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Burnout to Brilliance | Hemlata Rathi | TEDxGNA University
TEDx Talks· 2025-11-26 16:14
How many of us look wildly successful from outside and feel drained and incomplete from inside. And how many of you have accomplished that next to impossible goal and when you reach there, you just felt exhaustion and not joy. We all have been there, haven't we.We have the best job, the best pay, the best team, the best family, all the milestone bees which I call them which society celebrates. Yet something from inside feels offbalance. Because in our flight to reach all these milestone bees, how many of us ...
The Missing Compass | K V Premraj | TEDxGNA University
TEDx Talks· 2025-11-26 16:14
A very close family friend of ours was a national level footballer. For his company, he won lot of trophies and was acclaimed by spectators. But five years into retirement, his world collapsed.He went to depression. Why. Because he was broke. Broke because he did not know how to manage money.We send our children to school and they spend more than 15 odd years in school, sometimes even more. And in school they are taught a lot of subjects, history, geography, physics, literature. But one subject which they w ...
The 1% Shift to Extraordinary Leadership | Rashoo Sachdeva | TEDxGNA University
TEDx Talks· 2025-11-26 16:14
Take a moment. Think of the last time you felt intense pressure. You were just about to walk into the meeting room and something happened.Maybe a deadline, a decision, a crisis that made you doubt your own capability. Your mind started racing. Your heartbeat went shallow.In that moment, your energy, your clarity, your power slipped away. Still, you gathered yourself up and you entered into into the room trying to look as if everything's fine. But the truth is, even before you entered the room, your tensed v ...
From Classrooms to Communities: The Power of Connections | Dr. Sheela Dubey | TEDxGNA University
TEDx Talks· 2025-11-26 16:14
Often I feel you know that there is a misconception or some conceptual problem where we talk about the incoming of technology and the aspect of human con connection. We feel technology has separated us from that human behavior. We are no more humane.We becoming very mechanical. So there has been a conception you know all our life. And whenever we have a conversation with each other, we keep blaming technology.I think often we keep blaming you know I'm getting lonely because you're on the phone all the time. ...
The Land Secrets Decoded | Dr. Mohammed Hussain Shaikh | TEDxGNA University
TEDx Talks· 2025-11-26 16:14
Land as an Asset - Land appreciates and does not depreciate, making it a timeless asset [1] - Only 10% of the world's population controls about 70% of the world's land [2] - The total land area in the world is approximately 149 billion hectares, with 48 billion hectares being usable or arable land, and 44% of that being cultivable [3] - There is approximately 006 hectares of land per person, given a global population approaching 8 billion [4] Land's Enduring Nature - Throughout history, empires and regimes have come and gone, but land remains constant [5][6] - Land's permanent nature makes it a safe and realistic asset [13] Land Literacy and Investment - Land literacy is lacking, unlike discussions about stocks, cryptos, and other assets [7] - Investing in land early creates generational wealth, rewarding vision over velocity [10][11] - Awareness, cognizance, and early investment are key to participating in land wealth creation [10] Land's Resilience - Land is not hampered by economic events like demonetization, oil recessions, or wars [12] - Understanding land classes, titles, registries, and value creation is crucial for building a resilient portfolio [13][14]
From Lab Tech to Real World Impact | Jan-Georg Rosenboom & Bob Langer | TEDxBoston
TEDx Talks· 2025-11-26 15:57
I saw you first in Zurich when you received the chemical engineering medal when I was doing my PhD and then uh we met there briefly and later on I had a conference in Boston and I said well I was fascinated by you know Bob's fascination for polymer science. I'm a polymer scientist as well and like Bob said uh you can use polymers they typically are used in the plastic industry and for the first time you were thinking you know way back can we use it for drug delivery and so I thought that was very inspiring ...
The Importance of Science and Being Kind | Shriya Srinivasan & Bob Langer | TEDxBoston
TEDx Talks· 2025-11-26 15:57
Such an honor to be here with Bob. One of the things that most impressed me when I started in the lab was indeed Bob is just so down to earth it's almost unbelievable um because you expect someone of such high eminence and importance and intellectual depth um to treat you a certain way and Bob would just you know come out of the elevator and be like hi Shria how's it going do you need any help like what can I do is everything okay and it's just such a question of what can I do to help you is not something y ...
Surprise Interview: Bob Langer and His Son Sam | Sam Langer & Bob Langer | TEDxBoston
TEDx Talks· 2025-11-26 15:57
Hi, Dad. Hi, Sam. So, Ria, my my wife and I, we were sitting over the last few days really thinking about this opportunity of of what to ask you and just really thought about some key moments from your life and we were thinking about what and what can we ask that maybe people haven't heard and we thought of a few things.>> Okay. We thought, you know, first I think we realized that your story really is this hero's journey, you know, this going through all these trials and not knowing how it's going to go. An ...
The Secret to Producing Great Research for Decades | Daniel Kohane & Bob Langer | TEDxBoston
TEDx Talks· 2025-11-26 15:56
But I never heard that story about you skipping classing. >> I don't I've tried not to tell it very often. >> Yeah.>> Probably for the reasons I said, you know, I was thinking, boy, that that'll get back to uh Yeah. It's a terrible thing to tell students. >> Yeah.Well, it really resonates and in the spirit of things I probably shouldn't share. So, I did the same thing in medical school. Um, so six months into it, I realized I'd go from new uh Brooklyn to uh med school in Roxbury and I would just fall asleep ...
Smashing Stereotypes in Science: Genetics and the future of the NHS | Holly Ellis | TEDxTeesside
TEDx Talks· 2025-11-26 15:55
Every day for five years, I walked in and out of this building at school for my science lessons, never questioning who Rosyn Franklin was or why she had a building named after her. It was only when we studied genetics at school that I finally learned of her story. Rosyn Franklin was a scientist whose work was crucial in discovering the structure of DNA.But because she was a woman, all the credit and the Nobel Prize went to her two male colleagues, James Watson and Francis Crick. This was the first time I'd ...