桑德伯格TED演讲稿

桑德伯格TED演讲稿
桑德伯格TED演讲稿

谢乐尔桑德伯格是出色的女性领导,她是facebook首席运营官,她在ted演讲中发表题为《为什么女性领导太少》的演讲稿,下面是这篇桑德伯格ted演讲稿中文版及英文版

桑德伯格ted演讲稿中文版

今天在座的各位,我们先承认我们是幸运的。我们没有生活在我们母亲和我们祖母生活过的那个世界,在那时女性的职业选择是非常有限的。今天在座的各位,大多数人成长于一个女性有基本公民权的世界。令人惊讶地是,我们还生活在一个有些女性还没有这些权利的世界。但除上所述,我们还有一个问题,它是一个实际问题。这问题是:在世界各地,女性没达到任何职业的高管职位。这些数据很清楚地告诉我们这实情。 190个国家元首里,九位是女性领导。在世界上议会的总人数中, 13%是女性议员。在公司部门,女性占据高位, c级职位,董事会席位高管职位比例占15%,16%。自从2002年起这数据没变化过有下降趋势。即使在非营利的行业,我们有时认为这一行业是被更多女性所领导的,女性领导人占20%。

我们还面临着另一个问题,就是女性在职业成功和个人价值实现中所面临的艰难选择。美国最近一个研究表明,已婚高管人员,三分之二的已婚男性高管人员有孩子只有三分之一的已婚女性高管人员有孩子。几年前,我在纽约,出席一个协议,在那种别致的纽约私募投资办事处中的一个你能想象到的。我在这个大约有3小时的会议上,过了2小时,有个间歇休息,所有人都站起来,这会议组织者开始显得的确很尴尬。我意识到他不知道在他办公室哪里是女洗手间。所以我开始寻找移动厕所,盘算他们刚搬进来,但我没有看到任何移动厕所。然后我说,你是刚搬到这办公室吗? 他说,不是,我们在这儿已经有一年了。我说,你能否告诉我这一年来,我是唯一一个来这间办公室的女性吗? 他看着我,说到,是的。或者说你可能是唯一一个要上女性洗手间。

(笑声)

所以问题是,我们该怎样解决这样的尴尬? 我们怎样改变这些高管职位的比例? 我们怎样使这个变得不同? 我首先想说,我谈这个女性就职因为我的确认为我们得找到答案。在我们劳动力的高收入的部分,在高管的人员中财富500强首席执行长官中,或在其它类似的高管行业中,我确信,问题是女性被排除在外。当下人们对此谈了很多,他们谈到像弹性时间和指导和公司应该培训妇女的计划的事。今天我不想谈这些尽管所有这些事都非常重要。今天我想关注作为个人我们所能做到的事。我们要告诉给自己的事是什么? 我们告诉给女同事和打工的女性的事是什么? 我们要告诉给我们女儿的事是什么?

现在首先,我想澄清这个演讲不带有任何评判。我也没有正确的答案; 甚至就我而言,我也没有完全的答案。在周一,我离开我生活的加利福尼亚,我坐上飞机赶赴这会议。当我送我三岁的女儿到幼儿园时,她紧紧抱进我的腿,哭喊着,妈咪,不要上飞机之类的话。这很难受。有时我感到内疚。我知道无论是家庭主妇,还是职业女性,有时她们都会感同身受。所以我不会说对所有人来说,呆在职场是件正确的事。

今天我的演讲是要讲如果你真正想呆在职场。我想有3条建议。一,坐在桌旁。二,让你的伴侣成为一个真正的合作伙伴。三,在你离开前别放弃。第一,坐在桌旁。仅仅几周前在脸谱,我们主持一个非常高级行政官员会议,他(马克·扎克伯格)与来自硅谷周围的高级行政官员一一见面。每个人都坐在桌边。然后携同他的2个女性在他部门中她们也占非常高的职位。我对她们说,坐在桌边。来吧,坐在桌边。她们坐在了屋子的一边。我在大四时,我选修一节欧洲思想史的课程。你们喜爱大学的这类课程嘛。我希望我现在能做到。我和我室友卡丽一起学习,她那时是一个才华横溢的文学学生成为了一个杰出的文学家我的弟弟一个聪明的小伙子,但他爱打水球,他上医学预科大二。

我们三人一起选修这课。然后卡丽读了所有希腊文和拉丁文的原版书籍-- 去了所有的课-- 我读了所有英语的书上了大多数的课。我弟弟有点忙; 他读了12本书中的一本去上了几节课,在考试前几天他来到我们房间自己辅导了一下。我们三个一起去考试了,我们坐下来。我们考了有3个小时我们的小蓝笔记本,是的。我们走出来,对视对方,我们说,你考得怎样? 卡丽说,伙计,我感到我真没有答对有关黑格尔辩证法的主要命题。我说,上帝啊,我真希望我考试时能想到学习过的洛克的产权理论等哲学家。我弟弟却说,我会是班里考得最好的。你会是班里考得最好的? 你啥都不知道。

这种故事的问题出在数据所表明的事实:女性被系统化地低估了她们自身的能力。如果你测试男性和女性,你问他们问题,按完全客观的标准平均成绩来算,男性会错误的高估一些,女性则会错误地低估一些。女性在职场不会为自身利益去谈判。在过去两年,关于人们从学校进入职场的一个调查表明57%的男生或男性进入职场,我猜会协商他们的第一份薪水,只有7%的女性会去协商。更重要的是,男性把他们的成功归功于他们自身,而女性则归功于其他外部因素。如果你问男性为什么他们能把工作做好,他们会说,我棒极了。这是显而易见的。这还用问吗? 如果你问女性是什么使她们在工作中出色,她们会说有人帮助她们,她们很幸运,她们工作异常努力。这个问题很重要吗? 大家,这关系很大因为没人得到角落办公室的职位要是只坐在旁边,而不是桌边。没人得到提升如果他们认为他们不应享有这成功,或者他们甚至不明白他们自己的成功。

我但愿这答案是容易的。我希望我尽可能告诉我所共事过的所有年轻女性,所有这些非常棒的女性,相信你们自己,为自身利益要讨价还价。把握住你的成功。我希望我也能告诉

我的女儿。但这不是很简单。因为首先是数据表明的是一件事它表明成功和人缘亲切性对于男性来说是积极影响的而对于女性来说是负面影响的。每个人都点头,因为我们大家都知道这是真的。

一个非常棒的研究也很好地表明了这一观点。哈佛商学院的一个著名研究是有关于一位叫海蒂·罗森的女性。她是硅谷一家公司的负责人,她使用她的关系成为一名非常成功的风险资本家。在2002年,不久前当时在哥伦比亚大学的一位教授做这个例子和把它改成霍华德·罗森。他把这个案例,他们两人向两组学生展示。他只改变了一个词:海蒂到霍华德。但这个词就造成了非常大的差异。然后他调查学生。好消息是学生们,男生和女生认为海蒂和霍华德都是能力相当的,这很好。但坏消息是每个人都喜欢霍华德。他是个了不起的人,大家都想和他共事,大家都想和他去钓鱼。但海蒂呢?不好说。她有点只为自己着想,对政治有点热衷。大家不太想和她共事。这是复杂的。我们得告诉我们的女儿和我们的同事,我们得告诉我们自己相信我们能获得a,得到提升,坐在桌边。我们在这世上得做到这点在世上,女性要争取这些就得做出牺牲,尽管她们的兄弟不用为此而付出牺牲。

所有关于这的最可悲的事是很难记住这个。我将讲个对我来说是个真正尴尬的故事,但我认为它很重要。在脸谱不久前我给大约100名员工做这个演讲。几小时后,在脸谱工作的一个年轻女性坐到我小桌子旁边,她想和我谈谈。我说,好,她坐了下来,我们谈了起来。她说,我今天学了一些东西。我知道我需要举起我的手。我说,你指什么啊? 她说,你在讲这个话时,你说你将会回答2个以上问题。我和其他一些人举起手,你回答了2个以上问题。我把手放下来,我注意到所有女性都把手放下来,然后你又回答了很多问题,仅有男性参与。我自己想了一下,如果换成是我,谁会在乎这个,明显地做这次演讲,在这演讲中,我甚至没注意到男人们的手是不是还一直举着,女人们的手是不是还一直举着,我们到底有多出色,当我们作为公司和组织的经理人的时候,以及当我们作为少数,与男性竞争争取机会的时候? 我们得让女性坐到桌子边上。

(掌声)

第二条:让你的伴侣成为一个真正的合作伙伴。我已经确信我们在职场比起我们在家庭中起了更大的作用。数据也很清楚地表明这点。如果一个女性和一个男性同时全职并有一个小孩,女性比起男性要做两倍多家务活儿,女性比起男性做了三倍多照顾婴儿的事。所以她有了2份,3份工作,而他只有一份。当有人必须在家多干活时,谁应该留下来? 这个的理由实在太复杂,我没有时间来讲它们。但我也不认为周日看美式足球和日常的懒惰是理由。

我认为理由是更加复杂化的。我认为,作为一个社会,我们总是更希望男孩子们成功,对女孩子则压力小些。我知道有居家男人呆在家里做内务支持职场妻子这很难。当我去妈咪和我的培训课时,我看到那里的父亲,我留意到其他妈咪不愿和他相处。这是个问题,

因为我们得把内务变成一个重要的工作因为它是世界上最难的工作-居家工作无论男人女人,我们只有平分了这些事,女性才可能留在职场。 (掌声) 研究表明夫妻收入相等、且夫妻分担责任相当的家庭也有50%的离婚率。如果这数据并不那么鼓舞人,还有更多的在这个讲台我该怎么讲呢? 夫妻双方对于彼此的了解,不仅是做爱这么简单。

(欢呼)

建议三:在你离开前别放弃。我认为这是一个非常深刻的讽刺对于女性所采取行动而言-- 我一直目睹类似情况的发生-- 女性希望留在职场这个目标,往往导致它们最终不得不离开职场。曾发生这样的事:我们都忙;每个人都很忙;作为一个女人也很忙。她开始考虑生小孩。从她开始考虑生小孩的时候起,她开始考虑为孩子准备房间。我该如何调整孩子这件事和手头上的其他事呢? 言下之意,她不再举起她的手,她不寻求提升,她不找新的计划,她不会说,我,我想做那个。她开始退缩。这是个问题让我们说说她怀孕的那段日子 9个月的怀胎,3个月的产假, 6个月来调养休息快速调整要2年,更多的,正如我看到的女性开始过早考虑这事当她们有约会或者结婚时,当她们开始考虑要小孩,这会花相当长的一段时间。一位女性关于此事来找我,我看着她,她显得有点年轻。我说,那么你和你丈夫考虑要小孩了? 她说,哦不,我还没结婚。她甚至没有男友。我说,你考虑这个太早了吧。

但关键是一旦你开始退缩下来,接下来会发生什么呢? 每个人都会经历这个在这儿我告诉你,一旦在家你有了孩子,你真的最好是回到你的工作中去,因为把小孩留在家太难了,你的工作得有挑战性。它也得有回报。你得感觉到世界因你而变。如果2年前你没有得到提升在你旁边的一个男孩得到提升,如果三年前你放弃寻找新的机会,你会变得很乏味因为你应该紧踩油门,加油。在你离开前别放弃。保住工作。紧踩油门,除非到了那一天你需要离开为了孩子休假然后做出你自己的决定。不要提前做太长远决定,特别是你甚至不晓得自己该做怎样的决定。

我这一代的女性非常可惜,没能改变高管职位的数据变化。女人们就是呆在原地。我们没能达到50%的高管职位在任何行业的高管职位中,女性都未达到50%。但我希望未来一代人可以做到。我认为我们世界上半数国家和半数公司会由女性所领导,那将会是一个更美好的世界。这不仅仅是因为人们会知道女性洗手间在哪儿,尽管这也有非常大的帮助。我认为它将会是一个更美好的世界。我有2个孩子。我5岁的儿子和3岁的女儿。我想我儿子会选择在职场或在家里都尽心尽责,全心奉献。我女儿的选择不仅仅是成功,她会更热爱她所做出的成就。

谢谢。

Ted中英对照演讲稿.

Ted中英对照演讲稿 大人能从小孩身上学到什么 Now, I want to start with a question: When was the last time you were called childish? For kids like me, being called childish can be a frequent occurrence. Every time we make irrational demands, exhibit irresponsible behavior, or display any other signs of being normal American citizens, we are called childish, which really bothers me. After all, take a look at these events: Imperialism and colonization, world wars, George W. Bush. Ask yourself: Who's responsible? Adults. 首先我要问大家一个问题:上一回别人说你幼稚是什么时候?像我这样的小孩,可能经常会被 人说成是幼稚。每一次我们提出不合理的要求,做出不负责任的行为,或者展现出有别于普通美 国公民的惯常行为之时,我们就被说成是幼稚。这让我很不服气。首先,让我们来回顾下这些事件:帝国主义和殖民主义,世界大战,小布什。请你们扪心自问下:这些该归咎于谁?是大人。 Now, what have kids done? Well, Anne Frank touched millions with her powerful account of the Holocaust, Ruby Bridges helped end segregation in the United States, and, most recently, Charlie Simpson helped to raise 120,000 pounds for Haiti on his little bike. So, as you can see evidenced by such examples, age has absolutely nothing to do with it. The traits the word childish addresses are seen so often in adults that we should abolish this age-discriminatory word when it comes to criticizing behavior associated with irresponsibility and irrational thinking. 而小孩呢,做了些什么?安妮·弗兰克(Anne Frank)对大屠杀强有力的叙述打动了数百万人的心。鲁比·布里奇斯为美国种族隔离的终结作出了贡献。另外,最近还有一个例子,查理·辛普 森(Charlie Simpson)骑自行车为海地募得 12万英镑。所以,这些例子证明了年龄与行为完 全没有关系。 "幼稚"这个词所对应的特点是常常可以从大人身上看到,由此我们在批评不负责 和非理性的相关行为时,应停止使用这个年龄歧视的词。 (Applause) Thank you. Then again, who's to say that certain types of irrational thinking aren't exactly what the world needs? Maybe you've had grand plans before, but stopped yourself, thinking: That's impossible or that costs too much or that won't

杨澜ted演讲稿中文

杨澜ted演讲稿中文 欢迎来到聘才网,以下是聘才小编为大家搜索整理的,欢迎大家阅读。 杨澜ted演讲稿中文 The night before I was heading for Scotland, I was invited to host the final of "China's Got Talent" show in Shanghai with the 80,000 live audience in the stadium. Guewho was the performing guest? Susan Boyle. And I told her, "I'm going to Scotland the next day." She sang beautifully, and she even managed to say a few words in Chinese. So it's not like "hello" or "thank you," that ordinary stuff. It means "green onion for free." Why did she say that? Because it was a line from our Chinese parallel Susan Boyle -- a 50-some year-old woman, a vegetable vendor in Shanghai, who loves singing Western opera, but she didn't understand any English or French or Italian, so she managed to fill in the lyrics with vegetable names in Chinese. (Laughter) And the last sentence of Nessun Dorma that she was singing in the stadium was "green onion for free." So Susan Boyle was saying that, 80,000 live audience sang together. That was hilarious.

桑德伯格哈佛商学院毕业演讲稿

桑德伯格哈佛商学院毕业演讲稿 Facebook COO 桑德伯格哈佛商学院毕业演讲稿 It’s an honor to be here today to address HBS’s distinguished faculty, proud parents, patient guests, and most importantly, the class of 2012.今天很荣幸来到这里为尊敬的哈佛商学院(HBS)的教授们,自豪的毕业生家长们和耐心的来宾们,尤其是为今年的毕业生们演讲。 Today was supposed to be a day of [w]unbridled[/w] celebration and I know that’s no longer true. I join all of you in grieving for your classmate Nate. I know there are no words that makes something like this better.今天原本应该是狂欢的日子,不过我知道现在并不合适了(由于一名毕业生在欧洲突然死亡)让我们一起为Nate同学表示哀悼,当然任何言语在这样的悲剧前都苍白无力。 Although laden with sadness, today still marks a distinct and impressive achievement for this class. So please everyone join me in giving our warmest congratulations to this class of 2012.尽管有悲伤萦绕在大家心头,今天仍然象征着你们取得的杰出成绩。所以让我们一起为12届的毕业生们献上最热烈的祝贺。 When the wonderful Dean Nohria invited me to speak here today, I thought, come talk to a group of people

ted英文演讲稿3篇范文稿

ted英文演讲稿3篇 以下这篇由应届毕业生演讲稿网站整理提供的是《阿凡达》、《泰坦尼克号》的导演詹姆斯·卡梅隆(james cameron)的一篇ted演讲。在这个演讲里,卡梅隆回顾了自己从电影学院毕业后走上导演道路的故事。卡梅隆告诉你,不要畏惧失败,永远不要给自己设限。更多演讲稿范文,欢迎访问应届毕业生演讲稿网站! i grew up on a steady diet of science fiction. in high school, i took a bus to school an hour each way every day. and i was always absorbed in a book, science fiction book, which took my mind to other worlds, and satisfied, in a narrative form, this insatiable sense of curiosity that i had. and you know, that curiosity also manifested itself in the fact that whenever i wasn't in school i was out in the woods, hiking and taking "samples" -- frogs and snakes and bugs and pond water -- and bringing it back, looking at it under the microscope. you know, i was a real science geek. but it was all about trying to understand the world, understand the limits of possibility. and my love of science fiction actually seemed mirrored in the world around me, because what was happening, this was in the late '60s, we were going to the moon, we were exploring the deep oceans.jacques cousteau was coming into our living rooms with his amazing specials that showed us animals and places and a wondrous world that we could never really have previously imagined. so, that seemed to resonate with the whole science fiction part of it.

杨澜TED演讲:重塑中国的年轻一代(中英文对照)

杨澜TED演讲:重塑中国的年轻一代(中英文对照) The night before I was heading for Scotland, I was invited to host the final of “China’s Got Talent” show in Shanghai with the 80,000 live audience in the stadium. Guess who was the performing guest? Susan Boyle. And I told her, “I’m going to Scotland the next day.” She sang beautifully, and she even managed to say a few words in Chinese. [Chinese] So it’s not like “hello” or “thank you,” that ordinary stuff. It means “green onion for free.” Why did she say that? Because it was a li ne from our Chinese parallel Susan Boyle — a 50-some year-old woman, a vegetable vendor in Shanghai, who loves singing Western opera, but she didn’t understand any English or French or Italian, so she managed to fill in the lyrics with vegetable names in C hinese. (Laughter) And the last sentence of Nessun Dorma that she was singing in the stadium was “green onion for free.” So [as] Susan Boyle was saying that, 80,000 live audience sang together. That was hilarious. 来苏格兰(做TED讲演)的前夜,我被邀请去上海做”中国达人秀“决赛的评委。在装有八万现场观众的演播厅里,在台上的表演嘉宾居然是(来自苏格兰的,因参加英国达人秀走红的)苏珊大妈(Susan Boyle)。我告诉她,“我明天就要启程去苏格兰。” 她唱得很动听,还对观众说了几句中文,她并没有说简单的”你好“或者”谢谢“,她说的是——“送你葱”(Song Ni Cong)。为什么?这句话其实来源于中国版的“苏珊大妈”——一位五十岁的以卖菜为生,却对西方歌剧有出奇爱好的上海中年妇女(蔡洪平)。这位中国的苏珊大妈并不懂英文,法语或意大利文,所以她将歌剧中的词汇都换做中文中的蔬菜名,并且演唱出来。在她口中,歌剧《图兰朵》的最后一句便是“Song Ni Cong”。当真正的英国苏珊大妈唱出这一句“中文的”《图兰朵》时,全场的八万观众也一起高声歌唱,场面的确有些滑稽(hilarious)。 So I guess both Susan Boyle and this vegetable vendor in Shanghai belonged to otherness. They were the least expected to be successful in the business called entertainment, yet their courage and talent brought them through. And a show and a platform gave them the stage to realize their dreams. Well, being different is not that difficult. We are all different from different perspectives. But I think being different is good, because you present a different point of view. You may have the chance to make a difference. 我想Susan Boyle和这位上海的买菜农妇的确属于人群中的少数。她们是最不可能在演艺界成功的,而她们的勇气和才华让她们成功了,这个节目和舞台给予了她们一个实现个人梦想的机会。这样看来,与众不同好像没有那么难。从不同的方面审视,我们每个人都是不同的。但是我想,与众不同是一件好事,因为你代表了不一样的观点,你拥有了做改变的机会。 My generation has been very fortunate to witness and participate in the historic transformation of China that has made so many changes in the past 20, 30 years. I remember that in the year of 1990, when I was graduating from college, I was applying for a job in the sales department of the first five-star hotel in Beijing, Great

桑德伯格TED演讲

桑德伯格TED演讲:为什么女性领导那么少? Facebook COO 谢乐尔·桑德伯格(Sheryl Sandberg) 谢乐尔·桑德伯格(Sheryl Sandberg)是全球最大的社交网站Facebook的首席运营官,曾任比尔·克林顿政府的财政部办公室主任,后任Google副总裁,短时间内帮助谷歌实现盈利。2008年3月,桑德伯格加入新兴社交网络Facebook,担任首席运营官。3年后,Facebook 的用户数从当初的6000万飙升至如今的7亿,广告收入更是从2008年的3亿美元上涨到2010年的19亿美元,比两年前翻了六倍,而Google的广告收入在这三年增速减缓。她在演讲中为职场女性提供3条建议:像男性一样坐到谈判桌旁,争取自己能够胜任的职位和应得的薪水;与伴侣有效沟通,共同分担家务和养育孩子的责任;在得到自己想要的职位前“不要提前离场”。 正文:我们先承认我们是幸运的。我们没有生活在我们母亲和我们祖母生活过的那个世界,在那时,女性的职业选择是非常有限的。今天在座的各位,大多数人成长于一个女性有基本公民权的世界。令人惊讶地是,我们还生活在一个有些女性还没有这些权利的世界。但除上所述,我们还有一个问题,它是一个实际问题。这问题是:在世界各地,女性没达到任何职业的高管职位。这些数据很清楚地告诉我们这实情。190个国家元首里,九位是女性领导。在世界上议会的总人数中,13%是女性议员。在公司部门,女性占据高位C级职位,董事会席位高管职位比例占15%,16%。自从2002年起这数据没变化过有下降趋势。即使在非营利的行业----我们有时认为这一行业是被更多女性所领导的,女性领导人占20%。 我们还面临着另一个问题,就是女性在职业成功和个人价值实现中所面临的艰难选择。美国最近一个研究表明,已婚高管人员,三分之二的已婚男性高管人员有孩子,只有三分之一的已婚女性高管人员有孩子。几年前,我在纽约,出席一个协议,在那种别致的纽约私募投资办事处中的一个你能想象到的。我在这个大约有3小时的会议上,过了2小时,有个间歇休息,所有人都站起来,这会议组织者开始显得的确很尴尬。我意识到他不知道在他办公室哪里是女洗手间。所以我开始寻找移动厕所,盘算他们刚搬进来,但我没有看到任何移动厕所。然后我说,“你是刚搬到这办公室吗?”他说,“不是,我们在这儿已经有一年了。”我说,“你能否告诉我这一年来,我是唯一一个来这间办公室的女性吗?”他看着我,说到,“是的。或者说你可能是唯一一个要上女性洗手间。” 所以问题是,我们该怎样解决这样的尴尬?我们怎样改变这些高管职位的比例?我们怎样使这个变得不同?我首先想说,我谈这个女性就职因为我的确认为我们得找到答案。在我们劳动力的高收入的部分,在高管的人员中,财富500强首席执行长官中,或在其它类似的高管行业中,我确信,问题是女性被排除在外。当下人们对此谈了很多,他们谈到像弹性时间和指导公司应该培训妇女计划的事。今天我不想谈这些尽管所有这些事都非常重要。今天我想关注作为个人我们所能做到的事。我们要告诉给自己的事是什么?我们告诉给女同事和打工的女性的事是什么?我们要告诉给我们女儿的事是什么? 现在首先,我想澄清这个演讲不带有任何评判。我也没有正确的答案;甚至就我而言,我也没有完全的答案。在周一,我离开我生活的加利福尼亚,我坐上飞机赶赴这会议。当我送我三岁的女儿到幼儿园时,她紧紧抱进我的腿,哭喊着,“妈咪,不要上飞机”之类的话。这很难受。有时我感到内疚。我知道无论是家庭主妇,还是职业女性,有时她们都会感同身受。所以我不会说对所有人来说,呆在职场是件正确的事。今天我的演讲是要讲如果你真正想呆在职场。我想有3条建议。一、坐在桌旁。二、让你的伴侣成为一个真正的合作伙伴。三、在你离开前别放弃。

TED英文演讲稿:谈转变心态的珠峰游(附翻译)

TED英文演讲稿:谈转变心态的珠峰游(附翻译)Last year when I was here, I was speaking to you about a swim which I did across the North Pole.去年,当我站在这里的时候,我在谈论我横跨北极的游泳。 And while that swim took place three years ago, I can remember it as if it was yesterday.那还是发生在3年前,对我则好像是昨天一般。 I remember standing on the edge of the ice, about to dive into the water, and thinking to myself, I have never ever seen any place on this earth which is just so frightening.我还记得我站在冰层的边缘,就要扎进水里,然后我自己想到,我再也再也不要看到地球上的这个地方,这里是如此的让人恐惧。 The water is completely black.The water is minus 1.7 degrees centigrade, or 29 degrees Fahrenheit.It's flipping freezing in that water. 那里的水是全黑色。水的温度是负1.7摄氏度,华氏29度。那水里就是翻动的冰块。 And then a thought came across my mind: if things go pear-shaped on this swim, how long will it take for my frozen body to sink the four and a half kilometers to the bottom of the ocean?然后一个念头在我脑

TED英语演讲稿

TED英语演讲稿 When you are a kid, you get asked this one particular question a lot, it really gets kind of annoying. What do you want to be when you grow up? Now, adults are hoping for answers like, I want to be an astronaut or I want to be a neurosurgeon, youre adults in your imaginations. Kids, theyre most likely to answer with pro-skateboarder, surfer or minecraft player. I asked my little brother, and he said, seriously dude, Im 10, I have no idea, probably a pro-skier, lets go get some ice cream. See, us kids are going to answer something were stoked on, what we think is cool, what we have experience with, and thats typically the opposite of what adults want to hear. But if you ask a little kid, sometimes youll get the best answer, something so simple, so obvious and really profound. When I grow up, I want to be happy. For me, when I grow up, I want to continue to be happy like I am now. Im stoked to be here at TedEx, I mean, Ive been watching Ted videos for as long as I can remember, but I never thought Id make it on the stage here so soon. I mean, I just became a teenager, and like most teenage boys, I spend most of my time wondering,

ted演讲中英对照-拖延症

TED演讲——拖延症 拖延症者的思维方式到底是什么样的?为什么有些人非要到deadline来的时候才知道打起精神做事情?是否存在执行力强的人或是说人人都有一定程度的拖延症?Tim Urban从一个被deadline 赶着走的拖延症者的角度带你走进拖延症的神奇思维世界。 中英对照翻译 So in college, I was a government major, which means I had to write a lot of papers. Now, when a normal student writes a paper, they might spread the work out a little like this. So, you know --you get started maybe a little slowly, but you get enough done in the first week that, with some heavier days later on, everything gets done, things stay civil.And I would want to do that like that. That would be the plan. I would have it all ready to go, but then, actually, the paper would come along, and then I would kind of do this. 在大学,我读的是政府专业。也就是说,我需要写很多的论文。一般的学生写论文时,他们可能会这样安排:(看图)你可能开头会慢一点,但第一周有这些已经足够。后期再一点点的增加,最后任务完成,非常的有条理。我也想这么做,所以一开始也是这么计划的。我做了完美的安排(看图),但后来,实际上论文任务一直出现,我就只能这样了(看图)。 And that would happen every single paper. But then came my 90-page senior thesis, a paper you're supposed to spend a year on. And I knew for a paper like that, my normal work flow was not an option. It was way too big a project. So I planned things out, and I decided I kind of had to go something like this. This is how the year would go. So I'd start off light, and I'd bump it up in the middle months, and then at the end, I would kick it up into high gear just like a little staircase. How hard could it be to walk up the stairs? No big deal, right? 我的每一篇论文都是这种情况,直到我长达90页的毕业论文任务,这篇论文理应花一年的时间来做,我也知道这样的工作,我先前的工作方式是行不通的,这个项目太大,所以我制定了计划。决定按照这样的方式工作,这样来安排我这一年。(看图)开头我会轻松一点,中期任务逐渐增加,到最后,我再全力冲刺一下。整体是这种阶梯式安排,一层一层走楼梯有多难?所以没什么大不了的,是吧? But then, the funniest thing happened. Those first few months? They came and went, and I couldn't quite do stuff. So we had an awesome new revised plan. And then --But then those middle months actually went by, and I didn't really write words, and so we were here.And then two months turned into one month, which turned into two weeks. 但后来,好笑的事情出现了,头几个月时光匆匆而逝,我还没有来得及动工,所以我们明智的调整了计划。然后,中间的几个月也过去了,我还是一个字也没有动,眨眼就到了这里,然后两个月变成了一个月,再变成了2周。 And one day I woke up with three days until the deadline, still not having written a word, and so I did the only thing I could: I wrote 90 pages over 72 hours, pulling not one but two all-nighters -- humans are not supposed to pull two all-nighters -- sprinted across campus, dove in slow motion, and got it in just at the deadline. 一天我醒来,发现离交稿日期只剩3天了,但我还一个字都没写。我别无选择,只能在接下来的72小时里,连续通宵两个晚上赶论文——一般人不应连续通宵两个晚上。90页赶出来后,我飞速冲过校园,像电影中的特写慢镜头一样,恰好在截止日期前的最后一刻交上。 I thought that was the end of everything. But a week later I get a call, and it's the school. And they say, "Is this Tim Urban?" And I say, "Yeah." And they say, "We need to talk about your thesis." And I say, "OK." And they say, "It's the best one we've ever seen." That did not happen.It was a very, very bad thesis. I just wanted to enjoy that one moment when all of you thought, "This guy is amazing!" No, no, it was very, very bad. 我以为事情就这么完了,但一周后,我接到一个电话,是学校打来的。他们说:“你是Tim Urban 吗?”我说:“是。”他们说:“我们要说一说你的毕业论文。”我说:“好啊。”他们说:“这是我见过最棒

雪莉桑德伯格演讲

(1)Congratulations everyone, you made it And I don't mean to the end of college, I mean to class day because if memory serves some of your classmates had too many scorpion bowls at the Kong last night and are with us today Given the weather the one thing Harvard hasn't figured out how to control some of your other classmates are at someplace warm with a hot cocoa so you have many reasons to feel proud of yourself as you sit here today Congratulations to your parents You have spent a lot of money so your child can say she went to a "small school" near Boston And thank you to the class of 2014 for inviting me to be part of your celebration It means a great deal to me and looking at the list of past speakers was a little daunting I can't be as funny as Amy Poehler but I'm gonna be funnier than Mother Teresa 25 years ago a man named Dave I did not know at the time but who would one day become my husband was sitting where you are sitting today 23 years ago I was sitting where you are sitting today Dave and I are back this weekend with our amazing son and daughter to celebrate his reunion and we both share the same sentiment Harvard has a good basketball team Standing here in the yard brings memories flooding back for me I arrived here from Miami in the fall of 1987 with big hopes and even bigger hair I was assigned to live in one of Harvard's historic monuments to great architecture Canaday My go-to outfit, and I'm not making this up, was a jean skirt white leg warmers and sneakers and a Florida sweater because my parents who were here with me then as they're here with me now told me everyone would think it was awesome that I was from Florida At least we didn't have Instagram For me, Harvard was a series of firsts

Ted英语演讲稿-Underwater Astonishment

三一文库(https://www.360docs.net/doc/2417560624.html,)/演讲致辞/英语演讲稿 Ted英语演讲稿:Underwater Astonishment weregoingtogoonadivetothedeepsea,andanyonethat shadthatlovelyopportunityknowsthatforabouttwoa ndhalfhoursonthewaydown,itsaperfectlypositivel ypitch-blackworld.andweusedtoseethemostmysteri ousanimalsoutthewindowthatyoucouldntdescribe:t heseblinkinglights--aworldofbioluminescence,li kefireflies.dr.edithwidder--shesnowattheoceanr esearchandconservationassociation--wasabletoco meupwithacamerathatcouldcapturesomeoftheseincr edibleanimals,andthatswhatyoureseeinghereonthe screen. 好了,我们即将潜入海底深处。任何一个有过这种美妙机会的人都知道在这两个半小时的下降过程中,是一个完全漆黑的世界。我们透过窗户会看见世界上各种最神秘的动物,各种无法形

容的动物。这些闪亮着的光,完美地构成了如萤火虫般发光的世界。研究保护协会的edithwitter博士发明了一种照相机,这种照相机可以拍下这些令人难以置信的生物。这就是你现在在屏幕上看到的。 thatsallbioluminescence.so,likeisaid:justlikef ireflies.theresaflyingturkeyunderatree.(laught er)imageologistbytraining.butilovethat.andyous ee,someofthebioluminescencetheyusetoavoidbeing eaten,sometheyusetoattractprey,butallofit,from anartisticpointofview,ispositivelyamazing.anda lotofwhatgoesoninside...theresafishwithglowing eyes,pulsatingeyes.someofthecolorsaredesignedt ohypnotize,theselovelypatterns.andthenthislast one,oneofmyfavorites,thispinwheeldesign.justab solutelyamazing,everysingledive. 他们全部都是生物发光体。像我说的,就像萤火虫一样。这是个会飞的火鸡,在树下。(笑声)我知道我现在像是个实习期的地质学家,不过我就是喜欢。你可以看到这些生物发出的光,有些是为了避免被吃掉。有些又是为引诱食物上钩。尽管如此,用艺术的角度来看,这些都如此神奇。再来看看这里发生了些什

2016thomas suarez ted演讲稿中英文

2016thomas suarez ted演讲稿中英文 thomassuarez年纪12岁的他,制作iphoneApp的他被大家称之为小乔布斯,在TED上发表精彩演讲,讲述他的童年时代那些创作故事,下面是第一公文网小编整理的thomassuarezted演讲稿中英文 thomassuarezted演讲稿中英文 Helloeveryone,mynameisThomasSuarez. I'vealwayshadafascinationforcomputersandtechnology,andImadeafewappsfort heiphone,ipodTouch,andipad.I'dliketoshareacouplewithyoutoday. 我一直都对计算机与科技很入迷,我研制了一些适用于Iphone,iTouch以及ipad的应用。今天,我想与大家分享一些我研发出的应用。 MyfirstappwasauniquefortunetellercalledEarthFortunethatwoulddisplaydifferen tcolorsofearthdependingonwhatyourfortunewas.Myfavoriteandmostsuccessfulappi sBustinJieber,whichis—(Laughter)—whichi saJustinBieberWhac-A-Mole. 我最先研制出的应用是一个叫EarthFortune的运势测试器,它能根据你的运势呈现不同颜色的地球图形我个人最喜欢、也是最成功的应用叫BustinJieber它是一个---(笑声)它是一个贾斯汀·比伯攻击器(Whac-A-Mole原意为"打地鼠"游戏) IcreateditbecausealotofpeopleatschooldislikedJustinBieberalittlebit,soIdeci dedtomaketheapp. 在学校里,我的很多同学都不太喜欢贾斯汀·比伯,所以我决定开发这样一个应用。 SoIwenttoworkprogrammingit,andIreleaseditjustbeforetheholidaysin2016. 于是我就开始写这个程序,并且在2016年圣诞假期和新年来临之前发布了这个应用。 Alotofpeopleaskme,howdidImakethese?Alotoftimesit'sbecausethepersonwhoas kedthequestionwantstomakeanappalso. 很多人都问我,是怎样开发出这些应用的?很多情况下,那些问这个问题的人,其实也想开发应用。 Alotofkidsthesedaysliketoplaygames,butnowtheywanttomakethem,andit'sdiff icult,becausenotmanykidsknowwheretogotofindouthowtomakeaprogram. 如今,很多的孩子都喜欢玩游戏,但是,现在他们也想制作游戏。这是很困难的,因为

相关文档
最新文档