ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Charles Leadbeater - Innovation consultant
A researcher at the London think tank Demos, Charles Leadbeater was early to notice the rise of "amateur innovation" -- great ideas from outside the traditional walls, from people who suddenly have the tools to collaborate, innovate and make their expertise known.

Why you should listen

Charles Leadbeater's theories on innovation have compelled some of the world's largest organizations to rethink their strategies. A financial journalist turned innovation consultant (for clients ranging from the British government to Microsoft), Leadbeater noticed the rise of "pro-ams" -- passionate amateurs who act like professionals, making breakthrough discoveries in many fields, from software to astronomy to kite-surfing. His 2004 essay "The Pro-Am Revolution" -- which The New York Times called one of the year's biggest global ideas -- highlighted the rise of this new breed of amateur.

Prominent examples range from the mountain bike to the open-source operating system Linux, from Wikipedia to the Jubilee 2000 campaign, which helped persuade Western nations to cancel more than $30 billion in third-world debt. In his upcoming book, We-Think, Leadbeater explores how this emerging culture of mass creativity and participation could reshape companies and governments. A business reporter by training, he was previously an editor for the Financial Times, and later, The Independent, where, with Helen Fielding, he developed the "Bridget Jones' Diary" column. Currently, he is researching for Atlas of Ideas, a program that is mapping changes in the global geography of science and innovation.

More profile about the speaker
Charles Leadbeater | Speaker | TED.com
TEDGlobal 2005

Charles Leadbeater: The era of open innovation

查尔斯•利比特谈创新

Filmed:
1,715,597 views

在这个貌似随意的演讲中,查尔斯•利比特编织了一个严谨的论断:创新再也不是只来源于专业人士。有激情的业余人士,通过使用新的工具,正在创造一些不可能来源于公司的产品和典范。
- Innovation consultant
A researcher at the London think tank Demos, Charles Leadbeater was early to notice the rise of "amateur innovation" -- great ideas from outside the traditional walls, from people who suddenly have the tools to collaborate, innovate and make their expertise known. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:25
What I'm going to do, in the spirit精神 of collaborative共同 creativity创造力,
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现在我将要做的,在协作创新精神的影响下,
00:28
is simply只是 repeat重复 many许多 of the points
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只是简单地重复
00:31
that the three people before me have already已经 made制作,
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前面3位已经说过的许多观点。
00:34
but do them --
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但是就这样去做吧 ――
00:36
this is called "creative创作的 collaboration合作;"
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这就叫作创造性协作;
00:38
it's actually其实 called "borrowing借款" --
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实际上叫借用(拿来主义)。
00:41
but do it through通过 a particular特定 perspective透视,
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但是从一个独特的角度来做,
00:43
and that is to ask about the role角色 of users用户 and consumers消费者
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也就是问问用户和消费者
00:46
in this emerging新兴 world世界 of
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在这个逐渐显现的
00:48
collaborative共同 creativity创造力
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协作创新世界里面所扮演的角色,
00:50
that Jimmy吉米 and others其他 have talked about.
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这也是吉米和其他几位讲过的。
00:53
Let me just ask you, to start开始 with,
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作为开头,让我来问你们,
00:55
this simple简单 question:
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这个简单的问题:
00:57
who invented发明 the mountain bike自行车?
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谁发明了山地车?
00:59
Because traditional传统 economic经济 theory理论 would say,
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传统的经济理论会说,
01:02
well, the mountain bike自行车 was probably大概 invented发明 by some big bike自行车 corporation公司
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嗯,山地车很有可能是某个大型自行车公司发明的,
01:05
that had a big R&D lab实验室
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因为它有一个很大的研发中心
01:07
where they were thinking思维 up new projects项目,
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来琢磨出新项目,
01:09
and it came来了 out of there. It didn't come from there.
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于是山地车就产生了。但是山地车不是从那里创造出来的。
01:12
Another另一个 answer回答 might威力 be, well, it came来了 from a sort分类 of lone孤单 genius天才
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另外一种回答可能是,嗯,山地车来自于一个孤独的天才。
01:15
working加工 in his garage车库, who,
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他在他的车库里面,
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working加工 away on different不同 kinds of bikes自行车, comes up
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研究了很多种不同的自行车,
01:19
with a bike自行车 out of thin air空气.
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然后就凭空想像出了这么一种新型的自行车。
01:21
It didn't come from there. The mountain bike自行车
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但是山地车也不是从那里创造出来的。山地车
01:23
came来了 from users用户, came来了 from young年轻 users用户,
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来自于用户,来自于年轻的用户,
01:27
particularly尤其 a group in Northern北方 California加州,
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特别是在北加州的那一群。
01:29
who were frustrated受挫 with traditional传统 racing赛跑 bikes自行车,
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他们对传统的赛车很灰心丧气,
01:32
which哪一个 were those sort分类 of bikes自行车 that Eddy涡流 Merckx麦克斯 rode骑着车,
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就那种埃迪•墨克斯(顶尖自行车赛手)
01:35
or your big brother哥哥, and they're very glamorous富有魅力的.
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或者你们的大哥骑的赛车,那些赛车过于迷人了。
01:37
But also frustrated受挫 with the bikes自行车 that your dad rode骑着车,
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同样他们也不满于你们的老爸骑的自行车,
01:40
which哪一个 sort分类 of had big handlebars车把 like that, and they were too heavy.
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它们有着很大的把手,并且太重了。
01:43
So, they got the frames from these big bikes自行车,
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于是他们就拿来那些大自行车的骨架,
01:45
put them together一起 with the gears齿轮 from the racing赛跑 bikes自行车,
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赛车的挂档系统,
01:48
got the brakes刹车 from motorcycles摩托车,
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摩托车的刹车,
01:52
and sort分类 of mixed and matched匹配 various各个 ingredients配料.
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把这些部分拼在一起搭建起来。
01:54
And for the first, I don't know, three to five years年份 of their life,
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在起先的大概3到5年,
01:57
mountain bikes自行车 were known已知 as "clunkers旧车."
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山地车被称为“咔咔车”(听起来像年久失修的旧机器)。
01:59
And they were just made制作 in a community社区 of bikers骑自行车的人,
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并且也只有
02:02
mainly主要 in Northern北方 California加州.
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主要在北加州的一个自行车手团体中使用。
02:04
And then one of these companies公司 that was importing输入 parts部分
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然后一个给咔咔车进货零配件的公司
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for the clunkers旧车 decided决定 to set up in business商业,
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决定新开一个生意,
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start开始 selling销售 them to other people,
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开始向其他人销售,
02:11
and gradually逐渐 another另一个 company公司 emerged出现 out of that, Marin马林,
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慢慢地一个新的公司“马林(Marin)”就形成了。
02:14
and it probably大概 was, I don't know,
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大概过了
02:16
10, maybe even 15, years年份,
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10年,甚至15年,
02:18
before the big bike自行车 companies公司
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其他的大型自行车公司
02:20
realized实现 there was a market市场.
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才醒悟过来:这里原来有个市场。
02:22
Thirty三十 years年份 later后来,
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30年后,
02:24
mountain bike自行车 sales销售
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山地车的销售额,
02:26
and mountain bike自行车 equipment设备
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和山地车设备,
02:28
account帐户 for 65 percent百分 of bike自行车 sales销售 in America美国.
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占据了美洲自行车市场的65%。
02:30
That's 58 billion十亿 dollars美元.
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也就是说,580亿美元。
02:33
This is a category类别 entirely完全 created创建 by consumers消费者
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这是一个完全靠消费者创造的产业,
02:36
that would not have been created创建 by the mainstream主流 bike自行车 market市场
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之所以它不会被主流自行车市场创造
02:39
because they couldn't不能 see the need,
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是因为他们不可能看到这个需求,
02:41
the opportunity机会;
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这个机会,
02:43
they didn't have the incentive激励 to innovate创新.
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所以他们不具有创新的动机。
02:46
The one thing I think I disagree不同意 with
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约柴的演讲中
02:48
about Yochai's尤查的 presentation介绍
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有一点我不同意,
02:50
is when he said the Internet互联网 causes原因
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他说互联网所产生的
02:52
this distributive分配的 capacity容量 for innovation革新 to come alive.
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分布的能力使得创新更有活力。
02:55
It's when the Internet互联网 combines联合收割机
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只有在互联网
02:58
with these kinds of passionate多情 pro-am亲我 consumers消费者 --
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和这些有激情的有专业精神的业余消费者——
03:01
who are knowledgeable懂行; they've他们已经 got the incentive激励 to innovate创新;
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有知识,有创新的动机,
03:04
they've他们已经 got the tools工具; they want to --
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有工具,有渴望——相结合的时候,
03:06
that you get this kind of explosion爆炸
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你才能看到这种爆发性的
03:08
of creative创作的 collaboration合作.
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创造性协作。
03:11
And out of that, you get the need for the kind of things
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从这中间,你也感到
03:14
that Jimmy吉米 was talking about, which哪一个 is our new kinds of organization组织,
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对于吉米所讲的一类东西的需求,也就是我们新的组织形式,
03:17
or a better way to put it:
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换种更好的方式说:
03:19
how do we organize组织 ourselves我们自己 without organizations组织?
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我们怎么样能够不用某种组织形式来组织我们自己?
03:22
That's now possible可能; you don't need an organization组织 to be organized有组织的,
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现在已经有可能,你不需要一个组织形式来形成秩序,
03:26
to achieve实现 large and complex复杂 tasks任务,
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来完成大型和复杂的任务,
03:28
like innovating创新 new software软件 programs程式.
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比如开发新的软件程序。
03:31
So this is a huge巨大 challenge挑战
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所以这对我们认为的创造力的来源
03:34
to the way we think creativity创造力 comes about.
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是一个巨大的挑战。
03:38
The traditional传统 view视图, still enshrined供奉
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传统的观点,仍然主宰着
03:40
in much of the way that we think about creativity创造力
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我们思考创造力的模式
03:43
-- in organizations组织, in government政府 --
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——在组织结构中,在政府中-
03:45
is that creativity创造力 is about special特别 people:
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认为创新靠的是一群特别的人。
03:48
wear穿 baseball棒球 caps帽子 the wrong错误 way round回合,
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反戴着棒球帽,
03:50
come to conferences会议 like this, in special特别 places地方,
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像我这样来参加会议,在特殊的场所,
03:53
elite原种 universities高校, R&D labs实验室 in the forests森林, water,
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名牌大学,森林里面的研发实验室,水,
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maybe special特别 rooms客房 in companies公司 painted funny滑稽 colors颜色,
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或者在公司里面粉刷成怪异的颜色的特殊房间,
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you know, bean bags包装袋, maybe the odd table-football桌上足球 table.
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你知道吧,豆包沙发,可能还有奇怪的桌子——足球桌。
04:05
Special特别 people, special特别 places地方, think up special特别 ideas思路,
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特别的人,特别的地方,想出特别的点子,
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then you have a pipeline管道 that takes the ideas思路
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然后你还有一个渠道把这些点子实现
04:10
down to the waiting等候 consumers消费者, who are passive被动.
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并输送给消费者,他们在那里被动地等着。
04:14
They can say "yes" or "no" to the invention发明.
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他们对这个发明可能说“好”或者“不要”,
04:16
That's the idea理念 of creativity创造力.
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那就是一般认为的创造性。
04:18
What's the policy政策 recommendation建议 out of that
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从这种概念出发会产生什么样的政策建议,
04:20
if you're in government政府, or you're running赛跑 a large company公司?
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如果你在政府部门,或者在经营一个大公司?
04:24
More special特别 people, more special特别 places地方.
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更多的特别的人,更特别的地方。
04:27
Build建立 creative创作的 clusters集群 in cities城市;
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在城市中建立有创造力的群体,
04:29
create创建 more R&D parks公园, so on and so forth向前.
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更多研发园,等等。
04:32
Expand扩大 the pipeline管道 down to the consumers消费者.
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扩展一直延伸到消费者的渠道。
04:35
Well this view视图, I think, is increasingly日益 wrong错误.
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其实,这种观点,我认为,已经越来越错误。
04:38
I think it's always been wrong错误,
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我认为它一直就是错误的,
04:40
because I think always creativity创造力 has been highly高度 collaborative共同,
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因为我一直认为创造力是高度合作的,
04:43
and it's probably大概 been largely大部分 interactive互动.
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并且很可能大部分是互动的。
04:46
But it's increasingly日益 wrong错误, and one of the reasons原因 it's wrong错误
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但是它越来越错了,其中一个错的原因
04:49
is that the ideas思路 are flowing流动 back up the pipeline管道.
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是创意在渠道中的反方向回流。
04:52
The ideas思路 are coming未来 back from the consumers消费者,
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创意开始从消费者那一端产生并回流,
04:54
and they're often经常 ahead of the producers生产商.
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并且它们经常超前于生产商。
04:57
Why is that?
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为什么会这样?
04:59
Well, one issue问题
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嗯,一个原因
05:02
is that radical激进 innovation革新,
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是突破性创新,
05:04
when you've got ideas思路 that
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当你的点子
05:06
affect影响 a large number of technologies技术 or people,
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影响到一大批技术或者人时,
05:10
have a great deal合同 of uncertainty不确定 attached to them.
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产生的后果连带着极大的不确定性。
05:12
The payoffs收益 to innovation革新 are greatest最大
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创新的不确定性越大,
05:14
where the uncertainty不确定 is highest最高.
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回报越高。
05:17
And when you get a radical激进 innovation革新,
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并且当你有一项突破性创新,
05:19
it's often经常 very uncertain不确定 how it can be applied应用的.
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对于它的应用往往是极其不确定的。
05:22
The whole整个 history历史 of telephony电话
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整个电话技术的发展史
05:24
is a story故事 of dealing交易 with that uncertainty不确定.
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就是一个对付不确定性的故事。
05:28
The very first landline座机 telephones电话,
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发明第一条电话线的时候,
05:30
the inventors发明家 thought
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发明人的原设想是
05:32
that they would be used for people to listen in
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用来让人从外面听到
05:34
to live生活 performances演出
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伦敦西区剧院里面的
05:36
from West西 End结束 theaters剧院.
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现场表演。
05:38
When the mobile移动 telephone电话 companies公司 invented发明 SMS短信,
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手机公司发明短信技术的时候,
05:41
they had no idea理念 what it was for;
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根本不知道能用它来干什么,
05:43
it was only when that technology技术 got into the hands
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一直等到这个技术到了
05:45
of teenage青少年 users用户
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年轻用户手上的时候,
05:47
that they invented发明 the use.
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他们才发明了它的用处。
05:49
So the more radical激进 the innovation革新,
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所以说越是突破性的创新,
05:52
the more the uncertainty不确定,
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越具有不确定性,
05:54
the more you need innovation革新 in use
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你就越需要使用中的创新
05:56
to work out what a technology技术 is for.
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来发现下一个技术能用来干什么。
05:59
All of our patents专利, our entire整个 approach途径
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所有我们的专利,我们的整个
06:02
to patents专利 and invention发明, is based基于 on the idea理念
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获得专利和创造发明的方式都是基于
06:05
that the inventor发明者 knows知道 what the invention发明 is for;
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发明者知道这个发明是干什么,
06:08
we can say what it's for.
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我们能定义它的用处,这个概念上的。
06:10
More and more, the inventors发明家 of things
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逐渐地,很多东西的发明者
06:12
will not be able能够 to say that in advance提前.
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在事先将不能这么说了。
06:14
It will be worked工作 out in use,
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它将在使用过程中,
06:16
in collaboration合作 with users用户.
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在与用户的协作中被发掘出来。
06:19
We like to think that invention发明 is
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我们习惯地认为发明
06:21
a sort分类 of moment时刻 of creation创建:
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是一种好像是短时间内产生的创造。
06:24
there is a moment时刻 of birth分娩 when someone有人 comes up with an idea理念.
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某人想出一个点子就像是诞生婴儿的那一刻一样。
06:27
The truth真相 is that most creativity创造力
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事实上大部分的创造
06:30
is cumulative累积的 and collaborative共同;
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是逐渐积累协作产生的,
06:32
like Wikipedia维基百科, it develops发展 over a long period of time.
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比如维基百科,它发展了很长一段时间。
06:37
The second第二 reason原因 why users用户 are more and more important重要
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为什么用户越来越重要的第二个原因是,
06:40
is that they are the source资源 of big, disruptive破坏性 innovations创新.
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他们是巨大的突破性创新的源头。
06:44
If you want to find the big new ideas思路,
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如果你想找到大的新的点子,
06:47
it's often经常 difficult to find them in mainstream主流 markets市场,
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往往从主流市场
06:50
in big organizations组织.
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或大机构中很难找到。
06:53
And just look inside large organizations组织
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只要往大组织机构中看看,
06:55
and you'll你会 see why that is so.
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你就能发现为什么会这样。
06:57
So, you're in a big corporation公司.
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设想一下,你在一个大公司,
07:01
You're obviously明显 keen敏锐 to go up the corporate企业 ladder阶梯.
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你当然非常想沿着公司的等级阶梯向上爬。
07:04
Do you go into your board and say,
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你会走进董事会这样说吗,
07:06
"Look, I've got a fantastic奇妙 idea理念
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你们看,我有一个非常好的点子,
07:08
for an embryonic胚胎 product产品
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在边际市场做这样一个早期产品,
07:10
in a marginal边缘 market市场,
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面向
07:12
with consumers消费者 we've我们已经 never dealt处理 with before,
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我们从来没有应付过的消费者,
07:15
and I'm not sure it's going to have a big payoff付清, but it could be really, really big in the future未来?"
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我不确定会不会有大的回报,但是也许有可能在未来的回报非常非常大?
07:18
No, what you do, is you go in and you say,
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不会的。你会做的是,你走进去,你说,
07:21
"I've got a fantastic奇妙 idea理念 for an incremental增加的 innovation革新
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我有一个非常好的点子,对我们的现有产品进行一个渐进性的创新改良,
07:24
to an existing现有 product产品 we sell through通过 existing现有 channels渠道
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从现有渠道
07:27
to existing现有 users用户, and I can guarantee保证
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卖给现有用户,并且我能保证
07:29
you get this much return返回 out of it over the next下一个 three years年份."
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你们能在3年内获得这么这么多的回报。
07:33
Big corporations公司 have an in-built内置 tendency趋势
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大公司有一个内在的倾向
07:35
to reinforce加强 past过去 success成功.
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要去强化过去的成功。
07:37
They've他们已经 got so much sunk沉没 in it
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它们陷入其中不可自拔,
07:39
that it's very difficult for them to spot
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以至于很难发现
07:42
emerging新兴 new markets市场. Emerging新兴 new markets市场, then,
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逐渐显现的新兴市场。那么新兴市场
07:45
are the breeding配种 grounds理由 for passionate多情 users用户.
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就成了有激情的用户的成长温床。
07:48
Best最好 example:
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举一个最好的例子:
07:50
who in the music音乐 industry行业,
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在30年前的音乐产业中,
07:52
30 years年份 ago, would have said,
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有谁会说:
07:55
"Yes, let's invent发明 a musical音乐 form形成
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“好,让我们发明一种音乐形式,
07:58
which哪一个 is all about dispossessed一无所有 black黑色 men男人
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专门反映那些
08:01
in ghettos贫民区 expressing表达 their frustration挫折
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生活在贫民窟的无家可归的黑人
08:03
with the world世界 through通过 a form形成 of music音乐
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对这个世界的无奈和困惑,
08:05
that many许多 people find initially原来 quite相当 difficult to listen to.
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通过一种很多人一开始都很难听得下去的音乐形式。
08:08
That sounds声音 like a winner优胜者; we'll go with it."
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这听起来好像能火,我们行动吧。”
08:11
(Laughter笑声).
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(大家笑)
08:12
So what happens发生? Rap敲击 music音乐 is created创建 by the users用户.
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而事实是怎样的?说唱音乐是用户自己创造的。
08:15
They do it on their own拥有 tapes磁带, with their own拥有 recording记录 equipment设备;
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他们用自己的录音设备,录在自己的磁带上,
08:18
they distribute分发 it themselves他们自己.
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自己发行。
08:19
30 years年份 later后来,
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30年后,
08:21
rap敲击 music音乐 is the dominant优势 musical音乐 form形成 of popular流行 culture文化 --
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说唱音乐成了流行文化的主导音乐形式――
08:24
would never have come from the big companies公司.
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这是永远不可能从大公司产生的。
08:26
Had to start开始 -- this is the third第三 point --
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必须来自于 ――这是第三点――
08:29
with these pro-ams亲AMS.
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有专业精神的业余人士。
08:31
This is the phrase短语 that I've used in
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这个词组我曾经在
08:33
some stuff东东 which哪一个 I've doneDONE
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给伦敦的一个
08:35
with a think tank坦克 in London伦敦 called Demos演示,
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叫作德莫斯的智囊公司做的一些东西里面用过,
08:37
where we've我们已经 been looking at these people who are amateurs业余 --
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在那里我们曾经研究过这类人,他们是业余的――
08:40
i.e., they do it for the love of it --
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也就是说,他们是因为热爱某件事情――
08:43
but they want to do it to very high standards标准.
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但是他们想把它做到非常高的标准。
08:45
And across横过 a whole整个 range范围 of fields领域 --
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而且涉及到一系列的领域――
08:47
from software软件, astronomy天文学,
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从软件,天文,
08:51
natural自然 sciences科学,
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自然科学,
08:53
vast广大 areas of leisure闲暇 and culture文化
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到广阔的休闲和文化领域
08:55
like kite-surfing风筝冲浪, so on and so forth向前 --
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比如风筝冲浪,等等――
08:58
you find people who want to do things because they love it,
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你们会发现这些人是因为热爱而想做那些事情,
09:02
but they want to do these things to very high standards标准.
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但是他们想把这些事情做到极其高的水准。
09:05
They work at their leisure闲暇, if you like.
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他们在休闲中工作,你可以这么说。
09:07
They take their leisure闲暇 very seriously认真地:
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他们非常严肃地对待他们的闲暇时间:
09:09
they acquire获得 skills技能; they invest投资 time;
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他们获取技能,他们投资时间,
09:12
they use technology技术 that's getting得到 cheaper便宜 -- it's not just the Internet互联网:
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他们使用越来越便宜的技术:不光是互联网,
09:15
cameras相机, design设计 technology技术,
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照相机,设计技术,
09:18
leisure闲暇 technology技术, surfboards冲浪板, so on and so forth向前.
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休闲技术,冲浪板,等等。
09:21
Largely大部分 through通过 globalization全球化,
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主要由于全球化,
09:23
a lot of this equipment设备 has got a lot cheaper便宜.
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许多的这些设备已经便宜了很多。
09:26
More knowledgeable懂行 consumers消费者, more educated博学,
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消费者越有知识,受过的教育越多,
09:29
more able能够 to connect with one another另一个,
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就越能够与其他人联合,
09:31
more able能够 to do things together一起.
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更能够一起做事情。
09:33
Consumption消费, in that sense, is an expression表达
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消费,在这种意义上说,
09:35
of their productive生产的 potential潜在.
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是他们的生产潜力的表达。
09:37
Why, we found发现, people were interested有兴趣 in this,
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为什么,我们发现,人们会对这个有兴趣,
09:41
is that at work they don't feel very expressed表达.
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是因为在工作中他们感到没有充分发挥。
09:44
They don't feel as if they're doing something that really matters事项 to them,
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他们觉得他们所工作的事情好像不是他们真正在乎的,
09:47
so they pick up these kinds of activities活动.
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所以他们拾掇起这类活动。
09:50
This has huge巨大 organizational组织 implications启示
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这对于
09:52
for very large areas of life.
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生活中一大片领域都有组织结构上的冲击。
09:54
Take astronomy天文学 as an example,
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拿天文学来作例子,
09:57
which哪一个 Yochai尤查 has already已经 mentioned提到.
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约柴已经提过的。
10:00
Twenty二十 years年份 ago, 30 years年份 ago,
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20年前,30年前,
10:02
only big professional专业的 astronomers天文学家
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只有高深的专业天文学家
10:05
with very big telescopes望远镜 could see far into space空间.
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才有很长大的天文望远镜来看到宇宙的远处。
10:09
And there's a big telescope望远镜 in Northern北方 England英国 called JodrellJodrell Bank银行,
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在北英格兰的约德瑞•班克有一个很长大的天文望远镜,
10:12
and when I was a kid孩子, it was amazing惊人,
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当我还是个小孩的时候,觉得非常神奇,
10:14
because the moon月亮 shots镜头 would take off, and this thing would move移动 on rails轨道.
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因为它可以对月亮进行近距离拍摄,并且这个东西还能在轨道上移动。
10:17
And it was huge巨大 -- it was absolutely绝对 enormous巨大.
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并且它非常地大――绝对是一个庞然大物。
10:20
Now, six
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现在,6个
10:23
amateur业余 astronomers天文学家, working加工 with the Internet互联网,
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业余天文爱好者,通过互联网,
10:25
with Dobsonian多布森 digital数字 telescopes望远镜 --
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和多布森式数字天文望远镜
10:27
which哪一个 are pretty漂亮 much open打开 source资源 --
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(基本上是开源的),
10:30
with some light sensors传感器
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再用一些过去10年开发出来的光学传感器,
10:32
developed发达 over the last 10 years年份, the Internet互联网 --
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以及互联网――
10:34
they can do what JodrellJodrell Bank银行 could only do 30 years年份 ago.
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他们就能做30年前只有约德瑞•班克才能做的事情。
10:38
So here in astronomy天文学, you have this vast广大 explosion爆炸
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所以现在天文学界,你就有了
10:41
of new productive生产的 resources资源.
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新的生产力资源的巨大爆发。
10:43
The users用户 can be producers生产商.
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用户也可以成为生产者。
10:46
What does this mean, then, for our
239
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这种现象,那么,对于我们的
10:48
organizational组织 landscape景观?
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组织结构的前景意味着什么?
10:50
Well, just imagine想像 a world世界,
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呃,让我们来暂时想象这样一个世界,
10:52
for the moment时刻, divided分为 into two camps营地.
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它被分成两个阵营。
10:56
Over here, you've got the old, traditional传统 corporate企业 model模型:
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这一边,你有这个旧的传统的公司模式。
10:59
special特别 people, special特别 places地方;
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特别的人,特别的地方,
11:01
patent专利 it, push it down the pipeline管道
245
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申请到专利,通过已有渠道推送到
11:03
to largely大部分 waiting等候, passive被动 consumers消费者.
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基本上是等待着的被动的消费者。
11:06
Over here, let's imagine想像 we've我们已经 got
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这一边,让我们想象我们有
11:08
Wikipedia维基百科, LinuxLinux的, and beyond -- open打开 source资源.
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维基百科,Linux, 和更多的――开放的资源。
11:12
This is open打开; this is closed关闭.
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这边是开放的,这边是封闭的,
11:14
This is new; this is traditional传统.
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这边是新的,这边是传统的。
11:16
Well, the first thing you can say, I think with certainty肯定,
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嗯,第一个你可以说的是,我认为肯定是
11:19
is what Yochai尤查 has said already已经 --
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约柴已经谈到的――
11:21
is there is a great big struggle斗争
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这两种组织形式之间
11:23
between之间 those two organizational组织 forms形式.
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有着非常大的冲突。
11:25
These people over there will do everything they can
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那边的那批人会尽其所能
11:28
to stop these kinds of organizations组织 succeeding下一,
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来阻挡这种组织的成功,
11:31
because they're threatened受威胁 by them.
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因为他们受到对方的威胁。
11:33
And so the debates辩论 about
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于是就产生了对于
11:36
copyright版权, digital数字 rights权利, so on and so forth向前 --
259
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版权,数字版权,等等的争辩――
11:40
these are all about trying to stifle窒息, in my view视图,
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所有这些都是在企图扼杀,在我看来,
11:43
these kinds of organizations组织.
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这种类型的组织。
11:45
What we're seeing眼看 is a complete完成 corruption腐败
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我们现在正看到的是一个完全腐败的
11:48
of the idea理念 of patents专利 and copyright版权.
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专利和版权的概念。
11:50
Meant意味着 to be a way to incentivize激励 invention发明,
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本该是一种刺激发明创造的机制,
11:54
meant意味着 to be a way to orchestrate编排 the dissemination传播 of knowledge知识,
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本该是一种协调知识传播的机制,
11:57
they are increasingly日益 being存在 used by large companies公司
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但是它们越来越被大公司
12:00
to create创建 thickets灌丛 of patents专利
267
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用来制造专利壁垒
12:02
to prevent避免 innovation革新 taking服用 place地点.
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来阻止发明创造。
12:04
Let me just give you two examples例子.
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让我给你们讲两个例子。
12:07
The first is: imagine想像 yourself你自己 going to a venture冒险 capitalist资本家
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第一个,想象你自己走到一个风险投资商面前,
12:10
and saying, "I've got a fantastic奇妙 idea理念.
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说:“我有一个非常好的点子。
12:12
I've invented发明 this brilliant辉煌 new program程序
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我发明了这个超级棒的新程序,
12:15
that is much, much better than Microsoft微软 Outlook外表."
273
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比微软的Outlook 好得多了去了。
12:19
Which哪一个 venture冒险 capitalist资本家 in their right mind心神 is going to give you any money to set up a venture冒险
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有哪一个脑袋还正常的风险投资商会给你钱来设立一个公司
12:23
competing竞争 with Microsoft微软, with Microsoft微软 Outlook外表? No one.
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来与微软,与微软的Outlook 竞争?没有人。
12:26
That is why the competition竞争 with Microsoft微软 is bound to come --
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这就是为什么和微软的竞争肯定会来自于,
12:29
will only come --
277
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也只能是来自于,
12:31
from an open-source开源 kind of project项目.
278
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开放源代码类型的项目。
12:33
So, there is a huge巨大 competitive竞争的 argument论据
279
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因此,现在就有一个很有争辩力的观点,
12:35
about sustaining维持 the capacity容量
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要支持
12:37
for open-source开源 and consumer-driven消费拉动 innovation革新,
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开放资源和消费者驱动的创新,
12:40
because it's one of the greatest最大
282
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因为它是反垄断的最有
12:42
competitive竞争的 levers杠杆 against反对 monopoly垄断.
283
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竞争力的杠杆之一。
12:45
There'll有会 be huge巨大 professional专业的 arguments参数 as well.
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当然也有很权威的来自于各专业的观点。
12:48
Because the professionals专业人士, over here
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因为这些专业人士,在这边的
12:50
in these closed关闭 organizations组织 --
286
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这些封闭的组织之中――
12:52
they might威力 be academics学者; they might威力 be programmers程序员;
287
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他们可能是学者,他们可能是程序员,
12:54
they might威力 be doctors医生; they might威力 be journalists记者 --
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3000
他们可能是医生,他们可能是记者
12:57
my former前任的 profession职业 --
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(我以前的职业)――
12:59
say, "No, no -- you can't trust相信 these people over here."
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他们说,“不行不行。你不能信任这边的这些人。”
13:03
When I started开始 in journalism新闻学 --
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当我开始进入记者行业的时候
13:05
Financial金融 Times, 20 years年份 ago --
292
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(金融时报,20年前),
13:09
it was very, very exciting扣人心弦
293
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看到别人
13:11
to see someone有人 reading the newspaper报纸.
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看报纸是让我非常兴奋的。
13:13
And you'd kind of look over their shoulder on the Tube
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于是你在地铁里面就有点像监视别人一样,
13:15
to see if they were reading your article文章.
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去看看他们是不是在阅读你写的文章。
13:18
Usually平时 they were reading the share分享 prices价格,
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2000
通常他们是在看股票价格,
13:20
and the bit of the paper with your article文章 on
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而你的文章所在的那一页报纸
13:22
was on the floor地板, or something like that,
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被铺在地上,或者类似的地方,
13:24
and you know, "For heaven's sake清酒, what are they doing!
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于是你很自然就会想:“天哪,他们在干什么!
13:26
They're not reading my brilliant辉煌 article文章!"
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他们居然不是在阅读我写的漂亮文章!”
13:29
And we allowed允许 users用户, readers读者,
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并且我们提供了
13:32
two places地方 where they could contribute有助于 to the paper:
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两个地方给用户和读者来发表东西在报纸上。
13:34
the letters page, where they could write a letter in,
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读者来信版块,在那里他们可以写一封信进来,
13:37
and we would condescend屈尊 to them, cut it in half,
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我们就委屈一下,把它砍一半,
13:39
and print打印 it three days later后来.
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然后3天之后印刷出来。
13:41
Or the op-ed专栏 page, where if they knew知道 the editor编辑 --
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或者个人评论版块,如果他们认识编辑
13:43
had been to school学校 with him, slept with his wife妻子 --
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(什么一起上过学啦,睡了他的老婆啦),
13:45
they could write an article文章 for the op-ed专栏 page.
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他们就可以在个人评论版块发表文章。
13:48
Those were the two places地方.
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就那两个地方。
13:50
Shock休克, horror恐怖: now, the readers读者 want to be writers作家 and publishers出版商.
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震惊,恐怖:现在读者自己想成为作家和出版商。
13:54
That's not their role角色; they're supposed应该 to read what we write.
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那不是他们的角色,他们本来是应该只看我们所写的东西的。
13:57
But they don't want to be journalists记者. The journalists记者 think
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但是他们并不想成为记者。记者们以为
13:59
that the bloggers博客 want to be journalists记者;
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那些博客写手想成为记者,
14:01
they don't want to be journalists记者; they just want to have a voice语音.
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其实他们不想,他们只想发出自己的声音。
14:03
They want to, as Jimmy吉米 said, they want to have a dialogue对话, a conversation会话.
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他们想,就像吉米所说,他们想有对话,有讨论交流。
14:06
They want to be part部分 of that flow of information信息.
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他们想成为信息流动中的一部分。
14:10
What's happening事件 there is that the whole整个 domain
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那里所发生的情况是
14:12
of creativity创造力 is expanding扩大.
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整个创造力领域在扩张。
14:14
So, there's going to be a tremendous巨大 struggle斗争.
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于是也将产生极其严重的冲突。
14:17
But, also, there's going to be tremendous巨大 movement运动
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但是,同时,也会有
14:20
from the open打开 to the closed关闭.
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从开放走向封闭的强烈趋势。
14:23
What you'll你会 see, I think, is two things that are critical危急,
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你们将会看到,我认为,两个关键的东西,
14:26
and these, I think, are two challenges挑战
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而它们,我认为,
14:28
for the open打开 movement运动.
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将是开放资源运动要面对的两个挑战。
14:30
The first is:
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第一个是:
14:32
can we really survive生存 on volunteers志愿者?
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我们能依靠志愿者而生存下去吗?
14:35
If this is so critical危急,
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如果这是如此生死攸关,
14:37
do we not need it funded资助, organized有组织的, supported支持的
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难道我们不需要它有资金来源,有组织形式,
14:40
in much more structured结构化的 ways方法?
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由一个更加结构化的方式来支持?
14:42
I think the idea理念 of creating创建 the Red Cross交叉
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我认为那个建立一个
14:44
for information信息 and knowledge知识 is a fantastic奇妙 idea理念,
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信息和知识的红十字会的点子是一个非常好的点子,
14:47
but can we really organize组织 that, just on volunteers志愿者?
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但是我们真的能组织起来吗,只凭志愿者?
14:51
What kind of changes变化 do we need in public上市 policy政策
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我们需要在公共政策
14:53
and funding资金 to make that possible可能?
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和资金赞助中做什么样的改变来使这成为可能?
14:55
What's the role角色 of the BBCBBC,
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比如说,英国广播电视台BBC的角色是什么,
14:57
for instance, in that world世界?
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在那个世界里面?
14:59
What should be the role角色 of public上市 policy政策?
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公共政策的角色应该是什么?
15:01
And finally最后, what I think you will see
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最后,我认为你们能看到的
15:04
is the intelligent智能, closed关闭 organizations组织
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是聪明的封闭的组织
15:07
moving移动 increasingly日益 in the open打开 direction方向.
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开始逐渐走向开放。
15:10
So it's not going to be a contest比赛 between之间 two camps营地,
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所以,这将不是两个阵营之间的对垒,
15:13
but, in between之间 them, you'll你会 find all sorts排序 of interesting有趣 places地方
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而是在它们之间,你会发现
15:16
that people will occupy占据.
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人们占据着各种各样的有趣的地盘。
15:18
New organizational组织 models楷模 coming未来 about,
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新的组织结构模式将产生,
15:21
mixing混合 closed关闭 and open打开 in tricky狡猾 ways方法.
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以奇特的方式混合着封闭和开放的特点。
15:24
It won't惯于 be so clear-cut明确; it won't惯于 be Microsoft微软 versus LinuxLinux的 --
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它不会那么清晰和明确,不会像微软对抗Linux――
15:28
there'll有会 be all sorts排序 of things in between之间.
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那中间将有各种各样的东西。
15:30
And those organizational组织 models楷模, it turns out,
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并且那些组织模式,将被证明,
15:32
are incredibly令人难以置信 powerful强大,
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会极其的强大有力,
15:34
and the people who can understand理解 them
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而那些能理解它们的人
15:36
will be very, very successful成功.
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将非常非常成功。
15:38
Let me just give you one final最后 example
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让我再给你们讲最后一个例子
15:41
of what that means手段.
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来说明那是什么意思。
15:43
I was in Shanghai上海,
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我曾经在上海,
15:45
in an office办公室 block
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在一个5年前
15:47
built内置 on what was a rice白饭 paddy稻田 five years年份 ago --
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3000
在水稻田上面建的写字楼里面——
15:50
one of the 2,500 skyscrapers摩天大楼
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过去10年上海建起来的
15:53
they've他们已经 built内置 in Shanghai上海 in the last 10 years年份.
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3000
2500栋大厦之一。
15:56
And I was having dinner晚餐 with this guy called Timothy蒂莫西 Chan.
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我在和这个叫作陈天桥的人一起吃晚饭。
15:59
Timothy蒂莫西 Chan set up an Internet互联网 business商业
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2000
陈天桥
16:01
in 2000.
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2000
在2000年开了一家互联网公司。
16:03
Didn't go into the Internet互联网, kept不停 his money,
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3000
但没有进入互联网,保留了他的资金,
16:06
decided决定 to go into computer电脑 games游戏.
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决定进入电脑游戏行业。
16:08
He runs运行 a company公司 called Shanda盛大,
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他运营着一家叫作盛大的公司,
16:11
which哪一个 is the largest最大 computer电脑 games游戏 company公司 in China中国.
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现在是中国最大的电脑游戏公司。
16:15
Nine thousand servers服务器 all over China中国,
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在全中国上下共有9000台服务器,
16:18
has 250 million百万 subscribers用户.
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4000
2.5亿注册用户。
16:22
At any one time, there are four million百万 people playing播放 one of his games游戏.
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957000
4000
任何一个时候,都有4百万人在玩一个他的游戏。
16:27
How many许多 people does he employ采用
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那他雇佣了多少人
16:29
to service服务 that population人口?
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来为这么多人服务?
16:32
500 people.
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2000
500个人。
16:34
Well, how can he service服务
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2000
呃,他怎么能只用500员工
16:36
250 million百万 people from 500 employees雇员?
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3000
为2.5亿人服务?
16:39
Because basically基本上, he doesn't service服务 them.
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因为基本上,他并不为他们服务。
16:41
He gives them a platform平台;
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他给他们提供一个平台,
16:43
he gives them some rules规则; he gives them the tools工具
377
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3000
制定一些规矩,提供工具,
16:46
and then he kind of orchestrates编排 the conversation会话;
378
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3000
然后他就有点像是指挥对话,
16:49
he orchestrates编排 the action行动.
379
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2000
协调他们的行动。
16:51
But actually其实, a lot of the content内容
380
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但是实际上,很多的内容
16:53
is created创建 by the users用户 themselves他们自己.
381
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3000
是用户自己创作的。
16:56
And it creates创建 a kind of stickiness粘性
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因此它就在社会团体和公司之间
16:58
between之间 the community社区 and the company公司
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2000
建立了一种
17:00
which哪一个 is really, really powerful强大.
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真正非常强大的粘性。
17:02
The best最好 measure测量 of that: so you go into one of his games游戏,
385
997000
3000
一个最好的衡量办法:你进到一个他的游戏,
17:05
you create创建 a character字符
386
1000000
2000
你创建一个人物
17:07
that you develop发展 in the course课程 of the game游戏.
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2000
然后在游戏过程中发展它。
17:09
If, for some reason原因, your credit信用 card bounces反弹,
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3000
如果,因为某种原因,比如你的信用卡拒付,
17:12
or there's some other problem问题,
389
1007000
2000
或者其他什么原因,
17:14
you lose失去 your character字符.
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2000
你丢失了你的人物。
17:16
You've got two options选项.
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2000
你有两个选择:
17:18
One option选项: you can create创建 a new character字符,
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1013000
3000
一个选择是:你可以创建一个新的人物,
17:21
right from scratch, but with none没有 of the history历史 of your player播放机.
393
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3000
从头再来,但是没有任何你前面那个人物的历史。
17:24
That costs成本 about 100 dollars美元.
394
1019000
2000
这要花费大概100美元。
17:26
Or you can get on a plane平面, fly to Shanghai上海,
395
1021000
3000
或者你可以坐上飞机,飞到上海,
17:29
queue队列 up outside Shanda's盛大 offices办事处 --
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3000
在盛大的办公室外面排队——
17:32
cost成本 probably大概 600, 700 dollars美元 --
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4000
大概花费600或700美元——
17:36
and reclaim回收 your character字符, get your history历史 back.
398
1031000
3000
然后就可以重新找回你丢失的人物,要回你的历史。
17:39
Every一切 morning早上, there are 600 people queuing排队
399
1034000
2000
每天早上,都有600人
17:41
outside their offices办事处
400
1036000
2000
在他们的办公室外面排队
17:43
to reclaim回收 these characters人物. (Laughter笑声)
401
1038000
2000
要找回他们的人物。
17:45
So this is about companies公司 built内置 on communities社区,
402
1040000
3000
所以这就是以社团为基础的公司,
17:48
that provide提供 communities社区 with tools工具,
403
1043000
3000
给社团提供他们能够共享的工具,
17:51
resources资源, platforms平台 in which哪一个 they can share分享.
404
1046000
2000
资源,和平台。
17:53
He's not open打开 source资源,
405
1048000
2000
他不是开放资源,
17:55
but it's very, very powerful强大.
406
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2000
但是它非常非常强大。
17:57
So here is one of the challenges挑战, I think,
407
1052000
3000
因此这是一个,我认为,
18:00
for people like me, who
408
1055000
2000
对于像我这样的
18:02
do a lot of work with government政府.
409
1057000
3000
给政府部门做很多事情的人要面对的挑战之一。
18:05
If you're a games游戏 company公司,
410
1060000
3000
如果你是一个游戏公司,
18:08
and you've got a million百万 players玩家 in your game游戏,
411
1063000
3000
并且你有1百万玩家在玩你的游戏,
18:11
you only need one percent百分 of them
412
1066000
3000
你只需要其中1%的人
18:14
to be co-developers合作开发, contributing贡献 ideas思路,
413
1069000
2000
是协同开发人员,贡献点子,
18:16
and you've got a development发展 workforce劳动力
414
1071000
2000
那么你就有一个
18:18
of 10,000 people.
415
1073000
3000
1万人的开发队伍。
18:21
Imagine想像 you could take all the children孩子
416
1076000
3000
想像一下你有英国所有在受教育的小孩,
18:24
in education教育 in Britain英国, and one percent百分 of them
417
1079000
3000
其中1%是
18:27
were co-developers合作开发 of education教育.
418
1082000
2000
教育的协同开发者。
18:29
What would that do to the resources资源 available可得到
419
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这对于教育系统能使用的资源
18:31
to the education教育 system系统?
420
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2000
会有什么样的影响?
18:33
Or if you got one percent百分 of the patients耐心 in the NHSNHS
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1088000
3000
或者如果你有国民医疗系统NHS中1%的病人
18:36
to, in some sense, be co-producers合作生产 of health健康.
422
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3000
成为某种意义上的健康的协同制造者。
18:39
The reason原因 why --
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为什么会这样的原因——
18:41
despite尽管 all the efforts努力 to cut it down,
424
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3000
尽管遇到所有这些力量要削弱它,
18:44
to constrain压抑 it, to hold保持 it back --
425
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限制它,阻止它——
18:46
why these open打开 models楷模 will still start开始 emerging新兴
426
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为什么这些开放模式还能
18:49
with tremendous巨大 force,
427
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2000
以极其惊人的力量继续不断显现,
18:51
is that they multiply our productive生产的 resources资源.
428
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2000
是因为它们能成倍地利用我们的生产力资源。
18:53
And one of the reasons原因 they do that
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2000
它们能办到这一点的其中一个原因是
18:55
is that they turn users用户 into producers生产商,
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2000
它们把用户变成了生产者,
18:57
consumers消费者 into designers设计师.
431
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2000
把消费者变成了设计者。
18:59
Thank you very much.
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非常感谢。
Translated by Gary Wang
Reviewed by Yongming Luo

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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Charles Leadbeater - Innovation consultant
A researcher at the London think tank Demos, Charles Leadbeater was early to notice the rise of "amateur innovation" -- great ideas from outside the traditional walls, from people who suddenly have the tools to collaborate, innovate and make their expertise known.

Why you should listen

Charles Leadbeater's theories on innovation have compelled some of the world's largest organizations to rethink their strategies. A financial journalist turned innovation consultant (for clients ranging from the British government to Microsoft), Leadbeater noticed the rise of "pro-ams" -- passionate amateurs who act like professionals, making breakthrough discoveries in many fields, from software to astronomy to kite-surfing. His 2004 essay "The Pro-Am Revolution" -- which The New York Times called one of the year's biggest global ideas -- highlighted the rise of this new breed of amateur.

Prominent examples range from the mountain bike to the open-source operating system Linux, from Wikipedia to the Jubilee 2000 campaign, which helped persuade Western nations to cancel more than $30 billion in third-world debt. In his upcoming book, We-Think, Leadbeater explores how this emerging culture of mass creativity and participation could reshape companies and governments. A business reporter by training, he was previously an editor for the Financial Times, and later, The Independent, where, with Helen Fielding, he developed the "Bridget Jones' Diary" column. Currently, he is researching for Atlas of Ideas, a program that is mapping changes in the global geography of science and innovation.

More profile about the speaker
Charles Leadbeater | Speaker | TED.com