Kevin Kelly: The next 5,000 days of the web

211,099 views ・ 2008-07-29

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:16
The Internet, the Web as we know it,
0
16160
2000
00:18
the kind of Web -- the things we're all talking about --
1
18160
3000
00:21
is already less than 5,000 days old.
2
21160
4000
00:25
So all of the things that we've seen come about,
3
25160
4000
00:29
starting, say, with satellite images of the whole Earth,
4
29160
3000
00:32
which we couldn't even imagine happening before,
5
32160
3000
00:35
all these things rolling into our lives,
6
35160
4000
00:39
just this abundance of things that are right before us,
7
39160
5000
00:44
sitting in front of our laptop, or our desktop.
8
44160
2000
00:46
This kind of cornucopia of stuff
9
46160
2000
00:48
just coming and never ending is amazing, and we're not amazed.
10
48160
6000
00:54
It's really amazing that all this stuff is here.
11
54160
4000
00:58
(Laughter)
12
58160
1000
00:59
It's in 5,000 days, all this stuff has come.
13
59160
4000
01:03
And I know that 10 years ago,
14
63160
3000
01:06
if I had told you that this was all coming,
15
66160
2000
01:08
you would have said that that's impossible.
16
68160
3000
01:11
There's simply no economic model that that would be possible.
17
71160
5000
01:16
And if I told you it was all coming for free,
18
76160
2000
01:18
you would say, this is simply -- you're dreaming.
19
78160
2000
01:20
You're a Californian utopian. You're a wild-eyed optimist.
20
80160
4000
01:24
And yet it's here.
21
84160
2000
01:26
The other thing that we know about it was that 10 years ago,
22
86160
4000
01:30
as I looked at what even Wired was talking about,
23
90160
3000
01:33
we thought it was going to be TV, but better.
24
93160
3000
01:36
That was the model. That was what everybody was suggesting
25
96160
4000
01:40
was going to be coming.
26
100160
2000
01:42
And it turns out that that's not what it was.
27
102160
3000
01:45
First of all, it was impossible, and it's not what it was.
28
105160
3000
01:48
And so one of the things that I think we're learning --
29
108160
1000
01:49
if you think about, like, Wikipedia,
30
109160
2000
01:51
it's something that was simply impossible.
31
111160
2000
01:53
It's impossible in theory, but possible in practice.
32
113160
4000
01:57
And if you take all these things that are impossible,
33
117160
1000
01:58
I think one of the things that we're learning from this era,
34
118160
4000
02:02
from this last decade, is that we have to get good at believing in the impossible,
35
122160
4000
02:06
because we're unprepared for it.
36
126160
3000
02:09
So, I'm curious about what's going to happen in the next 5,000 days.
37
129160
3000
02:12
But if that's happened in the last 5,000 days,
38
132160
2000
02:14
what's going to happen in the next 5,000 days?
39
134160
3000
02:17
So, I have a kind of a simple story,
40
137160
3000
02:20
and it suggests that what we want to think about is this thing that we're making,
41
140160
3000
02:23
this thing that has happened in 5,000 days --
42
143160
2000
02:25
that's all these computers, all these handhelds,
43
145160
3000
02:28
all these cell phones, all these laptops, all these servers --
44
148160
4000
02:32
basically what we're getting out of all these connections
45
152160
4000
02:36
is we're getting one machine.
46
156160
2000
02:38
If there is only one machine, and our little handhelds and devices
47
158160
4000
02:42
are actually just little windows into those machines,
48
162160
2000
02:44
but that we're basically constructing a single, global machine.
49
164160
6000
02:50
And so I began to think about that.
50
170160
2000
02:52
And it turned out that this machine happens to be
51
172160
3000
02:55
the most reliable machine that we've ever made.
52
175160
3000
02:58
It has not crashed; it's running uninterrupted.
53
178160
2000
03:00
And there's almost no other machine that we've ever made
54
180160
3000
03:03
that runs the number of hours, the number of days.
55
183160
4000
03:07
5,000 days without interruption -- that's just unbelievable.
56
187160
3000
03:10
And of course, the Internet is longer than just 5,000 days;
57
190160
2000
03:12
the Web is only 5,000 days.
58
192160
2000
03:14
So, I was trying to basically make measurements.
59
194160
6000
03:20
What are the dimensions of this machine?
60
200160
3000
03:23
And I started off by calculating how many billions of clicks there are
61
203160
4000
03:27
all around the globe on all the computers.
62
207160
3000
03:30
And there is a 100 billion clicks per day.
63
210160
2000
03:32
And there's 55 trillion links between all the Web pages of the world.
64
212160
6000
03:38
And so I began thinking more about other kinds of dimensions,
65
218160
3000
03:41
and I made a quick list. Was it Chris Jordan, the photographer,
66
221160
5000
03:46
talking about numbers being so large that they're meaningless?
67
226160
4000
03:50
Well, here's a list of them. They're hard to tell,
68
230160
2000
03:52
but there's one billion PC chips on the Internet,
69
232160
4000
03:56
if you count all the chips in all the computers on the Internet.
70
236160
2000
03:58
There's two million emails per second.
71
238160
2000
04:00
So it's a very big number.
72
240160
2000
04:02
It's just a huge machine,
73
242160
2000
04:04
and it uses five percent of the global electricity on the planet.
74
244160
4000
04:08
So here's the specifications,
75
248160
1000
04:09
just as if you were to make up a spec sheet for it:
76
249160
2000
04:11
170 quadrillion transistors, 55 trillion links,
77
251160
4000
04:15
emails running at two megahertz itself,
78
255160
2000
04:17
31 kilohertz text messaging,
79
257160
3000
04:20
246 exabyte storage. That's a big disk.
80
260160
4000
04:24
That's a lot of storage, memory. Nine exabyte RAM.
81
264160
3000
04:27
And the total traffic on this
82
267160
4000
04:31
is running at seven terabytes per second.
83
271160
3000
04:34
Brewster was saying the Library of Congress is about twenty terabytes.
84
274160
3000
04:37
So every second, half of the Library of Congress
85
277160
3000
04:40
is swooshing around in this machine. It's a big machine.
86
280160
4000
04:44
So I did something else. I figured out 100 billion clicks per day,
87
284160
4000
04:48
55 trillion links is almost the same
88
288160
3000
04:51
as the number of synapses in your brain.
89
291160
2000
04:53
A quadrillion transistors is almost the same
90
293160
2000
04:55
as the number of neurons in your brain.
91
295160
2000
04:57
So to a first approximation, we have these things --
92
297160
3000
05:00
twenty petahertz synapse firings.
93
300160
2000
05:02
Of course, the memory is really huge.
94
302160
2000
05:04
But to a first approximation, the size of this machine is the size --
95
304160
6000
05:10
and its complexity, kind of -- to your brain.
96
310160
5000
05:15
Because in fact, that's how your brain works -- in kind of the same way that the Web works.
97
315160
4000
05:19
However, your brain isn't doubling every two years.
98
319160
4000
05:23
So if we say this machine right now that we've made
99
323160
5000
05:28
is about one HB, one human brain,
100
328160
3000
05:31
if we look at the rate that this is increasing,
101
331160
3000
05:34
30 years from now, there'll be six billion HBs.
102
334160
5000
05:39
So by the year 2040, the total processing of this machine
103
339160
4000
05:43
will exceed a total processing power of humanity,
104
343160
3000
05:46
in raw bits and stuff. And this is, I think, where
105
346160
3000
05:49
Ray Kurzweil and others get this little chart saying that we're going to cross.
106
349160
5000
05:54
So, what about that? Well, here's a couple of things.
107
354160
6000
06:00
I have three kind of general things
108
360160
3000
06:03
I would like to say, three consequences of this.
109
363160
4000
06:07
First, that basically what this machine is doing is embodying.
110
367160
5000
06:12
We're giving it a body. And that's what we're going to do
111
372160
2000
06:14
in the next 5,000 days -- we're going to give this machine a body.
112
374160
3000
06:17
And the second thing is, we're going to restructure its architecture.
113
377160
3000
06:20
And thirdly, we're going to become completely codependent upon it.
114
380160
4000
06:24
So let me go through those three things.
115
384160
2000
06:26
First of all, we have all these things in our hands.
116
386160
3000
06:29
We think they're all separate devices,
117
389160
2000
06:31
but in fact, every screen in the world
118
391160
3000
06:34
is looking into the one machine.
119
394160
3000
06:37
These are all basically portals into that one machine.
120
397160
3000
06:40
The second thing is that -- some people call this the cloud,
121
400160
4000
06:44
and you're kind of touching the cloud with this.
122
404160
2000
06:46
And so in some ways, all you really need is a cloudbook.
123
406160
4000
06:50
And the cloudbook doesn't have any storage.
124
410160
3000
06:53
It's wireless. It's always connected.
125
413160
3000
06:56
There's many things about it. It becomes very simple,
126
416160
2000
06:58
and basically what you're doing is you're just touching the machine,
127
418160
2000
07:00
you're touching the cloud and you're going to compute that way.
128
420160
3000
07:03
So the machine is computing.
129
423160
2000
07:05
And in some ways, it's sort of back
130
425160
1000
07:06
to the kind of old idea of centralized computing.
131
426160
3000
07:09
But everything, all the cameras, and the microphones,
132
429160
4000
07:13
and the sensors in cars
133
433160
4000
07:17
and everything is connected to this machine.
134
437160
2000
07:19
And everything will go through the Web.
135
439160
2000
07:21
And we're seeing that already with, say, phones.
136
441160
2000
07:23
Right now, phones don't go through the Web,
137
443160
2000
07:25
but they are beginning to, and they will.
138
445160
3000
07:28
And if you imagine what, say, just as an example, what Google Labs has
139
448160
4000
07:32
in terms of experiments with Google Docs, Google Spreadsheets, blah, blah, blah --
140
452160
4000
07:36
all these things are going to become Web based.
141
456160
3000
07:39
They're going through the machine.
142
459160
2000
07:41
And I am suggesting that every bit will be owned by the Web.
143
461160
5000
07:46
Right now, it's not. If you do spreadsheets and things at work,
144
466160
3000
07:49
a Word document, they aren't on the Web,
145
469160
3000
07:52
but they are going to be. They're going to be part of this machine.
146
472160
2000
07:54
They're going to speak the Web language.
147
474160
2000
07:56
They're going to talk to the machine.
148
476160
2000
07:58
The Web, in some sense, is kind of like a black hole
149
478160
3000
08:01
that's sucking up everything into it.
150
481160
3000
08:04
And so every thing will be part of the Web.
151
484160
4000
08:08
So every item, every artifact that we make, will have embedded in it
152
488160
5000
08:13
some little sliver of Web-ness and connection,
153
493160
3000
08:16
and it will be part of this machine,
154
496160
2000
08:18
so that our environment -- kind of in that ubiquitous computing sense --
155
498160
3000
08:21
our environment becomes the Web. Everything is connected.
156
501160
5000
08:26
Now, with RFIDs and other things -- whatever technology it is,
157
506160
3000
08:29
it doesn't really matter. The point is that everything
158
509160
3000
08:32
will have embedded in it some sensor connecting it to the machine,
159
512160
3000
08:35
and so we have, basically, an Internet of things.
160
515160
3000
08:38
So you begin to think of a shoe as a chip with heels,
161
518160
4000
08:42
and a car as a chip with wheels,
162
522160
3000
08:45
because basically most of the cost of manufacturing cars
163
525160
3000
08:48
is the embedded intelligence and electronics in it, and not the materials.
164
528160
6000
08:54
A lot of people think about the new economy
165
534160
2000
08:56
as something that was going to be a disembodied,
166
536160
2000
08:58
alternative, virtual existence,
167
538160
3000
09:01
and that we would have the old economy of atoms.
168
541160
3000
09:04
But in fact, what the new economy really is
169
544160
3000
09:07
is the marriage of those two, where we embed the information,
170
547160
4000
09:11
and the digital nature of things into the material world.
171
551160
2000
09:13
That's what we're looking forward to. That is where we're going --
172
553160
4000
09:17
this union, this convergence of the atomic and the digital.
173
557160
7000
09:24
And so one of the consequences of that, I believe,
174
564160
2000
09:26
is that where we have this sort of spectrum of media right now --
175
566160
4000
09:30
TV, film, video -- that basically becomes one media platform.
176
570160
3000
09:33
And while there's many differences in some senses,
177
573160
2000
09:35
they will share more and more in common with each other.
178
575160
3000
09:38
So that the laws of media, such as the fact that copies have no value,
179
578160
5000
09:43
the value's in the uncopiable things,
180
583160
2000
09:45
the immediacy, the authentication, the personalization.
181
585160
5000
09:50
The media wants to be liquid.
182
590160
3000
09:53
The reason why things are free is so that you can manipulate them,
183
593160
3000
09:56
not so that they are "free" as in "beer," but "free" as in "freedom."
184
596160
4000
10:00
And the network effects rule,
185
600160
2000
10:02
meaning that the more you have, the more you get.
186
602160
2000
10:04
The first fax machine -- the person who bought the first fax machine
187
604160
3000
10:07
was an idiot, because there was nobody to fax to.
188
607160
5000
10:12
But here she became an evangelist, recruiting others
189
612160
4000
10:16
to get the fax machines because it made their purchase more valuable.
190
616160
3000
10:19
Those are the effects that we're going to see.
191
619160
2000
10:21
Attention is the currency.
192
621160
2000
10:23
So those laws are going to kind of spread throughout all media.
193
623160
5000
10:28
And the other thing about this embodiment
194
628160
2000
10:30
is that there's kind of what I call the McLuhan reversal.
195
630160
3000
10:33
McLuhan was saying, "Machines are the extensions of the human senses."
196
633160
2000
10:35
And I'm saying, "Humans are now going to be
197
635160
2000
10:37
the extended senses of the machine," in a certain sense.
198
637160
3000
10:40
So we have a trillion eyes, and ears, and touches,
199
640160
4000
10:44
through all our digital photographs and cameras.
200
644160
3000
10:47
And we see that in things like Flickr,
201
647160
5000
10:52
or Photosynth, this program from Microsoft
202
652160
3000
10:55
that will allow you to assemble a view of a touristy place
203
655160
4000
10:59
from the thousands of tourist snapshots of it.
204
659160
4000
11:03
In a certain sense, the machine is seeing through the pixels of individual cameras.
205
663160
6000
11:09
Now, the second thing that I want to talk about was this idea of restructuring,
206
669160
4000
11:13
that what the Web is doing is restructuring.
207
673160
2000
11:15
And I have to warn you, that what we'll talk about is --
208
675160
2000
11:17
I'm going to give my explanation of a term you're hearing, which is a "semantic Web."
209
677160
4000
11:21
So first of all, the first stage that we've seen
210
681160
3000
11:24
of the Internet was that it was going to link computers.
211
684160
3000
11:27
And that's what we called the Net; that was the Internet of nets.
212
687160
3000
11:30
And we saw that, where you have all the computers of the world.
213
690160
3000
11:33
And if you remember, it was a kind of green screen with cursors,
214
693160
4000
11:37
and there was really not much to do, and if you wanted to connect it,
215
697160
2000
11:39
you connected it from one computer to another computer.
216
699160
3000
11:42
And what you had to do was -- if you wanted to participate in this,
217
702160
2000
11:44
you had to share packets of information.
218
704160
4000
11:48
So you were forwarding on. You didn't have control.
219
708160
2000
11:50
It wasn't like a telephone system where you had control of a line:
220
710160
2000
11:52
you had to share packets.
221
712160
2000
11:54
The second stage that we're in now is the idea of linking pages.
222
714160
5000
11:59
So in the old one, if I wanted to go on to an airline Web page,
223
719160
3000
12:02
I went from my computer, to an FTP site, to another airline computer.
224
722160
4000
12:06
Now we have pages -- the unit has been resolved into pages,
225
726160
5000
12:11
so one page links to another page.
226
731160
2000
12:13
And if I want to go in to book a flight,
227
733160
3000
12:16
I go into the airline's flight page, the website of the airline,
228
736160
5000
12:21
and I'm linking to that page.
229
741160
2000
12:23
And what we're sharing were links, so you had to be kind of open with links.
230
743160
4000
12:27
You couldn't deny -- if someone wanted to link to you,
231
747160
2000
12:29
you couldn't stop them. You had to participate in this idea
232
749160
4000
12:33
of opening up your pages to be linked by anybody.
233
753160
3000
12:36
So that's what we were doing.
234
756160
2000
12:38
We're now entering to the third stage, which is what I'm talking about,
235
758160
4000
12:42
and that is where we link the data.
236
762160
2000
12:44
So, I don't know what the name of this thing is.
237
764160
2000
12:46
I'm calling it the one machine. But we're linking data.
238
766160
2000
12:48
So we're going from machine to machine,
239
768160
2000
12:50
from page to page, and now data to data.
240
770160
2000
12:52
So the difference is, is that rather than linking from page to page,
241
772160
4000
12:56
we're actually going to link from one idea on a page
242
776160
4000
13:00
to another idea, rather than to the other page.
243
780160
2000
13:02
So every idea is basically being supported --
244
782160
3000
13:05
or every item, or every noun -- is being supported by the entire Web.
245
785160
3000
13:08
It's being resolved at the level of items, or ideas, or words, if you want.
246
788160
6000
13:14
So besides physically coming out again into this idea
247
794160
4000
13:18
that it's not just virtual, it's actually going out to things.
248
798160
4000
13:22
So something will resolve down to the information
249
802160
3000
13:25
about a particular person, so every person will have a unique ID.
250
805160
4000
13:29
Every person, every item will have a something
251
809160
2000
13:31
that will be very specific, and will link
252
811160
2000
13:33
to a specific representation of that idea or item.
253
813160
4000
13:37
So now, in this new one, when I link to it,
254
817160
3000
13:40
I would link to my particular flight, my particular seat.
255
820160
6000
13:46
And so, giving an example of this thing,
256
826160
3000
13:49
I live in Pacifica, rather than -- right now Pacifica
257
829160
2000
13:51
is just sort of a name on the Web somewhere.
258
831160
3000
13:54
The Web doesn't know that that is actually a town,
259
834160
2000
13:56
and that it's a specific town that I live in,
260
836160
2000
13:58
but that's what we're going to be talking about.
261
838160
3000
14:01
It's going to link directly to --
262
841160
2000
14:03
it will know, the Web will be able to read itself
263
843160
3000
14:06
and know that that actually is a place,
264
846160
2000
14:08
and that whenever it sees that word, "Pacifica,"
265
848160
2000
14:10
it knows that it actually has a place,
266
850160
1000
14:11
latitude, longitude, a certain population.
267
851160
3000
14:14
So here are some of the technical terms, all three-letter things,
268
854160
3000
14:17
that you'll see a lot more of.
269
857160
2000
14:19
All these things are about enabling this idea of linking to the data.
270
859160
5000
14:24
So I'll give you one kind of an example.
271
864160
3000
14:27
There's like a billion social sites on the Web.
272
867160
4000
14:31
Each time you go into there, you have to tell it again who you are
273
871160
3000
14:34
and all your friends are.
274
874160
1000
14:35
Why should you be doing that? You should just do that once,
275
875160
2000
14:37
and it should know who all your friends are.
276
877160
3000
14:40
So that's what you want, is all your friends are identified,
277
880160
2000
14:42
and you should just carry these relationships around.
278
882160
2000
14:44
All this data about you should just be conveyed,
279
884160
3000
14:47
and you should do it once and that's all that should happen.
280
887160
3000
14:50
And you should have all the networks
281
890160
2000
14:52
of all the relationships between those pieces of data.
282
892160
2000
14:54
That's what we're moving into -- where it sort of knows these things down to that level.
283
894160
5000
14:59
A semantic Web, Web 3.0, giant global graph --
284
899160
3000
15:02
we're kind of trying out what we want to call this thing.
285
902160
3000
15:05
But what's it's doing is sharing data.
286
905160
2000
15:07
So you have to be open to having your data shared, which is a much bigger step
287
907160
5000
15:12
than just sharing your Web page, or your computer.
288
912160
2000
15:14
And all these things that are going to be on this
289
914160
4000
15:18
are not just pages, they are things.
290
918160
3000
15:21
Everything we've described, every artifact or place,
291
921160
4000
15:25
will be a specific representation,
292
925160
2000
15:27
will have a specific character that can be linked to directly.
293
927160
5000
15:32
So we have this database of things.
294
932160
2000
15:34
And so there's actually a fourth thing that we have not get to,
295
934160
4000
15:38
that we won't see in the next 10 years, or 5,000 days,
296
938160
2000
15:40
but I think that's where we're going to. And as the Internet of things --
297
940160
5000
15:45
where I'm linking directly to the particular things of my seat on the plane --
298
945160
4000
15:49
that that physical thing becomes part of the Web.
299
949160
3000
15:52
And so we are in the middle of this thing
300
952160
2000
15:54
that's completely linked, down to every object
301
954160
3000
15:57
in the little sliver of a connection that it has.
302
957160
2000
15:59
So, the last thing I want to talk about is this idea
303
959160
2000
16:01
that we're going to be codependent.
304
961160
3000
16:04
It's always going to be there, and the closer it is, the better.
305
964160
4000
16:08
If you allow Google to, it will tell you your search history.
306
968160
3000
16:11
And I found out by looking at it
307
971160
2000
16:13
that I search most at 11 o'clock in the morning.
308
973160
2000
16:16
So I am open, and being transparent to that.
309
976160
3000
16:19
And I think total personalization in this new world will require total transparency.
310
979160
6000
16:25
That is going to be the price.
311
985160
2000
16:27
If you want to have total personalization,
312
987160
1000
16:28
you have to be totally transparent.
313
988160
2000
16:30
Google. I can't remember my phone number, I'll just ask Google.
314
990160
3000
16:33
We're so dependent on this that I have now gotten to the point
315
993160
2000
16:35
where I don't even try to remember things --
316
995160
2000
16:37
I'll just Google it. It's easier to do that.
317
997160
2000
16:39
And we kind of object at first, saying, "Oh, that's awful."
318
999160
3000
16:42
But if we think about the dependency that we have on this other technology,
319
1002160
3000
16:45
called the alphabet, and writing,
320
1005160
2000
16:47
we're totally dependent on it, and it's transformed culture.
321
1007160
3000
16:50
We cannot imagine ourselves without the alphabet and writing.
322
1010160
4000
16:54
And so in the same way, we're going to not imagine ourselves
323
1014160
3000
16:57
without this other machine being there.
324
1017160
2000
16:59
And what is happening with this is
325
1019160
3000
17:02
some kind of AI, but it's not the AI in conscious AI,
326
1022160
2000
17:04
as being an expert, Larry Page told me
327
1024160
3000
17:07
that that's what they're trying to do,
328
1027160
1000
17:08
and that's what they're trying to do.
329
1028160
2000
17:10
But when six billion humans are Googling,
330
1030160
3000
17:13
who's searching who? It goes both ways.
331
1033160
2000
17:15
So we are the Web, that's what this thing is.
332
1035160
4000
17:19
We are going to be the machine.
333
1039160
2000
17:21
So the next 5,000 days, it's not going to be the Web and only better.
334
1041160
5000
17:26
Just like it wasn't TV and only better.
335
1046160
2000
17:28
The next 5,000 days, it's not just going to be the Web
336
1048160
3000
17:31
but only better -- it's going to be something different.
337
1051160
2000
17:33
And I think it's going to be smarter.
338
1053160
4000
17:37
It'll have an intelligence in there, that's not, again, conscious.
339
1057160
4000
17:41
But it'll anticipate what we're doing, in a good sense.
340
1061160
4000
17:45
Secondly, it's become much more personalized.
341
1065160
3000
17:48
It will know us, and that's good.
342
1068160
2000
17:50
And again, the price of that will be transparency.
343
1070160
4000
17:54
And thirdly, it's going to become more ubiquitous
344
1074160
2000
17:56
in terms of filling your entire environment, and we will be in the middle of it.
345
1076160
5000
18:01
And all these devices will be portals into that.
346
1081160
3000
18:04
So the single idea that I wanted to leave with you
347
1084160
3000
18:07
is that we have to begin to think about this as not just "the Web, only better,"
348
1087160
6000
18:13
but a new kind of stage in this development.
349
1093160
3000
18:16
It looks more global. If you take this whole thing,
350
1096160
3000
18:19
it is a very big machine, very reliable machine,
351
1099160
3000
18:22
more reliable than its parts.
352
1102160
2000
18:24
But we can also think about it as kind of a large organism.
353
1104160
3000
18:27
So we might respond to it more as if this was a whole system,
354
1107160
5000
18:32
more as if this wasn't a large organism
355
1112160
2000
18:34
that we are going to be interacting with. It's a "One."
356
1114160
4000
18:38
And I don't know what else to call it, than the One.
357
1118160
3000
18:41
We'll have a better word for it.
358
1121160
1000
18:42
But there's a unity of some sort that's starting to emerge.
359
1122160
3000
18:45
And again, I don't want to talk about consciousness,
360
1125160
3000
18:48
I want to talk about it just as if it was a little bacteria,
361
1128160
2000
18:50
or a volvox, which is what that organism is.
362
1130160
3000
18:53
So, to do, action, take-away. So, here's what I would say:
363
1133160
6000
18:59
there's only one machine, and the Web is its OS.
364
1139160
4000
19:03
All screens look into the One. No bits will live outside the Web.
365
1143160
4000
19:07
To share is to gain. Let the One read it.
366
1147160
4000
19:11
It's going to be machine-readable.
367
1151160
1000
19:12
You want to make something that the machine can read.
368
1152160
3000
19:15
And the One is us. We are in the One.
369
1155160
5000
19:20
I appreciate your time.
370
1160160
2000
19:22
(Applause)
371
1162160
3000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7