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The Blockchain and Us - "A blockchain conversation with industry pioneers" [2017] [CC] - Duration: 31:27.
A Film by Manuel Stagars
THE BLOCKCHAIN AND US
In 1903, the Wright brothers invented the airplane.
It was hard to imagine then that today, there would be
over 500,000 people travelling in the air at any point in time.
In 2008, Satoshi Nakamoto invented bitcoin and the blockchain.
For the first time in history his invention made it possible
to send money around the globe without banks,
governments, or any other intermediaries.
Satoshi is a mystery character and just like the Wright brothers
he solved an unsolvable problem.
Whenever this happens, it inspires incredible innovation.
The concept of the blockchain isn't very intuitive
but still, many people believe it is a gamechanger.
Despite its mysterious beginnings,
the blockchain may be the airplane of our time.
Chapter 1: First Contact With The Blockchain
I found out about blockchain first
as most people around that time were through bitcoin.
Personally, at first I thought bitcoin was a terrible idea.
I was teaching at Stanford back in 2010
and a teaching assistant for the class sent me an article.
She said "There's this really cool thing, it's open source money."
I remember thinking "Open source money, isn't that cool
but it will probably never work."
I did what most people do the first moment
they are exposed to bitcoin. I discounted it.
I thought this was silly Internet money
you could mine it, it's like a golden goose.
It took me about a year to really re-explore the technology.
By 2012 I did what I tell most people to do today:
Turn off your phone, lock your door, and study this technology for a day.
It's the best advice I could give.
I was on a sabbatical from work.
I decided I take a year off, live off some savings
and figure out what I want to do.
It was there that I discovered this little orange icon with a B in the middle
and said "What is this strange thing."
I started looking... Bitcoin... interesting.
That was about 2012/2013
and I haven't left this space since.
I continued further down the blockchain rabbit hole if you will
and I've been pleasantly surprised
and had no reason to crawl my way back out
and find another technology.
There's a point at which you almost can't stop.
It just gets so interesting and you're so fascinated by it
and you just want to learn more and more.
Even to this day, there are new developments
and new ways of solving problems, new approaches
and it's very exciting to be in this world.
It feels really exciting to be involved in blockchain.
It feels like we're at the forefront of something
that has at least the potential to transform
our interactions between each other
between corporations, the underlying infrastructure
of both the private sector but also of government.
For me part of the fascination is that
we don't yet know exactly what this thing is
and yet, there are still lots of people gathering around it.
I thought of it as a space rock that crashed on earth.
You'd have a bunch of people that gather around
and they're all pointing and asking "What is this thing?"
You don't really know but it's still very interesting.
Chapter 2: Blockchain Technology
For me, the blockchain has two main technical ingredients.
One ingredient is cryptography.
When I say cryptography, I really mean asymmetric cryptography.
The other ingredient is so-called distributed systems.
These are the two main things.
If you understand them you understand all the
technical details of blockchain or bitcoin.
You have the ability to create records that are indelible.
You have the ability to transfer value
by making updates to those records.
And you have the ability to automate updates to the records
through these things called smart contracts.
That means potentially that you could transform
the structure of financial services.
Today there are all sorts of institutions
that exist to maintain sets of records.
To be "trusted third party" in industry parlance.
That role is potentially fundamentally reshaped.
Blockchains are networks.
Networks that we see today
Alibaba, AirBnB, Uber...
those are interesting networks but they are centralized.
Here, you're going to have networks that are decentralized
that are working more as a cooperative.
I think some of the challenges will be
what are the economics of those networks,
what are the economics of certain blockchains
versus today's discussion which is all about the technology.
I think tomorrow's discussion will be about
how do you build network effects off of these new railroads.
What's especially interesting for me is that
it was a grassroots movement from the technology sector.
Not a movement of established businesses
trying to find a new selling point.
It's really a bottom-up movement from us geeks.
It's one of the most amazing things in science
that happened in the last 100 years
that this thing is actually possible.
You can digitally sign transactions or other kinds of information
so that you can prove that you actually signed this.
It's much more secure than these
curvy, wriggly signatures that we use every day.
It will probably replace those things soon enough.
Chapter 3: Influence Of The Blockchain
We spent two years trying to understand this space
and what it really meant.
We found that it meant a lot more than just
another digital currency.
As the blockchain became more influential in our thinking
we began to realize that it was a profound shift
in how the Internet could be used
to create new forms of value
and how it could be used to enfranchise
and include people in global finance.
We've had the Internet for years now
and on the Internet, still nobody knows
whether you're a dog or not.
Identity fraud is completely out of control.
So the area where we need some new thinking
is in the identity space.
Maybe the technology brings something new into that space.
And we need it fairly quickly because
we haven't fixed the identity problem for people
but we're about to put ten billion, trillion, gazillion
things on the Internet.
We can have a trust relationship
without really having ever met each other
or having done business at all with each other.
I think that's fundamental.
Security is another.
Blockchains are military grade cryptology
and they've never been cracked.
When you hear about hackers stealing bitcoin
they're not stealing from the blockchain itself.
They are stealing at the point of entry
at the wallet or browser level
where they intercept messages.
But the blockchain itself is very secure.
The Internet of Things will probably be
the best test case for a lot of blockchain technology.
Because if we're going to have millions or billions or trillions
of Internet-enabled devices doing everything
from driving us around to managing our affairs
to monitoring our health, they need a way to
move and store and manage value and
data that has value in a way that is secure and private.
Right now we don't have that.
I'm concerned about the ubiquity of data and how
it flows in and through Internet-connected devices.
I think with a value platform like blockchain
we can at least address some of these problems and
maybe even create new opportunities.
Chapter 4: New Business Opportunities
We cannot sit in our office and study
of course we do that as well
but we need to go out and participate
in this whole blockchain community.
Honestly, what's very new to me
especially regarding younger persons in my team
is how enthusiastic they are about that.
If there is a hackathon, for example
they never come to me and ask if
they can go there and get some money for that
they just go. They're so interested.
They just go and participate and share
what they learned, and we have further discussions.
This is really a new way, also for us
to deal with new technology.
We're in the middle of it, nobody tells us what to do.
It's really we together shaping what we stand for
in the end for blockchain.
We need to be much more technological.
We need to have an awareness of
how something is programmed
so we can check if the programming is correct.
This might be a capability that we have
but not in the way it's needed in the future.
In the future, you always need to have
a technological link to things so you can understand them.
Otherwise you always need your IT guy sitting next to you
helping you in the understanding of the problem.
This is not something that's going to impact one of two industries
it's going to affect every industry
in the same way the internal combustion engine
affected almost every industry
or the Internet affected almost every industry
or the steam engine created new industries.
This is one of those big generational technology shifts
that requires a concerted and focused response.
Otherwise, you will miss the boat.
We are all, also in the financial services industry
trying to recognize that we don't have to be defensive
but we rather have to embrace not just this technology
but this enabler it brings us to access
a vastly underutilized or undiscovered market
that we have to do business with on an eye-to-eye level.
We talk to all sorts of senior executives in financial services
and often the say "We looked at bitcoin,
we had smart people come in and explain
how the blockchain works
but I still just really don't understand
what it means for my business."
I think that makes sense in a way because
if you think about an iPhone, for example:
What's really important, when a new iPhone comes out?
Is it the new chipset or some new way of
compressing frequencies?
I'm not an engineer and don't know how any of that works.
What matters to people is what they can do with the technology.
Of course, success is in now way guaranteed.
One day we may look back on this and say
"Oh, wasn't that great..." But:
If you ask me, there is undoubtedly
a huge amount of progress that has been made.
There's something here.
I find it hard to believe that I'm going to look back
in ten or twenty years and say
"None of this ended up happending."
Because we're really seeing a new way
of transacting value on the Internet.
Chapter 5: The Blockchain And Banks
I know how big financial institutions work.
They're not going to do something reckless with technology.
This is people's money and livelihood they're working with.
These are slow upgrade processes.
These systems, once they get implemented,
will run in parallel with the old systems for a while
before you have a switch over to the new one.
That's standard in technology upgrade.
I knew this was going to take time.
But there are antagonists, players who are threatened.
It's the AT&T/Verizon/Kodak analogy again.
Their business model is threatend by this
and they're going to do things to slow down
and water down the transformational networks.
There is a game theory approach to how the technology
is being rolled out in the markets, for sure.
We made different roundtables here in Zug
after the start of our bitcoin experiment.
For example, we invited banks and bankers from Zug
and tried to connect them with people
of the "Zug cryptovalley".
They were talking, but the bankers were not so happy.
They said there were different things with the law
and "It's not so easy for us."
But it's also a question of attitude.
It's the same as for our city, for our administration:
banks have to get ready.
I know that in a way they are defensive
but on the other hand have research and teams
that face these questions.
Maybe they are waiting a little bit now
but they can't deny it, I'm sure.
I think there's going to be a lot of disruption
a lot of revolution with respect to blockchain-based technologies.
That's going to drive not necessarily
banks worrying about other banks being competitors.
What banks worry about is the "bank of one"
the next generation of a banking network that's
resident on a phone, that's decentralized, distributed
and that's based on a digital token, a digital asset
that's not issued by a bank or government.
It creates all these different permutations and opportunities
not only for enterprises and governments
but also for society.
We see a lot of example of banks and consulting companies
and other Big Four audit firms talking about
how they can strip cost out of the business
of—I don't know—trading in public markets
or whatever it might be.
But if you take the example of public markets:
How can you cut cost out of a market that doesn't exist in the future?
What if the trading of securities happens peer-to-peer
in the marketplace that doesn't have traditional intermediaries
of exchanges, brokers, agents, escrow agents, clearing houses
and all the other parties we rely on?
That's the cost you're cutting out but
what if the market can function without them?
The important thing for leaders of big companies
is not just to think about cost
but also to think strategically.
What can this technology enable me to do
that I wasn't able to do in the past?
I think it's going to take a long time
for it to weave its way into the system.
It may take a normal tech upgrade cycle for it
to fully weave its way into the system.
I have said publicly I think within twenty years
financial services will be just software
and the smart contracts technology in particular
is going to automate a lot of the things
that institutions and people handle today.
Chapter 6: The Blockchain And Financial Inclusion
Seventy-four percent of the world's population
according to the World Bank
does not have access to basic financial services.
In my home country, in the United States of America,
which is one of the wealthiest countries in the world,
about fifty percent of the population
does not have access to basic financial services
including bank accounts.
There's a huge amount of people around the world
that don't get to experience and be a part of the global economy
because they don't have access to the financial system
for a variety of reasons.
I do think this technology will lift
a lot of people out of poverty
but will also be an inclusive technology
that allows more people to engage in global commerce.
I don't like to think that we're creating
so much prosperity for the less than one percent.
I like to think of purpose-led businesses.
By the way, that's the trick I think
for large corporations: to understand
that the cost efficiencies of embracing this new technology
will potentially widen their accessible markets
at a cost that's reasonable.
That in itself will create prosperity in different areas.
Something that we should think about.
Pretty soon, when smartphones can be had for
less than five dollars each, which is right around the corner
nearly every person living in poverty on earth
will have access to a smartphone
and be connected to a network.
That is game changing in and of itself.
When you have digital wallets on these phones
and the ability to trade assets
we're going to answer the question
"What happens when everybody has money?"
Capitalism itself has thrived in some areas
by the natural exclusion of others from markets.
It actually uses that scarcity principle
as its driving basis.
So what happens when money is not scarce?
We will look at people and say:
"What are the things that I cannot do
and where we can join forces?"
Much more than today, where we say
"How big is your car and how much money
do you have on your bank account?"
So, I believe the future will be even more
human, or humane—no... human
than the last hundred years we have seen.
Chapter 7: The Real Revolution
I don't think blockchain is a revolution.
It has been done forever, for forty years,
which is really forever in computer science.
Both ingredients of the blockchain—security and distributed systems
have been around since the early seventies.
This is not the revolution.
The revolution, or the evolution is that
jobs will change.
That's something I believe in.
Jobs will be digitized in some sense.
Computers will do a lot of the manual labor
that we still see in service domains today.
It's called the "fourth technological revolution"
and I think we are at the beginning
of such a revolution just now.
That's why we don't close our eyes.
Some people say "There will be much trouble
people will lose their work," and so on.
I'm sure it will happen
but it's better we face it than deny it.
Offshore working, automation, robots
are they threatening our work?
It's a real-life question when your own son
who is prepared to go get an advanced education
asks you that question.
I concluded I do have a genuine answer:
It's not threatening.
It is forcing us to think a little bit different
but if we do it smart, we actually give
the next generation a great new opportunity
to reinvent why they get up every morning
and why they go to work
and make sure they really make best use of
the degree they studied for
and the things they really want to do in life.
I want to make the world better.
Just better.
Whatever my measure of better is, or yours
is what might be valued by society.
The other thing is this wonderful opportunity
to create a little bit of prosperity.
Because what prosperity offers you is independence.
We don't have to have people who are living in squalor
simply fighting for a handful of rice every day.
There is too much in the world
to live like that anymore.
I think certain countries and even corporations
are beginning to understand that.
Certainly this movement, this blockchain movement
is the technology underpinning
the technology part of that mindset
which exists offline as well.
The idea is out.
If it's not being realized here it may be realized there
or even in the Internet, uncontrollably.
Bitcoin is here, it is here to stay
and will become bigger and bigger.
As the blockchain, as cryptocurrencies
as the possibilities connected to the blockchain and cryptocurrencies.
That's out of the box.
And the whole system does not need any government.
It exists. It works.
It's like a computer network surrounding the world.
You can say "We don't want to be part of it."
So be it.
It's here. And it won't go away.
Chapter 8: The Blockchain And Us
I feel like this is a generational opportunity
for entrepreneurs and investors.
Quite frankly, I have not seen something
as exciting in my entire investment career.
Let's try to build a new system
that has better trade-offs and features
and less downsides.
And let's make it work.
Now the pendulum is going to swing back.
What that's going to do is frankly
make confidence in capital markets higher.
Blockchain has enormous potential implications
outside of financial services.
We might even see the full-scale implementation
of some of those more real-world applications
leapfrog financial services.
This invention, when it came up in the seventies
is really one of the groundbreaking ideas.
It will change society for sure in many domains.
It already has changed society in a sense that
the Internet is a secure place
that you can make transactions on the Internet.
The potential for creating trust
or even permissionless trust
within the Internet
that's something that we haven't had before.
Its impact on society, on business, on government
could be profound.
Blockchain is to be fair nearly ten years old.
I think it has another ten years to run before
we really see what its long-term impact is.
I think it's going to be a long, much more steady journey
we go down and you're going to see
multiple technologies inspired by this thing.
Blockchain technology is not the solution to
all the problems under the sun.
As it matures we will begin to see its potential benefits
but also its limitations.
You can deny it or you can face it.
We always said we have to face it
because these things are coming
if we want or not.
I have seen long-standing partners
when they saw the opportunity, to change
and say "I don't understand everything
but I understand there is something behind this
so we need to go forward." That's really great.
People often say necessity is the mother of invention
but I like to say necessity is also the mother of adoption.
If there is a real use case
that people need a technology for
they start using it.
I started with Commodore, we had Atari, Apple
but at some point in time, Windows came.
Everybody just started to use Windows
without asking "What is the code behind it?
What is the code behind moving the mouse?"
We have a whole lot of possibilities.
Everything will change.
In my opinion, the possibilities are endless.
It reminds me of the situation where all of a sudden
we have two or three huge inventions
happening in one moment.
We are living in a very interesting window of opportunity.
I'm surely very excited to fully embrace that.
Even one little step can be a great step for mankind.
I think we are exiting the industrial age
and are entering an age we still have to name.
Where that will take us is very hard tell.
My suspicion is it means a sort of
resurgence of the notion of community.
It absolutely feels like a whole new paradigm
for changing the world.
We're at a crossroads here.
We have the wherewithal now to create technology
that would help the entire human race.
The question is: Will we do it?
But we can do it now.
There is so much innovation
that blockchain technology has spurred
all throughout the world.
I have absolutely no doubt in my mind
that this technology is going to affect everybody.
I would say in ten to twenty years
there won't be a human being
whose life is not impacted by this technology.
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THE MYSTERIOUS ORIGIN OF THE HUMAN BEING. With José Luís Giménez and Luís Palacios. - Duration: 30:38.
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How To Create a Static Background on your YouTube videos with FREE tools - Duration: 6:25.
For an appropriate image background on
Google Image Search Search for mantle
fireplace widescreen or similar search
phrase download the image by left click
let it load then right click save
picture as
film yourself and upload the
video into Windows Movie Maker or
similar program create a transitional
effect that starts up before you start
talking open Avidemux
in the description below find download
link for Avidemux insert project
[Music]
start playing the video and stop it at
any time
go to file save as image as bitmap
start
up your favorite image editing software
I use GIMP
open the image still shot use the
cropping tool go to edit cut edit paste
right click on layer created new layer
hide the background image file open
select the image you downloaded from
Google search select scale tool stretch
out the image to the four corners of the
template
[Music]
when you done click on the scale button
on the layers window select the
background still image click on image
autocrop image go to layers alpha to
selection click on the new background
image edit cut edit paste right click
new layer hide layer belowe newly created
layer done there now I need to save it
as a PNG file so that the transparent
area remains see-through to show the
video behind it save a copy on the left
select file type scroll down select PNG
merge visible layers export make sure
say background colors are ticked just
created border image open Avidemux
under video output select Mpeg 4 ASP
in brackets Xvid4 file open insert
project or movie file
click video filters add logo next to image
click on select open border image you
just created you can re-position the image
with the x and y values close tick off
play filtered play and there you see the
border applied to the video with the new
background image file save save it as a
MKV file the program applies all the
filters as if it was a Mpeg4 open
Shotcut video editing software open file
select MKV file you just created
you can use Shotcut to add further
effects prior to saving it as an mp4
file before you upload it to YouTube I
hope you benefited from this tutorial
please like and subscribe to my channel
if you know what you want to see in
future tutorials in the comments below
there are a lot of ways in which your
business can benefit from the software
products I used mine did thanks for
watching til next time goodbye
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Blue 1990 Honda Civic EF Factory Seal 2017 - Hot wheels Indonesia - Duration: 5:32.
welcome back to channel AToyZ
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5 Ways How to Make Your Protein Shakes Taste Better - Duration: 4:17.
5 Ways How to Make Your Protein Powder Shakes Tastier and More Filling
Hey there; Paul from UltimateFatBurner.com here.
Are you getting tired of drinking protein shakes that leave
you feeling hungry or don't taste the greatest?
In this video, I'm going to give you 5 easy ways to make your
protein powder shakes more tasty and a heck of a lot more filling.
I'll be right back in just a couple of seconds, stick around don't go anywhere!
Alright welcome back.
So let's get started talking with 5 ways we can make your protein powder shakes taste
a heckuva lot better.
1) Consume with milk
A lot of people consume their protein powders with water only, and when I ask them why,
they don't really know why.
The truth is mixing your shake with a cup or two of milk is the easiest and quickest
way to improve the taste of your shakes.
unless you're lactose intolerant or counting every last calorie, there's no reason why
you can't do this.
And honestly, you probably should, especially if you're taking a why protein; There is some
clinical evidence to suggest that the combination of a high quality
whey protein with whole milk - not low fat milk - whole milk - can actually stimulate
net muscle protein synthesis after exercise.
It's important that it was whole milk that showed a benefit - not low fat milk.
The combination of whey protein with carbohydrates has also been demonstrated effective for muscle
growth.
2) Add a high fiber cereal.
I do this myself - it makes the shakes much more filling and because it's crunchy, adds
a nice mouth feel to the shake.
I use Kellog's All bran buds, which contain a whopping 11 grams of fiber for every quarter
cup - which is almost exactly the amount you can fit in
a regular sized protein powder scoop.
3) Add an avocado to your shake.
Yeah, I know what you're thinking... an avocado, really?
Yep.
Trust me.
That's what I thought too.
Until I tried it.
Adding an avocado to a shake mixed with milk changes the flavor only a tiny bit, but it
makes the shake super smooth and creamy, and SO filling, you
won't even believe it.
And of course, more nutritious as well.
One thing to keep in mind: avocadoes are high in calories and fat.
And although it's mostly monounsaturated fat - which is a good fat - adding avocado
to your shake can significantly increase its caloric value, so if calorie
restriction is a concern you may only want to add half of one.
Half an avocado can add up to 100 calories and ? grams of fat to your shake, a full sized
one, twice that.
4) Add berries
Adding a quarter cup of berries is a great way to boost the taste, the fiber and nutritional
content of your shake.
I usually add about a 1/4 cup of wild blueberries
to my shakes.
You can also add half a banana to your shakes if you
prefer.
5) Add ice
Not only does adding ice to your protein powder contribute to an enhanced mouth feel, it can
make a plain tasting shake taste significantly less so, simply
because of the relationship between food temparature and taste.
Alright there you have it, 5 Easy Ways to Make Your Protein Powder Shakes Tastier and
More Filling.
If you enjoyed this video a like or share would be
appreciated.
If you have your own tips please share them below,
i'd love to hear about them and so would our viewers.
Before you go don't forget to subscribe to this channel to receive updates on new videos.
Thanks for watching, and I'll see you really soon!
-------------------------------------------
WELCOME || Tanner & Kayla - Duration: 3:48.
welcome to our channel a watching our official why is it a little kid outside
are you sure are you sure the Sun and the minutes late what is up YouTube I'm
Tanner welcome to our channel and boom
so our channel is going to be a couple pranking challenge vlog whatever else
were feeling this right goals goals my name is Kayla I'm 20 years old I have a
youtube channel called innermost K where I film routines health fitness makeup
Beauty willness skincare I'll be above that's really all you know because
that's mean another show hello guys I'm Tanner 19 years old I
have a youtube channel called Tanner official TV I do pranks challenges
really lives and pretty anything that guy back there was an asshole are you
recording yeah yay he was an asshole you let him in and
he's like over there well the person next to us did the same thing and then
the guy looked him that's why I don't like people through I let him through
and then you were like oh that's so nice and then he goes then he looks at me all
mad and I'm like I'm going to let you through the person
next to me did the same thing no one was gonna live and then he looked at me it
wasn't just a stick it was a rod can I get a venti iced chai yep and then a
venti pink drink yes thank you
wait to my McDonald's order actually you do you get a meal yes all the time so
chicken nuggets no there's some minutes above a chicken nugget it's number one
that's a huge head right there what's number one I don't know that a Big Mac
whoa I'm smart I love mikta then we're going I can't
have me today then it doesn't mean you can't have fries double damn the no
haters that's go again no we have to do it at the end thank you for watching to
remember double-damn on those haters welcome to our channel we are gonna be a
couples prank live channel goals to our general Joe channel is gonna be okay
yeah so now what we're gonna do now is talk about ourselves yeah yeah yeah and
then put them in the middle of it
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Нощна молитва, Избавление на Църквата - Duration: 3:57:57.
For more infomation >> Нощна молитва, Избавление на Църквата - Duration: 3:57:57. -------------------------------------------
Warum ein Dinkelbrot schon in der Herstellung etwas Besonderes ist - Duration: 15:54.
For more infomation >> Warum ein Dinkelbrot schon in der Herstellung etwas Besonderes ist - Duration: 15:54. -------------------------------------------
Bolt Mac X Cole the VII - Coupe - Duration: 3:03.
Cop myself a....
alright
Cop me a coupe with my drinks, u niggas likely drinking soup
Gonna cop myself a suit, Boi you better show the roof.
Ayy, this year is my year. I see that, it's pretty clear.
Put the car in high gear,
Imma be a pioneer.
I make money on the fly
I never wanna see you cry. I know you know I'm the guy.
Imma flex for the grammies
Your friend like uncle sam. Uncle sam(my)
This year imma cop me a coupe. (x4)
Cop me a coupe (x8)
Imma cop me a coupe
Imma cop me a coupe
2018 yes, my time to shine
2018 yeah, nowhere to hide. 2018 yeah imma provide
for you if you Bonnie and Clyde.
Imma treat you like a queen, take you places you've never been
I know sometimes you are mean.
Don't worry. (x2)
Girl you got me.
Girl you got me
This year imma cop me a coupe. (x4)
Cop me a Coupe. (x8)
Imma cop me a coupe
Imma cop me a coupe
Imma cop me a coupe
Imma cop me a coupe
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Interstellar Travel and Biosphere Reboots Means There Are a Lot of Aliens in the Galaxy - Duration: 7:26.
Interstellar Travel and Biosphere Reboots Means There Are a Lot of Aliens in the Galaxy
by Brian Wang
� Based upon the average lifespan of a typical galactic civilization, and the notion that
civilizations come, go, and reappear within the same star systems, aerospace engineer
Robert Zubrin (pictured above) calculates that the number of technologically advanced
civilizations in our galaxy (ie: at least as advanced as we are) greatly exceeds the
3,500 calculated by Frank Drake in 1961 known as �Drake�s Equation�.
� Among the 400 billion stars comprising the Milky Way galaxy, Zubrin estimates the
number of technological civilizations to be 5 million. Also, the nearest civilization
is probably about 185 light years away.
In 1961, radio astronomer Frank Drake developed a pedagogy for analyzing the question of the
frequency of extraterrestrial civilizations. Robert Zubrin shows a couple of significant
mistaken assumptions by Drake. Robert Zubrin wrote this for Centauri Dreams.
Drake equation defines a �civilization� as a species possessing interstellar communication
capability. This means radiotelescopes. By this definition, civilization did not appear
on Earth until the 1930s. Although, Earth does not really have the means to usefully
broadcast and had limited means to interpret interstellar radio communications. Also, we
may need to look at laser or other forms of interstellar communication.
L is the average lifetime of a technological civilization.
N/L, is the rate at which such civilizations are disappearing from the galaxy.
R*, the rate of star formation in our galaxy; fp, the fraction of these stars that have
planetary systems; ne, is the mean number of planets in each
system that have environments favorable to life;
fl the fraction of these that actually developed life;
fi the fraction of these that evolved intelligent species; and
fc the fraction of intelligent species that developed sufficient technology for interstellar
communication
If we estimate L=50,000 years (ten times recorded history), R* = 10 stars per year, fp = 0.5,
and each of the other four factors ne, fl, fi, and fc equal to 0.2, we calculate the
total number of technological civilizations in our galaxy, N, equals 400.
Four-hundred civilizations in our galaxy may seem like a lot, but scattered among the Milky
Way�s 400 billion stars, they would represent a very tiny fraction: just one in a billion
to be precise. In our own region of the galaxy, (known) stars occur with a density of about
one in every 320 cubic light years. If the calculation in the previous paragraph were
correct, it would therefore indicate that the nearest extraterrestrial civilization
is likely to be about 4,300 light years away.
The Drake equation is wrong. The equation assumes that life, intelligence, and civilization
can only evolve in a given solar system once. This is manifestly untrue. Stars evolve on
time scales of billions of years, species over millions of years, and civilizations
take mere thousands of years.
Current human civilization could knock itself out with a thermonuclear war, but unless humanity
drove itself into complete extinction, there is little doubt that 1,000 years later global
civilization would be fully reestablished. An asteroidal impact on the scale of the K-T
event that eliminated the dinosaurs might well wipe out humanity completely. But 5 million
years after the K-T impact the biosphere had fully recovered and was sporting the early
Cenozoic�s promising array of novel mammals, birds, and reptiles.
Similarly, 5 million years after a K-T class event drove humanity and most of the other
land species to extinction, the world would be repopulated with new species, including
probably many types of advanced mammals descended from current nocturnal or aquatic varieties.
Estimating the Galactic Population
There are 400 billion stars in our galaxy, and about 10 percent of them are good G and
K type stars which are not part of multiple stellar systems. Almost all of these probably
have planets, and it�s a fair guess that 10 percent of these planetary systems feature
a world with an active biosphere, probably half of which have been living and evolving
for as long as the Earth. That leaves us with two billion active, well-developed biospheres
filled with complex plants and animals, capable of generating technological species on time
scales of somewhere between 10 and 40 million years. As a middle value, let�s choose 20
million years as the �regeneration time� tr.
Using average lifespan technological civilization at 50,000 years then there are probably 5
million technological civilizations active in the galaxy right now and the nearest civilization
is probably about 185 light years away.
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