Now I'm going to start.
It is like this: Winged birds, toys, East, West, North, and so on things.
It has become an art form, a sculpture form.
Every Japanese child learns to fold paper cranes.
More importantly, he created a language - a way we can communicate, a code made up of points, broken marks, and arrows.
This is an origami work: One piece of paper, not cut, only folded, hundreds of times folded.
And this is origami, which shows where we have come in the modern world.
You can make horns, antlers - if you look close, hoofs.
This raises the question: What has changed?
What has changed is one thing you may not have expected in art, that is mathematics.
In other words, people apply mathematical principles to art to discover potential laws.
This has created a powerful tool.
The secret to productivity improvement in many areas - including origami - is to let the dead work for you.
This crease is a paper-shaped design
You can't draw a plan casually.
They must follow four simple rules.
They are very simple and easy to understand.
The first rule is the duality of coloring.
If you look at the angles around the crease, you will see that all the even-numbered angles add up to a straight line as they are surrounded in a circle.
All the angles listed as odd numbers add up to a straight line.
If we follow these rules, we can do amazing things.
Or it could be raised into a flag with 50 stars and 13 stripes (the American flag).
If you want to do something crazy, here's a rattlesnake with 1000 scales.
The work is on display downstairs, so you can have a chance to see it.
In the art of origami, the most useful method has to do with how we construct part of life.
I can explain it with a simple equation.
We came up with the idea that by combining it with a piece of paper, we could get a folded piece of paper.
Step 1: It's Simple.
Make an idea, draw a line diagram.
But we need to start from a very early age.
I can use it to make a leg, an arm, and everything similar.
There are also other ways to make flakes.
If you fold the sheet into smaller pieces, you will use less paper.
If you fold the sheet as fine as possible, you can use only the minimum amount of paper required by the sheet.
There are other ways to make flakes.
If you put a piece at the center of a piece of paper, you need a whole circle.
That is to say, no matter how folded, the sheet is made of a part of the circular area on the paper.
Because many people have studied the problem of combinatorial circles.
Then you make a general shape.
You get a folded shape, here, it's a cockroach.
You might ask, "How simple can that be?"
We find that we can stack insects, or similar spiders, things with feet, things with feet and wings, and things with feet and tentacles.
If it's not fun to stack a mantis with an uncut square paper, you can stack two mantis with an uncut square paper.
I call it dessert time.
In fact, many people in the origami art add their fingers to their models.
You can make a variety of objects.
Everything you'll see except the car is folded paper.
In one of the earliest applications, such a pattern, the origami pattern, was invented by Korean engineer Koryo Miura in Japan.
He used the technology to design the solar panel.
It was an artist's performance, but it was applied to a Japanese telescope in 1995.
Now there is only a little origami art in James Webb's Space Telescope, but it's very simple.
It's a very simple style, and you don't call it origami.
These scientists really don't have to discuss it with an origami artist.
But when you want to do more research, origami is necessary.
So the lens is as big as a football field.
No matter what you want to observe, how do you go into space?
You need a rocket.
How do you make a large piece of glass smaller?
So you have to do this, this little model.
But this style can't turn 100 meters into a few meters.
So they studied folding circles. We got in touch with origami artists, and I started working with them.
They used this style in the first generation of telescopes. The first generation was not 100 meters but 5 meters.
And it works well within its testing range, and it does have to be stacked in bundles.
Now, there are other types of origami used in space.
The problem that has been solved here is to make a very small, but very large, destination-like object on the journey.
The stent is folded with a folding paper. We call it a water bullet model.
Designers of airbags also face the same problem of crashing large slices into small spaces.
The algorithm we developed for stacking insects here has become a solution to the problem of airbags in simulation technology.
So designers can do this imitation.
Those are the creases of folding paper, and now all you see is the airbag that is breathing out and you know it doesn't work.
The heart surgery stent was derived from a paper balloon that everyone had learned in elementary school.
When you use mathematics to solve problems that you want to solve purely for aesthetic value or to create beauty, results can actually be applied in the real world as well.
And even if it sounds strange, origami may one day save one's life.
So plants and animals have evolved their own internal clocks, which enable them to adapt to changes in light.
If you grab a limulus from the beach, fly it to the other end of the continent, and place it in a slanting cage, which climbs to the top of the cage when the tide rises thousands of miles off its home coast.
This behavior will repeat for weeks until it gradually loses its judgment.
As far as humans are concerned, we call them biological clocks.
When you take someone's watch off and shut him up in a deep underground fort for a few months, you can see more clearly what a biological clock does.
In fact, volunteers did the experiment, and when they came out of the cave, they were a little confused about their time in the cave.
And, in this way, we know that they do this with their biological clocks, not some way of perceiving the outside sun.
It is also a great driver of culture, and I think it is one of the most underrated forces in our actions.
What, then, should our natural rhythm be?
What is our ideal sleep pattern?
Well, it turns out that people sleep twice a night when they live in an environment with no artificial light at all.
People go to bed around 8 p. m.
Until midnight, then go to sleep again, from about 2 a.m. until sunrise.
The sea is a very complex thing.
Human health is also a very complex matter.
But what I would like to try to say is that even in such a complex situation there are topics that I think are simple and that if we can understand, they are easy to move forward.
These simple topics are not really about how the complex science has evolved, but about what happens to us all.
If Mom isn't happy, don't everyone want to be happy.
We are getting angry with the sea in many different ways.
Pollution comes from the financial benefits of the community.
Because when ecologists look at the oceans, they see the interrelationships.
The flow of life from the bottom to the top is the concern of ecologists.
Some of the pollutants we make, such as the PCB molecule, a carcinogen, cannot be absorbed by our bodies.
Then, in order to get a thorough understanding of the problem, I would like to invite you to play a little game
Imagine when we boarded the ship, we both got two Polaron peanuts.
The mechanism in the game allows people to do nothing but get a growing pile of indigestible Polaron peanuts.
This is the same as the accumulation of PDB molecules (p-dichlorene, chemical synthetic agents, cancer-causing agents) in the food chain.
Well, some of us will eat chocolate instead of giving it to someone else.
In this way there will be no accumulation, they will only circulate in the crowd but not in the crowd.
PCB molecules enter the food chain.
Dolphins get PCB molecules from plankton, and these fat-soluble PCB molecules are concentrated in dolphins.
Through breast milk.
This is a chart of PCB content in dolphins in Sarasota Bay.
Adult males have a large body mass.
There are also large amounts of young dolphins.
Female levels were slightly lower after the first breast feeding.
Female dolphins don't want to do this.
They transmit PCB molecules to their offspring through fat in the milk.
The mothers delivered all the pollutants to their first offspring.
Most of them will die.
Now female dolphins can continue to breed, but it is too expensive to enrich the animals - at the expense of the deaths of their first offspring.
Obviously, this top predator is us.
We also eat meat from the same places.
This proves that many dolphins are sold as meat in whale meat markets around the world.
The toxin is between two and three times as much as the EPA has ever allowed.
For the first time in my scientific career, I broke the scientific agreement, making data and publishing it in science magazines, and then talking about them.
We wrote a very polite letter to the Minister of Health of Japan and simply stated that it was not an intolerable situation for us, but for the Japanese people.
At this point, I'm really proud to say that it's hard to buy anything in Japan. It's a wrong label, even if they're still selling whale meat, and I don't think they should.
But at least the label is right and you won't buy toxic dolphin meat again.
Not only Japan, but in some countries, where the natural food chain is in northern Canada, and in the United States and northern Europe, the natural food chain of seals and whales has led to the accumulation of PCB molecules from all parts of the world to women.
These women's milk is poisonous.
Here's the end of the story: Red tides, which contain a lot of toxic algae, can cause mental damage by floating red tides on the ocean.
How many people have seen the "coast ban" sign?
It's sewage that usually bothers us.
It is also a question of how marine organisms enter human diseases.
Vibrio and bacteria do infect humans.
For example, surfers know this very well.
If you log on to some surf sites, you can actually see not only the waves and weather, but also some surfers' websites, and there are flickering warnings.
Reproduction produces other chemicals.
This is a list of several toxic substances that illustrate the hazards of these toxic algae: Shellfish venom, dysentery venom - neurotoxic shellfish venom, paralytic shellfish venom - that you don't want to know.
Rita Cavel's successful pursuit of an interesting story is about humans infected with cholera, not by normal people but by a marine radial foot.
What should we do?
There's a lot of things to do.
At first I showed the extent to which the ecosystem along the Monterrey coast has been destroyed because of pollution and the problems associated with canning plants.
The canning factory moved away, and so did the pollution.
They need a well-functioning pyramid food chain from bottom to bottom.
This ideological shift has led to great changes, not only changing the fate of Monterrey Bay, but also affecting the rest of the world.
But the food chain of marine life is closely linked to our terrestrial life.
Only by keeping the oceans healthy can we ensure our own health.
Forrest North: Any cooperation starts with a conversation
Once I drove a land sail across a Nevada desert.
FN: And I also have a very dangerous invention
This is a 100,000-volt Tesla transformer that I got out of my bedroom, and my mother is very angry about it
FN: My passion for clean energy finally came to fruition. I once drove a solar car across Australia
And the United States and Japan
Really do a fully intelligent product out of an ox X thing
Can you bring out our baby now?
It can reach 150 miles an hour
It's great to work with Yves Behar
We only have three minutes, though
I realize that few adults around me can withstand the trauma of war and seldom rebuild a normal, comforting, happy life because their jobs, families, and security are lost because of war
That time I went to a ski resort in Switzerland without a cent I was going there. The snow had melted away. I had no money to go to the movies. But I read in the paper that there was going to be a lecture place in downtown Zurich
The speech that night was very interesting
He did not talk about the green-skinned aliens He talked about how the hearts of Europeans had been traumatized by World War II, so he amused himself with flying saucers. He also said that Mandaro was thrown into the sky after the war in ancient India to re-establish order
But per capita income over the same period has more than tripled -- and inflation has been taken into account
The lack of basic living materials leads to unhappiness but the sustained growth of material wealth does not lead to greater happiness
My conversation with him lasts up to 40 pages
It depicts the composer's feelings when he writes music
Interestingly, when we think of those civilizations that are generally regarded as the pinnacle of human civilization, whether in China, Greece, India or Maya, or Egypt, we hear stories about their ecstasy rather than the details of their daily lives
This man doesn't have to go to a place like this one in ancient Greece. It's also a place of revelry
But that doesn't mean we have to go there
As long as he started to really write like Jennifer's improvisation, he entered a new reality and went into rapture
He himself said that his hands seemed to be able to move involuntarily
There is a near truth in the field of creative research that it is impossible to produce such miracles without a decade of accumulation
It takes such a long time for mathematics and music to attain a new sublimation
Once such a thing happened he said that music seemed to flow.
It is happening in different areas
I recently wrote a book that also mentioned examples of Good Business. I interviewed some of the company's executives who thought they were very successful and that they were very ethical and socially responsible
The first thing is that concentration is going to go to a certain level of euphoria and sobriety. You know exactly what you're going to do next because you can get instant feedback
For each participant, we can find a middle line, the middle line in the chart
That's the average challenge, the difficulty, the skill proficiency. This will be different from everyone else
What you do may be very different from what others do, but for everyone, the flow usually occurs when you do something you really love, such as playing the piano, staying with your friends, or even working if you can feel the flow at work
It's good to wake up because you still have a big challenge at that point
Getting into the "flow" from there will increase the level of challenge
Other combinations of challenges and skills will become increasingly negative.
The main cause of this emotion is watching TV, followed by squatting in the toilet.
So the question we have to ask is how to make our lives more mobile.
We are slowly unraveling the secret.
Some of you know how to do it, even if I don't give you any hint, but most of you don't.
One of our tasks is to help people find ways to do things.
I hope everyone knows which side we are on
Rockefeller called it a "benevolent cause."
Make philanthropy a long-lasting, open, fast-growing, interconnected system.
Such a spirit of entrepreneurship is now emerging from every aspect.
I hope I can share some of the most interesting stories that may be happening to you
I have to point out that I'm not going to talk about big philanthropy. A lot of people here have already talked about what Gates, Soros and Google are doing
It is also an era in which ordinary people have more power than people in history
But you must remember that charity is an act of giving time and energy, not money
Clay Shiirky, a well-known internet logger, is a wonderful record of the new opportunities brought about by changing times
'the people in the world we live do big things for love to do small things to make money, 'he said
The whole human race, as an organism, is working together to meet today's challenges
Of course, not all of these big pursuits mentioned above will succeed easily.
The second category is charity on-line
It challenges another idea that philanthropy is simply something the rich can afford
The next time you need wedding gifts or holiday gifts, check out the Changing the Present website, launched by a TED participant.
The third category is a pooled contribution represented by Buffett.
What you see here is not just Buffett's generosity, especially when you see him donating most of his money to the Gates Foundation
What these funds mean to the charity sector is what investment funds, private investment and common capital mean to the investment sector.
But there is a very ingenious place to be, because many times the community revolves around these funds, and this has happened in Acumen and elsewhere
