dimecres, 10 de gener del 2018

6th Tedtalk

Next deadline is on the 15th January 2018, the first tedtalk review of the year!

22 comentaris:

  1. https://www.ted.com/talks/kevin_allocca_why_videos_go_viral


    Kevin Allocca is YouTube trends manager and says that videos are made viral by 3 things: Trend creators, communities of participation and surprise factors. He says that videos become viral because people share them with their friends. However, Youtubers have many visits as people look at it more than once. Youtube videos awaken the creativity of people and that is very important. From a single video that has been posted on YouTube, not only goes viral but also imitations of that same video and becomes international.
    Kevin Allocca tells us that videos are uploaded every minute.

    Finally, he tells us that we do not need to ask permission to express our ideas, we are all masters of our pop culture.

    Ona Urquizu

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  2. The Ted Talk I’ve seen this week, it’s about an African man who invented a bath without water. This way the people of poorest countries in the world don’t need to spend time and money buying and looking for water to have a bath. The boy who invented this did a research about all the scientific knowledges he needed to create it with an old mobile, a limited internet connection and a few resources.
    Carlota Martin

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  3. In this ted talk, the 8 secrets to achieve success is explained to us by Professor Richard Stjohn. One day a student of his, a teenager, asked him what were the keys to achieve success and then he did not know how to answer the question with certainty, so he began to investigate it. Richar spent 7 years doing surveys to people who made presentations of tedtalks (tedsters). At the end he divided the keys to success in 8. The first of all is to be patient if you do something, do it for love and not for money, the second is to work hard, nothing comes easy, the third is to be good, the fourth, to focus only on one thing. the fifth push yourself psychologically to not give up, the sixth being a helpful person and doing favors since those people could help you later, the seventh have ideas to be innovative, and finally persist never give up persistence is the number one reason for our success
    Daniel Latorre https://www.ted.com/talks/richard_st_john_s_8_secrets_of_success?referrer=playlist-ted_in_3_minutes#t-182452

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  4. The fascinating secret lives of giant clams

    This video is abouts the giant clams, it starts with the south Pacific legends that decribed giant clams as a man-eaters that would lie in wait on the seabed to trap unsuspecting divers. The most biggest ginat clam discobered weighed about 550 pounds as three elephant babies.
    For curiosity the girl who explains it tryes to put her hand insude of one ginat clam but nothing happened. The legends were false.
    Unfortunantly we are the giant claims’ biggest thread because giant clams have fished as seafood and are also popular in the ornamental trade as jewerly and for display.
    The giant clams have a huge impact on coral reefs, these multitasking clams are reef buildres food factories, shelters for crabs andwater filters.
    In conclution I think that we should respect and take care these magnificent animals.

    Carles Nicolas Pascual

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  6. https://www.ted.com/talks/nadine_hachach_haram_how_augmented_reality_could_change_the_future_of_surgery?language=en

    This video talks about the new technologies applied in the future. It talks about the tecnologyIf you have surgery, you want the best surgical team collaborate where appropriate, no matter where you are. Surgeon and businesswoman Nadine Hachach-Haram is developing a new system that helps surgeons to operate together and train each other in new techniques, from remote locations using augmented reality tools. In this TED talk, they give an example in which it takes place in Minnesota that performs knee surgery. Nadine Hachach-Haram adds that with such simple and inexpensive things great things can be done.

    This TED talk reflects the usefulness of new technologies in the field of medicine.

    Bea de la Cruz

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  7. https://www.ted.com/talks/marily_oppezzo_want_to_be_more_creative_go_for_a_walk

    Want to be more creative? Go for a walk

    In this Ted Talk, Marily Oppezzo, tells us how to be more creative leaving aside scientific methods or studies. She says that when we look for an idea we can get stuck, and that for her the best way to be creative and to get out of this stagnation is to get up and to camoine, to let creativity flow.

    Victor Marimón Luna

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  8. https://www.ted.com/talks/clint_smith_the_danger_of_silence
    The danger of silence.
    Professor and poet Clint Smith talks about the problem of day-to-day silence through discrimination, wars…
    He uses poetry in his classroom to remove that silence so they do not have embarrassment.
    He gives 4 basic knowledge that his students practise that’s all the year.
    Says that the most important point is the last one that is truthful.
    He was a year without talking to always stop giving reason and look at things from ignorance and the silence is the residue of fear.

    In my conclusion is that as Clint says is that we should not give up anything or shut up for fear of what they will tell us but we have to talk and not shut things up.

    Pablo Campillo Dachs.

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  9. Graham Shaw show how to draw. He starts the talk showing us some fantastics draws he had done it at his home.
    He explains that all we know how to draw but in the most os persons that sais that they don't know it's beacuse they don't trust themselves.
    In the Talk Graham Shaw give a pice of paper and teach how to draw he said: First two circles, nous like a triangle or potato and finale some lines for the hair and the neck.

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  10. Benedetta Berti - The surprising way groups like ISIS stay in power.

    Bendetta Berti has a goal, this goal is to understand those groups of people that are known for violence, like ISIS. She says that's the way to solve any problem or conflict. To be able to understand them we need to know each detail of their attack, but most importantly, we need to know what they are doing when they are not fighting. Basically, we need to see the full picture of the situation.
    If we do this, if we better understand them, we encourage the transition from violence to nonviolence.

    https://www.ted.com/talks/benedetta_berti_the_surprising_way_groups_like_isis_stay_in_power#t-298747

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  11. Inés Mulder
    Anula Paulson. How I find myself through music

    https://www.ted.com/talks/anika_paulson_how_i_found_myself_through_music?language=en#t-537374
    Anika Paulson refers Plato, he said that music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything.
    Music had been a part of her life, music can connect people and when she is sad, happy, bored listen to music. She was involved in every musical event. Music it's a part of his identity. On a class of music that she went the teacher gave her an exercise to add a melody on a rhythm. And she was so good. When she went to university, she lost herself, she lost her melody and harmony but it changed, it was only her, and that's her melody, just changed a little. Her life has been defined by music. Music is always there, supporting us and connecting us. If you feel lost, stop and listen for your song.

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  12. Inés Mulder
    Anula Paulson. How I find myself through music

    https://www.ted.com/talks/anika_paulson_how_i_found_myself_through_music?language=en#t-537374
    Anika Paulson refers Plato, he said that music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything.
    Music had been a part of her life, music can connect people and when she is sad, happy, bored listen to music. She was involved in every musical event. Music it's a part of his identity. On a class of music that she went the teacher gave her an exercise to add a melody on a rhythm. And she was so good. When she went to university, she lost herself, she lost her melody and harmony but it changed, it was only her, and that's her melody, just changed a little. Her life has been defined by music. Music is always there, supporting us and connecting us. If you feel lost, stop and listen for your song.

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  13. The Ted Talk that I've seen is called "The most Martian place on Earth" by Armando Azua-Bustos.
    The speaker start his conference explaining some characteristics of Mars. After that, he says that he's a astrobiologist, and he explain us what's his job: study the possibility of life in other planets.
    But how can he study that if he can't move to another planets? Because hi studi places from the Earth that are similar to another planets, in this case Mars.
    As we know, Mars is a very dry planet, so Armando looked for the driest place on the Earth to search life. Curiosly, this place is 15 minutes away from the town where he was born.
    He found some microorganisms under the ground, so it's possible that in the martian's caves we'll probably may found life.
    His theory is that is possible that some microorganisms use UV as a source of energy.

    -Bru Sanz

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  14. Sue Jay Johnson - What we don’t teach kids about sex.

    Sue is a woman who thinks there is more than just sex.
    Parents use books or tell children about sex when it comes to that time when you have to talk to them about “the talk”. In school they also teach children about sex in Sex ed, but focusing it more on how to prevent a pregnancy or how to have safe sex.
    She thinks there is something else about sex: finding emotions and sensations.
    She says that most women focus on pleasuring men, and they don’t focus on themselves, and some men are pressured by others telling them to “man up”.
    She taught one day that when she’s bathing her daughter she’s telling her how she must respect her body, and how she must be touched: gentle, like how she dries her after bath.
    She wants her children to know their sensations and to be curious about it like a foreigner in a stranger’s land, like how she says it.

    Mai Bayaborda Silang

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  15. 5 WAYS TO KILL YOUR DREAMS

    https://www.ted.com/talks/bel_pesce_5_ways_to_kill_your_dreams#t-317909

    This ted talk talks a about a woman who teaches others how not to follow their dreams.

    You first have to believe in overnight success, everything that you have done to arrived in that momenta. Secondly you have to believe that someone has the answer for every question you have, people can help you but not every one has the best answer you may just pick the best one for you. Thirdly you have to decided to settle when grove is guaranteed, you may have some goals that have been achieved but if you want a better impact you have to work hard for it. The next one is to believe that is not your fault, don’t say that someone has to achieve your goal for you, it’s up to you if you really want to do what you want. And finally, the only things that matter are the dreams themselves, life is no really about the goal themselves but it’s about the journey, the effort you put to achieve the goal that you proposed to yourself.

    Achieving the goal might just me a sensation of success but, what it is really is to be proud of every step you take to achieve it.

    -Andrea Marie Silang

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  16. Roger Herrero

    This video begins introducing Marco Tempest and his robot named Edi.
    The robot is design to make it closer to the people.
    Tempest says a very curious phrase: " Robots can't anticipate human actions". This means that robots always have to be below humans.
    New technologies can help us a lot in our lives.

    At the end of the video Marco makes a little magic performance with the robot.
    In conclusion this new technology has seemed interesting to me and that technologies can do very innovative things.

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  17. MARTA CAPDEVILA

    This Ted talk I watched was about an entrepreneur woman who had a child with a rare disease. She explains how it all started when her son started acting weird in a young age till the first day she brought him to a doctor. After that she explained how any doctor she visited in any different city of the United States could help her son because they had never seen something like what was happening to her son. So from that moment, she decided to investigate it by herself. She had worked in a lab before she had kids and thats how she found her sons disease studying the symptons and his reactions. She found a way to keep her son alive even though she hasnt find a cure.

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  18. Sofia Testor

    https://www.ted.com/talks/elizabeth_blackburn_the_science_of_cells_that_never_get_old/up-next

    Biologist Elisabeth won a Nobel prize after years and years investigating what makes our lives longer. She found out that there’s a part of DNA which has no genetical information that when it gets copied in the cell duplication it gets shorter. This part is called telomerase and those who have longer telomerase live longer. But it wasn’t until Blackburn talked to a psychologist that she realized the factors that made telomerase longer in humans. The woman she talked to was exposed everyday to people with real problems either family issues, problematic children or very stressful lives. They discovered that this people’s telomerase was shorter than the average and that in the other hand, people who did meditation or any type of relaxation activities had larger telomerase and lived longer.

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  19. This video is about a boy named Dan Ganterberg who explains how to get to have deep sleep in a longer period of time, because, people do not sleep enough hours. He and Dr. Dimitry try to develop a way to improve people's sleep.

    https://www.ted.com/talks/dan_gartenberg_the_brain_benefits_of_deep_sleep_and_how_to_get_more_of_it

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  21. How to resolve conflicts: William Ury

    In this brilliant conference that mixes psychology with international conflicts, the mediator and negotiator William Ury asks us how to resolve our differences given the propensity to conflict of the human being.

    Dr. Ury demonstrates in The Road from No to Yes the usefulness of seeing conflicts from a third perspective to separate our criteria from them and to be able to think calmly. The ultimate goal is to find solutions, often creative, that satisfy all the parties involved.

    One of the practical tips that I found most useful is to try to clarify a discussion with someone while taking a walk together, instead of in the office or the living room. The reason is that it creates the feeling of having the same objective, of walking together in the same direction. And that can be very helpful to reach an agreement.

    As Ury says, he has not yet found a conflict that can not be resolved. Your greatest advice? Always look for the third part, the one that is indirectly involved in the conflict without having caused it, and understand their perspective.

    Bernat Torner

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  22. LINK : https://www.ted.com/talks/amy_cuddy_your_body_language_shapes_who_you_are?referrer=playlist-the_most_popular_talks_of_all

    This ted talk is called : "Your body language may shape who you are " and talks about how your movements can reflect your personality

    Amy Cuddy says how body language affects how others see us and also ourselves. The Social psychologist for example argues that standing in a posture of confidence, even when we don't feel confident can boost feelings of confidence, and might have an impact on our chances for success. Its interesting to see how our gestures and postures can change the way things happen and also how the movements we do influence in some desicions

    I really liked this ted talk because i have learned new things that i didn't know and also talks about phsicology that is a subject that i find very interesting

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