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A precise, three-word address for every place on earth

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    According to the UN,
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    billions of people still live
    without an address.
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    The economist Hernando de Soto said,
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    "Without an address,
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    you live outside the law.
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    You might as well not exist."
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    I'm here to tell you how my team and I
    are trying to change that.
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    If you go to an online map
    and look at a favela in Brazil
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    or a township in South Africa,
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    you'll see a few streets,
    but a lot of empty space.
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    But if you flip to satellite view,
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    there are thousands of people,
    homes and businesses
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    in these vast, unmapped,
    and unaddressed spaces.
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    In Ghana's capital, Accra,
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    there are numbers and letters
    scrawled onto the sides of walls,
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    where they piloted address systems
    but not finished them.
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    But these places,
    these unaddressed places,
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    hold huge economic potential.
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    Here's why the issue
    of addressing stuck with me.
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    I worked in the music
    business for 10 years,
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    and what you may not know
    about the music world
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    is that every day, people struggle
    with the problems of addressing.
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    So from the musicians
    who have to find the gigs
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    to the production companies
    who bring the equipment,
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    everyone somehow always gets lost.
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    We even had to add someone
    to our schedules
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    who was the person you called
    when you thought you'd arrived
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    but then realized you hadn't.
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    And we had some pretty bad days,
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    like in Italy, where a truck driver
    unloaded all the equipment
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    an hour north of Rome,
    not an hour south of Rome,
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    and a slightly worse day,
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    where a keyboard player
    called me and said,
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    "Chris, don't panic,
    but we may have just sound-checked
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    at the wrong people's wedding."
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    (Laughter)
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    So not long after the fated Rome event,
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    I chatted this through
    with a friend of mine
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    who is a mathematician,
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    and we thought it was a problem
    we could do something about.
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    We thought, well,
    we could make a new system,
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    but it shouldn't look like the old system.
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    We agreed that addresses were bad.
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    We knew we wanted something very precise,
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    but GPS coordinates,
    latitude and longitude,
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    were just too complicated.
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    So we divided the world
    into three-meter squares.
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    The world divides into around 57 trillion
    three-meter squares,
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    and we found that there are
    enough combinations
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    of three dictionary words
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    that we could name every three-meter
    square in the world uniquely
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    with just three words.
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    We used 40,000 words,
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    so that's 40,000 cubed,
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    64 trillion combinations of three words,
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    which is more than enough for
    the 57-trillion-odd three-meter squares,
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    with a few spare.
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    So that's exactly what we did.
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    We divided the world
    into three-meter squares,
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    gave each one a unique,
    three-word identifier --
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    what we called a three-word address.
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    So for example, right here,
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    I'm standing at Mustards Coupons Pinup,
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    (Laughter)
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    but over here ...
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    I'm standing at Pinched
    Singularly Tutorial.
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    But we haven't just done this in English.
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    We thought it was essential that people
    should be able to use this system
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    in their own language.
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    So far, we've built it into 14 languages,
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    including French, Swahili, and Arabic,
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    and we're working on more now,
    like Xhosa, Zulu, and Hindi.
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    But this idea can do a lot more
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    than just get my musicians
    to their gigs on time.
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    If the 75 percent of countries
    that struggle with reliable addressing
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    started using three-word addresses,
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    there's a stack of far more
    important applications.
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    In Durban, South Africa,
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    an NGO called Gateway Health
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    have distributed to 11,000
    three-word address signs
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    to their community,
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    so the pregnant mothers,
    when they go into labor,
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    can call the emergency services
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    and tell them exactly
    where to pick them up from,
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    because otherwise, the ambulances
    have often taken hours to find them.
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    In Mongolia, the National Post Service
    have adopted the system,
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    and are now doing deliveries
    to many people's houses
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    for the first time.
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    The UN is using it
    to geotag photos in disaster zones
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    so they can deliver aid
    to exactly the right place.
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    Even Domino's Pizza
    are using it in the Caribbean,
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    because they haven't been able
    to find customers' homes,
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    but they really want to get
    their pizza to them while its still hot.
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    Shortly, you'll be able to get into a car,
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    speak the three words,
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    and the car will navigate you
    to that exact spot.
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    In Africa, the continent
    has leapfrogged phone lines
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    to go to mobile phones,
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    bypassed traditional banks
    to go straight to mobile payments.
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    We're really proud that the post services
    of three African countries --
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    Nigeria, Djibouti, and Côte d'Ivoire,
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    have gone straight to adopting
    three-word addresses,
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    which means that people in those countries
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    have a really simple way
    to explain where they live, today.
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    For me, poor addressing
    was an annoying frustration,
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    but for billions of people,
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    it's a huge business inefficiency,
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    severely hampers
    their infrastructure growth,
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    and can cost lives.
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    We're on a mission to change that,
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    three words at a time.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
A precise, three-word address for every place on earth
Speaker:
Chris Sheldrick
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
05:18

English subtitles

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