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(OFF) Thanks very much...
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(David Price) This is the
ever-shrinking presentation.
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It was originally 25 minutes,
last night it was 23,
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now it's 22.
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I've got a 40-minute presentation.
I'm just going to speak twice as quickly.
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No, I'm only kidding, it's only
20, 22 minutes.
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And I've got a thing to time it
to make sure I don't go over.
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About four months ago, I was diagnosed
with cancer of the colon.
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And what was it, seven weeks ago,
I had the operation
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which kind of went okay,
got rid of the tumor.
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But when the colon was reconnected,
it sprung a leak
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and I got a thing called sepsis,
which I later discovered,
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is fatal in 60% of the cases.
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What essentially happens with sepsis is
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the organs start to pack in,
one after the other,
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so my heart was fibrillating.
I lost, kidneys stopped working,
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lungs stopped working,
so they put me on a ventilator.
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And my wife Claire
who's here somewhere
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was told to bring the family around,
because they didn't expect me
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to get through the weekend.
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As you can see, I survived, and this is
actually the first talk I've given
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since I was in intensive care.
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I was in intensive care for a week.
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So, when a sick, no, no honest.
(Applause)
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But when I say I'm delighted to be here,
I'm not just being polite.
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(laughter)
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I'm talking existentially
rather than conversationally.
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But I wanted to start with that story
because, in that process of the journey
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from diagnosis to operation,
I met with some remarkable people:
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on forums and interest groups,
but I also visited and interviewed people.
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So I interviewed some people
in the Netherlands
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who are treating their loved ones,
who've got end-stage cancer.
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They are lay people, computer technicians,
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who, frankly, conventional medicine
has given up, they're stage 4,
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they said there is nothing more we can do,
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so they're administering
introvenous cocktails of drugs,
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some of which are approved,
some of which are off-patent,
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some of which are off-label.
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I visited a clinic, here in Germany,
which I can't name, because
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they're kind of operating in the shadows
in fear that they'll be closed down.
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And what it seemed to me,
once I looked beyond health
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is that this is a phenomenon
which is happening
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in all kinds of areas of public life,
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that we're seeing what I call
people-powered innovation.
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And I think it presents a real challenge
for institutions and organizations.
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So, why is it important?
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I think it's important because it's
kind of a natural consequence
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of the issues I talked about
in my book "Open,"
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where, now that we're able to share
and exchange knowledge,
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we're now at a point where
we want to do something about it,
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we want now to be more in control
of our own lives.
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But I think it's particularly important
for the people who are in this room today:
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educators and human resource people
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Because one of the things that we're
seeing is a major shift in the way
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in which we accredit knowledge
and competencies.
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I don't know if any of you have read
Phillip Brown's excellent book
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called "The Global Auction," but he talks
about how our graduates are facing
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a high-skilled, low-income future
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because of globalization
and a whole range of other issues.
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And recently, Laszlo Bock who is in charge
of People Operations at Google said this,
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"Your degree is not a proxy
for your ability to any job.
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"The world only cares about
and pays off on
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"what you can do with what you know
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"and it doesn't care how you learned it."
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So my point, I guess, is that
unless we change the product,
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we risk being dis-intermediated.
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By that, I mean learners
can find other ways
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to get the knowledge and skills
that they need.
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And let's face it, the product hasn't
really changed much in decades.
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So I'd argue that the best way
to stay relevant
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is to involve users
in the process of innovation.
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So this is what I mean by
people-powered innovation,
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a process where users lead users,
accelerate innovation
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by either advocating
for new products or services,
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tinkering with existing products
and services,
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or creating new products
and services from scratch.
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That's my kind of working definition,
based partly
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on Eric von Hippel's definition
of people-powered innovation.
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So here's some examples.
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The potato crisp,
the humble potato chip
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was invented in 1853 by a chef
called George Crum
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who worked at a restaurant in Saratoga.
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Now he gets the credit for inventing it,
but I think it should go
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to the disgruntled diner
in that restaurant
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who kept sending the potatoes back,
said that they were too thickly sliced.
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And this kept going backwards and forwards
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and eventually George Crum got really
pissed off about this
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and cooked them as thin as he could,
burned them to a crisp,
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smothered them in salt
and then sent them out.
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And the diner loved it.
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So he thought, oh,
we're on to something here
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but he didn't take out a patent: in fact,
none of these examples have been patented.
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So, 1853, we've always had
people-powered innovation.
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In fact, you could argue that up until
the Industrial Revolution,
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that's all we had, we had
people-powered innovation.
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But if you bring it a wee bit
more up to date
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I don't know if you know
the story of the skateboard
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but it was something that surfers, facing
a wind a way they couldn't surf,
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it was the best kind of substitute.
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So they took a pair of roller-skates,
chopped them in two,
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put wheels on either end of a plank
of wood, and you had a skateboard.
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So the skateboard industry is now worth
$4.8 billion a year.
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And a similar story happened
with the mountain bike.
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It was basically cannibalized from
other forms of bikes
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and developed entirely by users.
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To bring it even more up to date,
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I don't know if you're aware
of this thing called Patreon?
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It's been set up by Jack Conte
who is a musician.
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Certainly, he wouldn't have thought
of himself as a kind of entrepreneur
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but it kind of recreates
in the digital age
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the 18th century notion
of patronage for artists.
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So you pay up artists,
because you like their work.
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And it has been a hugely successful
venture for Jack.
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And then one of the few companies
that have really latched onto
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people-powered innovation
at a very early stage
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is Proctor & Gamble, who have developed
a thing called Connect and Develop
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and that service now,
which brings in innovations
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from outside of the organization,
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that constitutes about half
of all their innovations.
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So much so that Proctor & Gamble say:
"Proudly found elsewhere."
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That's their motto.
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And I wonder how many of us working
in universities could say the same thing,
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or how many of us who are
learning officers in companies?
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So, where do we see
people-powered innovation?
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Well, you can go to any maker space
and you'll see it,
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visit forums or interest groups,
even groups like Anonymous,
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whatever you may think
of their philosophy,
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you can't deny their ingenuity
and innovation.
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And I've looked at a number of examples
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and I've identified
four common characteristics.
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I'm going to quickly go through them.
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The first is need.
The second is "Jugaad."
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Don't worry if it's not
a familiar term to you.
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Third is the hacker ethic
and the fourth is a sense of agency.
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Right. Very quick examples.
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It's a cliché, but it's a cliché
for a reason,
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that invention is indeed the mother
of necessity.
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And you get people-powered innovation
where the need is greatest.
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So it's no accident that some of the
most innovative things that we now see
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now are happening in the developed world
in slums and favelas.
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So 85% of mobile transactions
have actually originated
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in developing countries.
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And 50% of them were created by users.
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And if you think about it, that's kind of
paved the way for things like
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Apple Pay and Samsung Wallet.
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The first use of mobile banking
was actually in the Philippines,
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and what people did there was to take
pay-as-you-go top-up vouchers,
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take the code from them, text them
to their friends and family
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in other parts of the Philippines, and
they used it as a kind of currency.
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But they're not just turning air time
into money,
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they're turning shit into money too.
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[To you it may be SHIT, To us it is MONEY
"Shit Business is Serious Business"]
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This is a genuine sign,
I didn't make this up
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but it says, if you can't read the bottom
it says,
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"Shit Business is Serious Business".
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And there's a guy in Lagos in Nigeria
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and Lagos has a big
public health problem
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because people are using
the streets as a toilet
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but there is a graphic artist
called Isaac Agbetusin
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who invented a thing that he called
the Dignified Mobile Toilet.
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They look like the kind of Portaloos
that you see on building sites
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but he's designed it, built it,
delivers it to communities
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and then they charge people
ten cents to use them.
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But that's only part of the story, because
then the waste is collected
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and turned into biogas which is sold
to energy companies.
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It's ingenious.
He's getting profit at both ends
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of the transaction.
So that leads us
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to the second characteristic.
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And that's this word "jugaad".
And if you're not familiar with it,
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it's a Hindi term which kind of means
it's making the most of what you've got.
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So I don't know if you can see
the photograph on the right.
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That's an ox-powered two-story truck.
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During the rainy season,
of course people get drenched
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so somebody found the cabin
from an old truck, put it on.
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There are people on the top deck
of the truck, people on the bottom,
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and they're staying dry.
Making the most of what you've got.
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But it's also this sense of "jugaad"
as meaning "good enough".
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What you see on the left
is the world's first clay refrigerator.
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It was created, again,
by just an ordinary user.
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And of course it doesn't work
as well as a powered refrigerator
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that you might have in the West.
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It's cooled by cold water
which cools the clay.
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But when you've got temperatures
of 45, 50 degrees in summer,
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it's good enough.
It keeps the produce cool enough
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to be used, and it doesn't go off.
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Here's some very quick examples
of jugaad as well.
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Guy on the top left,
he's frying his breakfast
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while he's listening to his MP3 player.
(audience laughing)
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Guys on the top right have designated
the compartment a sleeper compartment.
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They took a blanket and put it up
as a hammock.
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Guy at the bottom right.
This is fascinating.
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He's turned what we call in the U.K.
a flip-flop, Australians call them thongs,
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he's turned it into a gun holster.
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I don't know what he's doing
with the other flip-flop.
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And the guy on the bottom left
has invented a kind of hands-free kit.
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(audience laughing)
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It's just a handkerchief with
a mobile phone.
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I hope to God he's cut a couple
of holes out in the front.
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But what we're seeing is that
your jugaad principles
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are now being adopted
by Western countries.
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And if you think about it,
a company like Google
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when it talks about everything's
in better, fail fast and integrate
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that's a kind of jugaad approach
to innovation.
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And when jugaad meets
the next characteristic,
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I think things get really interesting.
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So when you combine a hacker ethic
with jugaad,
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I think you then start or rub against
what I would call
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one of the biggest blockers
to people-powered innovation,
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and that's kind of over-strict
regulatory framework.
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And it's put there on the premise
of protecting us and maintaining quality.
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Now I'm assuming you all know the story
of Wikipedia, so I'll give you
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the truncated version.
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When it was first started,
it was called Newpedia
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and they commissioned a bunch
of academics to write articles
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which were then going to be
peer-reviewed to maintain the quality.
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And two years into its existence,
Newpedia had to close
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cause it had a grand total of 25 articles,
cause people had spent all that time
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arguing about whether
the article was good enough.
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So it became Wikipedia,
and as you know, Jimmy Wales then said,
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"To hell with this.
I'll make it open source.
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"Anybody can write this.
It will be good enough.
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"And people can hack it
and improve it."
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But what's less commonly known
is that Wikipedia wasn't
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the kind of direct successor
of Newpedia.
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It sort of forked, and alongside Wikipedia
was a thing called Citizendium.
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Now, could you just put your hand up
if you've ever used Wikipedia?
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Yeah, pretty much everybody.
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Can you put your hand up if
you've used Citizendium?
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Yes, and that's because
they insisted on peer review.
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And if you go on the Citizendium website,
they've got something like 160,000 articles
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which have been commissioned,
and 106 of them, I think it is,
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have actually been released for citation.
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So, I don't know what's happening
for all the rest, but it seems to me
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there's a lesson here
for academic publishing
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because I don't believe peer review,
unless it's open source,
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does anything other than obstruct
research and innovation and not advance it.
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So here's an example from education,
from education
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which is what I'd consider
to be jugaad in the hypothetic.
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There's a college in London
called the School for Communication Arts.
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It's run by a maverick called Marc Lewis,
and it serves the advertising industry.
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Now, it provides tertiary-level courses
but they're not degrees
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because he can't get validated.
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Why can't he get validated?
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Because Marc invites people
to hack its own programs,
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and he does it via this.
There a thing called the Curriculum Wiki.
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So if you're in the advertising industry,
and you think that there's
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a particular skill that's being developed,
or there's some new processes and practices,
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or if you're a student,
or indeed a member of the public,
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you can put up on the Curriculum Wiki
what you think should be taught,
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and Marc and his staff there
will guarantee to turn that
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into a set of learning outcomes
with a syllabus.
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And they'll have it up and running
within six weeks.
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Now of course, that means
that it can't get validation,
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because in the U.K.,
universities want to know
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what your program's going to be
in five years' time.
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He doesn't know what they're going
to be doing in five weeks' time,
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but he doesn't care because
all the students get jobs.
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They've got 100% employability rate.
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So that's a case of, I think,
the kind of regulatory frameworks
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that we've got coming up against
innovation and people-powered innovation.
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And it seems to me that
that sense of urgency is really important.
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In most examples of formal learning,
it seems to me we've promoted
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a kind of learned dependence.
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We're the experts.
You're the learners.
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And if you want to progress
to the next level,
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then you're going to need us.
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And then along came the biggest,
disruptive innovation
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since chewing gum in education,
and that's YouTube.
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And everybody suddenly went,
"Hmm, maybe we don't need you guys
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"as much as we thought we did."
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And YouTube begat MOOCs.
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And then the new mantra became
"Any lecturer that can be replaced
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"by a YouTube video, will be."
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But whilst MOOCs and online learning allow
learners to hack their education, sort of,
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they don't yet build community
or a sense of learner agency.
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And I believe that building learner
agency will be the next big development
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in learning, because that's what we see
in social learning now.
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And learners expect that
that agency in formal learning
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is also going to be there.
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So, it's not hard to do.
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We just need to adopt social learning
six key motivations
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which I talk about in the book.
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And there's a whole other talk
to go through these
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but I'll just quickly list them.
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So, a sense of do-it-yourself.
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There's a great deal of autonomy
in social learning.
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You all know that because
that's how you communicate.
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I know I'm preaching to the converted here.
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Second is immediacy.
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There's what Lillian Katz called
a horizontal relevance about learning
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because you're getting the knowledge
that you need now
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to solve the challenge
that you've got
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rather than just in case
at some point in the future.
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There's an obvious sense
of collegiality, do it with friends.
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It's now the case that if you're
on Twitter or Yammer,
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you've probably got your closest
collaborator on the other side
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of the world, rather than
on the other side of the office.
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And then, there's a sense of playfulness
about all of this stuff.
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Then we get into the contentious ones.
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Do unto others.
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Now, I know that social media
has got bullies, has got trolls,
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and there are bad people out there
who do bad things,
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but that's the stuff that gets reported.
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What doesn't get reported
are the million random acts of kindness
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which happen every day because of
that sense of generosity
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which is powering the learning.
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And similarly, for the last one.
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There's a high visibility about the
learning which is happening
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in the social space which isn't
being replicated, I would argue,
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in the formal learning space.
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Companies and universities
get very nervous about the learning
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being open to the rest of the world.
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But I think these six qualities
of social learning are
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the means by which those communities
develop a sense of agency.
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And I'd argue that we need to think
about how many of these
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we can bring in to our formal
learning programs.
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And it's really encouraging to see
the presentations that are scheduled
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for the next couple of days,
particularly the ones which
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are about peer learning.
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So they're the four kind of
common characteristics
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behind people-powered
innovation.
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I'm now, only got a couple of
minutes left, so let's just finish
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with perhaps three things
that we could do
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to develop more people-powered
innovation.
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First is don't be afraid of the pro-am.
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The poster boy these days
for the pro-am is this kid.
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Just put your hand up
if you recognize this kid.
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Oh, not many.
His name's Jack Andraka.
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When he was fifteen,
he came up with a biomarker
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for pancreatic cancer because
the need was there.
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A close member of his family died
of pancreatic cancer
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because it wasn't spotted early enough.
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So Jack came up, did all his research
on Google and Wikipedia.
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He calls them a teenager's best friends.
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And then he reached a point where
he needed lab space.
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So he wrote to 200 universities
in America
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and 199 of them turned him down.
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They couldn't see what a 15-year-old
could possibly tell them
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about pancreatic cancer, I mean,
he didn't even have a master's.
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So how would he possibly be able
to help them?
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Now fortunately, one did,
and that was Johns Hopkins.
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And it's ready to go into production now,
this biomarker.
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But here again, he's come up,
he's incredibly frustrated
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because he's come up against
regulatory framework
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which is not allowing this thing
to be made available
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because of the ridiculous clinical
trial system that we've got.
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And it's going to be five,
possibly ten years,
-
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before this is now made available.
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And as Jack says, "How many
more people are going to die
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"as a result of that?"
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So that's one,
don't be afraid of the pro-am,
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and obviously,
de-regulate where possible.
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Welcome those education hackers.
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But then finally, I think we've just
not got to be in denial about this.
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Since "Open" was published,
I've worked with a lot of companies
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and universities, and I go in
and I tell them about the risks
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of being dis-intermediated.
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But I sense this kind of collective
denial going on.
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And it's understandable because
for a long time,
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learners had nowhere else to go.
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And we've had a kind of monopoly
for the past hundred years or more,
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but the time to open up education
is here and it's now,
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and we have to involve users
in redefining what we do.
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So I began by talking about
my recent cancer treatment.
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And when I was first diagnosed, I had
my first meeting with the oncologist.
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And as you can imagine,
I had done a ton of research
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because I'm a hypochondriac,
I don't mind admitting it.
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The only consolation about
being a hypochondriac
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is that eventually you're proven right.
(audience laughs)
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So I was talking to the oncologist, and I
said, "What are the alternatives to surgery?"
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"What are going to be the side effects
of chemotherapy, if I have to have it?"
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And he was getting more and more
frustrated.
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I asked about holistic treatments.
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Eventually, he kind of snapped
at me, and he said,
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"Look, just have the surgery.
Don't overthink this."
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Now, when a doctor tells you
to not overthink it,
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I would strongly recommend you
find another doctor,
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because that's the kind of
Apple philosophy.
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You know, we've done
all the research and the design.
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You should just be grateful
that we're letting you buy it.
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But one of these forums that I was on,
the one I was telling you about
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that are operating kind of
on the boundaries,
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go on there regularly, and this oncologist
joined in on the conversation.
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And people woke up smart,
and they said,
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"But we never get professionals
coming on this forum."
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And the oncologist said, "Well,
it's really important
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"that this dialogue takes place."
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And I remember what he said.
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He said, "Those who seek answers
need to be part of this solution."
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So I hope you'll think how you
can bring more people-powered innovation
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into your own learning programs, and
enable people to be part of the solution.
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Thanks very much for listening.
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(applause)
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- David, thank you very much, indeed.
You're great, at 23 minutes,
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so thank you very much indeed
for making that happen.
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And some of these questions
actually will be applicable
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for Cory and for Ian as well, so you
may want to pick them up
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in your remarks too.
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But let me just reflect some of
the comments that we've been getting,
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and there you can see the address.
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I can take many more if you want.
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This one from Alejandro Molini.
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The shift to a new age of opportunity,
what exactly is this shift towards?
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- Well, I think that's a bigger question.
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That's a question that I asked myself when
I looked at the overall theme for today.
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But certainly as far as the thing that I
was talking about, for me
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it is the shift toward knowledge
is becoming more open.
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It's a curious kind of battle which is
constantly taking place
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cause I think Cory will be talking
to some extent about institutions
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and how they're making it difficult
for that knowledge to be shared.
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But I think what we've seen over
the past ten years, is a desire
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for people to have more control
over their lives,
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and the implication behind all that,
which is why I think dis-intermediation
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is such a powerful implication.
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If you're part of the music industry,
you never thought that you'd be done out.
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If you were a travel agent, you never
really thought that people
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would want to organize their
own holidays.
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If you're a taxi driver, you probably
didn't see Uber coming.
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But that to me is part of that shift.
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- What about this comment from
Maria Ebro?
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A very interesting talk, but how do
you ensure confidentiality?
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How do you balance control
versus innovation?
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- Yep, there is no easy answer to that.
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And when I talk about regulatory
frameworks, of course you wouldn't want
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to get on a plane and wonder if
the pilot was actually somebody
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who previously was sitting
in the back row.
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There are some needs for that
regulatory framework,
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but I think we've gone too far.
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And 23:47
Claude Almansi
Again, thanks a bunch, Cathy!
Best wishes for this year.
Cathy
Hi Claude,
I enjoy thinking that somebody will enjoy this video. It was a pretty cool one about innovation. I'm already innovating my children's educations by homeschooling them. YouTube and other online things are amazing tools for future education. Lynda.com is a great tool for adults to learn new career skills as well.
Happy 2016 to you too!
Claude Almansi
Hi again, Cathy,
Re home schooling your children: you could use one of non language "Metadata" tracks (not Metadata: audiodescription, though, that one is really useful for scripting audio descriptions) to ask questions synced with a video, and have your children answer there: it'll create awfully long pseudo-subtitles, but it doesn't matter.
Best
Claude