People & Blogs
We’re Keeping the Ocean Wild — and You Can Join Us | Sylvia A. Earle | TED
In 2009, marine biologist Sylvia Earle stood on the TED stage and made a wish: to build a global network of “Hope Spots” and protect the ocean before it’s too late. Seventeen years later, she’s back to report on what’s happened since — and the picture is both more urgent and more hopeful than you…
People & Blogs
And you thought human dating was complicated! #TEDTalks
Octopus, squid and cuttlefish — collectively known as cephalopods — have strange, massive, distributed brains. What do they do with all that neural power? Dive into the ocean with marine biologist Roger Hanlon, who shares astonishing footage of the camouflaging abilities of cephalopods, which can change their skin color and texture in a flash. Learn…
People & Blogs
How to Google Your Symptoms Without Freaking Out | John Whyte | TED
Why does searching your symptoms online always leave you more frightened than before? As former chief medical officer of WebMD, physician John Whyte spent years believing more information meant better health — until he saw how too much of it was making people spiral. In a world of health influencers, algorithms and AI tools designed…
People & Blogs
Your new playlist might be right outside your door #TEDTalks
What if the calm you feel when you hear birdsong isn’t a coincidence, but ancient evolutionary wiring … a signal that once meant safety? Musical ecologist and rapper Louis VI says humans are hardwired to nature’s sonic language, but modern life has drowned it out. He explores how we can tap back into the “overwhelming…
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@GamingEpochs
June 8, 2026 at 11:03 am
There is always hope!
@alwayslearning2004
June 8, 2026 at 11:09 am
I just have the need to say the oceans are beautiful and healthy as ever. Stop with wanting to fix something that is NOT broken. Strive to change and educate yourself to better the world. Nature is AMAZING and self-healing.
@Avarice7D
June 8, 2026 at 11:36 am
just ask the dodo.
@user_user1337
June 8, 2026 at 11:11 am
Nope, it is too late now… sorry.
@alwayslearning2004
June 8, 2026 at 11:39 am
Doom and gloom sells and if it makes you happy to believe that I believe in my statement.
@user_user1337
June 8, 2026 at 12:22 pm
@alwayslearning2004 I’d rather spend the last years or maybe decades partying. If we are not going to go extinct when I die: fine. Other people with more time on their hands saved the Planet.
If we are going to go extinct when I die: I never have procreated and I will have then spent my life what I loved doing most, and did not worry about anything my last 40 years.
I’d is your choice in this Pascalian wager.
@ExistentialWolf
June 8, 2026 at 11:43 am
That’s where the sewer pipes come from 😀
@JCMills55
June 8, 2026 at 1:34 pm
Oh geez a bunch of tree huggers.
@treytate10
June 8, 2026 at 2:52 pm
@JCMills55 you sound like a very unhappy person lol
@worldbrotherhoodglobal
June 8, 2026 at 2:50 pm
The Shinnecock Bay example proves that the most powerful solutions aren’t hidden in high-tech corporate software, but in restoring the raw, foundational networks of nature itself. Industrial scale exploitation breaks the baseline chemistry of our planet, and trying to fix it with sterile metrics is a loop of failure. Real structural resilience begins by stepping back and protecting the real-world groundwork.