In his 2006 TED lecture, Professor of International Health, Hans Rosling, shows that, contrary to rumours, the end is not yet nigh. Complex global trends – in life expectancy, child mortality and poverty – are revealed in ways that may surprise. See the world changing. Marxists please take note.
Professor Rosling’s follow-up lecture, filmed in March 2007, can be viewed here. More here and at TEDblog.
(H/T, Vitruvius.)
Thanks for the link to the 2007 video, David. I had not previously seen it. I’ve been poking around a bit further, and am now studying Prof. Rosling et al’s http://www.gapminder.org/ web site. This stuff really is quite interesting.
Oh my, check this out David. The live interactive web-based software that Prof. Rosling has been talking about is available here:
http://tools.google.com/gapminder/
This thing is amazing. I’ve been exploring it for hours. The on-line help is available here (and from the upper-left corner of the tool):
http://www.gapminder.org/gapminderworld/help/gapminder_world_help.htm
Did the South African government change in 1991?
Most of sub-Saharan Africa got hammered by disease starting in the late 1980’s, as shown by this Gapminder animation I just made:
http://tinyurl.com/2a7yf3
Wow! Thanks for posting the link Vitruvius (and David for posting the video, of course). It is one of the most fascinating sites I’ve seen on this internet thingy.
Things Just May Be Better Than You Think: ‘New insights on poverty and life around the world’
In his 2006 TED lecture (Technology, Entertainment, Design, Professor of International Health), Hans Rosling, shows that, contrary to rumors, the end is not yet almost upon us. Complex global trends in life expectancy, child mortality and poverty are r…