Earlier in the week I traveled to the annual Google Zeitgest conference, where I’ve been honored to be a moderator for the past few years. This year I was given the challenge of tacking a 90-minute block on “The World We Dream,” which featured an extraordinary set of speakers. The session included a short interview with two impressive folks: Ron Garan, a NASA astronaut who has spent 180 days in space, and Lisa Randall, a celebrated theoretical physicist and author. I’ve never spent as much time prepping for a 20-minute interview as I did for this – in part because the Higgs Boson is not that easy for the laymen to grok, nor is the concept of floating around in space. If you are so inclined, enjoy:
Very interesting!
What a beautiful earth – a beautiful creation!
Zastanawiam się w którą stronę pójdzie rozwój Googla.
http://mirat.eu
Great interview. An accessible explanation of Higgs Boson and I love Garan’s suggestion to build a universal open source platform for collaboration. Improving social decision making is essential to being able to capitalize on all the possibility at hand – new tools of collaboration and democracy are needed for a world of abundance, for a world of accelerating change.
When Ron said that, I thought – we already have what he’s talking about. It’s called the open Internet….
beautiful creation!Very interesting!
http://www.hqew.net/product-data/2N2907A
Pretty nice post. I just stumbled upon your weblog and wanted to say that I have really enjoyed browsing your blog posts. After all I’ll be subscribing to your feed and I hope you write again soon!
https://archive.org/details/drdavidtiandesiresystemreview