Tragedy in Nairobi

It was with great sadness that we learnt of the tragic murder of Ross Langdon and his wife Elif Yavuz in the terrorist attacks in Nairobi on Saturday. They were expecting their first baby in a couple of weeks. Ross spoke at TEDxKraków in 2012 about his work as an architect in Africa. He devoted his life to creating sustainable architecture that is integrated into communities, and he left us with hope for humanity. It’s impossible to make sense of this senseless and shocking loss of life. We send our condolences to both their families.

 

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TEDxCity2.0 in Kraków

The 2012 TED Prize was, for the first time in the history of TED, awarded not to an individual but to an idea – the idea of a new generation of cities. Cities that are safer, more beautiful and healthier for everyone – the City 2.0.

Tomorrow, on 20 September 2013, TEDx communities around the world will get together to watch the live broadcast of the TEDxCity2.0 conference from New York, where over 20 speakers will talk about how innovative ideas and ideas can really change the cities in which we live for the better. The conference will take place at Times Square and will address topics that have great significance for the success of the City 2.0: arts, education, food, health, housing, play, public space and security. Speakers will include urban planners, anthropologists, architects, strategists and even mayors of some of the most progressive cities around the world. Details of the conference can be found on the website of the event. We are most looking forward to Catherine Bracy’s talk as she’s going to be a guest at our own TEDxKraków 2013 in October (there’s still time to register!). Catherine will be talking about extending the Code for America project outside of US. What does this mean for us? Come and find out for yourself!

So we invite you to watch the broadcast of the TEDxCity2.0 conference together with us. We’re inviting lots of energetic people who are running various projects, workshops and meetings around our city to show that it is worth being active and to work for the good of the community. We decided to organize the viewing of the transmission so that we could invite residents of Krakow to a common reflection on the city, so a very interesting afternoon awaits you tomorrow – lots of great talks and discussions, as well as a couple of projects on local typography and sounds. See you in Czuły Barbarzyńca cafe (ul. Powiśle 11), tomorrow at 2.45 p.m.

P.S. The poster you see in the post has been featured on the TEDx website as one of seven amazing TEDxCity2.0 posters – we’re very, very proud of our graphic designers :)

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Introducing the Speakers: Trine Hahnemann

The Queen of Nordic cookery, Trine Hahnemann, is coming back to Kraków. This time to talk about her “Rye Bread Project,” a movement started three years ago to reintroduce heritage rye grains to the North-East region of the United States. The project’s first initiative, the ‘Smørrebrød Table‘, organized in the New York City brought together specialists from different fields including organic local farmers, bakers, chefs, international government officials, ecological planners, public health experts, educators and parents in an attempt to collaboratively solve important food issues ranging from health to ecology. Last year, the Rye Bread Project reached a significant milestone when 24 varieties of heritage rye seeds were generously donated to the purposes of this project by the Norwegian-based Svalbard Global Seed Vault and later were distributed to the American farmers to start a long-term testing process.

In addition to bringing rye bread back to our homes and lives, Trine shares her love of food through cooking on television shows such as Good Morning Denmark, writing for Denmark’s leading women’s magazine column, tweeting, founding new projects, advocating for sustaining regional farming, and writing cooking books. As if that was not enough, she also teaches cooking classes and organizes workshops focused on sustaining the food culture.

Trine’s fascinating background includes having an on-tour catering company and cooking for artists such as the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Soundgarden, Elton John, Pink Floyd, Tina Turner, Rolling Stones, as well as many Danish bands. She also founded a company that runs in-house canteens and staff restaurants for large corporations and government organizations, including the Danish House of Parliament.

As part of her Kraków visit, Trine also plans to organize a rye bread baking workshop and teach us about the value of rye bread and whole grain meals. We are all very excited to have Trine back in Poland in October!

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Introducing the Speakers: Trine Hahnemann

The Queen of Nordic cookery, Trine Hahnemann, is coming back to Kraków. This time to talk about her “Rye Bread Project,” a movement started three years ago to reintroduce heritage rye grains to the North-East region of the United States. The project’s first initiative, the ‘Smørrebrød Table‘, organized in the New York City brought together specialists from different fields including organic local farmers, bakers, chefs, international government officials, ecological planners, public health experts, educators and parents in an attempt to collaboratively solve important food issues ranging from health to ecology. Last year, the Rye Bread Project reached a significant milestone when 24 varieties of heritage rye seeds were generously donated to the purposes of this project by the Norwegian-based Svalbard Global Seed Vault and later were distributed to the American farmers to start a long-term testing process.

In addition to bringing rye bread back to our homes and lives, Trine shares her love of food through cooking on television shows such as Good Morning Denmark, writing for Denmark’s leading women’s magazine column, tweeting, founding new projects, advocating for sustaining regional farming, and writing cooking books. As if that was not enough, she also teaches cooking classes and organizes workshops focused on sustaining the food culture.

Trine’s fascinating background includes having an on-tour catering company and cooking for artists such as the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Soundgarden, Elton John, Pink Floyd, Tina Turner, Rolling Stones, as well as many Danish bands. She also founded a company that runs in-house canteens and staff restaurants for large corporations and government organizations, including the Danish House of Parliament.

As part of her Kraków visit, Trine also plans to organize a rye bread baking workshop and teach us about the value of rye bread and whole grain meals. We are all very excited to have Trine back in Poland in October!

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Introducing the Speakers: Janusz Makuch

With our next speaker, we return back to Poland, and right back to Kraków to speak of the man behind of one of our city’s most distinguishing annual events. Janusz Makuch is best known as a founder of the Jewish Culture Festival in Kraków and has been its director for 25 years. Amongst many honors, he was awarded the Officer’s Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta “for outstanding achievements in discovering, collecting and disseminating the truth about the Holocaust, and for his contribution to advancing the history of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising”.

Janusz Makuch

During his TEDxKraków Talk, Janusz will tell the story of the transformation that took place in a young Pole who discovered his personal Atlantis – the Jewish world – many years ago. This story entails entering a world of cultural pluralism, in which the most important trait is mutual respect for all differences, and in which it’s sometimes necessary to be a heretic marching against the tide of history, because there is no progress without heresy. In short, his own story.

As a fifteen-year-old, Janusz discovered that half of the pre-war population of his family home of Puławy had been Jewish. This fact took him by surprise and sparked his curiosity. He began to study the subject – the history of the Jews, their language, customs, Jewish philosophy – and the more he read and understood, the more he could not believe that such a great and splendid culture, which was once an integral part of many Polish towns and cities, had not even left a trace.

It was only a few years later that Janusz, then a young graduate of Polish Studies at the Jagiellonian University, founded the Jewish Culture Festival in Kraków together with Krzysztof Gierat. The first edition was held in 1988 in a small cinema and was the first attempt to bridge two cultures: Polish and Jewish. Even this small step took great courage. After all, in the eighties the word “Jew” was still considered derogatory, if it was considered at all.

Throughout its 25-year history, the Jewish Culture Festival has led to the rebirth of Jewish life in Kazimierz, and is now one of the biggest and most important festivals of its kind in the world. It features Jewish folk music and traditional Klezmer, synagogue and Hasidic music, as well as modern fusion experiments such as Hebrew jazz, rap, gospel and afro-beat, as well as film screenings, debates, workshops, multimedia and art exhibitions and performances by and centered around the Jewish community in Poland and abroad. Most significantly, it draws a largely non-Jewish, Polish audience that is able to witness the rebirth of Jewish culture in Krakow.

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Announcing Maker Weekend!

As you may have heard through the grapevine (or our blog), the theme of this year’s is TEDxKraków conference is Make! However, the conference itself will only last one day, but there are a whole bunch of “Makers” who want to infect others with their ideas and positive energy. Therefore, we decided to go a step further, and spread out the idea of making over a whole weekend. Hence, Maker Weekend!


What’s it about?

The aim of Maker Weekend is to encourage the spread of Maker Culture, a phenomenon known mainly in the U.S. but slowly making its way over to Poland. “Makers” are not just activists, artists and programmers, but anyone who creates something based on his or her own creativity and wants to share their ideas, passion and positive energy with others.

Maker Weekend is a weekend of workshops and meetings that will not only expand on the topics and ideas discussed during TEDxKraków, but allow you to also try to spread new ideas while picking up new skills.

When will it happen?

26-27 October, or the weekend immediately following TEDxKraków 2013.

Where will it happen?

We want all the workshops to be held in one place, which will be announced shortly.

Who will take part?

We have invited the speakers of this year’s TEDxKraków as well as many local makers.

Here are a few of the confirmed workshops:

· The Hackathon – a workshop for developers
· Tinkering Workshop – DIY workshops for children led by Gever Tulley and the Children’s University
· Rye Bread Workshop – a bread baking workshop led by Trine Hahnemann
· Najedzeni Fest – the second edition of a culinary festival where Krakow restaurants present new and fresh culinary ideas: najedzenifest.blogspot.com
· Film Workshops in Alvernia Studios – A journey into the world of film in one of the most modern film studios in Europe

If you want to submit your initiative and help us spread the idea of ​​Make!, contact us via email. Be sure to write who you are and what idea you would like to share during Maker Weekend. The application deadline is 30 September.

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Introducing the Speakers: Richard Satava

“You go through one failure after another, and finally you get things done,” says Richard Satava, who believes that you cannot have innovation without first failing.

When you look at Richard’s accomplishments – active flight surgeon, a US Army astronaut candidate, DARPA employee, and an inventor of cutting edge technologies to create the next generation of medicine, it probably would never cross your mind that he believes all of his accomplishments stem from failure.

Richard says that science is currently experiencing a crisis because it cannot explain all the phenomena occurring in the universe. New technologies are mushrooming and the current scientific methods we’re using aren’t leaving room for truly innovative thinking. Richards says that we are on the verge of a revolution – and if it happens, it might have a greater impact on us than the emergence of the Internet.

Currently, Richard is working as a surgeon using technology and tools that look like something from a science fiction movie. If you’d like to find out more, have a look at his presentation on Reaching For Innovation, One Failure at a Time from the Business Innovation Factory Conference. We’re sure that Richard will convince you to his groundbreaking approach to the world!

 

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Introducing the Speakers: Gever Tulley

“Don’t play with those matches!” – is something we all heard as kids, despite the fact that all we ever wanted is to make the wooden stick produce flames as if by magic. Gever Tulley believes that experiments such as these enrich our childhood and teach us how the world functions.

‪Gever is the founder of the Tinkering School – a week long, sleepaway summer camp for children, where kids learn by doing. Some of the projects built by students include a three-story tree house and a roller coaster. Gever argues that allowing children to do things conventionally has been considered to be dangerous, but in reality it teaches them creativity and helps them explore the environment and learn how to safely function in it.

In his book 50 Dangerous Things (You Should Let Your Children Do), Gever included some of Tinkering School program’s curriculum: tree climbing, boiling water in a paper cup and deconstructing an appliance. Who doesn’t want to try these things? The book is an attempt to persuade parents who are overly protective of their children that preventing kids from doing these things suppresses their innate curiosity and sense of exploration. Gever believes that whether we consider something to be dangerous or not, it is the result of our upbringing and the influence of the society that we live in.

Gever is no stranger to TED as he has spoken at TED twice as well as at multiple TEDx events.

Gever will  be coming to TEDxKraków with two of his students who will tell us about life doing dangerous things. You can learn more about Gever’s projects from their websites: Tinkering School and Brightworks.

 

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Introducing the Speakers: Gever Tulley

“Don’t play with those matches!” – is something we all heard as kids, despite the fact that all we ever wanted is to make the wooden stick produce flames as if by magic. Gever Tulley believes that experiments such as these enrich our childhood and teach us how the world functions.

‪Gever is the founder of the Tinkering School – a week long, sleepaway summer camp for children, where kids learn by doing. Some of the projects built by students include a three-story tree house and a roller coaster. Gever argues that allowing children to do things conventionally has been considered to be dangerous, but in reality it teaches them creativity and helps them explore the environment and learn how to safely function in it.

In his book 50 Dangerous Things (You Should Let Your Children Do), Gever included some of Tinkering School program’s curriculum: tree climbing, boiling water in a paper cup and deconstructing an appliance. Who doesn’t want to try these things? The book is an attempt to persuade parents who are overly protective of their children that preventing kids from doing these things suppresses their innate curiosity and sense of exploration. Gever believes that whether we consider something to be dangerous or not, it is the result of our upbringing and the influence of the society that we live in.

Gever is no stranger to TED as he has spoken at TED twice as well as at multiple TEDx events.

Gever will  be coming to TEDxKraków with two of his students who will tell us about life doing dangerous things. You can learn more about Gever’s projects from their websites:Tinkering School and Brightworks.

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TEDxKraków 2013 Registration Begins this Sunday!

On October 25th, a few fascinating speakers, several unique artists, and hundreds of people worth meeting will gather for the 2013 TEDxKraków conference. And starting this Sunday, you can register to be a part of it all!

If you’ve been following our blog, you’ve already seen the first few speakers and artists announced for this year’s TEDxKraków. There is Steve Crawshaw of Amnesty International, who is fascinated with people using playful disobedience to fight the system. Michał Żołnowski is a Polish physician whose hobby is looking for asteroids using an iPad that remotely controls an observatory hidden in an Italian village. Then there are some great women – Catherine Bracy, who with the help of new technologies is building a modern civil society, and Agnieszka Stach, who is trying to make Polish law understandable for common people and advocating for the “prophylactic” use of lawyers.

All that we want to know from you is to get to know a little about what drives you and what makes you a maker (it is our theme, after all). We want you to let us know who you are, what you are looking for in life and from TEDxKraków what you can offer our community. TED Conferences tend to have an audience filled with interesting people who don’t differ much from those who are on the stage. We want the talks during the breaks to be just as enriching for you as those by the speakers, so we invite people who are willing to give something back to the community through their activity, commitment and passion. How can you change the lives of the other participants? How will you make the world a better place? Think carefully when filling out your application, as this will decide who will be with us on October 25th and helps make TEDxKraków an unforgettable experience.

This year, you can register online anytime from the opening of registration on September 1st until September 27th, and we will let you know by Monday the 30th if you’re in or not. Then, you’ll have three days to purchase your ticket (the cost is 56 PLN) and you’re done. Much easier, don’t you think?

Stay tuned on Sunday for the link to the registration page!

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