Sandbox
-
0:00 - 0:06so I'm gonna go back and really try and
nail this thing down so that you wind up
with an operational understanding of the -
0:08 - 0:13blockchain that will allow you to
correctly interpret its significance in -
0:13 - 0:21your life right and to do that we have
to go back really 50 or so years into -
0:21 - 0:25the early days of computing because what
what is making this so confusing is that -
0:25 - 0:29most of the practitioners in the
blockchain space have 50 years of -
0:29 - 0:34history parked into their heads which
forms an implicit matrix in which words -
0:34 - 0:39like distributed database hang so to
really get this to hang together we've -
0:39 - 0:42got to go all the way back and we're
gonna go through this kind of quickly -
0:42 - 0:46but I want to try and lay out the
foundations in the past so that we can -
0:46 - 0:52meaningfully talk about the future
so we conveniently have this stage which
is set out in lumps and I'm gonna make -
0:54 - 1:00each one of these basically a ten year
span so right back somewhere over here -
1:00 - 1:05in the darkness of history we've got the
Second World War which is where the -
1:05 - 1:09computer was was originally created
right the computer as it currently -
1:09 - 1:14exists was developed as a weapon to
defeat the Nazis it was used to crack -
1:14 - 1:19the codes that allowed the Allies to
paralyze the German war effort and -
1:19 - 1:23eventually defeat them and the link
between cryptography and computation -
1:23 - 1:28goes all the way back to the birth in
fact if you go even further back the -
1:28 - 1:31analog computers these monsters brass
devices which were used way back in the
day were actually created to calculate -
1:34 - 1:38gunnery tables for naval ships at war
they wanted to be able to calculate the -
1:38 - 1:44trajectory of artillery so you come
forward into the 1950s and you get this -
1:44 - 1:48kind of demilitarized computing all
these machines and all these engineers -
1:48 - 1:53that have left of services and are
coming in to you know create a new -
1:53 - 1:57generation and we're gonna take all this
former military gear and we're gonna put
it in the hands of businesses and back -
1:59 - 2:05in this prehistory the computers are the
size of this room they weighed tons the -
2:05 - 2:09guy from IBM famously says that there
might be a world market for perhaps five -
2:09 - 2:14computers a year right the data is
stored on -
2:14 - 2:20cards and then eventually one inch wide
magnetic tapes and the complexity of -
2:20 - 2:24these systems is such that it takes a
roomful of programmers to get a simple -
2:24 - 2:28reliable system to do something a
process an invoice right this is the
prehistory and this is the mid mid-1960s -
2:32 - 2:37that were talking about so the game
really begins to be recognizable in 1970 -
2:37 - 2:41when you get the creation of an
abstraction called -
2:41 - 2:50SQL in IBM by a guy called coder Edward
Cod and it caught so SQL is this
extremely forceful application of -
2:52 - 2:58mathematics to bring order to the chaos
of tape machines back here you've got a -
2:58 - 3:02whole bunch of data basically just
spattered across magnetic tape and -
3:02 - 3:06you've got huge machines that process
the tape but when you want to retrieve -
3:06 - 3:11something you have to go and fish for
the day to yourself move tape number -
3:11 - 3:16three forward 17 feet find me the record
and give me back the first name and
programming these things is glacially -
3:18 - 3:23slow it's a nightmarish so here is the
first place where the heavy mouth really -
3:23 - 3:29enters the picture in this story which
is the SQL abstraction assumes that you -
3:29 - 3:36create a multi-dimensional cube one tape
machine per axis of the cube five tape -
3:36 - 3:41machines five dimensional cube you can
imagine it kind of hanging in space you
then have an abstract algebra which -
3:43 - 3:49allows you to take a locus a set space
inside of the five dimensional cube -
3:49 - 3:55specify in ways which make sense the
programmers fairly intuitively see where
there might be a gap there and pull that -
3:57 - 4:04and that set of data out into something
that looks like a spreadsheet and that -
4:04 - 4:09conceptual jump was at the time so
revolutionary it took people were five -
4:09 - 4:13years to accept that it had happened and
that actually worked and what came out -
4:13 - 4:22of that was the golden age of SQL right
1970 to 1990 just about all that we did -
4:22 - 4:27was take every single thing that we
could fit into a database in business or -
4:27 - 4:29in the white
world and we shoved it into a database -
4:29 - 4:36and right here in 1970 the machines were
incredibly expensive and incredibly -
4:36 - 4:40fragile the people working with the
machines actually wore white coats -
4:40 - 4:44because if you weren't wearing a white
coat stray fibers from your clothing
could interfere with the tapes Jam the -
4:48 - 4:51tape machines and destroy your customer
data Ron
so amount in this very fragile very -
4:54 - 4:59arcane very expensive system it's only
just become technically feasible these -
4:59 - 5:04things are like laboratory artifacts
right it's like going into you know CERN -
5:04 - 5:08or something like that when you want to
inspect one of them and this sets the -
5:08 - 5:14mindset for databases right the way
through 70s up until the beginning of
the 80s that's the psychological -
5:16 - 5:22condition of the database and the
organization's become siloed because all -
5:22 - 5:25the information that makes your
organization work is stored inside of -
5:25 - 5:32one of these data temples right right
around 84 you get the microcomputer -
5:32 - 5:37revolution the IBM PC the Apple all this
kind of stuff and these are appliances -
5:37 - 5:41there are things that you can buy like a
television and plug into your office -
5:41 - 5:46they are robust they're reasonably cheap
as as well as four or five thousand -
5:46 - 5:52dollars amazing they are fairly easy to
maintain and repair they are relatively -
5:52 - 5:56resistant to dust and humidity they're
pretty much like a television in terms -
5:56 - 6:03of their operating characteristics one
per desk seems possible and weirdly
enough they can absolutely run database -
6:04 - 6:08software on them you can actually have a
database kind of sort of like the big -
6:08 - 6:11thing you had over here but actually
living on the machine that you have in -
6:11 - 6:16front of you and the kind of first real
heavy use of an application that works -
6:16 - 6:20in that environment is a thing called
Lotus 1-2-3 which is the first
spreadsheet and this begins a revolution -
6:23 - 6:25that goes all the way through accounting
but we're not gonna talk about -
6:25 - 6:28accounting too much but if you want to
think about computers and Ledger's -
6:28 - 6:37starts here back in the 80s now this is
15 years from you know enormous with -
6:37 - 6:41fragile machinery and enormous expanse
through to its -
6:41 - 6:45on a desktop can you imagine how
disoriented the people that live through
that technological transformation were -
6:46 - 6:51it was just as weird as what's happening
now but it was happening somewhere over -
6:51 - 6:55there because we hadn't invented the
Internet to bring you the news that -
6:55 - 7:01something weird it happened with
computers now we get to kill in 1990 the -
7:01 - 7:07networking push really starts a long way
back but it takes a long time to get the
networking stuff to work 1990 is about -
7:09 - 7:14where you begin to get networking that's
practical for real stuff yeah I got my -
7:14 - 7:22first email account about 91 and at that
point there was no World Wide Web there -
7:22 - 7:27was a computer there was email there
were chat programs but if you wanted a -
7:27 - 7:31document from another machine you got an
interface that looked a bit like a file -
7:31 - 7:34browser and you clicked on the document
you want then it loaded it onto your
machine and then you opened it in -
7:35 - 7:39something to take a look at it and the
notion that you could build the thing to -
7:39 - 7:44read the document into the thing that
got you the document was quite radical -
7:44 - 7:50that was sort of a big deal and that was
why the web was a big deal no one were
bit weird paradigm stuff over here -
7:53 - 7:58through this period the computing is
very much centered around data it's -
7:58 - 8:04structured it's hard it's rigid it's
formulated it's tabulated the stuff is -
8:04 - 8:09very rigid the web builds on a different
model of computing which is called -
8:09 - 8:16document-centric right document-centric
computers are paper simulators right -
8:16 - 8:19they harm do things which look like
documents you get email it looks like a -
8:19 - 8:24letter am you open up a graphics program
it looks like a canvas there are things -
8:24 - 8:28that look like paintbrushes in term
model of computing that we're using -
8:28 - 8:34right now is document-centric computing
and the connection between databases and -
8:34 - 8:39that sort of data centric computing and
document-centric computing is extremely -
8:39 - 8:43weak there are two completely different
ways of getting the machine to do stuff -
8:43 - 8:49for you and getting data into documents
is tricky as anybody who's ever done in -
8:49 - 8:53Excel merge knows and seriously right
it's hard -
8:53 - 8:57getting documents into data is even
harder which is the entire mass of -
8:57 - 9:02content management systems right
scanning documents all of us these two -
9:02 - 9:08things don't mix together at all well so
we come out through the 90s and you kind -
9:08 - 9:14of get to mid 95 maybe early 96 and
people suddenly realize that one day in -
9:14 - 9:18the future you'll be able to make money
on the internet there's just one problem
there's no security which means if you -
9:21 - 9:25type your credit card into an internet
form it will be bounced all around the -
9:25 - 9:28internet anybody can read it and they
can steal money out of your account
it's another five years until we get a -
9:31 - 9:36widely deployed solution that allows us
to have encryption which lets us move -
9:36 - 9:40credit cards around the internet
e-commerce doesn't really become a thing
into hot 1999 2000 so we were already -
9:44 - 9:49here by the time you've got a computer
that is capable of taking a payment from -
9:49 - 9:57you know the the internet again how fast
is the rate of change does anybody even -
9:57 - 10:01remember when you couldn't put credit
cards into the internet but you were all -
10:01 - 10:06alive pretty much but we forget so
quickly what was possible or impossible -
10:06 - 10:09when you technology arrived so we're
just gonna wash the memory out it's -
10:09 - 10:13quite hard even to think about what it
was like before we had cell phones so
you come forward to 2010 by 2010 I'm -
10:17 - 10:20gonna suggest that more or less
everything you could do in a webpage had -
10:20 - 10:24been done to at least the first
approximation more or less all the basic -
10:24 - 10:28stuff was there if you could do it with
a computer that was basically a paper -
10:28 - 10:34simulator it had been done more or less
now this is also roughly when Bitcoin -
10:34 - 10:38gets started and Bitcoin starts in some
you know festering little weird -
10:38 - 10:42counterculture on the internet which I
spent my entire 1990s and called -
10:42 - 10:47cyberpunk and the cypherpunks are
straight out of science fiction they
can't tell the difference between -
10:48 - 10:51science fiction and reality they
generally speaking have an emotional
intelligence Koecher around 75 to 50 it -
10:55 - 11:00took me a long time to grow over and one
of the things which makes that scene -
11:00 - 11:04work the way that does is the enormous
prevalence of autism so whenever you -
11:04 - 11:08hear somebody ragging on the Nerds
right but ever you hear somebody ragging -
11:08 - 11:11on the nerds remember what they're doing
generally speaking is picking on
autistic people right it's really -
11:14 - 11:17important to understand that the people
building the technologies on put your -
11:17 - 11:22society completely depends the people
without whom the lights go out and the -
11:22 - 11:28food stays cold are heavily heavily
heavily tending towards being on the -
11:28 - 11:31autistic spectrum so when you hear
people laughing at the Nerds remember -
11:31 - 11:34they're often at people that are
disabled there are also the people that -
11:34 - 11:40your civilization depends on so don't
screw with them right so the cypherpunks
come out and basically say in a very -
11:42 - 11:48naive way why do we need government and
they go and they build this thing which -
11:48 - 11:53is essentially a central bank of the
internet now you sort of think well that -
11:53 - 11:57was a bit of a big jump how did we go
from we can finally take a credit card
to central bank of the internet that's -
12:00 - 12:04what all of us spent about five years
wondering as well what the hell did they -
12:04 - 12:09do because the technology arrived raw we
could go to ask what satoshis intent was -
12:09 - 12:13because Satoshi was a ghost right the
software was dropped onto the internet -
12:13 - 12:18there was some early discussion and then
the guy vanished so we have no idea who -
12:18 - 12:21Satoshi was we don't know what the
intent was there is nobody to go to -
12:21 - 12:25conferences and pitch the technology we
were left with an artifact that to all
intents and purposes might have been -
12:26 - 12:33created by a time-travel or under
dropped it's about bigger jump um so -
12:33 - 12:40what did they do what they did was this
right back over here the databases were -
12:40 - 12:46singular they existed in an atomic state
one database per enterprise the network
existed in some relational sense between -
12:48 - 12:53enterprises but because the database was
perceived has been too fragile to let -
12:53 - 12:57anybody touch the database never
directly communicated with the network -
12:57 - 13:01you always had a lots and lots and lots
of guards and buffers and other stuff in -
13:01 - 13:05between to prevent the two things
working properly and if you did actually -
13:05 - 13:09connect the databases kind of directly
to each other you got another problem
which was the database encoded the -
13:11 - 13:16worldview of the organization to
organizations to different world views -
13:16 - 13:19you always needed something in between
to translate -
13:19 - 13:25so you never got large-scale
computer-to-computer connections that -
13:25 - 13:28allows you to create a shared model of
reality between lots of different
organizations and this shows up everyday -
13:31 - 13:36when you try and do something like
process a claim on insurance and you -
13:36 - 13:40have to fill in the name and address
details seventy four times for different
organizations often three or four times -
13:42 - 13:46for the same organization the databases
are kept separate from each other -
13:46 - 13:50there's no real connectivity between
them and when you try and build -
13:50 - 13:53connections between the systems the
complexity builds to the point where -
13:53 - 13:59it's too expensive to do so what they
say you know mean when they say the word -
13:59 - 14:06distributed database is a database which
is both like a database and like a
network and this is the genius of -
14:08 - 14:13Bitcoin it fuses together the database
and the network into a seamless hole -
14:13 - 14:18called blockchain everywhere there is
data there is Network and everywhere
there is Network there is data they're -
14:20 - 14:25completely fused inside of these systems
so what that means is rather than having -
14:25 - 14:29all of these individual kind of ivory
tower computer systems connected by a -
14:29 - 14:33network and then all the costs of moving
things in and out you have a single -
14:33 - 14:40shared story of reality spread across
all the machines simultaneously and when -
14:40 - 14:44it changes in one place it changes
everywhere and this is such a powerful -
14:44 - 14:48abstraction it's such a powerful
technology that the first thing they -
14:48 - 14:54implemented was the central bank of the
internet that was the first thing they -
14:54 - 15:03did can you imagine to write you open by
creating a single global currency which -
15:03 - 15:07is the first thing that has worked that
way since we went off the gold standard -
15:07 - 15:11and the technology deployed is so
powerful that it was done by either one -
15:11 - 15:15individual or a small group that
remained a secret they basically -
15:15 - 15:22reinvented gold and that was the first
move this is unimaginable strangeness to -
15:22 - 15:24somebody that spent their entire
lifetime monkeying around with computers -
15:24 - 15:32oh my god what have we done so you get
up to kind of where we are now right -
15:32 - 15:39basically 2015-2016 we're sort of midway
through the process Bitcoin is well -
15:39 - 15:43established as a reality everybody is
comfortable with bitcoins existence to -
15:43 - 15:50some degree what is it it's a bank
account that stores magic internet money -
15:50 - 15:53that comes from the central bank of the
internet which is a decentralized -
15:53 - 15:55database which is everywhere anoher
maintained by a bunch of people you -
15:55 - 16:01don't understand but the funny thing is
that if I describe to you how your -
16:01 - 16:08government works it's even worse right
so every four years we hold a popularity -
16:08 - 16:14contest regionally we pick the person
that is most likeable on television more -
16:14 - 16:18or less regardless of their values we
know nothing about them because they're -
16:18 - 16:21protected by privacy that surrounds most
individuals so they could be a person -
16:21 - 16:25playing a role and then we assemble
these people into a large group that -
16:25 - 16:33gets to decide who lives and who dies
every day right so you know don't assume -
16:33 - 16:37that because the new stuff is weird it's
any weirder than the old stuff the old -
16:37 - 16:44stuff is just weird stuff you got used
to now let me move a little forward to -
16:44 - 16:49this whole smart contract thing right so
the smart contract is the third big -
16:49 - 16:53integrative step first we merge the
network and the database to make the -
16:53 - 16:59blockchain then we take computer
software code and put it into the shared -
16:59 - 17:04database into the blockchain so we take
a little program and they can only be -
17:04 - 17:07little because it's just the beginning
of the story and we take the little -
17:07 - 17:12program and we store it in the
blockchain and that means everybody -
17:12 - 17:17that's connected to the block chain has
the copy of exactly the same program and -
17:17 - 17:23programs when you run the program same
data same code same result so now -
17:23 - 17:28everybody's got a copy of the database
everybody's got a copy the code we all
run the code at the same time we all put -
17:30 - 17:34the output back into the blockchain if
there's a disagreement we find it -
17:34 - 17:39immediately we sort it out so in that
sort of environment you have these -
17:39 - 17:43little programs which are just as
transactional sending people money it's -
17:43 - 17:47like a wire transfer you
go here and my fools across the network -
17:47 - 17:51it pops up there it's like a Bitcoin
payment what kind of things the world
programs do if this job has been done -
17:54 - 18:00pay bob if the job hasn't been done by
the 31st of March send the money back to
ours how you tiny little pieces of -
18:03 - 18:07business logic pulled out of the
application stack and put onto the box -
18:07 - 18:12chain instead and this is the third big
unification I work for a company called -
18:12 - 18:17consensus systems that uses aetherium
which is the first really durable smart
contract platform to build lots of -
18:19 - 18:24applications and those little programs
do things like make sure the artists get -
18:24 - 18:27paid when their music is listened to
they do things like streamline -
18:27 - 18:33transactions between banks through all
kinds of simple useful things and we're -
18:33 - 18:38still only at the very beginning of the
story right now the Bitcoin system
processes about seven transactions a -
18:40 - 18:46second the etherium system does
something like 20 so these are way back -
18:46 - 18:51in terms of speed they're way back over
there her computers were in the 1960s on -
18:51 - 18:58punched cards now brace yourselves right
now the challenge is to produce a thing -
18:58 - 19:03called a scaled blockchain and a scaled
blockchain is watch-chain that doesn't -
19:03 - 19:08do 20 transactions a second it does
roughly the same number of transactions -
19:08 - 19:13a second as Visa or Swift ten thousand
50 thousand a hundred thousand -
19:13 - 19:18transactions a second quarter of a
million transactions a second and the -
19:18 - 19:22scaled blockchain is something that
begins to provide us with something that -
19:22 - 19:26looks like a global computing surface
onto which things like the internet -
19:26 - 19:30things could be loaded you could take
the entire global financial system and -
19:30 - 19:34push it into a scale box chain you could
take the entire Internet of Things and -
19:34 - 19:38push it into a scale blockchain you
could take all of those machines in the -
19:38 - 19:42cloud you could put blockchain software
onto them as Microsoft recently did with -
19:42 - 19:47a thing called a Dewar and then you
could have a single global computing -
19:47 - 19:51surface that took all of our different
bits and pieces of computing power and -
19:51 - 19:55turned them into a global knowledge
resource that basically manages the -
19:55 - 19:58fundamental infrastructure of our
society -
19:58 - 20:02instead of the cobbled-together nonsense
that you get every time you talk to your -
20:02 - 20:09bank right and because these computer
systems don't create new woe curses of -
20:09 - 20:13political control when they're built
because they're decentralized what you -
20:13 - 20:18don't get is a position where the basic
infrastructure of your society a stock -
20:18 - 20:22that your society runs on is
automatically owned by a set of -
20:22 - 20:26corporations or even a set of
governments what you have is something -
20:26 - 20:31which is constituted by the will of the
people and serves their purposes which -
20:31 - 20:35is after all the original intention of
government now this is where we have to -
20:35 - 20:39go back and separate reality from
fantasy because this is the mistake
that's made it almost impossible for -
20:41 - 20:45people to understand Bitcoin remember I
mentioned the cypherpunks back here and
their inability to tell the difference -
20:47 - 20:51between science fiction and political
reality the notion that we're simply -
20:51 - 20:55going to automate away all of the things
which constitute government makes a ton -
20:55 - 21:02of sense to people that spend 23 hours a
day online and I'm really framing this -
21:02 - 21:06very carefully because this is causing
enormous trouble but if you're somebody -
21:06 - 21:10that spends only a little bit of your
time interacting with computers it's -
21:10 - 21:14pretty obvious that the computer only
exists as a rectangle of glowing light
somewhere in your room or in your hand -
21:16 - 21:22and and out here from that perspective
it's pretty clear that if you teach -
21:22 - 21:26computers governed resources a lot of
trivial stuff in your life gets a lot
easier like paying your taxes or making -
21:28 - 21:32sure that your telephone works or you
know doing your banking whatever happens -
21:32 - 21:36to be but it's not obvious that this is
a replacement for the general edifice of -
21:36 - 21:41government and the tension between the
way the world looks to the technologists -
21:41 - 21:45and the way the world looks to everybody
else is what's at the heart of the fight -
21:45 - 21:49with entities like uber because uber
makes perfect sense to a technologist -
21:49 - 21:54and it really upsets people that have
run a taxi monopoly for 150 years and -
21:54 - 21:58those kind of discussions and tensions
are as much about the different -
21:58 - 22:03neurological makeup of the people who
developed the world view as they are -
22:03 - 22:07about the technology what we're really
having here is a discussion about what -
22:07 - 22:12kinds of minds run our society is our
society predominantly run by charming -
22:12 - 22:17glib slightly sociopathic people who are
good on television or is it -
22:17 - 22:20predominantly run by people that live in
front of computers and control the world -
22:20 - 22:25with numbers and that debate has gone on
inside of our culture since the two -
22:25 - 22:29cultures period of British history where
there was this discussion about whether -
22:29 - 22:34arts and sciences could ever get along
well turns out the sciences guys are now
figuring out how to govern instead of -
22:35 - 22:41the lawyers and this is creating an
enormous amount of turbulence but the -
22:41 - 22:45turbulence is not well described because
it's happening extremely quickly and the -
22:45 - 22:50only place that there's a literary canon
that really describes these processes is
science fiction right if you want mental -
22:53 - 22:56models of how to think about the reality
that we're currently in you have to go -
22:56 - 23:00back to the science fiction a thirty
years ago published under a general -
23:00 - 23:05title of cyberpunk right and cyberpunk
was the fiction that describes the
reality that we're now in it's about -
23:07 - 23:11virtual reality it's about drones it's
about biotechnology that regrows your -
23:11 - 23:15nervous system
it's about virtual currencies and -
23:15 - 23:20artificial intelligence and we would all
have a much better grip on the reality -
23:20 - 23:23that we found ourselves in if science
fiction hadn't been kicked out of the -
23:23 - 23:26Witter recon and sometime after World
War two -
23:26 - 23:31there's a definite push where science
fiction is pushed away from the -
23:31 - 23:35mainstream of literature and into its
own kind of genre box and as a result -
23:35 - 23:39the place where most of the thinking and
analysis has been done about these
technologies and what they mean to us as -
23:40 - 23:45a society has been banished from polite
company it all exists in a place called -
23:45 - 23:49genre fiction and it's no longer
considered to be real literature as a -
23:49 - 23:53result the mainstream can arts
population have been left without mythic -
23:53 - 23:58narratives to allow them to interpret
the reality that the technicians have -
23:58 - 24:03created and what we've seen this evening
is a perfect demonstration of that gap -
24:03 - 24:07because actually getting the message
across requires a completely different -
24:07 - 24:09perspective to the one which is natural
to the technicians -
24:09 - 24:14you know I'm lucky in that I've managed
to bridge that gap because I was always
as much a writer as I was a programmer -
24:16 - 24:20and I've done about you comments are
both in my life so the thing that I -
24:20 - 24:23wanted to leave you with is this the
dialogue about how these technologies -
24:23 - 24:28are going to fit into our society
is going to be a dialogue about class -
24:28 - 24:33it's going to be about whether the
society is run by lawyers or technicians -
24:33 - 24:39both are the wrong answer it has to be
run by the people but for the people to -
24:39 - 24:43be able to intelligently make decisions
in a society where the core technologies -
24:43 - 24:47that run our society are rapidly
becoming so complicated we no longer -
24:47 - 24:51understand them we have to do better the
guessing which technocrat or which -
24:51 - 24:56lawyer to put in charge without a
fundamental reawaken event of -
24:56 - 25:00reawakening of interest in science and
technology and without reclaiming -
25:00 - 25:03science fiction as a fundamental
literacy for the present that we're in -
25:03 - 25:07we're going to be left making decisions
more or less at random depending on what -
25:07 - 25:12charming person tells us the news story
so my challenge to all of you is start -
25:12 - 25:20reading cyberpunk it's painful right
it's painful right it's much of it is -
25:20 - 25:24not very well written many of the ideas
look almost like it's kind of weird -
25:24 - 25:29potboiler fiction about the present but
if you sift through carefully and it -
25:29 - 25:32suggests starting with an anthology
called mirror shades which is a short -
25:32 - 25:37will book with short stories nothing to
challenge you too much if you go back
and read that stuff what you could begin -
25:38 - 25:43to flash out is the stories that all of
the programmers hand in their heads when
they built these technologies and that's -
25:46 - 25:50how you get your head around what's
happening if you share the myths at the -
25:50 - 25:54technical class half when they create
these things you can begin to understand -
25:54 - 25:58the technology in a mythic way which is
how we understand it you have to learn -
25:58 - 26:00the ways of our people because you're
living in the world that we create for -
26:00 - 26:02you
- Title:
- Sandbox
- Description:
-
You can use this Sandbox to try out things with the Amara tool.
The video that is primarily streaming here is http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZU2kyr9jRkg , which is completely blank. But you can go to the URLs tab to add the URL of another video and make it primary.
Please remember to download your subtitles if you want to keep them, as they will get deleted - and the streaming URL reverted to the blank video if you changed it - after a week or two,
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
- Captions Requested
- Duration:
- 01:46:39
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox | ||
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox | ||
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox | ||
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox | ||
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox | ||
koma edited English subtitles for Sandbox | ||
koma edited English subtitles for Sandbox | ||
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Sandbox |
Claude Almansi
Revision 1 = provided subtitles for Lecture 1.2 of Prof. Scott Plous' Social Psychology course
Claude Almansi
Revision 1 = provided subtitles for Lecture 1.2 of Prof. Scott Plous' Social Psychology course
Claude Almansi
Revision 1 = provided subtitles for Lecture 1.2 of Prof. Scott Plous' Social Psychology course