Sorry ! Jan 8th Event Postponed.
Archive for November, 2009
Winners of free passes!! Added November 27th, 2009
  by Joseph
 

The three tweople who won the free passes to TEDxChennai ’09 are:

@ramprakash_r

@armchairexpert

@karthikjai

Congrats guys!! Let us know if you can make it to the event.

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To all the Tweople Added November 25th, 2009
  by Joseph
 

One awesome event to watch out for, this month end, is the TEDxChennai, happening at IIT-Madras on Sunday, 29th November. Have a taste of TED at TEDxChennai !!
We are also giving away free passes for a select few tweople. If you want to win a pass all you have to do is tweet the one of the following:

Looking for great people to network with? #TEDxChennai is the event for you. Buy your tickets at http://tedxchennai.com/ C ya there

I used to watch TED videos all my life; now i get a chance to experience it in real. Nov29 #chennai #TEDxChennai http://bit.ly/7rut7o

TED comes to Chennai.Attend #TEDxChennai on Nov 29 at ICSR audi in IIT-Madras; Get inspired and be inspirational http://bit.ly/7rut7o

Three winners will be selected by end of Friday (27th November), through random selection.
In case you have already bought the ticket and you happen to be one of the three selected in this process, your ticket fare will be refunded.
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TEDChris Interview in TOI-Chennai Edition Added November 20th, 2009
  by Raja
 

“We make great ideas available to millions of people”

TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) Conference, an annual four-day residential conclave devoted to “ideas worth spreading”, which concluded in Mysore recently, was held for the first time in India. Chris Anderson, curator of TED, spoke to Sudeshna Chatterjee:

What has taken you so long to reach India?
Apart from one experimental event in Japan 15 years ago, TED has been for most of its history a closed event held annually in California. In 2001, its ownership transferred from its founder into my non-profit foundation (The Sapling Foundation) and we gradually started bringing in a more global roster of speakers. The big shift came in 2006 when we started releasing talks on the Web and discovered that there was a vast global audience excited by this type of content.

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But isn’t the Rs 1 lakh entry fee exorbitant in a country like India?
Yes, a lakh is a lot, although it’s one-third the price we charge in California. No one is making a profit at TED. It’s run from a foundation and the fees don’t cover the large costs of putting on an event as ambitious as TED. This conference was subsidised by the foundation because we so badly wanted to come to India. Despite the high price it sold out. We also included 100 fellows, selected from 1,000 applicants, all of whose costs we covered, and a number of discounted educational and non-profit passes. We also streamed four of the sessions on the Web to anyone for free, and will be releasing all the best talks on our website, ted.com, in the coming months.

There will be numerous selforganised events held across India in the coming months under the programme we call TEDx. These will be publicised in due course, and people can find them on http://ted.com/tedx. Typically they will be one-day events held in various cities or universities and targeting a few hundred local knowledge-seekers.

Can you talk about some of the interesting ideas that came up at the Mysore conference?
Pranav Mistry is developing SixthSense, which is a wearable prototype that augments the physical world around us with digital information. Shaffi Mather’s corruption-busting business idea, where he proposes to set up antibribe BPOs across India and which will take a fee from the client is both brilliant and courageous. Shashi Tharoor’s views on soft power have been articulated before, but perhaps never in so compelling a way. The philosophy behind TED is ideas have a unique ability to shape the future. By making great ideas available to millions of people on ted.com, we’re helping to accelerate this process. There was the special moment when attendees responded to Sunitha Krishnan’s searing talk on her fight against sex trafficking by committing more than $100,000 in donations on the spot, and by promising jobs for the young women she is rehabilitating.

Courtesy:TOI,Chennai

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Interview with Quizmaster Giri Balasubramiam Added November 7th, 2009
  by admin
 

Interview with noted quiz master Giri Balasubramaniyam from TEDxChennai on Vimeo.

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Blaise Aguera y Arcas demos Photosynth-TED Talks Translated in Tamil Added November 2nd, 2009
  by Raja
 

Blaise Aguera y Arcas’ background is as multidimensional as the visions he helps create. In the 1990s, he authored patents on both video compression and 3D visualization techniques, and in 2001, he made an influential computational discovery that cast doubt on Gutenberg’s role as the father of movable type. Full Bio>>

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John La Grou plugs smart power outlets Added November 1st, 2009
  by Prashanth
 

John La Grou unveils an ingenious new technology that will smarten up the electrical outlets in our homes, using microprocessors and RFID tags. The invention, Safeplug, promises to prevent deadly accidents like house fires — and to conserve energy.

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