TED Talks

by david_park on January 2, 2009 · 3 comments

in Uncategorized

When I was in graduate school at Columbia University, we has so many outside speakers coming to present their latest research, I would have to force myself to limit my attendance to just a few a week so I could actually work on my dissertation. I thought it would be such a public good to have these talks available via the web. Back then, hardware and software was expensive and internet connections were slow. Now, costs have come down and connections are much faster, so we should have these available to the public (and less endowed universities). How great would it be to have these talks at Columbia, Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, etc. available to the public. Until then, we have TED talks now available via their website and podcasts. Check out this great talk by Dan Gilbert.

{ 3 comments }

Andrew January 2, 2009 at 10:27 pm

David:

Don’t worry. As you stay in academia, you’ll find other people’s talks becoming less and less interesting. And if you stay in academia long enough, you’ll eventually find your own talks being less interesting also. . . .

David K Park January 3, 2009 at 9:13 pm

I’ve found my talks to be less interesting a long time ago, fortunately, I still find other people’s talks interesting.

Dan January 4, 2009 at 12:05 pm

I like TED. And as a TED watching regular (they post a new video every weekday), I’m telling you to check out iTunesU. They have all those hour long talks you remember wanting to attend…

Comments on this entry are closed.

Previous post:

Next post: