to fill a large part of your life and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work and
Steve Jobs Stanford Commencement 2005 · Stanford
8 examples from real videos — listen, replay, loop.
to fill a large part of your life and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work and
Steve Jobs Stanford Commencement 2005 · Stanford
to fill a large part of your life and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work and
Steve Jobs Stanford Commencement 2005 · Stanford
They think of people as consumers with social needs that can be satisfied by machines. They think it's good to free people from
How Screens Stole Childhood — and How to Get It Back | Jonathan Haidt | TED · TED
that's actually linked to less loneliness and is something that actually makes us feel more satisfied in our relationships. So if we want to have deep virtual connections, it's certainly possible.
The Secret to Making New Friends as an Adult | Marisa G. Franco | TED · TED
that people that are involved with AI romantic companions feel emotionally satisfied. Now, isn't that as good as the real thing?
The AI-Generated Intimacy Crisis | Bryony Cole | TED · TED
And all these gave rise to intelligence. Today, we're no longer satisfied with just nature's gift of visual intelligence. Curiosity urges us to create machines to see just as intelligently as we can,
With Spatial Intelligence, AI Will Understand the Real World | Fei-Fei Li | TED · TED
That takes marketing your services, negotiating contracts, building a network of satisfied clients, and a whole set of administrative skills like project management,
What is a gig economy?
some work that needs to be done in order to achieve it. Ideally you would not be satisfied until you'd actually done the work. But when you tell someone your goal and they acknowledge it,
Keep your goals to yourself | Derek Sivers
the couples then entered individual tents to do whatever they wanted. When satisfied, they could press a button
A Firework Ladder to the Sky — and the Magic of Explosive Art | Cai Guo-Qiang | TED · TED