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March 04, 2008 Tuesday Safar 25, 1429





World’s elite tune in for inspiration



By Glenn Chapman


MONTEREY: Comedian Robin Williams scrutinises grim images of abuses perpetuated by US soldier guards at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.

Actress Cameron Diaz twirls a lock of her blond hair with a finger as she leans back in a bean bag chair and listens to a vaunted paleontologist speak of an inevitable end to humanity’s golden age in the cosmos.

Queen Noor of Jordan debates with Google co-founder Serge Brin and legendary Watergate scandal reporter Carl Bernstein whether the Internet is changing news coverage for the better or worse.

Acclaimed actor Forest Whitaker exchanges views with a Ugandan journalist after hearing a renowned geneticist tell of engineering a new life form that will feed on climate-ruining carbon dioxide.

The powerful, famous, influential and brilliant mingle casually, finding inspiration, hope and challenge in mind-bending themes at the Technology, Entertainment and Design (TED) conference in California.

“Ted is wonderful,” Diaz said as the four-day gathering ended over the weekend. “It changed my life.” Veteran attendees describe the gathering as a friendly retreat where visionaries, geniuses and achievers put aside life’s daily distractions to collaborate on tackling the world’s woes.

Former US vice president Al Gore, Microsoft founder Steve Wozniak, singer Paul Simon, and actress Goldie Hawn are among the TED “citizens.” TED speakers each get 18 minutes each to address “big questions” that this year included “Will evil prevail?” and “How can we change the world?”

The “TED community” is perpetually tapped to fulfill visions such as ending poverty, nurturing the environment, and fostering planetary harmony.

“Between poverty and global warming we have our marching orders for a while,” Google co-founder Larry Page said on the conference’s final day.

“We all need a violence-free, stress-free world,” Sri Sri Ravi Shankar said while sharing yogic breathing techniques he teaches at his ashram in India.

Nearly 15 million people have viewed conference talks at the TED.com website since it launched in April of 2007.—AFP






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