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The Power of Code: How Programming Shapes our World | Neal Chopra | TEDxSacredHeartSchoolsAtherton 

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Step into a world where everything is built from code, yet remains invisible to the naked eye. But where did it all start, and where is it leading us? Join me on a journey to uncover the secrets of code, from its powerful impact on our past and present, to its unknown influence on our future. Will we continue to be the creators of our own destiny, or will machines take over? Come explore the possibilities and prepare to be captivated by the world of technology. Neal Chopra is a junior at Sacred Heart Prep in Atherton, California. A budding entrepreneur and avid “techie,” Neal is the founder of an education technology company, performs research at Stanford, has interned at companies, including Google, and has a RU-vid channel with over 16,000 subscribers. In his free time, Neal enjoys coding, creating videos, playing tennis, and sleeping. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

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11 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 6   
@thenormaltraveler
@thenormaltraveler Год назад
Very well articulated neal.. easy to follow and a very relevant topic ..great job 🎉
@cammoto
@cammoto Месяц назад
I think the CEO of Nvidia mentioned somewhere that coding is obsolete because AI can do almost all the things for you. He suggested we learn how to use AI. What do you think?
@ProfShibe
@ProfShibe 14 дней назад
He said that it WILL be in the future, not that it is now. AI is unusable for any real programs right now, it will make everything worse as there's too many files and context. In the future we won't have to code as we do right now, which will be a good thing as we can just type in natural language, but that isn't for a while, and all meaningful projects are far too big for it to replace programmers right now. You misunderstood what Jensen said. It won't be obsolete in the future once that happens too. Programming in its current form might be, but the skill of thinking and learning to break problems down into manageable, logical steps won't. Neither will knowing how computers work. It's like how assembly isn't used for programming things now, but knowing how it works and things go on under the hood makes you a far better programmer than someone who just learned JS or python and is clueless.
@emmanuelmukuna347
@emmanuelmukuna347 8 месяцев назад
Incredible, well done.
@kristijanlazarev
@kristijanlazarev Год назад
Golden
@saketthakur1722
@saketthakur1722 Год назад
hey, I am the first one
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To mahh too🫰🍅 #abirzkitchen #tomato
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