, what can originality look like?
- Yat Siu: The dream of digital ownership, powered by the metaverse
- Alua Arthur: Why thinking about death helps you live a better life
- Yuval Noah Arari: Nationalism vs. globalism: the new political divide
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