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SPACE TRAVEL
TED turns 30 with new chapter of 'ideas worth spreading'
by Staff Writers
Vancouver (AFP) March 22, 2014


Electrical engineering is child's play with littleBits
Vancouver (AFP) March 22, 2014 - Ayah Bdeir is out to make creating Internet Age gadgets as fun and easy as playing with LEGO blocks.

The engineer behind littleBits kits that make a game of piecing together modular circuitry used a Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) conference to debut a piece to the puzzle that lets creations talk to the Internet.

"It is about allowing people to understand electronics which govern our modern lives and to let people become creators and makers," she said of her motivation to start the company behind littleBits about two years ago.

"The Internet of Things is too important for it to be governed by only big companies telling you what you should purchase."

Generic items ranging from jewelry to door locks, cars or household appliances are enhanced with computer chips to go online for information or instruction under the Internet of Things.

Bdeir's kits come with arrays of rectangular modules with buttons, lights, buzzers or other little bits that can be stuck together to create working electronic devices.

It is simple to make new creations, even for those with weak geek skills. LittleBits blocks are magnetized so that modules can only be stuck together in ways that will work.

- Innovate and create -

Two basic rules of play are that magnets are always right, and that one always needs a blue and a green piece for success. Pink pieces are optional.

"On the one hand, you can play and learn about electronics," the littleBits chief told AFP while snapping together modules on a cushioned sofa at TED, the conference renowned for innovative minds that ended on Friday.

"But on the other, you can invent and prototype without being an engineer or a programmer."

She spoke of users snapping together creations ranging from window displays made of littleBits and craft material to hardware prototypes entrepreneurs have used to pitch investors.

The addition of a "cloud" module to link module creations to the Internet opens the door to using littleBits to create such gadgets as wireless speakers, smart thermostats and security systems.

The module is expected to be available later this year.

"You can really start to prototype complex things with no engineering knowledge whatsoever," Bdeir said.

"Kids, entrepreneurs, artists or anyone else can invent with electronics the way they would invent with LEGOs."

Kits were such hits when the New York-based startup introduced them that they sold out in two weeks.

LittleBits are now available in scores of countries and used in about 1,800 schools, according to the company.

Kits range in price from $100 to $200, with "bits" also available for individual purchase.

TED turns 30 years old with a mind-sizzling mix of intrigue, wonder and passion in the renowned gathering's new home in Canada.

A conference born in California in 1984 that grew into a global forum for heady "ideas worth spreading" ended Friday after gazing thoughtfully at the past and looking optimistically ahead.

"The platform has gotten more interesting to more people," Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) curator Chris Anderson told AFP.

"We are planning on taking every opportunity to go deeper into issues; to present a core idea and add to it with ways to get involved."

TED has won a global following for trademark "talks" during which the brilliant, innovative, artistic or accomplished deliver thought-sparking presentations in 18 minutes or less.

- Broad range of TED topics -

Topics at the five-day TED gathering ranged from mind-controlling parasites and bionic limbs to intestinal microbes and collective consciousness.

Female fashion model Geena Rocero used the TED stage to, for the first time, tell how she was born a boy in the Philippines but become a woman to match her "inner truth."

"Some of my neighbors, friends, colleagues, even my agent didn't know about my history," Rocero said on the TED stage.

"Not a lot of people can say that their first job was pageant queen for transgender women, but I'll take it."

Internet spying and online privacy were hot topics at the gathering, known for attracting Internet entrepreneurs such as founders of Google, Amazon, and Netflix.

That debate was set ablaze by the surprise appearance of US former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden in the form of a robot controlled remotely from his hideaway in Russia.

"Doing it by tele-presence really excited him," Anderson said of Snowden showing up in robot form to roam the conference, even stopping for photos with Google co-founder Sergey Brin and others.

"He liked the geekiness and the symbolic appeal of the bot."

Snowden's virtual visit to TED, and his promise of sensational new revelations to come, prompted the NSA to weigh in via video link a day later to argue that his "arrogance" has put lives at risk and terrorists on guard.

"It was an intense experience, it definitely pushed my own margin of comfort to the edge," Anderson said.

Anderson saw this year's move from California to Vancouver as symbolic of the gathering's evolution into a global platform for ideas.

Anderson and Peter Diamandis of the X PRIZE announced a competition to reward those behind the first artificial intelligence creation that gives a TED talk compelling enough to earn a standing ovation.

- A 'primal' experience -

Looks at TED's past and visions of the future were woven through the week, with MIT Media lab founder Nicholas Negroponte predicting by the end of the next three decades, people will ingest knowledge the way they do vitamins.

"Ultimately, TED is tapping into something that is quite primal - a circle of humans looking a speaker in the eyes, hearing a story told and feeling what the speaker is feeling in a shared experience," Anderson said.

The first TED gathering was a venue for elite thinkers to hear about and discuss new ideas.

Since then scientists, political leaders, artists, entrepreneurs and musicians have taken to the stage at the tech-focused gatherings.

In 2006, TED began to record talks and post them for free online at their TED.com website. The website was recently upgraded to let viewers delve deeper into ideas and take action.

As TED talks were posted in more languages, traffic to the website soared. Talks have spread to television and radio. Captivating TED speakers have become Internet stars.

"The dinner party has turned into a global phenomenon -- a banquet for the whole world," said Richard Saul Wurman, who started the gatherings that Anderson's non-profit Sapling Foundation has nurtured into the TED of today.

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