Caleb Harper: This computer will grow your food in the future
Caleb Harper leads a group of engineers, architects, urban planners, economists and plant scientists in the exploration and development of high performance urban agricultural systems. Full bio
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it's too little food,
creating bad oceans, toxic oceans,
of this discussion
to something that we understand?
in the last week, I'm sure.
from when it was picked?
in a grocery store in the United States.
to be much different in Europe
into these environments
of the apple with is also toxic to humans.
of that apple --
by the time we get it.
when I was young.
and I could express myself.
to question: What if?
the least productive in red.
now become Mexican farmers.
to grow better food,
its own productive climate?
about quality of life and nutrition?
was, we need more food
trains and automobiles.
seven billion people
in the production of food.
no water, no land and no future."]
that I went to Minamisanriku,
of their own food.
is involved in farming.
from two percent of any population?
population is under 18.
farmer is miserable.
to have basic access to utilities,
and the previous 10 before that.
that inspires the youth?
and Home Depot
intimate relationships
the language of plants.
that nobody wants.
inside of the media lab,
not for anything about biology
about 300 people once a month --
technology in there.
ripped the roots off of anything.
processing expert,
bring the plants out
you don't throw it away;
anything until I've eaten it first,
of a lettuce within .1.
no, you can't eat it today."
because the plant had been stressed
in the plant to protect itself:
taste sweet to me.
into plant physiology.
needed to be able to try this.
that could be shipped anywhere.
of the media lab is my lab,
of sensing per plant.
the strawberries from Mexico,"
from the climate
that you like.
a recipe -- you're coding
the nutrition of that plant,
the color, the texture.
fortune-telling eyes
late 60s and 70s.
see that plant dying
a calcium deficiency
are not being passed down.
to individual plants.
in my lab that day, by IP address.
and you get a plant profile.
is downloadable progress on that plant,
the nutrition that I need?
the taste that I desire?
on the plant Facebook, right?
friends with other plants
I don't know, they might friend us back,
in hospitals of all things,
a controlled environment.
with all kinds of things.
by NASA for Mir Space Station
they send into space.
exactly what it wants:
you get this amazing expression.
and seed for an adverse world
in commercial production for 150 years.
rare and ancient seed banks?
and things that you've never eaten.
that's eaten that kind of tomato.
and we don't know how to cook,
which is not that great.
we've grown all kinds of things.
it was too expensive.
around the world
in their back pocket isn't easy,
one of my student's --
undergraduate, Camille.
how to make it work better,
people can make it.
seventh through eleventh grade.
try to teach a kid something.
said, "What's humidity?"
in air, you're an idiot."
and eventually drip.
for this that's much like a game.
the physical, the sensors.
been created by other kids
they plant a seedling.
need CO2 anyway? Isn't CO2 bad?
that they developed
and what did it do --
of processing.
as we call them,
ever thought he could be a farmer --
your first food computer.
I'm just telling you.
but it's all there.
that this is easily accessible.
computer scientist,
economist, urban planners.
what they're good at.
that I'm just starting.
kind of like this.
and this DARPA Grand Challenge winner
we're getting ahead of Ebola.
the protein that's Ebola resistant.
property that's totally valuable.
we're just at the beginning,
environmentally friendly food.
what's in the Chicken McNugget,
food item of all time --
their marketing plan on that --
to put little climate recipes,
connected by strings?
to share information.
over what's wrong with this.
the next one billion farmers
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Caleb Harper - Principal Investigator and Director of the Open Agriculture InitiativeCaleb Harper leads a group of engineers, architects, urban planners, economists and plant scientists in the exploration and development of high performance urban agricultural systems.
Why you should listen
What do we know about the food we eat? What if there was climate democracy? These and other questions inform the work of Caleb Harper and his colleagues as they explore the future of food systems. He is the principal investigator and director of the Open Agriculture Initiative (OpenAG) at the MIT Media Lab. Under his guidance, a diverse group of engineers, architects, urbanists, economists and plant scientists (what he calls an “anti-disciplinary group”) is developing an open-source agricultural hardware, software and data common aiming to create a more agile, transparent and collaborative food system.
Caleb Harper | Speaker | TED.com