A delightful way to teach kids about computers | Linda Liukas

254,093 views ・ 2016-02-24

TED


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Code is the next universal language.
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In the seventies, it was punk music that drove the whole generation.
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In the eighties, it was probably money.
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But for my generation of people,
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software is the interface to our imagination and our world.
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And that means that we need
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a radically, radically more diverse set of people
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to build those products,
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to not see computers as mechanical and lonely and boring and magic,
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to see them as things that they can tinker
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and turn around and twist, and so forth.
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My personal journey into the world of programming and technology
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started at the tender age of 14.
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I had this mad teenage crush on an older man,
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and the older man in question just happened to be
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the then Vice President of the United States, Mr. Al Gore.
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And I did what every single teenage girl would want to do.
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I wanted to somehow express all of this love,
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so I built him a website, it's over here.
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And in 2001, there was no Tumblr,
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there was no Facebook, there was no Pinterest.
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So I needed to learn to code
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in order to express all of this longing and loving.
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And that is how programming started for me.
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It started as a means of self-expression.
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Just like when I was smaller, I would use crayons and legos.
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And when I was older, I would use guitar lessons and theater plays.
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But then, there were other things to get excited about,
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like poetry and knitting socks
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and conjugating French irregular verbs
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and coming up with make-believe worlds
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and Bertrand Russell and his philosophy.
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And I started to be one of those people
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who felt that computers are boring and technical and lonely.
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Here's what I think today.
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Little girls don't know that they are not supposed to like computers.
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Little girls are amazing.
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They are really, really good at concentrating on things
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and being exact and they ask amazing questions like,
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"What?" and "Why?" and "How?" and "What if?"
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And they don't know that they are not supposed to like computers.
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It's the parents who do.
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It's us parents who feel
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like computer science is this esoteric, weird science discipline
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that only belongs to the mystery makers.
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That it's almost as far removed from everyday life
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as, say, nuclear physics.
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And they are partly right about that.
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There's a lot of syntax and controls and data structures
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and algorithms and practices,
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protocols and paradigms in programming.
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And we as a community, we've made computers smaller and smaller.
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We've built layers and layers of abstraction on top of each other
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between the man and the machine
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to the point that we no longer have any idea how computers work
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or how to talk to them.
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And we do teach our kids how the human body works,
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we teach them how the combustion engine functions
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and we even tell them that if you want to really be an astronaut
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you can become one.
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But when the kid comes to us and asks,
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"So, what is a bubble sort algorithm?"
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Or, "How does the computer know what happens when I press 'play,'
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how does it know which video to show?"
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Or, "Linda, is Internet a place?"
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We adults, we grow oddly silent.
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"It's magic," some of us say.
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"It's too complicated," the others say.
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Well, it's neither.
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It's not magic and it's not complicated.
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It all just happened really, really, really fast.
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Computer scientists built these amazing, beautiful machines,
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but they made them very, very foreign to us,
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and also the language we speak to the computers
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so that we don't know how to speak to the computers anymore
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without our fancy user interfaces.
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And that's why no one recognized
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that when I was conjugating French irregular verbs,
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I was actually practicing my pattern recognition skills.
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And when I was excited about knitting,
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I actually was following a sequence of symbolic commands
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that included loops inside of them.
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And that Bertrand Russell's lifelong quest
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to find an exact language between English and mathematics
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found its home inside of a computer.
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I was a programmer, but no one knew it.
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The kids of today, they tap, swipe and pinch their way through the world.
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But unless we give them tools to build with computers,
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we are raising only consumers instead of creators.
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This whole quest led me to this little girl.
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Her name is Ruby, she is six years old.
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She is completely fearless, imaginative and a little bit bossy.
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And every time I would run into a problem
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in trying to teach myself programming like,
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"What is object-oriented design or what is garbage collection?",
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I would try to imagine how a six-year-old little girl would explain the problem.
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And I wrote a book about her and I illustrated it
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and the things Ruby taught me go like this.
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Ruby taught me that you're not supposed to be afraid
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of the bugs under your bed.
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And even the biggest of the problems
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are a group of tiny problems stuck together.
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And Ruby also introduced me to her friends,
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the colorful side of the Internet culture.
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She has friends like the Snow Leopard,
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who is beautiful but doesn't want to play with the other kids.
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And she has friends like the green robots that are really friendly but super messy.
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And she has friends like Linux the penguin
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who's really ruthlessly efficient, but somewhat hard to understand.
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And idealistic foxes, and so on.
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In Ruby's world, you learn technology through play.
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And, for instance, computers are really good at repeating stuff,
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so the way Ruby would teach loops goes like this.
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This is Ruby's favorite dance move, it goes, "Clap, clap, stomp, stomp
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clap, clap and jump."
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And you learn counter loops by repeating that four times.
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And you learn while loops by repeating that sequence
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while I'm standing on one leg.
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And you learn until loops by repeating that sequence
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until mom gets really mad.
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(Laughter)
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And most of all, you learn that there are no ready answers.
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When coming up with the curriculum for Ruby's world,
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I needed to really ask the kids how they see the world
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and what kind of questions they have
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and I would organize play testing sessions.
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I would start by showing the kids these four pictures.
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I would show them a picture of a car,
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a grocery store, a dog and a toilet.
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And I would ask, "Which one of these do you think is a computer?"
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And the kids would be very conservative and go,
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"None of these is a computer.
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I know what a computer is:
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it's that glowing box
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in front of which mom or dad spends way too much time."
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But then we would talk
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and we would discover that actually, a car is a computer,
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it has a navigation system inside of it.
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And a dog -- a dog might not be a computer,
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but it has a collar
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and the collar might have a computer inside of it.
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And grocery stores, they have so many different kinds of computers,
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like the cashier system and the burglar alarms.
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And kids, you know what?
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In Japan, toilets are computers
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and there's even hackers who hack them.
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(Laughter)
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And we go further
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and I give them these little stickers with an on/off button on them.
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And I tell the kids, "Today you have this magic ability
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to make anything in this room into a computer."
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And again, the kids go,
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"Sounds really hard, I don't know the right answer for this."
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But I tell them, "Don't worry,
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your parents don't know the right answer, either.
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They've just started to hear about this thing
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called The Internet of Things.
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But you kids, you are going to be the ones
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who are really going to live up in a world where everything is a computer."
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And then I had this little girl who came to me
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and took a bicycle lamp
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and she said, "This bicycle lamp, if it were a computer,
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it would change colors."
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And I said, "That's a really good idea, what else could it do?"
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And she thinks and she thinks,
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and she goes, "If this bicycle lamp were a computer,
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we could go on a biking trip with my father
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and we would sleep in a tent
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and this biking lamp could also be a movie projector."
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And that's the moment I'm looking for,
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the moment when the kid realizes
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that the world is definitely not ready yet,
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that a really awesome way of making the world more ready
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is by building technology
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and that each one of us can be a part of that change.
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Final story, we also built a computer.
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And we got to know the bossy CPU and the helpful RAM and ROM
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that help it remember things.
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And after we've assembled our computer together,
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we also design an application for it.
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And my favorite story is this little boy,
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he's six years old
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and his favorite thing in the world is to be an astronaut.
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And the boy, he has these huge headphones on
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and he's completely immersed in his tiny paper computer
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because you see, he's built his own
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intergalactic planetary navigation application.
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And his father, the lone astronaut in the Martian orbit,
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is on the other side of the room
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and the boy's important mission
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is to bring the father safely back to earth.
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And these kids are going to have a profoundly different view of the world
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and the way we build it with technology.
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Finally, the more approachable, the more inclusive,
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and the more diverse we make the world of technology,
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the more colorful and better the world will look like.
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So, imagine with me, for a moment,
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a world where the stories we tell
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about how things get made don't only include
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the twentysomething-year-old Silicon Valley boys,
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but also Kenyan schoolgirls and Norwegian librarians.
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Imagine a world where the little Ada Lovelaces of tomorrow,
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who live in a permanent reality of 1s and 0s,
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they grow up to be very optimistic and brave about technology.
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They embrace the powers and the opportunities
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and the limitations of the world.
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A world of technology that is wonderful, whimsical
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and a tiny bit weird.
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When I was a girl,
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I wanted to be a storyteller.
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I loved make-believe worlds
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and my favorite thing to do
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was to wake up in the mornings in Moominvalley.
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In the afternoons, I would roam around the Tatooines.
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And in the evenings, I would go to sleep in Narnia.
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And programming turned out to be the perfect profession for me.
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I still create worlds.
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Instead of stories, I do them with code.
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Programming gives me this amazing power
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to build my whole little universe
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with its own rules and paradigms and practices.
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Create something out of nothing with the pure power of logic.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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