Pablos Holman, A Message From a Deep Futurist: We Need Humans to Fix Things
Hosted by Andrew Keen, Keen On features conversations with some of the world’s leading thinkers and writers about the economic, political, and technological issues being discussed in the news, right now.
In this episode, Andrew is joined by Pablos Holman, founder of Intellectual Ventures Lab.
Pablos Holman is a notorious hacker, inventor, entrepreneur, and technology futurist who looks at the world differently than most, and is on a quest to solve the world's problems through the innovation of technology. At the Intellectual Ventures Lab, he has worked on a brain surgery tool, a machine to suppress hurricanes, a self-sterilizing elevator button, a cure for cancer, a laser that shoots laser beams at malaria-carrying mosquitoes, and 3D food printers. Pablos has a unique ability to articulate practical visions for the future of technology. He has contributed to visions for the future of urban transportation, entertainment, education, healthcare, food delivery, sensor networks, payment systems & cloud computing. Previously, Pablos helped build spaceships; the world's smallest PC; artificial intelligence agent systems; and the Hackerbot, a robot that can steal passwords on a Wi-Fi network.
249 Years Later: Is America Still Worth the Fireworks?
The Nazi Mind: 12 Warnings from History
Death of the American Dream: Terrence McCauley on why the Mob was behind the JFK Assassination
Why Everything is Propaganda: Connor Boyack's Libertarian Manifesto for July 4
From the Internet of Trolls to the Internet of Tolls: Has the Publishing Apocalypse Finally Arrived?
From Ghana to Goldman Sachs: Rachel Laryea on a Blueprint for Black Capitalism
The Great White Hoax: Two Centuries of Manufactured Racism in America
The Real Monkey Business: What the 1925 Scopes Trial was actually all about
The Michael Douglas Trap: What Is Wrong with Men
The $200 billion dilemma: Is Bill Gates helping or harming Africa?
The Architecture of Terror: Rafia Zakaria on Trump, Miller, Israel, Iran and Gaza
Why Elections Aren't Always Democratic: Challenging American Political Science's Founding Myth
The Virtuous Side Of Silicon Valley: How Jimmy Chen is Building Tech to Help the Poorest America