Hello!
How are you? Here is a supporting post for all of your final presentation projects - a series of TED Talk links that treat different areas of the internet, WWW and AI, and issues concerning views on internet regulation.
Video links
Here are the links. Each one will take you directly to the TED website. With each one, except one, you can download the written transcript of the talk in either English or Japanese.
The Japanese subtitling on the videos that have them may still not be exact for the topic, but it generally is better than on most YouTube videos. In the same way, the Japanese transcripts may not be exact, but generally give you good guides that you can follow for a topic if you need them.
1. Margaret Gould Stewart – How the hyperlink changed everything (2018.03) - click on this link for this talk.
Video links
Here are the links. Each one will take you directly to the TED website. With each one, except one, you can download the written transcript of the talk in either English or Japanese.
The Japanese subtitling on the videos that have them may still not be exact for the topic, but it generally is better than on most YouTube videos. In the same way, the Japanese transcripts may not be exact, but generally give you good guides that you can follow for a topic if you need them.
1. Margaret Gould Stewart – How the hyperlink changed everything (2018.03) - click on this link for this talk.
2. Chris Sheldrick – A precise,
three-word address for every place on earth (2017.08) - click on this link for this talk.
3. Kenneth Shinozuka – My simple
invention, designed to keep my grandfather safe (2014.11) - click on this link for this talk.
4. Keller Rinaud – A mini robot –
powered by your phone (2013.02) - click on this link for this talk.
5. Pratick Shah – How AI is making it easier to diagnose disease (2018.07) - click on
this link for this talk.
6. Olga Yurkova – Inside the fight against Russia’s fake news empire (2018.4) - click on this link for this talk.
Talks #6 and #9 do not have Japanese subtitles or transcripts, but both show some timely issues with the internet. Talk #9 is also longer - at 10 minutes - but again, is a powerful talk and is the latest one here, uploaded to the TED website in November.
NEW - Presentation tips and example
Here are two (2) videos for you on presentation that may help you as well. Rather than making a separate post, I have decided to include them here.
The first one is a funny, but important one on good and bad presentation habits:
I hope these links and videos will be interesting and informative for you.
Take care!
6. Olga Yurkova – Inside the fight against Russia’s fake news empire (2018.4) - click on this link for this talk.
7. Trevor
Timm – How free is our freedom of the press (2016.2) - click on this link for this talk.
8. Daniel
Engber – How the progress bar keeps you sane (2018.3) - click on this link for this talk.
9. Tamas
Kocsis – The case for a decentralized internet (2018.11) - click on this link for this talk.
Important notes:Talks #6 and #9 do not have Japanese subtitles or transcripts, but both show some timely issues with the internet. Talk #9 is also longer - at 10 minutes - but again, is a powerful talk and is the latest one here, uploaded to the TED website in November.
NEW - Presentation tips and example
Here are two (2) videos for you on presentation that may help you as well. Rather than making a separate post, I have decided to include them here.
The first one is a funny, but important one on good and bad presentation habits:
The second one is a TED Talk from a 12-year-old app developer. It's a great model for a confident, informative, and interesting presentation:
I hope these links and videos will be interesting and informative for you.
Take care!
Image: By GEDA_screenshot2007.png: Stefan Salewskiderivative work: Wirepath (talk) - GEDA_screenshot2007.png, GPL, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8894381
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