
MY TED TALK IS OUT NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The link is in my bio to watch it. I hope you guys love it. Thank you all for bringing me here and thank you @TEDTalks for everything.
Chris Anderson
6.2K posts

@TEDchris
Dreamer. Determined Optimist. https://t.co/G7MaibULhh, https://t.co/5NT0eOAEeq, https://t.co/wZodcvoP6Y, https://t.co/S8nIq1nb8t, https://t.co/1YDwlvuYKj, https://t.co/3enB3OkyfU, https://t.co/5OMY86h3d0

MY TED TALK IS OUT NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The link is in my bio to watch it. I hope you guys love it. Thank you all for bringing me here and thank you @TEDTalks for everything.

1/2 Why AI is unlikely to become conscious – my 2026 @TEDTalks is now online. What do you think about the prospects for 'conscious AI'? ted.com/talks/anil_set…

I wrote this song after hearing another woman tell me her idea was stolen by a man in a mtg. Great article about this in #forbes. I used an abstract idea for the video. Additional production by Marshall Altman. #ai #aiart #music #aianimation

Genomics pioneer Craig Venter has passed. "If you want immortality, do something meaningful with your life." — J.C. Venter (1946-2026) So many memories... I served on the board of his Synthetic Genomics for over a decade and invested in four of his companies. He was indefatigable and pitched me on his latest new startup just last month. He was the first to sequence the human genome — his own; he gave me a hardback book of his Y chromosome sequence, the one with the SRY gene that made him male. He made the first synthetic life form, a living organism with a near-minimal genome fabricated by chemical synthesis. President Obama awarded him the National Medal of Science. Time and time again, he pushed the bounds of what people thought possible, often engaging the cutting edge of Moore’s Law and the Carlson Curve of plummeting gene sequencing and synthesis costs. He even made a desktop DNA printer. And he had a keen sense of humor and joie de vivre throughout. Here are some of those moments from 23 years of photoblog posts on him: flickr.com/search/?user_i… And more in the SynBioBeta Obit: synbiobeta.com/read/a-synthet…

תספרו לי בבקשה על מישהו או מישהי שאתם מכירים שמצא/ה אהבה חדשה או מקצוע חדש או תחביב חדש אחרי גיל 50.








Let me make your day. I just rediscovered one of my favorite tracks from 25 yrs ago - the 9-min electronica masterpiece "8 ball" from Underworld. It's a long build... but about half way through explodes into exquisite beauty. Makes me feel... makes me feel... happy. open.spotify.com/track/1tnhrn0z…



I spoke with Pooja Arora about why people are drawn to pessimism despite historic progress, and how cognitive biases and media dynamics distort our perception of modern life. Pooja Arora (@LaulPatricia) Now, the human mind seems to be attracted to pessimism and cynicism a lot nowadays. And even though in your books, Better Angels of Our Nature and Enlightenment Now, you show how human progress has evolved over centuries—we have moved from a tribal era to living in luxuries that monarchs of the Middle Ages couldn’t even imagine—when you try to explain this to somebody, it’s extremely difficult. The world is bad for different reasons for different groups of people. Why is that happening, and how do you convince somebody that it’s a good era to live in? I don’t want to be born in the 1930s Me: No, no—or before. I mean, as I like to say, would you prefer your surgery with or without anesthesia, for example? Would you like dentistry in the 21st century or the 19th century? So yes, one part of the explanation is there’s a widespread pattern in polling that people are much more optimistic about their own lives than about the country as a whole. Reliably, if you ask people about the quality of schools, they’ll say the quality of schools in the country is terrible. What about your kid’s school? Oh, it’s actually pretty good. If you ask them, is the country safe? They’ll say, no, there’s crime everywhere—muggings and knifings and shootings. You say, what about your neighborhood? Do you feel safe? They say, well, yeah, I feel pretty safe. So partly there’s a dissociation between people’s vision of the whole country and their own lives. That is driven in part by what cognitive psychologists call the availability bias—heuristic—namely, people judge probability and risk and danger by salient examples, by narratives, by images. And that’s what the news delivers. The news is selectively biased toward the negative—not necessarily because editors prefer negative stories, although they do—but, on top of that overt bias, the mere fact that they report newsworthy events means there’s a built-in bias toward the negative. And that’s because anything that happens suddenly is much more likely to be bad than good. A shooting, a terrorist attack, a natural disaster, a man-made disaster—those are news. Things that are improvements, such as the decline in extreme poverty—which has been one of the most important events in the history of humanity—that extreme poverty has gone from 90% of humanity to less than 9%—the decline in crime, the decline in war, the gradual rise of human rights—those tend not to be reported in the news because they are not discrete events that happened on a Thursday morning in October. They creep up a few percentage points a year, and so they’re never reported. In fact, sometimes the reporting can convey the exact opposite impression. Imagine that you’ve got a curve that goes up, with occasional setbacks, and then up with a setback, and then up with a setback—and the only thing that gets reported is the setback, because it’s news. This year, for the first time in 10 years, life expectancy got shorter instead of longer. Well, if every time that happens there’s a new story, but there isn’t a new story about the nine years out of 10 in which life expectancy goes up—because it isn’t news, it’s the same as last year—then people get a systematically wrong impression about global trends. Finally, I mentioned that there is, on top of that, a negativity bias among journalists—but there’s a negativity bias in everyone, in that overall bad emotions are felt more strongly than good emotions. There’s a greater number of negative emotions than positive emotions. We remember the things that went wrong recently better than the things that went right. So human psychology is already tilted toward the negative. The very possibility of progress is a very recent development in human history. For thousands of years, there was imperceptible progress. People didn’t invent things. Things didn’t change. But over very short periods of time, the idea of a country getting better or the world getting better within the span of a human lifetime is something that only began to happen pretty much after the Industrial Revolution, itself following the scientific revolution and the Enlightenment. So I don’t think our intuitions were prepared by evolution for the very concept of global long-term progress.



Positron’s $230M Funding Led By Financial Trading Firms eetimes.com/positron-230-m…