As man has ever traveled, two miles down, to get to the rock thats become this liquid molten gold. But golds not all, scientists have found Something Else down there something known as extreme light. Which might also exist on mars. So the martians we meet in the future be prepared to be surprised, i would say. ticking welcome to the future m. I. T. s media lab, a place that follows crazy ideas wherever they may lead. We get to think about the future. What does the world look like ten years, 20 years, 30 years . What should it look like . Time to go to sleep. How about dream control . Robotic prosthetics . Whats the largest city in bulgaria and what is the population . Or connecting the human brain to the internet . Sofia, 1. 21 million. That is correct you know, the best way to predict the future is to invent it. ticking im steve kroft. Im lesley stahl. Im scott pelley. Im anderson cooper. Im bill whitaker. Those stories, tonight, on 60 minutes. ticking a lot will happen in your life.
Former patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez was the most severe case of the degenerative brain disease c. T. E. She had ever seen in someone under 30. Tonight we hear that its not only athletes who are at risk, but also the 300,000 soldiers who have returned home from war with brain injuries. Before he was deployed, he said, you know mom, i could come back with no legs, or no arms, but nobody ever said that he could lose his mind one day at a time. ticking dolphin sounds welcome to the future m. I. T. s media lab, a place that follows crazy ideas wherever they may lead. We get to think about the future. What does the world look like ten years, 20 years, 30 years . What should it look like . Time to go to sleep. How about dream control . Robotic prosthetics . Whats the largest city in bulgaria and what is the population . Or connecting the human brain to the internet . Sofia, 1. 21 million. That is correct you know, the best way to predict the future is to invent it. ticking im steve krof
and digital currency. this is just under 2 1/2 hours. hello. thanks for having me. my name is adam piore, and i m glad to be here. i m here to talk about my book, the bodybuilders: inside the science of the engineered human, and some of the trends that i reviewed. it s funny to be here, because i left d.c. i used to cover i m a journalist. i used to cover capitol hill. about 20 years ago i left and said i was never coming back. and actually, i covered congress for a newspaper in new jersey, and i left in the middle of the monica lewinsky scandal. my job was to stand off the house floor and ask every congressman what they thought of the day s news. so, i quit my job and i went about as far away as i could go, and i moved to the country of cambodia. and i spent a year and a half there reporting on events there, and it was an amazing experience. people were the country was emerging from 30 years of civil war, from a genocide in which one in four people died of murder, st
to be here. i m here to talk a little bit about my book which is called the body builders, inside the science of the engineered human and some of the trends that i reviewed. it s funny to be here because i m i left d.c., i used to cover capitol hill a few years ago, i left and said i was never coming back. it actually relates because i covered congress for a newspaper in new jersey and i left in the middle of the monica lewinsky scandal. my job was to stand off the house floor and ask every congressman what they thought of the day s news. so i quit my job and i went about as far away as i could go and i moved to the country of cambodia and i spent a year and a half there reporting on events there and it was an amazing experience, people were the country was emerging from 30 years of civil war, from a genocide in one one in four people died of murder, starvation and disease. what really struck me while i was there was this theme of human resilience and it was a very valuab
middle of the monica lewinsky scandal. my job was to stand off the house floor and ask congressman what they thought of the day s news. so i quit my job and moved to cambodia. i spent a year and a half there reporting on events there, and it was an amazing experience. the country was emerges from 30 years of civil war, from a genocide in which one in four people dies of murder, starvation and disease. what really struck me when i was there, the human resilience. d.c., there s a lot of data there and information bush to be seeing people s lives and how they bounce back, it started to change the way i looked at journalism and what i wanted do. and when i came back, i wanted to write more about the theme of human resilience and i found that in the united states, some of the most exciting stories of human resilience are being unleashed by technology. that s what my book is about engineering. my presentation is less data driven than some of the stuff. what i tried to do is put s