In this ted talk, Hadi Eldebek talks about why artists are poor or should be poor. Hadi Eldebek that the arts give meaning to our life and that we should not expect artists to make a living. Hadi Eldebek works on a project where artists and their works are valued online and that artists can coincide with grants and funding opportunities so that they can focus entirely on their craft and not have to worry about other things.
This TED talk talks about the commercial world of today, about how companies try to "cheat" us to get our attention. Informatics Jennifer Golbeck explains how this happened, how some applications of technology are not so nice and why she believes we should return control of information to its rightful owners. The TED talk is very interessant because it shows you a way to see how the ads affect us.
The Ted Talk I've seen talks about the invention of the tub map. In 1908 in London invent the first tub map, this was so easy but the people dosen't understran beacuse in it appeared the geography os London. Harry Beck was a engineering drafstman. He descoverd that peopel don't care where they are only wants to known when they have to get off the train. He invents a map that is not a map is a diagram where there only three typs of lines, vertical, horitzontal and lines of 45 degrees with diferents colors and diferents symbols.
This Ted Talk tells of a high school student named Randy Gardner who stayed awake for 11 days in a row. Sleeping is a vital necessity.
For example, in the United States, it is determined that 30% of adults and 66% of adolescents suffer from insomnia regularly. Staying awake can cause bodily harm, inflammation, even being linked to diabetes and obesity.
In conclusion, it is very important to sleep between 7-8 hours a day minimum since this way they will not have any problem and they will have a healthy life.
https://www.ted.com/talks/mitchell_joachim_don_t_build_your_home_grow_it#t-4072 Don´t build your home, grow it! The urban designer Mitchell Joachim presents his vision for sustainable, organic architecture. He wants to make a house that adapts to the environment, the good thing is that plants absorb carbón. çWith fabrics similar to our skin wants to make the other components of the house that are not plants. In my conclusion about making houses made of plants seems to me very well to be more in contact with nature but you do not have to reach the extremes that he wants to reach.
Your social media "likes" expose more than you think
Jennifer Golbeck explains how a single “like” of any social network leads scientists and companies to know how a person is. To explain it, she tells an example about a girl who was pregnant at 15 years old, two weeks before telling her parents, a lot of advertising messages related to babies came to her. This was known to each little detail that the girl was looking for social networks. The example was also set about a teacher who left her job and dedicated herself to creating a company that would show other entrepreneurs the things that interested people. But despite this, according to the privacy that each person can have in their social networks, the predictions that can be given of a person can become minor, so that the security of this on the Internet can be bigger and better .
Refugees want empowerment, not handouts - Robert Hazika
Nowadays, most of the refugees live in cities rather than in refugee camps. Hazika says that it's better to spend on programs to help refugees help themselves than wasting money on building walls.
These people leave their homes, but with their skills and knowledge they hep to contribute in their host country. Hazika, tells his story, and how the war forced him to leave Congo, and flew to Uganda.
Refugees have problems to fit in the society and they don't have international assistance, plus the language barrier makes it more dfficult for them. But most of the humanitarian organizations are more focused on building settlements in rural areas, but what refugees really want is to be able to work and support themselves.
The Ted Talk I have seen today was about a group of artisan mothers from Ghana who had an idea of starting a group of selling their own goods to first world mothers such as moses, baskets, purses all handmade by them. The tourist people who persuasively had been coming to Ghana in search of products to sell in their own countries. These group of african artisians have now became the first group in the territory to have their own local shop where they produce more and more products since theirs orders are unstoppable. The person who explains this is an american woman who sells online everything that they made and goes every 5 months to get more of it. She explains how big they have become since they started and how they are the big revolution in Ghana at the moment not just because their income but everything else.
In this ted talk Soyapi Mumba talks about how the HIV epidemic affect to all the hospitals in Sub-Saharan Africa( in this case talks about Malawi ) He say that They have low internet connections, long and frequent power outages, low penetrations of computers, and a lot of patients visiting understaffed hospitals. So He and his team Baobab Health (creates a new technology for the hospitals) develop suitable interventions that are addressing health care Challenges in Malawi, They designed an electronic health record system that use the doctors while they are seeing the patients.
From our fear of women's bodies to our sheepishness around the word "nipple," our ideas about sex need an upgrade, say sex educators Tiffany Kagure Mugo and Siphumeze Khundayi. For a radical new take on sex positivity, the duo take the TED stage to suggest we look to Africa for erotic wisdom both ancient and modern, showing us how we can shake off problematic ideas about sex we've internalized and re-define pleasure on our own terms.
This Ted Talk talks about what we do not teach children about sex. It tells us that sensation is like experiencing love for the first time, it is the basis of the human condition. It tells us that we can educate our sons and daughters about pleasure and desire. SuejaYe Johnson's life as a child was very important and significant since her aunt was very youngShe is doing the same with her daughter because she wants me to want her body and she begins to feel things of sensuality because Sue could not feel them.
In conclusion I think we have to teach our children to remain open and curious about the experiences.
The Ted talk I’ve seen it’s about the creation of a robot that is able to dance with a human partner following every step he does.
ResponEliminaCARLOTA Martin.
https://www.ted.com/talks/hadi_eldebek_how_artists_contribute_to_the_economy_and_how_we_can_support_them
ResponEliminaWhy must artists be poor?
In this ted talk, Hadi Eldebek talks about why artists are poor or should be poor. Hadi Eldebek that the arts give meaning to our life and that we should not expect artists to make a living. Hadi Eldebek works on a project where artists and their works are valued online and that artists can coincide with grants and funding opportunities so that they can focus entirely on their craft and not have to worry about other things.
Victor Marimón
The Ted Talk that I've seen is called "The dangerous evolution of HIV" by Edsel Salvaña.
ResponEliminaThe speaker strarts the conference explaining what kind of virus is HIV, and he shows with some graphs how the epidemi is growing.
Edsel says that HIV transform his genetic code very fast, and there are a hundred subtypes of it.
Finally he says that HIV is not eradicated yet, and we have to control the virus.
BRU SANZ
https://www.ted.com/talks/jennifer_golbeck_the_curly_fry_conundrum_why_social_media_likes_say_more_than_you_might_think/details#t-169771
ResponEliminaThis TED talk talks about the commercial world of today, about how companies try to "cheat" us to get our attention.
Informatics Jennifer Golbeck explains how this happened, how some applications of technology are not so nice and why she believes we should return control of information to its rightful owners.
The TED talk is very interessant because it shows you a way to see how the ads affect us.
The Ted Talk I've seen talks about the invention of the tub map. In 1908 in London invent the first tub map, this was so easy but the people dosen't understran beacuse in it appeared the geography os London.
ResponEliminaHarry Beck was a engineering drafstman. He descoverd that peopel don't care where they are only wants to known when they have to get off the train. He invents a map that is not a map is a diagram where there only three typs of lines, vertical, horitzontal and lines of 45 degrees with diferents colors and diferents symbols.
This Ted Talk tells of a high school student named Randy Gardner who stayed awake for 11 days in a row. Sleeping is a vital necessity.
ResponEliminaFor example, in the United States, it is determined that 30% of adults and 66% of adolescents suffer from insomnia regularly. Staying awake can cause bodily harm, inflammation, even being linked to diabetes and obesity.
In conclusion, it is very important to sleep between 7-8 hours a day minimum since this way they will not have any problem and they will have a healthy life.
Ona Urquizu
https://www.ted.com/talks/mitchell_joachim_don_t_build_your_home_grow_it#t-4072
ResponEliminaDon´t build your home, grow it!
The urban designer Mitchell Joachim presents his vision for sustainable, organic architecture.
He wants to make a house that adapts to the environment, the good thing is that plants absorb carbón.
çWith fabrics similar to our skin wants to make the other components of the house that are not plants.
In my conclusion about making houses made of plants seems to me very well to be more in contact with nature but you do not have to reach the extremes that he wants to reach.
Pablo Campillo Dachs.
https://www.ted.com/talks/jennifer_golbeck_the_curly_fry_conundrum_why_social_media_likes_say_more_than_you_might_think/up-next
ResponEliminaYour social media "likes" expose more than you think
Jennifer Golbeck explains how a single “like” of any social network leads scientists and companies to know how a person is. To explain it, she tells an example about a girl who was pregnant at 15 years old, two weeks before telling her parents, a lot of advertising messages related to babies came to her. This was known to each little detail that the girl was looking for social networks. The example was also set about a teacher who left her job and dedicated herself to creating a company that would show other entrepreneurs the things that interested people. But despite this, according to the privacy that each person can have in their social networks, the predictions that can be given of a person can become minor, so that the security of this on the Internet can be bigger and better .
Andrea Marie Mercado Silang
Refugees want empowerment, not handouts - Robert Hazika
ResponEliminaNowadays, most of the refugees live in cities rather than in refugee camps. Hazika says that it's better to spend on programs to help refugees help themselves than wasting money on building walls.
These people leave their homes, but with their skills and knowledge they hep to contribute in their host country.
Hazika, tells his story, and how the war forced him to leave Congo, and flew to Uganda.
Refugees have problems to fit in the society and they don't have international assistance, plus the language barrier makes it more dfficult for them. But most of the humanitarian organizations are more focused on building settlements in rural areas, but what refugees really want is to be able to work and support themselves.
-Mai Bayaborda Silang
The Ted Talk I have seen today was about a group of artisan mothers from Ghana who had an idea of starting a group of selling their own goods to first world mothers such as moses, baskets, purses all handmade by them. The tourist people who persuasively had been coming to Ghana in search of products to sell in their own countries. These group of african artisians have now became the first group in the territory to have their own local shop where they produce more and more products since theirs orders are unstoppable. The person who explains this is an american woman who sells online everything that they made and goes every 5 months to get more of it. She explains how big they have become since they started and how they are the big revolution in Ghana at the moment not just because their income but everything else.
ResponEliminahttps://www.ted.com/talks/soyapi_mumba_medical_tech_designed_to_meet_africa_s_needs#t-95512
ResponEliminaIn this ted talk Soyapi Mumba talks about how the HIV epidemic affect to all the hospitals in Sub-Saharan Africa( in this case talks about Malawi ) He say that They have low internet connections, long and frequent power outages, low penetrations of computers, and a lot of patients visiting understaffed hospitals. So He and his team Baobab Health (creates a new technology for the hospitals) develop suitable interventions that are addressing health care
Challenges in Malawi, They designed an electronic health record system that use the doctors while they are seeing the patients.
Dani Latorre
From our fear of women's bodies to our sheepishness around the word "nipple," our ideas about sex need an upgrade, say sex educators Tiffany Kagure Mugo and Siphumeze Khundayi. For a radical new take on sex positivity, the duo take the TED stage to suggest we look to Africa for erotic wisdom both ancient and modern, showing us how we can shake off problematic ideas about sex we've internalized and re-define pleasure on our own terms.
ResponEliminahttps://www.ted.com/talks/tiffany_kagure_mugo_and_siphumeze_khundayi_how_to_have_a_healthier_positive_relationship_to_sex/details
This Ted Talk talks about what we do not teach children about sex. It tells us that sensation is like experiencing love for the first time, it is the basis of the human condition. It tells us that we can educate our sons and daughters about pleasure and desire. SuejaYe Johnson's life as a child was very important and significant since her aunt was very youngShe is doing the same with her daughter because she wants me to want her body and she begins to feel things of sensuality because Sue could not feel them.
ResponEliminaIn conclusion I think we have to teach our children to remain open and curious about the experiences.
Ona Urquizu