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Rebekah Barnett

Stories by Rebekah Barnett:

Organizing principles: Notes from Session 5 of TEDSummit

Live from TEDSummit 2016

Organizing principles: Notes from Session 5 of TEDSummit

Do we have the vision and the energy to confront seemingly impossible problems — like predatory corporations, political deadlock, the wasted potential of millions of refugees? Session 5 rounded up people who are jumping right in. A call to action on fossil fuels. Costa Rica, climate advocate Monica Araya’s native country, gets almost 100 percent of []

Building blocks: Notes from Session 3 at TEDSummit

Live from TEDSummit 2016

Building blocks: Notes from Session 3 at TEDSummit

What are the tools we’re using to build the future? Session 3 speakers go deep on what’s next in finance, energy, business and the structures we live in. The next generation of trust on the Internet. For many online transactions, we rely on middlemen like banks and government to establish trust — but these systems face growing issues like []

Things we think we know: Notes from Session 2 of TEDSummit

Live from TEDSummit 2016

Things we think we know: Notes from Session 2 of TEDSummit

In Session 2, our speakers debunked received wisdom, looked critically at common knowledge — and restarted conversations we thought were closed. Here, our report:  Antique lamps, new sound. Brothers Ryan and Hays Holladay opened Session 2 completely unseen. In near pitch-black darkness, broken antique lamps lit up one by one — each perfectly matched with an electronic musical []

A  redesign for death, a monument hidden in plain sight and the intelligence of a bird brain

In Brief

A redesign for death, a monument hidden in plain sight and the intelligence of a bird brain

on

A design competition to reimagine death. 100 percent of the human population will die, and yet, why don’t we design for this inevitable outcome? OpenIDEO, design and innovation firm IDEO’s online innovation platform, has launched a new public design challenge to “reimagine the end of life experience.” BJ Miller is an advisor on the project []

A new take on an old school, the diet myth, and protecting North Korean women

In Brief

A new take on an old school, the diet myth, and protecting North Korean women

on

Abandoned school turned maker space. Theaster Gates turns Chicago’s abandoned buildings into thriving hubs for art and education. His next project? Turning an old elementary school into a maker space. Gates heads Place Lab, a think tank that fuses the brainpower of urban planners, architects, artists and other diverse professionals to create “culture-led neighborhood transformation”. []

Opening day for Venice Biennale, an invisible landmark, and an economist’s look at Uber’s surge pricing

In Brief

Opening day for Venice Biennale, an invisible landmark, and an economist’s look at Uber’s surge pricing

on

The TED community has been very busy over the past few weeks. Below, some newsy highlights. 121 years of celebrating art. Originally an art exhibition, the Venice Biennale is a tradition stretching back to 1895 and has expanded over the years to include events for music, theater, film, dance and architecture. Opening on May 28, []

A basic income pilot, the history of the gene, and the future of transportation

News

A basic income pilot, the history of the gene, and the future of transportation

As usual, the TED community has lots of news to share this week. Below, some highlights. A real-world test of basic income. Too often, humanitarian aid donations of food and materials, while well-intentioned, aren’t what the recipients actually need. But what about a different approach: giving people a basic income to spend however they like. []

Life on the Chinese-North Korean border, putting the joy back in voting, and an encouragement to give up

In Brief

Life on the Chinese-North Korean border, putting the joy back in voting, and an encouragement to give up

on

North Korean borderlands. Hotel rooms outfitted with binoculars to peer across the river at the forbidden land, spotty phone connections and a bridge partially destroyed by Korean War-era bombs, and smugglers of diamonds, watches and expensive face creams: This is the Chinese-North Korean border, a world of shifting identities and coded language. In the New []