TEDx Silicon Valley: Anderson, Hogg, Meier and Stein: #tedxsv

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Chris-Anderson (11) Chris Anderson kicked off TEDxSilicon Valley last Saturday, May 14, 2011 at Stanford University’s new Knight Management Center.

Anderson asserts that a data feedback loop can improve behavior as you see real-time stats on the consequences of your actions, whether its from a device or a non-intrustive wearable monitor. Simply by being aware of how your body is affected by your actions, you can improve your performance and lead a healthier life – emotionally and physically.

Feedback loops was a popular theme of many of the speakers, who focused on the growth of sensors which track your patterns and behavior. Bpttom line: once we see value in the feedback we receive from sensors, which continue to come down in price, we can measure everything we do. “Measurement,” says Anderson, “quantifies what matters most and through that feedback loop, we can make smarter decisions.”

Gamification — on and offline — can also be effective and is growing in popularity. Whether its points or rewards we give a child who remembers to brush his or her teeth or badges and coupons to buy things online if we cut out that donut and coffee for five days in a row, the feedback we receive through gamification is validation that we’re doing something right or wrong.

Imagine a future where you’re measuring nearly everything you do? Tomorrow, your thermometer can let you know when is the most efficient time to run the dishwasher, shaving money off your bill month after month. Today, you can already do quite a bit with measuring devices, right down to measuring stress levels in real time based on who you’re talking to. (be prepared bosses, mother-in-laws, accountants, dentists and lawyers – stress meter readings may not be all that pretty).

Chris Hogg reinforced Anderson’s message about the importance of data and measurement, particularly as it relates to better health and well being.  Chris-Hogg (1)

He pointed to his 67 year old step father who regularly drinks foul tasting tea and can see a correlation between drinking it and improved health, all of which he tracks on his iPhone.

Patrick Meier gave us a demo of something he referred to as Check-Ins with Purpose.

Country after country, he showed us a mapped location of how check-ins and smart location mapping has helped humanitarian efforts.

Patrick-Meier (2) Starting with Haiti and an initiative they called Mission 4636, they were able to measure and track people, resulting in hundreds of lives being saved during the recent crisis.

Forward wind to the Japanese Tsunami. They created a “crisis map” to help locate missing people, which the Japanese government and other organizations who were providing relief, could access.

The other example he used was Libya, where they created a “social media map” to improve their humanitarian efforts on the ground. Take a look at Libya Crisis Map.net.

The Libya Crisis Map platform was activated by the request of the Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) to the Standby Task Force (SBTF). The platform continues to be supported by volunteers.  

We can be more effective at helping people than we ever have been able to do in the past with rich geo-location based services and social media tools at our fingertips. We can use Facebook to schedule and post notices, Twitter to coordinate and get the word out and YouTube to share the story in more depth. “These live maps,” he says, “are like having helicopters above you so you can see exactly where people are and therefore find them that much faster.”

Lara-Stein (7) Lara Stein shared with us story after story of the countless number of TEDx events that are sprouting up around the world. She asks: “A movement or a tribe?”

One of the things she has learned from going through the process is to keep your ear to the ground….in other words, listen to voices from the local community. She calls the phenomena they have created, a “global tribe.”

Says Lara, “My goals have migrated from how do you create systems and back ends on the ground TO how to we paint the story of this massively global and passionate tribe? The latest stats are staggering: 1,783 past events, 1,002 future events, 101 cities and 46 countries.

A handful of guidelines she has learned include the following: plan for the predictable, be prepared to invent as you learn, don’t get in the way, pave the way of your real time feedback loop, ignore the chorus, be prepared to fail (another theme of speakers), don’t think of it as a part time job, listen to the community on the ground, and follow your moral compass. She adds, “our focus is inspiration and action, not education.”

She quoted an attendee who attended a TEDx in a remote area:  “I was sitting on the end of the world, huge oil fields surrounded by massive dunes and nothing else, I was surrounded by really smart kids and nothing else.” Indeed. That feeling is most definitely is a TED-like moment.

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