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Why you should make useless things

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    (Exhaling)
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    Hello.
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    My name is Simone.
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    You know how people tell you
    if you get nervous when onstage,
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    picture people in the audience naked?
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    Like it's this thing that's supposed
    to make you feel better.
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    But I was thinking --
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    picturing all of you naked in 2018
    feels kind of weird and wrong.
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    Like, we're working really hard
    on moving past stuff like that,
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    so we need a new method of dealing with
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    if you get nervous onstage.
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    And I realized that what I'd really like
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    is that I can look at you
    as much as you're looking at me --
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    just to even things out a little bit.
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    So if I had way more eyeballs,
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    then we'd all be
    really comfortable, right?
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    So in preparation for this talk,
    I made myself a shirt.
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    (Rummaging)
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    (Laughter)
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    It's googly eyes.
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    It took me 14 hours
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    and 227 googly eyes to make this shirt.
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    And being able to look at you
    as much as you're looking at me
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    is actually only half
    of the reason I made this.
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    The other half is being able to do this.
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    (Googly eyes rattle)
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    (Laughter)
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    So I do a lot of things like this.
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    I see a problem and I invent
    some sort of solution to it.
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    For example, brushing your teeth.
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    Like, it's this thing we all have to do,
    it's kind of boring
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    and nobody really likes it.
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    If there were any
    seven-year-olds in the audience,
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    they'd be like, "Yes!"
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    So what about if you had
    a machine that could do it for you?
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    (Laughter)
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    I call it ...
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    I call it "The Toothbrush Helmet."
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    (Laughter)
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    (Robot arm buzzing)
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    So my toothbrush helmet is recommended
    by zero out of 10 dentists
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    and it definitely did not
    revolutionize the world of dentistry,
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    but it did completely change my life
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    because I finished making this toothbrush
    helmet three years ago
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    and after I finished making it,
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    I went into my living room
    and I put up a camera,
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    and I filmed a seven-second
    clip of it working.
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    And by now,
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    this is a pretty standard
    modern-day fairy tale
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    of girl posting on the internet,
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    the internet takes the girl by storm,
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    thousands of men voyage
    into the comment sections
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    to ask for her hand in marriage --
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    (Laughter)
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    She ignores all of them,
    starts a YouTube channel
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    and keeps on building robots.
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    Since then, I've carved out this little
    niche for myself on the internet
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    as an inventor of useless machines,
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    because as we all know,
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    the easiest way
    to be at the top of your field
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    is to choose a very small field.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    So I run a YouTube channel
    about my machines
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    and I've done things
    like cutting hair with drones --
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    (Drone buzzes)
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    (Laughter)
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    (Drone crashes)
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    (Laughter)
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    (Drone buzzes)
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    To a machine that helps me
    wake up in the morning --
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    (Alarm)
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    (Laughter)
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    (Video) Simone: Ow!
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    To this machine
    that helps me chop vegetables.
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    (Knives chop)
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    I'm not an engineer.
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    I did not study engineering in school.
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    But I was a super ambitious
    student growing up.
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    In middle school and high school
    I had straight A's
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    and I graduated at the top of my year.
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    On the flip side of that,
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    I struggled with very severe
    performance anxiety.
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    Here's an email I sent
    to my brother around that time.
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    "You won't understand
    how difficult it is for me to tell you,
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    to confess this.
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    I'm so freaking embarrassed.
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    I don't want people
    to think that I'm stupid.
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    Now I'm starting to cry too.
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    Damn."
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    And no, I did not accidentally burn
    our parents' house down.
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    The thing I'm writing about in the email
    and the thing I'm so upset about
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    is that I got a B on a math test.
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    So something obviously happened
    between here and here.
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    (Laughter)
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    One of those things was puberty.
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    (Laughter)
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    Beautiful time indeed.
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    But moreover,
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    I got interested in building robots
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    and I wanted to teach myself
    about hardware.
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    But building things with hardware,
    especially if you're teaching yourself,
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    is something that's really
    difficult to do.
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    It has a high likelihood of failure
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    and moreover,
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    it has a high likelihood
    of making you feel stupid.
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    And that was my biggest fear at the time.
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    So I came up with a setup that would
    guarantee success 100 percent of the time.
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    With my setup, it would be
    nearly impossible to fail.
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    And that was that instead
    of trying to succeed,
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    I was going to try to build
    things that would fail.
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    And even though I didn't
    realize it at the time,
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    building stupid things
    was actually quite smart,
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    because as I kept on
    learning about hardware,
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    for the first time in my life,
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    I did not have to deal
    with my performance anxiety.
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    And as soon as I removed
    all pressure and expectations from myself,
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    that pressure quickly
    got replaced by enthusiasm
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    and it allowed me to just play.
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    So as an inventor,
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    I'm interested in things
    that people struggle with.
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    It can be small things or big things
    or medium-sized things
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    and something like giving a TED talk
    presents this whole new set of problems
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    that I can solve.
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    And identifying a problem
    is the first step in my process
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    of building a useless machine.
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    So before I came here,
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    I sat down and I thought of some
    of the potential problems I might have
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    in giving this talk.
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    Forgetting what to say.
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    That people won't laugh --
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    that's you --
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    or even worse,
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    that you'll laugh at the wrong things --
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    that was an OK part to laugh at,
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    thank you.
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    (Laughter)
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    Or that when I get nervous,
    my hands start shaking
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    and I'm really self-conscious about it.
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    Or that my fly has been
    open this entire time
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    and all of you noticed but I didn't,
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    but it's closed so we're
    all good on that one.
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    But one thing I'm actually really
    nervous about is my hands shaking.
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    I remember when I was a kid,
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    giving presentations in school,
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    I would have my notes on a piece of paper
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    and I would put a notebook
    behind the paper
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    so that people wouldn't be able
    to see the paper quivering.
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    And I give a lot of talks.
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    I know that about half of you
    in the audience are probably like,
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    "Building useless machines is really fun,
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    but how is this in any way
    or form a business?"
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    And giving talks is a part of it.
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    And the arrangers always put out
    a glass of water for you onstage
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    so you have something to drink
    if you get thirsty,
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    and I always so badly
    want to drink that water,
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    but I don't dare to pick the glass up,
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    because then people might be able
    to see that my hands are shaking.
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    So what about a machine
    that hands you a glass of water?
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    Sold to the nervous girl
    in the googly-eye shirt.
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    Actually, I need to take this off
    because I have a thing --
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    (Googly eyes rattle)
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    Oh.
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    (Clanking)
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    (Laughter)
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    I still don't know what to call this,
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    but I think some sort of
    "head orbit device,"
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    because it rotates
    this platform around you
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    and you can put anything on it.
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    You can have a camera;
    you can get photos of your entire head.
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    Like it's really --
    it's a very versatile machine.
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    (Laughter)
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    OK, and I have --
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    I mean, you can put
    some snacks on it, for example,
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    if you want to.
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    I have some popcorn here.
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    And you just put a little bit like that.
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    And then you want to --
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    there's some sacrifices for science --
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    just some popcorn falling on the floor.
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    Let's do the long way around.
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    (Robot buzzes)
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    (Laughter)
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    And then you have a little hand.
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    You need to adjust the height of it,
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    and you just do it by shrugging.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    It has a little hand.
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    (Hand thwacks)
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    I just bumped my mic off,
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    but I think we're all good.
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    OK, also I need to chew this popcorn,
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    so if you guys could
    just clap your hands a little bit more --
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    (Applause)
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    OK, so it's like your own
    little personal solar system,
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    because I'm a millennial,
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    so I want everything to revolve around me.
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    (Laughter)
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    Back to the glass of water,
    that's what we're here for.
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    So, I promise -- I mean, it still has --
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    it doesn't have any water in it,
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    I'm sorry.
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    But I still need to work
    on this machine a little bit
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    because I still need to pick up the glass
    and put it on the platform,
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    but if your hands
    are shaking a little bit,
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    nobody's going to notice
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    because you're wearing
    a very mesmerizing piece of equipment.
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    So, we're all good.
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    OK.
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    (Robot buzzes)
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    (Singing)
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    Oh no, it got stuck.
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    Isn't it comforting that even robots
    sometimes get stage fright?
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    It just gets stuck a little bit.
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    It's very human of them.
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    Oh wait, let's go back a little bit,
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    and then --
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    (Glass falls)
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    (Laughter)
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    Isn't it a beautiful time to be alive?
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    So as much as my machines can seem
    like simple engineering slapstick,
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    I realized that I stumbled
    on something bigger than that.
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    It's this expression of joy and humility
    that often gets lost in engineering,
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    and for me it was a way
    to learn about hardware
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    without having my performance
    anxiety get in the way.
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    I often get asked if I think I'm ever
    going to build something useful,
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    and maybe someday I will.
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    But the way I see it,
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    I already have
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    because I've built myself this job
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    and it's something that I could
    never have planned for,
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    or that I could --
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    (Applause)
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    It's something that I could
    never have planned for.
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    Instead it happened just because
    I was enthusiastic about what I was doing
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    and I was sharing that enthusiasm
    with other people.
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    To me that's the true beauty
    of making useless things,
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    because it's this acknowledgment
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    that you don't always know
    what the best answer is.
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    And it turns off that voice in your head
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    that tells you that you know
    exactly how the world works.
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    And maybe a toothbrush helmet
    isn't the answer,
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    but at least you're asking the question.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why you should make useless things
Speaker:
Simone Giertz
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:57

English subtitles

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