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Two Years of Living Randomly | Max Hawkins | TEDxVienna 

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For two years Max let a randomized computer program determine the course of his life. Everything from what he ate and the music he played to the city where he lived was determined by the whim of the computer. The randomizer sent him everywhere from a shopping mall in Japan to a goat farm in rural Slovenia.
He tells the story of his randomly generated life: how he stumbled upon the concept of chance, why it became an obsession, and how he discovered that refusing to choose can be a radical act.
Max Hawkins is an artist and computer scientist working at the boundary between computation and culture. His projects deal with information, chance, automation, and atypical forms of communication. He is a graduate of the Computer Science & Art program at Carnegie Mellon University and an alumnus of Google’s Data Arts Team. Since 2015 he has been nomadic, traveling the world based on the output of a random number generator. 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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26 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 14   
@goncalodias2179
@goncalodias2179 3 года назад
Absolutely loved this talk. The biggest threat to our freedom, in the 21st century, are recommendation algorithms. We need to get out of our comfort zone; and for that, also out of our recommendation zone.
@wooden_yt
@wooden_yt 5 лет назад
I so randomly stumbled upon that video lolololol ..can't remember how I ended up here !
@mangosteen1564
@mangosteen1564 3 года назад
No such thing as random ;)
@run1492
@run1492 3 года назад
Me too ! But it was "Audials" that suggested me that paradox of listen to not listen to the algorythms so often
@Kitiara31
@Kitiara31 2 года назад
Which is the name of the App?
@twogirlsandapsychopath4879
@twogirlsandapsychopath4879 Год назад
I wanna know too! Maybe he'll see this and let us know.
@TheKivifreak
@TheKivifreak 3 года назад
it's a cute solution to an underlying problem which gets more and more important every year. i wonder how we're going to solve this problem of algorithmic control. mooddex was my approach to offer a more effective alternative to eating the fast food from the algorithm. what can you come up with? would love to have a discussion.
@edwardbarba7370
@edwardbarba7370 4 года назад
tbh i randomly found this video i was reading about economic stuff like 2 hours ago
@mangosteen1564
@mangosteen1564 3 года назад
No such thing as random ;)
@fltof2
@fltof2 3 года назад
Speak up if this is the first TED talk you’ve ever watched. I’ll wait.
@r.b.284
@r.b.284 3 года назад
Too bad his algorithms didn’t take him to more public speaking classes. Wow, was that painful to watch! Interesting concept, though.
@PaperRaines
@PaperRaines 3 года назад
Other than the unscripted ending I actually thought to myself while watching the video that he was good at speaking. I've seen tough to listen to TedTalks, this wasn't one of them
@PaperRaines
@PaperRaines 3 года назад
He is 100% right on the concept of not getting owned by a comfort zone, but he left out the most important part. People, really like comfort zones lol I mean everywhere he randomly moved to, was comprised of people and things that were there permanently. It takes a certain mindset to wander around, and a certain mindset to grow roots I'm not sure which mindset is better than the other, but I do know this idea would not be remotely plausible to a lot of people Good talk overall. I found it fascinating
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