People & Blogs
How many stories have been lost throughout history? #TEDTalks
Conceptual artist Tavares Strachan creates the kinds of projects that make you stop in your tracks, like a 4.5-ton block of Arctic ice he brought back to his birthplace in the Bahamas or a gold, Egyptian-inspired sculpture he launched into orbit around the Earth.
People & Blogs
The Controversial Climate Tool Funding Real Change | Sandeep Roy Choudhury | TED
If a company plants trees to offset its pollution, is that climate progress — or is it greenwashing? Critics of carbon markets say it’s the latter. But Sandeep Roy Choudhury, who’s spent two decades financing climate projects from rural cookstoves to coastal forests, says the real failure is discouraging companies from even trying. Hear his…
People & Blogs
How to Be a Great Listener | Maegan Stephens, Nicole Lowenbraun | TED
Have you ever left a meeting thinking: everyone talked, but nothing was achieved? Chances are that people were listening to each other, just not in the same way. Listening experts Maegan Stephens and Nicole Lowenbraun unpack the four different ways to listen, sharing a practical framework that could change how you respond, build trust and…
People & Blogs
Have you heard of aphantasia? Here’s what it is — and how to know if you have it #TEDTalks
Picture this: a rocket ship crash-lands on a planet, and an alien approaches the spacecraft. What do you see in your mind when you visualize this scene? For Alex Rosenthal (and many others), the answer is: absolutely nothing. Exploring the fascinating science of aphantasia, or the inability to generate mental images, he shows why our…
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@mommipreneur
February 15, 2026 at 3:02 pm
I would love to get this encyclopaedia
@jwyllor
February 17, 2026 at 2:00 am
Same! Dude, sign me up. These are the type of treasures that make life worth experiencing.
@KeepRockinLikeaHurricane
February 17, 2026 at 8:48 am
It would be lovely to have, but the mini version is $4500.00. 😢
@jwyllor
February 17, 2026 at 12:40 pm
@KeepRockinLikeaHurricaneouch!
@Toko_the_Gamer
February 15, 2026 at 3:02 pm
First
@steelersluv
February 15, 2026 at 4:32 pm
Grow up
@RedTornado7942
February 15, 2026 at 3:07 pm
ROBERT SMALLS!!! 🤙🏻
@PiotrKaszuba8403
February 15, 2026 at 3:09 pm
I need to buy it and read it.
@Seda1979
February 15, 2026 at 5:19 pm
Nice…I wouldn’t mind a copy if I may say so myself.
@willkelly86
February 16, 2026 at 5:14 pm
Robert Smalls was a badass and someone I learned about in high school. I didn’t realize that his story was considered obscure. Everyone should learn about Robert Smalls; he was the embodiment of point yourself up by his own bootstraps. If he can do all that he did with the crappy hand he was dealt, then the rest of us have no excuses.
@westrim
February 16, 2026 at 8:29 pm
I’ve never seen that encyclopedia before so it must be very successful.
@Baritocity
February 16, 2026 at 9:09 pm
Don’t put your socks in the dryer
@KevingalvezGalvez
February 17, 2026 at 6:27 pm
There isn’t a single “first person” who invented rock and roll. Most historians describe it as a sound that emerged in the United States in the early-to-mid 1950s, built out of earlier styles, especially African-American rhythm & blues plus country influences. 
That said, a few people are often brought up depending on what you mean by “invent”:
• Who helped name and popularize it: Alan Freed didn’t invent the music, but he popularized the term “rock and roll” on mainstream radio and helped bring the sound to a wider (especially youth) audience. 
• Early “rock-and-roll-before-it-was-called-that” pioneer: Sister Rosetta Tharpe is often called the “Godmother of Rock and Roll” because her gospel-driven electric guitar style strongly influenced what came next. 
• If you force a single most-cited “closest” figure: Chuck Berry is frequently argued to be the closest to a one-person answer because he pulled together key ingredients (guitar riffs, storytelling lyrics, rhythm) into a blueprint that tons of later rock followed. 
So: no single inventor, but if someone insists on one name, Chuck Berry is a common pick, while Sister Rosetta Tharpe is a major “before the boom” origin figure, and Alan Freed is crucial for the label and mainstream breakthrough.