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What happens when a billion people get computers? | Matt Dalio & Jimmy Calí | TEDxUFM

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    So in a world where everyone
    buzz about smartphones and tablets,
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    I'm here to tell you about
    how we are building desktop computers.
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    "Why desktop computers?"
    everyone always asks.
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    The answer is because you cannot enter
    the knowledge economy
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    without being able to write a CV,
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    to do a school research report,
    to do a budget.
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    To enter the modern economy,
    you must have computing literacy.
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    Four and a half billion people
    do not have access to that.
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    Four and a half billion people.
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    What's so incredible is that its actually
    not that hard to solve it.
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    What does that mean?
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    How do four and a half
    billion people not have it,
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    and it's not that hard to solve it?
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    The answer comes in the form
    of technology that people already have,
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    everyone already has a television,
    that's a monitor.
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    and attached to those televisions
    are set-top boxes, cable boxes,
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    satellite TV boxes,
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    and that little box
    is where the magic takes place.
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    If you take an iBook from the year 2000,
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    your average set-top box today
    has four times the storage
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    and 60 times the RAM
    as an iBook in the year 2000.
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    It is a computer.
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    So, why is it that all these computers,
    monitors, set-top boxes as CPUs
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    are not actually computers?
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    And the answer
    is actually really simple: software.
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    We spent about a year
    trying to take existing solutions
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    and put it on set-top boxes
    and make that happen.
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    After a year,
    we threw it all away, gave up
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    and spent the subsequent three years
    building that from scratch ourselves.
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    A desktop operating system
    that is simple enough
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    that it doesn't require training,
    it doesn't get viruses,
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    that runs on this cheap processors
    making a computer cheaper than a tablet
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    and most importantly, that is
    built for users in emerging markets,
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    because people in emerging markets
    not only can’t afford computers
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    they can’t afford access to fundamentals
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    like education, health, and livelihood.
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    So, a computer can be an answer to that.
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    I'm supposed to get on stage
    and tell you stories about the seamstress
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    that can now have access
    to shopping from microfinance loans
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    and the farmer who can figure out
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    what to plant, when to irrigate,
    and where to sell.
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    But in the audience tonight,
    I actually found a new hero of mine.
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    He is a little 12 year old boy,
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    who eight months ago
    couldn't speak English
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    and decided to teach himself English
    through his computer
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    and I'd like to have you meet him.
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    Jimmy please welcome you on stage.
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    (Applause)
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    Jimmy Calí: Hello!
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    Matt Dalio: Tell me about yourself Jimmy.
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    JC: Hi everybody, my name is Jimmy,
    I'm 12 years old,
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    and I really like to play videogames
    and read books.
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    MD: So, how did you learn English?
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    I learned English by practicing,
    reading and listening.
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    I already ended the program
    Duolingo, I practiced in videos,
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    Skype, and writing on Whatsapp.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    So he was having a fluent conversation,
    I speak Spanish,
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    and the conversation was easier
    to had in English that it was in Spanish
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    because his conversational
    English is so good.
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    Tell me, how much English
    did you know eight months ago?
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    JC: I [started] learning
    eight months ago, in March last year.
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    MD: How much did you know
    eight months ago?
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    LC: Nothing.
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    (Laughter)
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    MD: You were saying something
    about programming?
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    JC: Yes I am learning programming
    in Khan Academy.
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    MD: Programing? Tell me,
    what sort of programming?
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    JC: Animation. I really like it,
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    it's very hard, but I like it,
    and I always practice it.
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    MD: My new hero.
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    (Applause)
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    There are a billion Jimmies
    about to get technology.
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    It's incredible what we are
    about to see as human kind.
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    The reason I'm on this stage is to make
    a call to the entrepreneurs of the world.
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    The this of that, the Uber of X
    has been done before.
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    Meanwhile, emerging markets have
    so many needs and so many opportunities.
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    WhatsApp sold for 19 billion dollars,
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    the largest startup
    acquisition in history.
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    Why?
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    Because it gave the power of communication
    to 450 million emerging market users.
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    M-Pesa is a mobile payments platform
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    that currently runs 31%
    of Kenya's GDP through it.
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    The opportunities of our era
    exist here, in Guatemala,
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    and emerging
    market countries just like it,
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    and this child right here
    is testament to what that means.
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    (Laughter)
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    Thank you all. Jimmy, you are a hero.
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    JC: Thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
What happens when a billion people get computers? | Matt Dalio & Jimmy Calí | TEDxUFM
Description:

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

Matt Dalio explains how giving access to computers can change the life of billions. He presents on stage, a proof and his Hero, Jimmy Calí, a 12 years old kid who learned to speak English in eight months using his computer.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
06:54

English subtitles

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