1 00:00:05,614 --> 00:00:09,770 There's currently over a thousand TED Talks on the TED website. 2 00:00:09,794 --> 00:00:14,790 And I guess many of you here think that this is quite fantastic, 3 00:00:14,814 --> 00:00:16,688 except for me, I don't agree with this. 4 00:00:16,712 --> 00:00:18,297 I think we have a situation here. 5 00:00:18,321 --> 00:00:21,688 Because if you think about it, 1,000 TED Talks, 6 00:00:21,796 --> 00:00:25,229 that's over 1,000 ideas worth spreading. 7 00:00:25,253 --> 00:00:28,842 How on earth are you going to spread a thousand ideas? 8 00:00:30,266 --> 00:00:33,134 Even if you just try to get all of those ideas into your head 9 00:00:33,158 --> 00:00:35,179 by watching all those thousand TED videos, 10 00:00:35,203 --> 00:00:38,942 it would actually currently take you over 250 hours to do so. 11 00:00:39,363 --> 00:00:41,927 And I did a little calculation of this. 12 00:00:41,951 --> 00:00:46,113 The damage to the economy for each one who does this is around $15,000. 13 00:00:46,480 --> 00:00:50,013 So having seen this danger to the economy, 14 00:00:50,037 --> 00:00:53,140 I thought, we need to find a solution to this problem. 15 00:00:54,964 --> 00:00:56,722 Here's my approach to it all. 16 00:00:57,346 --> 00:01:00,552 If you look at the current situation, you have a thousand TED Talks. 17 00:01:00,576 --> 00:01:05,450 Each of those TED Talks has an average length of about 2,300 words. 18 00:01:05,474 --> 00:01:10,175 Now take this together, and you end up with 2.3 million words of TED Talks, 19 00:01:10,199 --> 00:01:12,885 which is about three Bibles-worth of content. 20 00:01:12,910 --> 00:01:13,911 (Laughter) 21 00:01:14,234 --> 00:01:18,690 The obvious question here is, does a TED Talk really need 2,300 words? 22 00:01:19,014 --> 00:01:20,479 Isn't there something shorter? 23 00:01:20,503 --> 00:01:22,583 I mean, if you have an idea worth spreading, 24 00:01:22,607 --> 00:01:26,065 surely you can put it into something shorter than 2,300 words. 25 00:01:26,089 --> 00:01:28,783 The only question is, how short can you get? 26 00:01:28,807 --> 00:01:32,095 What's the minimum amount of words you would need to do a TED Talk? 27 00:01:32,745 --> 00:01:34,467 While I was pondering this question, 28 00:01:34,491 --> 00:01:37,688 I came across this urban legend about Ernest Hemingway, 29 00:01:37,712 --> 00:01:40,784 who allegedly said that these six words here: 30 00:01:40,808 --> 00:01:43,660 "For sale: baby shoes, never worn," 31 00:01:43,684 --> 00:01:46,017 were the best novel he had ever written. 32 00:01:46,422 --> 00:01:49,048 And I also encountered a project called Six-Word Memoirs 33 00:01:49,072 --> 00:01:51,192 where people were asked, take your whole life 34 00:01:51,216 --> 00:01:53,952 and please sum this up into six words, such as these here: 35 00:01:53,976 --> 00:01:55,987 "Found true love, married someone else." 36 00:01:56,011 --> 00:01:58,386 Or "Living in existential vacuum; it sucks." 37 00:01:58,410 --> 00:01:59,776 I actually like that one. 38 00:02:02,092 --> 00:02:04,488 So if a novel can be put into six words 39 00:02:04,519 --> 00:02:07,539 and a whole memoir can be put into six words, 40 00:02:07,618 --> 00:02:10,538 you don't need more than six words for a TED Talk. 41 00:02:10,562 --> 00:02:13,781 We could have been done by lunch here. 42 00:02:13,805 --> 00:02:15,288 (Laughter) 43 00:02:15,312 --> 00:02:17,522 And if you did this for all thousand TED Talks, 44 00:02:17,546 --> 00:02:20,874 you would get from 2.3 million words down to 6,000. 45 00:02:20,898 --> 00:02:22,771 So I thought this was quite worthwhile. 46 00:02:22,795 --> 00:02:24,553 So I started asking all my friends, 47 00:02:24,577 --> 00:02:27,575 please take your favorite TED Talk and put that into six words. 48 00:02:27,599 --> 00:02:29,843 So here are some of the results that I received. 49 00:02:29,867 --> 00:02:31,215 I think they're quite nice. 50 00:02:31,239 --> 00:02:34,339 For example, Dan Pink's talk on motivation, which was pretty good, 51 00:02:34,363 --> 00:02:37,469 if you haven't seen it: "Drop carrot. Drop stick. Bring meaning." 52 00:02:37,493 --> 00:02:40,365 It's what he's basically talking about in those 18,5 minutes. 53 00:02:40,889 --> 00:02:43,183 Or some even included references to the speakers, 54 00:02:43,207 --> 00:02:46,411 such as Nathan Myhrvold's speaking style, or the one of Tim Ferriss, 55 00:02:46,435 --> 00:02:48,844 which might be considered a bit strenuous at times. 56 00:02:50,068 --> 00:02:53,188 The challenge here is, if I try to systematically do this, 57 00:02:53,213 --> 00:02:55,538 I would probably end up with a lot of summaries, 58 00:02:55,562 --> 00:02:57,334 but not with many friends in the end. 59 00:02:57,359 --> 00:03:01,485 So I had to find a different method, preferably involving total strangers. 60 00:03:01,510 --> 00:03:05,112 And luckily, there's a website for that, called Mechanical Turk, 61 00:03:05,137 --> 00:03:07,305 which is a website where you can post tasks 62 00:03:07,329 --> 00:03:09,019 that you don't want to do yourself, 63 00:03:09,043 --> 00:03:12,048 such as "Please summarize this text for me in six words." 64 00:03:12,072 --> 00:03:14,907 And I didn't allow any low-cost countries to work on this, 65 00:03:14,931 --> 00:03:18,631 but I found out I could get a six-word summary for just 10 cents, 66 00:03:18,655 --> 00:03:20,901 which I think is a pretty good price. 67 00:03:21,525 --> 00:03:23,225 Even then, unfortunately, 68 00:03:23,249 --> 00:03:26,094 it's not possible to summarize each TED Talk individually. 69 00:03:26,118 --> 00:03:28,872 Because if you do the math, you have a thousand TED Talks, 70 00:03:28,896 --> 00:03:30,062 you pay 10 cents each; 71 00:03:30,086 --> 00:03:33,031 you have to do more than one summary for each of those talks, 72 00:03:33,055 --> 00:03:35,842 because some of them will probably be, or are, really bad. 73 00:03:35,866 --> 00:03:38,676 So I would end up paying hundreds of dollars. 74 00:03:38,700 --> 00:03:40,476 So I thought of a different way, 75 00:03:40,500 --> 00:03:45,594 by thinking, well, the talks revolve around certain themes. 76 00:03:46,198 --> 00:03:50,859 So what if I don't let people summarize individual TED Talks to six words, 77 00:03:50,883 --> 00:03:52,899 but give them 10 TED Talks at the same time 78 00:03:52,923 --> 00:03:55,544 and say, "Please do a six-word summary for that one." 79 00:03:55,568 --> 00:03:57,731 I would cut my costs by 90 percent. 80 00:03:57,755 --> 00:04:00,285 So for $60, 81 00:04:00,309 --> 00:04:04,300 I could summarize a thousand TED Talks into just 600 summaries, 82 00:04:04,324 --> 00:04:06,322 which would actually be quite nice. 83 00:04:07,301 --> 00:04:09,834 Obviously, some people that did that - 84 00:04:10,167 --> 00:04:13,234 of course, I payed everyone the 10 cents - 85 00:04:14,846 --> 00:04:17,139 Some of you might actually right now be thinking, 86 00:04:17,163 --> 00:04:20,661 it's downright crazy to have 10 TED Talks summarized into just six words. 87 00:04:21,084 --> 00:04:22,365 But it's actually not, 88 00:04:22,789 --> 00:04:25,918 because there's an example by statistics professor Hans Rosling. 89 00:04:25,942 --> 00:04:28,528 I guess many of you have seen one or more of his talks. 90 00:04:28,552 --> 00:04:29,888 He's got eight talks online, 91 00:04:29,912 --> 00:04:33,227 and those can basically be summed up into just four words, 92 00:04:33,252 --> 00:04:37,495 because that's all he's basically showing us, our intuition is really bad. 93 00:04:37,880 --> 00:04:39,246 He always proves us wrong. 94 00:04:40,170 --> 00:04:42,733 So people on the Internet, some didn't do so well. 95 00:04:42,757 --> 00:04:46,150 And when I asked them to summarize the 10 TED Talks at the same time, 96 00:04:46,174 --> 00:04:47,654 some took the easy route out. 97 00:04:47,678 --> 00:04:49,999 They just had some general comment. 98 00:04:50,093 --> 00:04:51,093 Others - 99 00:04:51,613 --> 00:04:54,109 There were others -- and I found this quite cheeky -- 100 00:04:54,173 --> 00:04:56,583 They used their six words to talk back to me 101 00:04:56,607 --> 00:04:58,916 and ask me if I'd been too much on Google lately. 102 00:04:58,940 --> 00:05:00,099 (Laughter) 103 00:05:00,123 --> 00:05:03,216 And finally also, I never understood this, 104 00:05:03,240 --> 00:05:06,374 some people really came up with their own version of the truth. 105 00:05:06,398 --> 00:05:09,013 I don't know any TED Talk that contains this. 106 00:05:09,038 --> 00:05:10,124 But, oh well. 107 00:05:10,156 --> 00:05:12,441 In the end, however, and this is really amazing, 108 00:05:12,465 --> 00:05:15,305 for each of those 10 TED Talk clusters that I submitted, 109 00:05:15,329 --> 00:05:17,291 I actually received meaningful summaries. 110 00:05:17,315 --> 00:05:18,758 Here are some of my favorites. 111 00:05:18,782 --> 00:05:21,062 For example, for the TED Talks about food, 112 00:05:21,086 --> 00:05:24,545 someone summed this up into: "Food shaping body, brains and environment," 113 00:05:24,569 --> 00:05:25,957 which I think is pretty good. 114 00:05:25,981 --> 00:05:29,271 Or happiness: "Striving toward happiness = moving toward unhappiness." 115 00:05:29,295 --> 00:05:30,448 So here I was. 116 00:05:30,472 --> 00:05:32,482 I had started out with a thousand TED Talks 117 00:05:32,506 --> 00:05:35,231 and I had 600 six-word summaries for those. 118 00:05:35,630 --> 00:05:37,633 Actually, it sounded nice in the beginning, 119 00:05:37,657 --> 00:05:41,055 but when you look at 600 summaries, it's quite a lot, it's a huge list. 120 00:05:41,079 --> 00:05:42,094 (Laughter) 121 00:05:42,118 --> 00:05:45,176 So I thought, I probably have to take this one step further here 122 00:05:45,200 --> 00:05:48,828 and create summaries of the summaries, and this is exactly what I did. 123 00:05:48,852 --> 00:05:52,122 So I took the 600 summaries that I had, put them into nine groups 124 00:05:52,146 --> 00:05:56,034 according to the ratings that the talks had originally received on TED.com 125 00:05:56,058 --> 00:05:58,943 and asked people to do summaries of those. 126 00:05:59,979 --> 00:06:01,951 Again, there were some misunderstandings. 127 00:06:01,975 --> 00:06:04,940 For example, when I had a cluster of all the "Beautiful" talks, 128 00:06:04,964 --> 00:06:08,183 someone thought I was just trying to find the ultimate pick-up line. 129 00:06:08,207 --> 00:06:10,384 But in the end, amazingly, 130 00:06:11,108 --> 00:06:12,689 again, people were able to do it. 131 00:06:12,713 --> 00:06:14,767 For example, all the courageous TED Talks: 132 00:06:14,791 --> 00:06:17,230 "People dying" or "People suffering" was also one, 133 00:06:17,254 --> 00:06:18,651 "with easy solutions around." 134 00:06:18,675 --> 00:06:21,160 Or the recipe for the ultimate jaw-dropping TED Talk: 135 00:06:21,184 --> 00:06:23,715 "Flickr photos of intergalactic classical composer." 136 00:06:23,739 --> 00:06:26,097 I mean that's the essence of it all. 137 00:06:26,612 --> 00:06:31,584 Now I had my nine groups, but, I mean, it's already quite a reduction. 138 00:06:31,608 --> 00:06:35,043 But of course, once you are that far, you're not really satisfied. 139 00:06:35,067 --> 00:06:38,291 I wanted to go all the way, all the way down the distillery, 140 00:06:38,316 --> 00:06:40,206 starting out with a thousand TED Talks. 141 00:06:40,230 --> 00:06:43,594 I wanted to have a thousand TED Talks summarized into just six words -- 142 00:06:44,618 --> 00:06:48,096 which would be a 99.9997 percent reduction in content. 143 00:06:48,120 --> 00:06:51,757 And I would only pay $99.50 -- 144 00:06:51,781 --> 00:06:53,932 so stay even below $100 for it. 145 00:06:54,910 --> 00:06:56,603 So I had 50 overall summaries done. 146 00:06:56,627 --> 00:06:58,035 This time I paid 25 cents 147 00:06:58,059 --> 00:07:00,163 because I thought the task was a bit harder. 148 00:07:00,187 --> 00:07:03,914 And unfortunately, when I first received the answers -- 149 00:07:03,939 --> 00:07:07,157 and here, you'll see six of the answers -- I was a bit disappointed. 150 00:07:07,181 --> 00:07:10,804 Because I think you'll agree, they all summarize some aspect of TED, 151 00:07:10,829 --> 00:07:13,052 but to me, they felt a bit bland, 152 00:07:13,077 --> 00:07:16,346 or they just had a certain aspect of TED in them. 153 00:07:16,970 --> 00:07:18,734 So I was almost ready to give up 154 00:07:18,758 --> 00:07:21,857 when one night, I played around with these sentences 155 00:07:21,881 --> 00:07:25,804 and found out that there's actually a beautiful solution in here. 156 00:07:25,828 --> 00:07:28,192 So here it is, 157 00:07:28,216 --> 00:07:32,198 a crowd-sourced, six-word summary of a thousand TED Talks 158 00:07:32,222 --> 00:07:34,581 at the value of $99.50: 159 00:07:35,030 --> 00:07:37,672 "Why the worry? I'd rather wonder." 160 00:07:37,696 --> 00:07:38,959 Thank you very much. 161 00:07:38,983 --> 00:07:44,968 (Applause)