TED Curator Chris Anderson’s note on INK

Dear Global TED Community,

By now you may have heard of the annual conference in India that has lots of links to TED.
The INK Conference (which stands for INnovation and Knowledge) is being run by longtime TEDster Lakshmi Pratury, who co-hosted TEDIndia with me in 2009. We’ve signed a content partnership agreement with INK that allowed us to bring the best of their talks to TED.com. Last year’s INK Talks posted on TED.com (including Anil Ananthaswamy, Arvind Gupta, Simon Lewis and Susan Lim) have proved popular online, and we’re excited to continue this collaboration.

TEDIndia in 2009 was a thrilling experience, attracting a sold-out audience of 1,000 attendees from 46 different countries. It was always planned as a one-off to bring TED to South Asia. So we’re delighted that the momentum generated by TEDIndia is continuing with numerous one-day TEDx events around the country — and the longer INK conference hosted in association with TED.
The first INK conference was held in December 2010, and Lakshmi pulled together a fine speaker lineup spanning business, science, technology, nonprofit organizations and the arts.
And she’s done so again with the lineup for the second INK Conference, being held in the colourful Rajasthan city of Jaipur, December 8-11, 2011.

The theme is “Power of the Journey,” and confirmed speakers include the first woman private space traveler, Anousheh Ansari; oceanographer David Gallo; music conductor Itay Talgam; director Julie Taymor; and the chair of UIDAI and co-founder of Infosys, Nandan Nilekani. INK is modeled on TED, and the talks will fit the familiar TED 18-minute format.

As an organization, the INK Conference remains 100% independent of TED. They are fully responsible for the event. But we’re happy to be offering strategic advice and content distribution.
If you want to attend a live TED-like event in India, do consider registering for INK and joining up with movers and shakers from a wide variety of industries, organizations and countries. There’s more information at www.inktalks.com.

Sincerely,
Chris Anderson
TED Curator

The goal is the game: Gareth Carter

We’ve all heard the saying, “It’s not about the destination, but the journey.” Cliché? Yes. Trite? Sure. But that doesn’t make it any less true. At least not for Gareth Carter, a British traveler who proved that embracing the journey could lead a man…a whole team of men…to a destination they had never dreamed.

An enthusiastic Laos footballer (Photo courtesy Gareth Carter)

Gareth was instrumental in organizing a bunch of football mad teenagers from Laos to play at The Gothia Youth World Cup 2010 in Sweden, thereby making them part of the first-ever Laos team to play outside Asia.
It, however, took more than a plane ride from Laos to Sweden to make this happen. Gareth’s story is not just of hope but a story of a friendship that lasts beyond a lifetime.

After being let go from his lucrative music career at Sony Ericsson, Gareth Carter found himself in the former war zone of Laos. During his visit in 2009, Gareth learned that this small and mysterious country in Southeast Asia was the most heavily bombed nation in the world during the Vietnam War. He also discovered that at the current rate of clean-up it is estimated to take 3,000 years to completely clear the country of all explosive remnants left behind from US bombers.

Gareth helps the team before their departure to Sweden. (Photo courtesy Gareth Carter)

While those numbers are staggering, Gareth was even more aghast when he came face to face with the devastation. In the Xieng Khouang province, Gareth discovered people who built their lives in and around the bomb contaminated grounds. The unexploded ordinances are like ghosts of the secret war that still haunt the people who live and farm in this region. They live in constant fear never knowing if the next dirt-filled shovel will detonate a 30-year old bomb. Seeing the number of amputees in the province, it certainly would not be the first accident of its kind…nor the last. But it was also in this same remote region where Gareth encountered Manophet, a man whose character would inspire Gareth to make history.

Manophet was well known in the area of Phonesavanh. He served as a UXO tour guide and also had a passion for teaching English and football to the local children. Manophet had a gentle and generous nature, yet he had an unyielding determination when it came to his work with the children.
From their first meeting, Gareth quickly realized that there was something different about Manophet. He was a kindhearted man who always thought of the children’s needs first. Not a father himself, Manophet dedicated his life to helping those who had lost their mothers and fathers during the war and took a vested interest in their academic future. He made children dream of better things to come in the bleak land of bombs and devastation.
Manophet, better known to the locals as the “Lone Buffalo” for his unique and unwavering vision, believed that his boys could stand alongside the rest of the world and compete as equals in a game of football. When his new found friend, Gareth, got a glimpse of the boys playing football, he was in awe not only of their skill, but of the heart and soul with which they played.

Laos fans cheering their team. (Photo courtesy Gareth Carter)

Manophet also dedicated his time to teaching the boys English, which he believed was a valuable skill for them to possess. What began as a shared passion for the game of football soon became so much more to Gareth. His journey started to take a new and far more meaningful direction as he began to join Manophet in his vision to showcase the potential that was apparent in this team of young, yet determined boys.

What neither of these two men knew at the time is that Manophet’s vision would never be accomplished in his unexpectedly short lifetime. That another would have to carry on this great vision in his absence. Gareth, unknowingly, was the perfect man for the job. Thanks to his personal connections and his undying determination, Gareth would not only change the lives of these young boys, but also the lives of the Phonsevanh people as a whole. Together they would face joy, heartbreak, defeat, and victory, but most importantly,  they would make history.

On Safer Ground, a documentary that follows the amazing journey not only of Gareth and Manophet, but that of the determined young boys of the football team, will be ready by the end of the year. To watch the trailer, click here.
Gareth started out like anyone else, someone with a desire to learn and explore. His story is a testament to the idea that a journey can start at any time and take us anywhere, that we should not be afraid to act in times of uncertainties.
I had an amazing opportunity to interview Gareth about the life-changing excursion he undertook in Laos. To listen to excerpts of the interview, click here.

Amy Chanthaphavong

 

 

Steve lived his life Zen like: Mark Thompson

You hear about Steve’s quick wit and sudden temper — but for a lifetime I never saw the latter. He was a Jedi master as far as I’m concerned and he saved my butt several times, except the first time I met him!

My first memory of Steve is back at Homestead High School. He was a senior and I was a freshman. I was at Prospect High a few miles away but showed up at Homestead every week because my mom was the principal’s secretary. I’d work in the office after school.

Some kids were throwing a football out in front of the office and one jerk fired a bullet at the back of Steve’s head. He never looked back but he must have seen my shocked expression as I approached him. Like Yoda, he smirked, ducked, and the football skimmed his back collar and pounded my chest. It knocked the wind out of me — even though I saw it coming!

That’s how Steve lived his life — Zen like — seeing not only what others couldn’t see in the future but also what would normally hit the rest of us in the back of the head.

When he was a young man, he worked as a technician to save up money to take a pilgrimage to India. It had been a dream for him and he returned to the US with his head shaved and practiced Buddhism for the rest of this life.
When I was at Schwab, I also served on a few boards and invested in some startups, including being recruited as Chairman in April 2000 for Rioport, which had popularized a cool new technology known as the MP3 player prior to iTunes. I’ll never forget seeing Steve at lunch and he played with my little RIO device. He gave me a slap on the shoulder and said it was a geeky piece of crap. Of course he was right. I was running UI at Schwab at the time and I could see that the RIO was way too hard to use, but Steve had saved me from investing millions in the company. In just over a year Steve launched the iPod and no one remembers Rioport put the mp3 on the map, nor should they.

Mark Thompson
INK Community Member

Steve Jobs lives on

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My theater coach Jack Featheringill said that good performances make you cry but great performances leave you with a lump in your throat. Today, I have a huge lump in my throat and my eyes can go only so far as being moist. When I heard that Steve Jobs passed away, the world became a…