How to Speak

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  • Опубликовано: 13 май 2024
  • MIT How to Speak, IAP 2018
    Instructor: Patrick Winston
    View the complete course: ocw.mit.edu/how_to_speak
    Patrick Winston's How to Speak talk has been an MIT tradition for over 40 years. Offered every January, the talk is intended to improve your speaking ability in critical situations by teaching you a few heuristic rules.
    0:16 Introduction
    3:11 Rules of Engagement
    4:15 How to Start
    5:38 Four Sample Heuristics
    10:17 The Tools: Time and Place
    13:24 The Tools: Boards, Props, and Slides
    36:30 Informing: Promise, Inspiration, How To Think
    41:30 Persuading: Oral Exams, Job Talks, Getting Famous
    53:06 How to Stop: Final Slide, Final Words
    56:35 Final Words: Joke, Thank You, Examples
    This video has been dubbed using an artificial voice via aloud.area120.google.com to increase accessibility.
    License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
    More information at ocw.mit.edu/terms
    More courses at ocw.mit.edu

Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @mitocw
    @mitocw  4 года назад +3940

    For more on the life and work of Professor Winston (1943-2019), visit www.memoriesofpatrickwinston.com/

    • @mohammadhatoum
      @mohammadhatoum 4 года назад +489

      @@zendokai1527 This professor died this year. Please respect that. I wanted to comment here because I just knew he died. Please allow me to say this, I have been working on artificial intelligence and machine learning for 2 years now. The first course I have ever watched was by this great man. I still remember his kind way of talking and simplicity. Thank you, Professor Partick

    • @iansmith3301
      @iansmith3301 4 года назад +68

      @@zendokai1527 I'm pretty sure he just wanted to live the life he wanted to live. Once you are older and living with pain everyday you'll understand. Why don't you give a talk at MIT and educate us on RUclips?

    • @silversrayleigh8980
      @silversrayleigh8980 4 года назад +35

      Every Millenial: Sp.. Sp... Speak ? what are speak? ... emoji no speak ? ehh?

    • @martinzitter4551
      @martinzitter4551 4 года назад +13

      ps -- one "asks" a question rather than "saying" a question.
      Bad: I said to him, how are you?
      Good: I asked him, how are you?

    • @hondamomo
      @hondamomo 4 года назад +36

      @@mohammadhatoum this is my first ever video i watch for this respectfull man . and oh i didnt know i would watch it all till the last end really filled and informative even for a non ai enthusiast like my self thank you for bringing that up mohammed and may god bless his soul

  • @MarcoDinacci
    @MarcoDinacci 3 года назад +9128

    "Your success in life will be determined largely by your ability to speak, your ability to write, and the quality of your ideas. In that order."

    • @vipermad358
      @vipermad358 3 года назад +646

      ...and who your parents are.

    • @effab1e200
      @effab1e200 3 года назад +123

      Jordan peterson is that you

    • @HHCronikO
      @HHCronikO 3 года назад +41

      Classical liberal burgeoise bullshit pov.

    • @paulmerritt8593
      @paulmerritt8593 3 года назад +65

      Define success in life. It might not be what you think it is today no matter who you are today.

    • @dustinluthro3023
      @dustinluthro3023 2 года назад +11

      @@HHCronikO I dig the attitude.

  • @ar9907
    @ar9907 3 года назад +19817

    We are lucky that we live in an age where we can watch/listen to something like this for free

    • @fredcrinson2715
      @fredcrinson2715 3 года назад +319

      Was just thinking something similar. We have so much knowledge, merely a few keystrokes away.

    • @iamsmarterthanme
      @iamsmarterthanme 3 года назад +158

      Shhhh, don’t tell everyone 😂

    • @deadmanswife3625
      @deadmanswife3625 3 года назад +37

      @EIon Musk and the cost of loss of privacy...

    • @deadmanswife3625
      @deadmanswife3625 3 года назад +38

      Tell them what you're going to tell them.
      Tell them.
      Tell them what you've told them.

    • @deadmanswife3625
      @deadmanswife3625 3 года назад +2

      Biden never needed attendees

  • @jooplin
    @jooplin 2 месяца назад +903

    I am 27 and this is the first time I spoke thanks to this gentleman

  • @bubblydeveloper6180
    @bubblydeveloper6180 Месяц назад +56

    How to start a talk. 4:15
    1. Never start with a joke, it always falls flat.
    2. Start with an empowerment statement, i.e. what will the audience achieve after the talk.
    3. Humans have only one language processor, so make sure they focus on what you're saying.
    ------------------------------------------
    4 Sample Heuristics 5:38
    1. Cycle on the topic. Repeat what are talking about to reinforce it
    2. Build a fence around your ideas, so audiences don't confuse them with the ideas from others. Tell them how your idea is different from others.
    3. Use verbal punctuation to help audiences re-focus. State what you have covered so far and what is there to come.
    4. Ask questions. Engage the audience with moderately difficult questions every now and then. But not very difficult ones.
    ------------------------------------------
    The Tools
    Time & place 10:17
    1. Choose an appropriate time for talks. 11 am is a good time for the 1st lecture of the day.
    2. The place should be well lit.
    3. Know the place before hand, it should be cased so that you can address challenges if any.
    4. Make sure it's reasonably populated.
    Boards. Props, & Slides 13:24
    1. Chalks and boards are good for informing and teaching.
    2. Boards are well paced medium, people can absorb content while you write or draw graphics.
    6. Using Boards and props helps in empathetic mirroring i.e. audiences think they are doing the writing and drawing
    3. You can used hands to draw attention.
    4. Slides are good for exposing.
    6. Don't use laser pointers as they reduce the speakers' chance to engage with audiences, use a sign-post instead.
    7. Slides should have minimum amount of words. You do the talking and explanation of the points.
    8. Font size should be large enough for easy reading.
    5. Props are useful to help audiences visualize things.
    9. Practice your talk with people who don't know your work so that they don't hallucinate whats not in the presentation.
    ------------------------------------------
    Informing, Inspire 36:30
    1. Show your passion towards the subject
    2. Promise a solution to a problem
    3. Inspire by igniting passion
    3. Teach people how to think by:
    - Providing stories that they need to know
    - Providing questions that they need to ask about these stories
    - Providing mechanism to analyse these stories
    - Providing ways to put together stories
    - Providing ways to evaluate reliability of the stories
    ------------------------------------------
    Persuade 41:30
    1. Job Talks:
    Vision - Tell them about a problem they'd be interested in and provide your approach to the solution.
    Achievement - Provide the steps you will take to solve the problem
    2. Getting Famous:
    Why? - Because you want your work to be recognized.
    How? - Brand your work, have a slogan, have a salient idea and have a story to tell.
    ------------------------------------------
    How to End a Talk 50:06
    1. The last slide - It should enumerate what the audience have learnt or achieved after this talk, give them the time to read.
    2. Final words:
    - Never thank the audience.
    - End with a call to action.
    - Alright, you can tell a joke now, people will think they've had fun all the while. 50:36

    • @user-hz5yb4bh5v
      @user-hz5yb4bh5v 14 дней назад +1

      Why not thank the audience?
      Thank the audience for their attention, courtesy, for sharing their intent to learn and
      grow .. ... all the positive reasons that the audience is there to begin with. Leave them not just with your talk or lecture or with the focus entirely on you, but tell them briefly of (the aforementioned) reasons you're thanking them. That ties their polite, intelligent, goal oriented adult behavior to you with your very own, very courteous human expression - of them - thus being one with each person in the audience, with all of their humanity.
      Without saying it specifically, without speaking about it in words, you send the audience away with their own gratitude silently acknowledged - you give them all the power of a blessing, of appreciation for being who they are.
      That simple expression of gratitude to the audience, with just a few words, which rather punctuates any speaking presentation, communicates far more deeply than speaking about speaking. Therefore the audience leaves with your talk not only in their minds,
      but also in their hearts.
      Thank the audience properly. It is good for them, and for the speaker.

    • @olemew
      @olemew 7 дней назад +1

      @@user-hz5yb4bh5v Agreed. You should close with takeaways and a call for action, aand a final "Thank you" is polite and just a great cue for closure and clapping. If I have slides, I also put the words on the screen, along with my email. I was just rewatching one of my favorite speeches of all time, Steve Jobs Stanford 2005, and what's the last he said? Thank you very much. Simple and effective.
      I also agree with simplifying slides, BUT bullet points help people read and don't take a mental load. Title should not be changing on every slide, but a Section title in the slide gives structure. Actually, my biggest criticism of this talk is the lack of structure. Takes 1 minute in the beginning to present an agenda and helps with what he said about people disconnecting and they need to come back.
      Finally, I do not use lasers but they can be used for a few seconds without turning your full body. You don't lose eye contact because they're looking at the slide anyway (e.g., to visualize traffic on a map of the future construction site). Very useful in big rooms with big projectors.

  • @voicelab9884
    @voicelab9884 3 года назад +2594

    "I always finish with a joke, and that way people think they've had fun the whole time!"

  • @GregoryKC
    @GregoryKC 4 года назад +14818

    *A summary of the whole talk. Save, read, use... Enjoy!*
    Someone should've done it, let me be your hero guys. I spent couple of hours doing it but believe it'll be usefull for many people out there!
    Start
    1. Do not start a talk with a joke.
    2. Promise - Tell them what they gonna learn at the end of your talk.
    3. Cycle - make your idea repeated many times in order to be completely clear for everyone.
    4. Make a “Fence” around your idea so that it can be distinguished from someone else’s idea.
    5. Verbal punctuation - sum up information within your talk some times to make listeners get back on.
    6. Ask a question - intriguing one
    Place and Time
    7. Best time for having a lecture is 11 am.
    (not too early and not after lunch)
    8. The place should be well lit.
    9. The place should be seen and checked before the lecture.
    10. The place should not be full less than a half, it must be chosen according to the amount of listeners.
    Tools
    For teaching.
    1. Board - it’s got graphics, speed, target. Watch your hands! Don’t hold them behind your back, it’s better to keep them straight and use for pointing at the board.
    2. Props - use them in order to make your ideas visual.
    Visual perception is the most effective way to interact with listeners.
    For Job Talk. Exposing, Slides
    3. Don’t put too many words on a slide. Slides should just reflect what you’re saying, not the other way around. Pictures attracts attention and people start to wait for your explanation - use that tip.
    4. Make slide as easy as you can - no title, no distracting pictures, frames, points and so on.
    5. Do not use laser pointer - due to that you lose eye contact with the audience. Instead you can make the arrows just upon a slide.
    Informing

    Show to your listeners your stuff is cool and interesting.
    You have to be able to:
    -show your vision of that problem
    -show that you’ve done particular things (by steps)
    All of that should be done real quick in no more than 5 min.
    Persuade your listeners you’re not a rookie (Prof. Winston contrived to do that from the very first seconds of his talk)
    Getting Famous
    If you want to your ideas be remembered you’ve got to have
    "5 S"
    - Symbols associate with your ideas (visual perception is the best way to attract attention)
    - Slogan (describing your idea)
    - Surprise (common fallacy that is no longer true, for instance, just after you’ve told about it)
    - Salient Idea (not necessarily important but the one that sticks out)
    - Story (how you did it, how it works…)
    How to End
    - Don’t put collaborators at the end, do that at the beginning.
    - Question’s the worst way to end a talk.
    - It’s good to end with a Contribution slide - to sum up everything you’ve told with your OWN decision.
    - At the very end you could tell a joke since people then will leave the event feeling fun and thus keep a good memory of your talk.
    - "Thank you (for listening)" isn’t good ending, it’s trite at least. You can end with a quote of a prominent person (my own knowledge), with a salute to people (how much you valued the time being here, the people over here..., “I’d like to get back, it was fun!”
    That part actually I find the hardest one, since saying “Thanks” is a kind of a habit and it’s really difficult to make people clap if your talk wasn’t fascinating, so you’d better do this great and you won’t have to worry about how to end!

    • @wegapaul3616
      @wegapaul3616 4 года назад +317

      Thanks bro. This comment should be pinned to the top

    • @Cc-qi1ou
      @Cc-qi1ou 4 года назад +229

      Wish I knew u in college

    • @alexanderzin
      @alexanderzin 4 года назад +48

      Thank you sir!

    • @722guy
      @722guy 4 года назад +51

      You sir are amazing! Thank you!

    • @practice_percussion2678
      @practice_percussion2678 4 года назад +25

      Bro, THANKS

  • @jerrygu436
    @jerrygu436 5 месяцев назад +927

    What's amazing about this lecture is that you can see Professor Winston implementing his own principles in real time. What an absolute masterpiece of a lecture.

    • @chirpy7049
      @chirpy7049 3 месяца назад +16

      I feel like that’s the bare minimum don’t you think I wouldn’t call it amazing

    • @anointinglartey2762
      @anointinglartey2762 3 месяца назад +8

      I can't help but agree with you. His delivery got me hooked

    • @LinarKawthar
      @LinarKawthar 3 месяца назад +1

      Living example right after mentioning it

    • @jerrygu436
      @jerrygu436 3 месяца назад +2

      @@LinarKawthar perfect way to put it

    • @LinarKawthar
      @LinarKawthar 3 месяца назад

      @@liloualy9176 he's a teacher after all must be boring to a degree

  • @BobRosenstock-pp7wk
    @BobRosenstock-pp7wk Месяц назад +71

    they guy sounded like he could collapse at any moment and still delivered his speech in an intriguing way. what a master.

  • @FilosSofo
    @FilosSofo 4 года назад +8114

    title: "How to speak"
    the guy in the video: **starts speaking**
    me: damn, he's good

    • @ntomatas1
      @ntomatas1 4 года назад +67

      when will this type of comment go away?

    • @beberivera7011
      @beberivera7011 4 года назад +5

      That was very schmidt!😭😉😈

    • @ZeroNoHighest
      @ZeroNoHighest 4 года назад +81

      He sounds out of breath to me, so much so that it was a distraction. Poor guy, he needs to see a doc quick and give lecturers later. Ijs

    • @jselectronics8215
      @jselectronics8215 4 года назад +11

      @@ZeroNoHighest He needs to go low carb/keto/carnivore.

    • @ZeroNoHighest
      @ZeroNoHighest 4 года назад +7

      @@jselectronics8215 he needs to give lecturers in a chair...or a senior citizen scooter

  • @ernieho5468
    @ernieho5468 4 года назад +4860

    Once upon a time, I stayed up late at the MIT lab. On 6am , I saw professor Winston came to the lab and start drawing on the board. I asked professor "Hi Prof Winston, why are you here so early?"
    However, he ignored me, and keep drawing on the board...
    After an hour, he called my name. "Hey Ernie, what's up?"
    I looked at him and asked "Hi Prof, is this the drawing for the course later on this morning? Why did you practice the subject if you taught it so many times?"
    He looked at me and smiled "I'm like an athlete, got to rehearse and improve my performance before every game! I've done it for many decades, and this is my commitment for students! "
    At that moment, I have no word to describe my feeling, but having tears in my eyes and deepest respect from my heart.
    The man standing in front of me is the ford professor at MIT, he practiced before each course even he had taught it for over 30 years, he showed his commitment and dedication to his students not by his words, but his actions!
    He is Prof Patrick Henry Winston, a great spirit who inspired thousands and thousands of brilliant minds.
    Prof Winston, please rest in peace…
    Thank you for teaching and mentoring... your commitment and dedication for students always live deeply in our heart!

    • @dethswurl117
      @dethswurl117 4 года назад +49

      Awesome comment 🧡

    • @pj0000007
      @pj0000007 4 года назад +71

      I am sorry to hear of his passing. I accidentally came upon his lecture video. I observed his movement & breathing as he spoke & said to myself “this isn’t right”, suspecting cardiovascular issues (CVD). Maybe I am wrong - I don’t know what he passed from but if I was in the class at that time I would have tried to communicate my concerns to him. / DrJ

    • @ZeroNoHighest
      @ZeroNoHighest 4 года назад +25

      He ignored you? He sounds rude to me

    • @petey8155
      @petey8155 4 года назад +111

      @@ZeroNoHighest oh jesus christ

    • @jennifernewman9799
      @jennifernewman9799 4 года назад +72

      Novasistic, sounds to me like he was focused on the task at hand and as soon as he completed his preparation he conversed with the student. Great presentation!

  • @Emilia-Wyatt
    @Emilia-Wyatt 3 месяца назад +225

    The use of the techniques he’s teaching while he’s teaching them in a thoughtful manner was amazing. Asking a question about what another good way for an audience to re-engage is (the answer to which was asking a question) was next level brilliant!

  • @kittyjayway
    @kittyjayway Год назад +2102

    Mark fans, this guy passed away in 2019, please be respectful to him in comments among the jokes from the stream.

    • @Wiikid777
      @Wiikid777 Год назад +72

      May this legend rest in peace.

    • @elaboratedreamer
      @elaboratedreamer Год назад +45

      WAIT REALLY?? OMG I DIDN'T KNOW THAT
      That's genuinely really sad :((

    • @leoncaples2947
      @leoncaples2947 Год назад +14

      Rest in peace, dear legend.

    • @sfbxiii
      @sfbxiii Год назад +18

      He is a legend i learned to speak from him

    • @DoingCoding
      @DoingCoding Год назад +25

      People Joking? It's sad they joking about someone who is giving such a knowledge. Even if he is alive or dead we should not joke.

  • @realhumphreyappleby
    @realhumphreyappleby 4 года назад +5340

    We're so lucky that this gem of a lecture was captured before he died. Now he can deliver this talk every year, just like he did before.

    • @EmbSysDev
      @EmbSysDev 4 года назад +62

      Yes Minister !!
      Requiescat in Pace, respected Professor...

    • @_l735
      @_l735 4 года назад +35

      @Culture Freedom I'm thinking the same thing, high visceral fat content is a good predictor for early morbidity. Not the best role model in that regard.

    • @ajwaddanwarr3409
      @ajwaddanwarr3409 4 года назад +103

      I had no idea Professor Winston had passed. His lecture series was instrumental in studying AI. I shall miss him immensely.

    • @brighamdallas994
      @brighamdallas994 4 года назад +55

      He was 76 when he passed

    • @sharonsumnerlott
      @sharonsumnerlott 4 года назад +18

      @@_l735 maybe he had a medical condition?

  • @TerraVivus
    @TerraVivus 4 месяца назад +105

    he is literally putting into to practice what he is teaching as he is teaching it. incredible.

    • @aanando
      @aanando 3 месяца назад +3

      You mean he is speaking while he is teaching.
      P.S.: I havent and wont watch the video

    • @ghost-wl3pm
      @ghost-wl3pm 3 месяца назад +2

      no the original commenter is right, dont correct them if you dont know what theyre talking about☠☠☠☠@@aanando

    • @aanando
      @aanando 3 месяца назад

      @@ghost-wl3pm Did I correct him? I dont think so🤔🥱

    • @ghost-wl3pm
      @ghost-wl3pm 3 месяца назад +2

      @aanando yeah you legit did..."you mean he is speaking while he is teaching" your comment is right there thought I wouldn't need to quote you, but yes you are legit trying to correct them and implying that they said something wrong by saying "you mean..."

    • @aanando
      @aanando 3 месяца назад

      @@ghost-wl3pm Sorry for the crime😉

  • @Zei33
    @Zei33 3 месяца назад +33

    Honestly, working retail for a few years set me up for life. I was so anxious about speaking to strangers when I was younger. Retail gave me the skills to go forward in life and now I’m one of the best speakers in my organisation. When I travel I can make friends easily and have regular nights out with new people in foreign lands. It’s a skill that makes life very well.

    • @XTRABIG
      @XTRABIG 29 дней назад

      same... minus the personal success. Retail experience was invaluable. I learned to express myself clearly and confidently. I also learned the skill of listening to and understanding what other people were communicating to me. working as a camp counselor overseeing youth and later camp counselors themselves sharpened my public speaking skills.
      thank you for sharing.

  • @farhanmughal262
    @farhanmughal262 3 года назад +1460

    How to start a talk.
    1. Never start with a joke, it always falls flat.
    2. Start with an empowerment statement, i.e. what will the audience achieve after the talk.
    3. Humans have only one language processor, so make sure they focus on what you're saying.
    ------------------------------------------
    Sample Heuristics:
    1. Cycle on the topic. Repeat what are talking about to reinforce it
    2. Build a fence around your ideas, so audiences don't confuse them with the ideas from others. Tell them how your idea is different from others.
    3. Use verbal punctuation to help audiences re-focus. State what you have covered so far and what is there to come.
    4. Ask questions. Engage the audience with moderately difficult questions every now and then. But not very difficult ones.
    ------------------------------------------
    The Tools
    Time & place:
    1. Choose an appropriate time for talks. 11 am is a good time for the 1st lecture of the day.
    2. The place should be well lit.
    3. Know the place before hand, it should be cased so that you can address challenges if any.
    4. Make sure it's reasonably populated.
    Boards & Props:
    1. Chalks and boards are good for informing and teaching.
    2. Boards are well paced medium, people can absorb content while you write or draw graphics.
    6. Using Boards and props helps in empathetic mirroring i.e. audiences think they are doing the writing and drawing
    3. You can used hands to draw attention.
    4. Slides are good for exposing.
    6. Don't use laser pointers as they reduce the speakers' chance to engage with audiences, use a sign-post instead.
    7. Slides should have minimum amount of words. You do the talking and explanation of the points.
    8. Font size should be large enough for easy reading.
    5. Props are useful to help audiences visualize things.
    9. Practice your talk with people who don't know your work so that they don't hallucinate whats not in the presentation.
    ------------------------------------------
    Inspire
    1. Show your passion towards the subject
    2. Promise a solution to a problem
    3. Inspire by igniting passion
    3. Teach people how to think by:
    - Providing stories that they need to know
    - Providing questions that they need to ask about these stories
    - Providing mechanism to analyse these stories
    - Providing ways to put together stories
    - Providing ways to evaluate reliability of the stories
    ------------------------------------------
    Persuade
    1. Job Talks:
    Vision - Tell them about a problem they'd be interested in and provide your approach to the solution.
    Achievement - Provide the steps you will take to solve the problem
    2. Getting Famous:
    Why? - Because you want your work to be recognized.
    How? - Brand your work, have a slogan, have a salient idea and have a story to tell.
    ------------------------------------------
    How to End a Talk
    1. The last slide - It should enumerate what the audience have learnt or achieved after this talk, give them the time to read.
    2. Final words:
    - Never thank the audience.
    - End with a call to action.
    - Alright, you can tell a joke now, people will think they've had fun all the while.

    • @bookkeepingllc
      @bookkeepingllc 3 года назад +15

      Thank you!

    • @nicholaswalczak4740
      @nicholaswalczak4740 3 года назад +25

      I think the value of chalk boards or white boards is in the tension they build. Personally I find that as the person is writing it I'm curious as to what they're going to write. You don't have that with slides.

    • @hermitgreen9581
      @hermitgreen9581 3 года назад +26

      Thanks for the summary. Very useful, and very public-spirited of you.

    • @farhanmughal262
      @farhanmughal262 3 года назад +5

      Hermit Green thank you, you’re very kind 😊

    • @farhanmughal262
      @farhanmughal262 3 года назад

      Nicholas Walczak absolutely.

  • @hadizamani6029
    @hadizamani6029 4 года назад +1051

    Professor Winston passed away on July 19, 2019.We mostly know him by Artificial Intelligence Course at MIT OCW.

  • @abdullateefmuraina4602
    @abdullateefmuraina4602 Месяц назад +5

    This is one of the reasons I so much love using RUclips, the algorithm serves me better by suggesting premium courses. It's really a pleasure coming across this video. Thank you for this lecture sir.

  • @BoyInTech
    @BoyInTech 8 месяцев назад +386

    Summary:
    00:00 🎖 Communication skills are vital for success in life; speaking, writing, and idea quality matter.
    01:25 🏆 Knowledge, practice, and inherent talent influence effective communication; knowledge matters most.
    02:20 📢 Learning various speaking techniques can significantly impact your success; a non-linear process.
    03:17 📵 Avoid distractions during learning; laptops and cell phones off to engage fully.
    04:39 🚀 Start with an empowerment promise, outlining what listeners will gain from the talk.
    06:01 🔄 Repetition and cycling ideas can help ensure better understanding among the audience.
    06:58 🧱 Build a fence around your idea to differentiate it from others and avoid confusion.
    08:24 ❓ Use verbal punctuation and ask questions to keep the audience engaged and help them stay on track.
    09:52 💼 Develop your personal speaking style by observing effective speakers and adapting their techniques.
    10:20 ⏰ Choose an optimal time and well-lit environment for effective communication.
    13:38 🖼 Use props, such as boards, to engage the audience and make concepts more tangible.
    16:53 🎭 Effective use of props can enhance audience engagement through empathetic mirroring.
    24:08 📊 Slides are effective for exposing ideas, but avoid reading them or overcrowding with text.
    27:52 📊 Experiment: Slides with too much text make the audience focus on reading rather than listening to the speaker. Students remembered slide content over spoken information.
    28:49 🚫 Eliminate Clutter: Excessive words on slides due to small fonts reduce audience engagement. Use easily legible fonts (around 40-50 size) to avoid cramming.
    29:46 🖐 Avoid Laser Pointer: Laser pointers disconnect you from the audience, leading to lack of eye contact and engagement. Use arrows or other methods to guide attention.
    32:08 📜 Too-Heavy Slides: Presentations with heavy text lack white space and visuals. Aim for balanced text and imagery to maintain audience interest.
    38:39 🌟 Inspiration: Inspire by sharing passion about your topic. Express enthusiasm and excitement to engage your audience effectively.
    41:31 💡 Teaching People How to Think: Educate by providing stories, questions, mechanisms, and ways to evaluate reliability of information, focusing on thinking skills.
    43:28 💼 Job Talks: In job talks, establish your vision and show steps taken to solve a problem in the first five minutes. Practice with friends to refine your presentation.
    48:38 🌟 Becoming Memorable: Create "Winston's star" for your work: symbol, slogan, surprise, salient idea, and story. Make sure your work stands out and is recognized.
    53:17 🏁 Ending a Talk: Avoid ending with a list of collaborators; introduce them at the beginning. Avoid concluding with negative statements or questions.
    54:34 🗣 Slides should effectively communicate your identity and message, avoiding wasted opportunities.
    55:31 🧠 Conclude with a "Contributions" slide to highlight what you've achieved, not just conclusions.
    56:56 😄 End with a joke to engage the audience and create a positive closing impression.
    57:54 🙌 Avoid weak endings like just saying "thank you," which may imply politeness over engagement.
    59:18 🎤 Observe how political speeches end to learn diverse ways to conclude effectively.
    01:01:13 🎶 Learn from established conventions, like the Latin mass or concert clapping signals.
    01:02:09 🙏 Salute the audience by expressing gratitude, valuing their time, and leaving a positive impression.

  • @leixun
    @leixun 4 года назад +1816

    *My takeaways:*
    *RIP Professor Winston. I have learnt a lot today, thank you!*
    1. We humans only have one language processor, so focus 3:00
    *How to start a talk?*
    2. Don't start with a joke, start with a promise 4:15
    *Some techniques*
    3. Cycle on the topic to reinforce it 5:38
    4. Build a fence around our ideas, so audiences don't confuse them with the ideas from others 6:32
    5. Use verbal punctuation to help audiences re-focus 7:25
    6. Ask questions to audiences 8:36
    *Time & place*
    7. 11am is a good time for the 1st lecture of the day 10:20
    8. The place should have good lighting condition, should be cased and reasonably populated 10:55
    *Tools: boards, props and slides*
    9. Chalks and boards are good for informing and teaching, slides are good for exposing 13:40
    10. Chalks and boards are good for showing graphics. You can control the speed of talk to help audiences absorb contents, and use your hand to point a target on board 13:55
    11. Props are useful to help audiences think about abstract things 16:50
    12. Boards and props are great because empathic mirroring 22:55, i.e. audiences can feel they are doing the writing and demonstration
    13. Bad slides contain too many pages and too many words 23:50
    14. Audiences can be tired to switch between slides and speaker if they far away from each other 26:11
    15. How to create good slides: simplification. Audiences will pay less attention to the speaker if their slides contain too many words 26:30
    16. Font size shouldn't be large enough for easy reading 28:49
    17. Lazer pointer reduces the speakers' chance to engage (e.g. eye contact) with audiences 29:35, using sign-post in the slides instead
    18. Examples: Bad slides vs good slides 31:45
    *More techniques*
    19. How to inspire your audiences? 36:20 Show your passion for the topic
    20. An example of making a promise and showing passion 38:40
    21. How to teach people how to think 40:10, Provide them with:
    - The stories that they need to know
    - The questions that they need to ask about these stories
    - The mechanism to analyse these stories
    - The ways to put together stories
    - The ways to evaluate reliable stories
    *Oral exams*
    22. People usually fail them because they fail to situate the context and fail to practice 41:47
    23. Practice your talk with people who don't know you work 42:38
    24. *Job talks* 44:02
    *Getting famous*
    25. Why should you care about getting famous 48:30, because we want our work to be recognised and we need good communication skills to do that
    26. How to get your presentation ideas to be remembered 50:07, we need to have: symbol, slogan, surprise, salient (ideas) and (tell a) story
    *How to end a talk*
    27. Some examples on final slides 53:10, show what you have done (i.e. contributions) and give audiences the time to read them!
    28. Final words 56:31:
    - A joke, his colleagues always end a talk with a joke, so people think they have had fun all the time :)
    - The phrase "thank you" is a weak move, "thank you for listening" is even worse, it suggests that people listen to your talk because their politeness
    - Some great endings without saying "thank you" 58:37
    - Salute the audiences
    *His final salute **1:02:40*

    • @Amy_Yu2023
      @Amy_Yu2023 4 года назад +31

      Thanks for sharing. RIP Professor Winston.

    • @fc.soccercard
      @fc.soccercard 3 года назад +24

      Thanks for the time stamps!

    • @raznatovicanastasija
      @raznatovicanastasija 3 года назад +31

      By writing this you demonstrated your commitment and understanding. I salute you Lei Xun!

    • @leixun
      @leixun 3 года назад +7

      Zgermud, them turds in my pants boiii! You are welcome

    • @JH-ji6cj
      @JH-ji6cj 3 года назад +5

      I like what he was saying about _empathic mirroring_ , but when he asked, I thought to myself *discovery* due to the mental action generated by figuring out the answer as it is being written on the board. Kind of a Wheel-of-fortune-effect? Still seems plausible to me anyhow.
      Thanks for the work you put into this. Your comment, and many others, really convey a deep regard and care for this man.

  • @MyRuger
    @MyRuger 2 года назад +3686

    Being an only child, and living without parents alone for years has definitely degraded my ability to speak effectively to crowds especially in a teaching scenario. My job has kept me away from people for years and now I’m going to be training people! I said lord help me and here we are. Best of the best, thank you professor Winston.

    • @brianbishoptv
      @brianbishoptv 2 года назад +65

      Im sorry you had to go through that. I found out that the best way is by practicing speeches

    • @jose000
      @jose000 2 года назад +5

      ...

    • @adazudiara4496
      @adazudiara4496 2 года назад +15

      Wishing you for the best !!! 🙌

    • @amitchatterjee4824
      @amitchatterjee4824 2 года назад +12

      Same situation for me bro

    • @aussierule
      @aussierule 2 года назад +60

      Same. I was as isolated as you can get in a rural population 400 town, also an only child and I couldn't talk to people for shit. I worked remote and got everything delivered. I decided to teach myself a skill and just up and switch careers. Because after years of loving isolation, I started to get extremely lonely to the point I would call my mom or dad or whoever would pick up just to talk for a couple minutes. Realized what was happening and now I talk to people every day as the only person in a shop. I learned a lot about people and speaking. Mostly was that the average person is a lot dumber than you think they are.

  • @TARTANTERR0R
    @TARTANTERR0R Месяц назад +5

    I wish I had seen this during my military career, everything he said about PP, mannerisms, etc was something I instinctively knew was wrong, but it was exactly how we were taught to teach as instructors/mentors. Fantastic information and an excellent educator. I understand he has sadly passed, but he is still educating a 52-year-old man, which is appreciated. This presentation is a very valuable gift he has left.

  • @user-so1qd6sh3m
    @user-so1qd6sh3m 4 месяца назад +18

    Serious I wouldn’t have ever imagined we can be as if we are attending an actual MIT lecture back in the 2000s. This is a gift and I think others who are interested in higher education and couldn’t attend due to, let’s say financial reasons can see and learn and even feel what it would feel like to be in class.

  • @AstroflipRecordings
    @AstroflipRecordings 4 года назад +1273

    "I don't recommend starting your talk with a joke." *Everyone laughs*

    • @nati1025
      @nati1025 4 года назад +45

      Yeah I think he was being Sly right there, intellectuals like to use Sly humor

    • @AstroflipRecordings
      @AstroflipRecordings 4 года назад +18

      @@nati1025 Yeah, it was really clever and subtle. My favorite type of humor.

    • @pizzaboy3946
      @pizzaboy3946 4 года назад +27

      And if no one laughed, he'd covered his back.

    • @Juksemakeren
      @Juksemakeren 4 года назад +73

      That was not the start of his talk

    • @Mutantcy1992
      @Mutantcy1992 4 года назад +44

      @@Juksemakeren Exactly. He's 4 and a half minutes into his talk and he started his talk with the promise of empowerment he says to start a talk with. I guess some people weren't paying attention

  • @phanbuithanhtrung244
    @phanbuithanhtrung244 Год назад +2360

    Prof Winston had a profound effect on my life. I was an Electrical Engineering major when I took Prof Winston's Introduction to AI class in the early 80s. I still remember the excitement I had in his class over almost 40 years later. That course led me to do my Master thesis using AI and EE together and then go on to get a Ph.D. in Computer Science with an emphasis in AI at CMU. That one course changed my trajectory in life. Thank you, Prof Winston, so sorry to see you go. To his family, he made a difference in mine and so many other's lives.

  • @sauravgupta9438
    @sauravgupta9438 17 часов назад +1

    I don't know how long this video has been in my recommendations, but I've always ignored it. Finally, I clicked on it. Let see

  • @achisiguneyt5281
    @achisiguneyt5281 5 месяцев назад +1

    Coincidentally found this video looked into this guy and was impressed by how much he did amazing and inspirational man
    i hope he rest well

  • @rcarnes3
    @rcarnes3 3 года назад +1033

    I served with Patrick on the Navy Research Advisory Board (sic "Navy Science Board"). Few, very few, would ever tell you that there was anyone in our group with tighter reasoning, more humor, and better presentations. He could engage people on any subject, anytime, anywhere. I am honored to have known him and served with him. Rob Carnes

    • @Adiudicium-1776
      @Adiudicium-1776 3 года назад +15

      Beautiful words, thank you for sharing.

    • @Aaron-hq4bu
      @Aaron-hq4bu 2 года назад +9

      - SIGNED SCOTT

    • @FlyingMonkies325
      @FlyingMonkies325 2 года назад +3

      Any subject? that's definitely a lot he was really really smart, i'm smart but like most i prefer what i like doing the most which is specific things while the other things are... cool and good to know but i wouldn't want to spend my life on it lol i'm an eager learner but i couldn't learn something i don't like from the ground up and be happy actually i wouldn't lol, so to learn any subject he must have found it ALL interesting and i wish i did. He was a definitely a Polymath. Schools try to get us interested in all the subjects but it's not possible i'm afraid Polymaths are something special indeed.

    • @4philipp
      @4philipp 2 года назад +17

      @@FlyingMonkies325 if you concentrate on concepts, you won’t need to know all the details. It allows you to become knowledgeable on more subject in a shorter timespan

    • @FlyingMonkies325
      @FlyingMonkies325 2 года назад

      ​@@4philipp Yep i know that but most people just aren't happy learning things they have simply no interest in that's how it is.
      I defo need all the details though ​on how to do it and any possible ways i can do it in an easier way any "trick" i can possibly use, such as with long division they don't tell you that you can use the first 1 or 2 numbers of the divisor (depending how big the number is) then multiply it close to but under the first 2 numbers of the dividend then whatever number that multiplies to use that to multiply the whole divisor :P you get a 99% accuracy rate using that method.
      Then on some you may just need to round the divisor up or down to the nearest ten or 100 then multiply but because it's a bit experimental you still may need to lower the number you multiplied the divisor by down by 1 to get the correct answer you then subtract. By not teaching ppl the operations properly and that there's multiple ways to use the numbers to work around it then it makes working around a concept too difficult if not impossible.
      I have no idea how anyone does anything using only 80% of the details at most and without research lol impossible... i know back in high school my entire class was always confused only 1 or 2 did well cos their parents got them tutors at home, most concepts i can more or less use the standard method but i still tweak it here and there to my understanding if i can't then it's useless, for most concepts only takes me 5 - 6 days to properly learn it then master it unless it's a concept i need to practise a bit more such a fractions.

  • @BeomSeokKang
    @BeomSeokKang Год назад +11

    Every single word and sentence had meanings. The ending, also, was like a movie ending. What a great lecture.

  • @jorgesaxon3781
    @jorgesaxon3781 9 месяцев назад +1

    Its amazing how while explaining each idea he is also provinding an example with his actions and you only realise this until he explains it, fantastic

  • @hfweuiofnweuio500
    @hfweuiofnweuio500 4 года назад +1513

    "please put the laptop away"
    me watching him on a laptop not knowing what i should do.

    • @JJ-oc1vo
      @JJ-oc1vo 4 года назад +6

      same bro

    • @TehShrike
      @TehShrike 4 года назад +78

      When he said that I fullscreened the video and sat down a few feet away

    • @GOA_Pictures
      @GOA_Pictures 4 года назад +5

      @@TehShrike great job, did the same

    • @alexthegreat7518
      @alexthegreat7518 4 года назад +3

      lol same

    • @yigitylmaz3585
      @yigitylmaz3585 3 года назад +9

      The moment he said that I immediately searched for this comment lol

  • @MoosaIslamic
    @MoosaIslamic 4 года назад +708

    Summary: Opening, Samples, Tools
    Start:
    Don't start with a joke. Try an "empowerment promise".
    4 Sample heuristics:
    1. Cycling
    2. Fencing
    3. Verbal punctuation
    4. Asking a question
    The Tools:
    + Time and place
    11am is a good time for a lecture. "Well-lit" room is the most important factor. It's also important the lecture room is relatively well-populated and easy to reach.
    + Boards and props
    -Try use boards. They give something to do with hands and directs attention.
    -Use props. They can make ideas much easier to engage with, and to "grasp" easily.
    Projections:
    +Slides: Slides should be supplementary, by having few words, simple images and no clutter.
    +Crimes: Don't use laser pointers or stick pointers. Just talk through the topic.
    - The "too heavy" crime
    - Hands-in-pockets crime
    Information:
    - Promises
    - Make it inspirational/astonishing
    - Show the audience "how to think" by providing them the stories they need to know, the questions they must ask about those stories, mechanisms for analysing those stories, ways of putting stories together, ways of evaluating the reliability of stories.
    - Structure using vision, steps, contribution framework.
    - Use symbols, slogans, surprise, salient idea, the story
    The End:
    Contribution slide. What you argued, how you argued it, and why it matters. A little joke to sweeten the ending.

    • @TimmacTR
      @TimmacTR 4 года назад +16

      Faith in Humanity: restored.

    • @CultofThings
      @CultofThings 4 года назад +8

      You forgot end with a joke.

    • @MoosaIslamic
      @MoosaIslamic 4 года назад +7

      @@CultofThings Thanks. I'll add that :)

    • @CultofThings
      @CultofThings 4 года назад +4

      @@MoosaIslamic Thanks. I just thought it was an interesting point, to end with a joke rather than start with one.
      Thank you for the summary and god bless america. :)

    • @SD-de4do
      @SD-de4do 4 года назад +3

      Thank you for the guide, it helps to know in advance.

  • @user-tj3kn8qy4h
    @user-tj3kn8qy4h 4 месяца назад +14

    By FAR the best part of this talk is Professor Winston pursing his lips after his masterful conclusion so as not to say “thank you.” A true man of his craft. Thank you MIT for providing such an awesome lecture for free and thank you Professor Winston for your contributions to our planet. I will definitely be reading more of your works! RIP

  • @Steve.Orland
    @Steve.Orland 2 месяца назад +9

    I remember seeing this in high school and thereafter internally critiquing every presentation I saw from my classmates and even teachers of twenty years! The way I make my PowerPoints and deliver information in front of a room, on those rare occasions throughout each school year and now semester, has forever been positively altered by Dr. Winston. Not everyone understands the difference but I can feel it! Thank you, professor ...

  • @gab882
    @gab882 2 года назад +64

    Me at the start of the lecture : This grumpy looking old man is going to teach me how to speak?
    Me at the end of the lecture : This is one of the greatest speakers of all time...

  • @abazabaabazaba4177
    @abazabaabazaba4177 3 года назад +182

    To think this guy is an AI teacher but he so eloquently broke down how to communicate is truly impressive. What a great watch.

    • @aleksanderbudzynowski3625
      @aleksanderbudzynowski3625 3 года назад +16

      To make significant advances in the field of AI you really must be multitalented-a philosopher, psychoanalyst, systems thinker. AI is not about being a programming whiz. It requires someone with constant insight into what it means to be human. So it's not at all surprising that Prof Winston was an excellent communicator.

    • @FlyingMonkies325
      @FlyingMonkies325 2 года назад +2

      If you want to do it yourself just find your info then squish it down into a more concise and simplified way, people learn best with smaller bits of info at a time rather than a lot it's just easy to follow... turns out even for me and what i was missing for years what we all were clearly not taught.
      I've been learning Maths on my own and so through writing my own Instructional Notes you see that information is generally scattered around not just online but in books too and so... you need to take it all and then put it into 1 place, but don't compromise on the details that's too much simplification then. If written well then it's useful to always keep it and stay refreshed for yourself too. Some tips from Bloggers are very helpful because you also want to reduce the word count.

  • @suwanichpatmayothin6917
    @suwanichpatmayothin6917 3 месяца назад +9

    For the ordinary people, who are on the side of the planet and had never thought that can access and see how MIT's student learn, this OpenCourse, with ready technology, open the opprtunities for people around the world learn and develop from the world class eductional institute like MIT, Thank you.

  • @user-cq4sl1ch3z
    @user-cq4sl1ch3z 3 месяца назад +11

    I watch this video from time to time to remind myself of how core competency works. Why I should keep practicing. Thank you professor Winston I never met you but you have changed my life. Bless your soul. Rest in peace.

  • @tombcruisin
    @tombcruisin 4 года назад +520

    A wonderful talk and a great decision by MIT to have so many lessons available to the public. Rest in peace, Professor Winston.

    • @bohnblue4153
      @bohnblue4153 4 года назад +1

      @@mohammedasif9246 idk man what do you thing "rest in peace" means

    • @Y0M
      @Y0M 4 года назад +8

      @@bohnblue4153 Professor Winston passed away this year

    • @daviddacus8168
      @daviddacus8168 4 года назад +4

      sus it’s not surprising by the way he is breathing unless it’s anxiety but I doubt it. Interesting lecture though so far.

    • @harshithvdn1449
      @harshithvdn1449 3 года назад

      @@Y0M Damn that's sad to know
      I want to know who is continuing this tradition of this speech in MIT

  • @sneedmando186
    @sneedmando186 4 года назад +186

    I respect this educator, politely and with humor, but firmly called for attention. Very classy.

    • @digiquo8143
      @digiquo8143 4 года назад +2

      @StoptheWars Anybody can go to any school with a big enough loan.

    • @rokpodlogar6062
      @rokpodlogar6062 4 года назад +2

      it's a new day and age. he's old school, you did see him break the stick, didn't you? :)

  • @raypalmer5125
    @raypalmer5125 9 месяцев назад +7

    Rest in Peace Professor, Thanks a lot for this wonderful gem of a lecture!

  • @codygilleland
    @codygilleland 8 месяцев назад +10

    I was blessed to see this lecture in person and I always come back to watch online before any important presentation. Thank you Prof. Winston. Your impact lives on.

  • @jakehands
    @jakehands 3 года назад +5930

    I had to stop watching after he told everyone to close their laptops.

  • @devon8372
    @devon8372 3 года назад +407

    A lot of this is basically a tutorial on how to teach. Many high school teachers need to watch this.

    • @silkepauli1456
      @silkepauli1456 3 года назад +7

      Yes,Yes,Yes

    • @charlesvigneron565
      @charlesvigneron565 2 года назад +4

      My thought exactly!

    • @mtlicq
      @mtlicq 2 года назад +5

      @@Ryan-jc7qh yeah. But at University level, teaching is not an issue. It is up to the student to teach oneself with whatever info and guidance the prof exposes. In public school, it is the teacher pushing info/propaganda/study methods, and pupils are sort of passive/compliant. In university, they assume you already learned how to learn, and give you tons of info to capture and process by yourself; not the prof's job to teach.

    • @samedy00
      @samedy00 2 года назад +10

      @@mtlicq how are they supposed to know how to learn by the end of the school, if all those years they were just passively feeded with info and propaganda?

    • @FlyingMonkies325
      @FlyingMonkies325 2 года назад

      They probably have... but they don't seem to care lol they're still too busy telling us the internet is bogus because their students are starting to not listen and understand we just won't entirely understand their perspective on things and can find something we DO online instead.
      For the current younger gen they're still trying to get them to only use what they gave them but always always did we need an alternative thing to use to do Research and now we do... they can't handle the idea of letting us go off and have actual brains of our own lol, you see that with Video Classes lol even if they got the material from Math-Aids that everyone can go on LOL and The Curriculum says they can only do that too but it's outdated and frankly restrictive and how they can teach is determined by it too sadly.

  • @EricDelgadillo-ue4vo
    @EricDelgadillo-ue4vo 5 месяцев назад

    Even if it's in amusement points. The whole lecture is gold. He's doing exactly what he's explaining. You have the knowledge, the visuals and an example all in one. I'm in awe.

  • @user-ry2yy5pc3f
    @user-ry2yy5pc3f 3 месяца назад +5

    What's amazing about this lesson is that Professor Winston effortlessly followed his own presentation principles

  • @susannasu886
    @susannasu886 2 года назад +1003

    We are grateful that MIT is making lectures like this available to the general public. Allowing Professor Patrick Winston's teaching to reach people beyond the institution, in essence transferring his knowledge to our world beyond his lifetime.

    • @adda4yuvaconnect452
      @adda4yuvaconnect452 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/b2zw3P2wW6w/видео.html

    • @PageMarker1
      @PageMarker1 Год назад +17

      They should be using these videos in the Community Colleges, it's an MIT education.

    • @Lamzyvictory
      @Lamzyvictory Год назад

      What kinda Bullshit is this , babies learn to speak young without any gray hair or white hair.

    • @fallboot7992
      @fallboot7992 Год назад

      +1

    • @AmitAgrawal-ud3li
      @AmitAgrawal-ud3li 10 месяцев назад

      @@fallboot7992 ruclips.net/video/vROoAISqVbs/видео.html

  • @RibeiroLucasDev
    @RibeiroLucasDev 2 года назад +2422

    00:16 Introduction
    03:11 Rules of Engagement
    04:15 How to Start
    05:38 Four Sample Heuristics
    10:17 The Tools: Time and Place
    13:24 The Tools: Boards, Props, and Slides
    36:30 Informing: Promise, Inspiration, How to Think
    41:30 Persuading: Oral Exams, Job Talks, Getting Famous
    53:06 How to Stop: Final Slide, Final Words
    56:35 Final Words: Joke, Thank You, Examples

    • @junkjunk2493
      @junkjunk2493 2 года назад +17

      thx for your work

    • @capowable
      @capowable 2 года назад +10

      Thanks man😊

    • @VeronicaStClair
      @VeronicaStClair 2 года назад +9

      This is awesome! Thank you for taking the time to do this!

    • @charlesgerety1403
      @charlesgerety1403 2 года назад +4

      Uh sir.....*Empathetic 22:50

    • @RibeiroLucasDev
      @RibeiroLucasDev 2 года назад +3

      @@charlesgerety1403 It's part of the 13:24 The Tools: Boards, Props, and Slides

  • @shivamchouhan5077
    @shivamchouhan5077 3 месяца назад +15

    Thank you so much
    I had never spoken a single word in my life until this video

  • @AlexandreHenriquePinheiro
    @AlexandreHenriquePinheiro 7 месяцев назад +5

    I've watched this lecture 3x on the past 2 years. The most awesome part of the lecture is the fact that he does exactly what he's explaining about. Like the "cycle thru it", he said that while cycle thru lol. Genius.

  • @GordonAlley
    @GordonAlley 2 года назад +770

    Sitting here alone watching this recorded presentation on my desktop computer, without thinking I automatically began to applaud along with the audience. He made what could have been a mundane topic very educational. I'm not a student -- I'm 74 years old.

    • @jamesewanchook2276
      @jamesewanchook2276 Год назад +3

      @@samuel9294 you guys are goofy but I like it, Cheers from Vancouver!

    • @rommelorlandoruiz633
      @rommelorlandoruiz633 Год назад

    • @JK_Clark
      @JK_Clark Год назад +1

      @@Grunchy005 That's the part I remember most, before that is simply an intro to giving presentations. I've been teaching for 16 years, so getting better at being recognised for my achievements is more significant to me than doing my job.

    • @mikemegachurch1310
      @mikemegachurch1310 Год назад

      @@Grunchy005 _They are: Symbol : Slogan : Surprise : Salient Idea : Story_
      You maybe right. Im not sure. Can you elaborate so I know what you mean please?

    • @meta4282
      @meta4282 Год назад +13

      we are all students until we die

  • @EranM
    @EranM 4 года назад +42

    I've learnt from Patrick over the internet for a long time. I just wanted to comment: "Patrick I want you to live forever!" And than I read a comment: "Rest In Peace.". God damnit! PATRICK WAS SO GOOD!!!!!!!! I wish I could have been his student..

    • @philyuan583
      @philyuan583 4 года назад +5

      By learning from him you remember his ideas, which, as he put, are like his children. His body dies but his ideas live on - in his students, in his audience, in you and me. Rest In Peace Mr Winston.

    • @RaviKiran-nv5dw
      @RaviKiran-nv5dw 4 года назад +2

      Adding a few things. Voice modulation (Volume, Pace, Pause and Expression) also plays a very important part.
      In the conclusion two points are important. Firstly a Summary or Recap will help. Secondly Application or 'What's in it for me' will reinforce the talk better.

  • @txcaponeyoungjerry9435
    @txcaponeyoungjerry9435 6 месяцев назад +1

    I like how we can relate to the professor and his form of explanation was magnificent..

  • @LegitkawasakiX
    @LegitkawasakiX 4 года назад +185

    This helped me land a job that I don’t qualify for and have no business doing. Thanks man

    • @animebros9214
      @animebros9214 4 года назад +1

      you telling truth?

    • @ronaldgarrison8478
      @ronaldgarrison8478 3 года назад +12

      I think this happens a hell of a lot more than most people want to acknowledge.

    • @MrAdriaxe
      @MrAdriaxe 3 года назад +9

      @@animebros9214 the world is full of people doing jobs they aren't qualified for. It's the Peter Principle.

    • @animebros9214
      @animebros9214 3 года назад +1

      @@MrAdriaxe cool

    • @clintfrench8629
      @clintfrench8629 3 года назад

      @@MrAdriaxe nepotism too

  • @MicroRishi
    @MicroRishi 4 месяца назад +5

    He proved that knowledge and practice is much much more effective than talent alone!

  • @stevenmyo8455
    @stevenmyo8455 Год назад

    Thank You for your great contributions to our society, Professor Winston. We will miss you.

  • @tinymountain
    @tinymountain 2 года назад +1096

    I read "On to C" back in college in 1999. It was a super coherent introduction to the C programming language. I remember being really impressed with how the author packaged the information up so effectively. Here I am 22 years later watching this video, and lo and behold, it's the same Professor Winston that wrote that book. What a mind! We're so lucky to have access to the knowledge he left behind.

    • @michaelrappaport7660
      @michaelrappaport7660 2 года назад

      well done

    • @laurenvaughn3282
      @laurenvaughn3282 2 года назад +16

      had to give a LIKE and a COMMENT. This was my first exposure, and I laughed aloud about every 15 mins. The guy's genius.

    • @fendric7662
      @fendric7662 2 года назад +13

      I've been looking into programming languages, I'll be picking up On the C thanks to this comment.
      Thank you, random internet denizen.

    • @fuzzywzhe
      @fuzzywzhe 2 года назад +6

      There's a better book than K&R? That was only, what 70-90 pages - and it completely described the entire language, and all concepts of it. It's one of the most dense books I've ever read, and it was the bible of understanding how coding works at a fundamental level. If you learn C properly, moving to another language is trivial.
      I did assembly after that, and you can see precisely how the language is translated into a machine language in C once you understand how the processor fundamentally works.

    • @JessicaGiardina1996
      @JessicaGiardina1996 2 года назад +4

      @@fendric7662 C is a bit outdated, python is lovely as it’s a great OOPL and a favorite for data science and analytics. Happy learning!

  • @jsjsjs1116
    @jsjsjs1116 4 года назад +203

    All my profs need to watch this

    • @veden310
      @veden310 4 года назад +6

      Especially his writings on the board.

    • @chrishayes5755
      @chrishayes5755 4 года назад +4

      This professors speech delivery wasn't very powerful or engaging. It was quite dry, monotone, and didn't deliver any hard hitting impact (didn't strike any emotional queues etc). He also constantly "err" and "umms".. this talk has plenty of value, but he doesn't seem to have amazing speech delivery skills (despite the fact he's teaching it).

    • @kingsman428
      @kingsman428 4 года назад +19

      @@chrishayes5755 You noticed all of that but failed to notice his breathing difficulties indicating poor health.

    • @Nicknamee-zj2qf
      @Nicknamee-zj2qf 12 дней назад

      ​​@@kingsman428I respect you bro

  • @caircolor
    @caircolor Год назад +2

    Graduated from MIT 10 years ago, I still watch his lecture today to remind myself how to avoid giving a bad presentation, as there are many ways to.

  • @otabekabdullayev8822
    @otabekabdullayev8822 10 месяцев назад +2

    WOW!! That's so amazing lecture I've seen by now. Not boring, catchable, simplified, in short great! Appreciate it and thanks for Professor Patrick Winston! (RIP).
    GOD BLESS YOU ALL!
    From UZBEKISTAN Otabek.

  • @siddjoshi2053
    @siddjoshi2053 4 года назад +59

    Rest in peace, Sir.

  • @nills2099
    @nills2099 Год назад +215

    Mark learned to speak so we could bust a move. Truly one is the people is all time.

    • @Wiikid777
      @Wiikid777 Год назад +5

      24:00

    • @WLF0X
      @WLF0X Год назад +6

      You clearly didn't learn much from this 📝

    • @nills2099
      @nills2099 Год назад

      @@WLF0X what do you mean

    • @Boltclick
      @Boltclick Год назад +2

      @@WLF0X He was concise and to the point. What more could you want?

    • @francisco-id9zg
      @francisco-id9zg 3 месяца назад

      @@nills2099he’s mainly talking about public speaking

  • @chrlmmartin7776
    @chrlmmartin7776 2 месяца назад

    One of best lectures I've ever heard. This dude is a good teacher.

  • @EranM
    @EranM 7 месяцев назад

    I come here after 3 years to reminisce, and I find myself that I did implement some of Patricks ideas into my talks. I come here to enforce what's left out.. and because I miss him

  • @zachariasorfanos7583
    @zachariasorfanos7583 Год назад +244

    Been telling my students for years to never finish a talk with “thank you for your attention”. He explains why. And so much more. What an amazing lecture.

  • @McJohnstable
    @McJohnstable 2 года назад +158

    I'm glad modern technology was able to preserve this man's wisdom, so I can still have the pleasure of learning from him. Rest in peace.

    • @borkair6581
      @borkair6581 2 года назад

      did he die?
      he looked close to it
      mebbe the dust off the blackboard finally fucked his lungs
      MIT. blackboards and fat conservative idiots in 2022
      waste of time

    • @officialprekesetvsubscribe1276
      @officialprekesetvsubscribe1276 Год назад

      Good

    • @Entropy106
      @Entropy106 Год назад

      Modern technology is what will destroy mankind and enslave us

  • @mrvfino
    @mrvfino Месяц назад +1

    Thanks for this! Learned a lot from it. The fact that it's kinda meta because he's utilizing what he's presenting in real time is really cool.

  • @user-hu2uz5ni2m
    @user-hu2uz5ni2m 4 месяца назад +1

    Rest in peace Patrick. What an amazing course, I'm glad I could spend an hour learning about this from you, along with now over 10 million other viewers. Amazing.

  • @LarryLawfer
    @LarryLawfer 3 года назад +35

    I miss Patrick, he was an exceptional human, husband, parent, professor and good guy.

  • @SeverelyoursTV
    @SeverelyoursTV 3 года назад +559

    This is the most meta presentation, of any content, that my mind has ever encountered.
    At any and probably all points of this presentation, he had done, was doing or was going to do what he already said, was saying or was going to say.

    • @aleksanderbudzynowski3625
      @aleksanderbudzynowski3625 3 года назад +27

      You should read "Gödel, Escher, Bach".

    • @otisjacksonjunior9795
      @otisjacksonjunior9795 2 года назад +34

      @@aleksanderbudzynowski3625 the moment he pulls up the slide with the recursive image of him looking at the slide of himself was peak meta.

    • @jeff__w
      @jeff__w 2 года назад +22

      The meta quality of the presentation made it spectacular. Prof. Winston never failed to demonstrate _exactly_ what he was talking about. (I wonder where that fits in in his talk.)

    • @danielmartin7838
      @danielmartin7838 2 года назад +9

      Circling around, I thought.

    • @alaypatel6050
      @alaypatel6050 2 года назад

      Whats ur language 😂😂😂

  • @Mr.chandravanshi_0II0
    @Mr.chandravanshi_0II0 Год назад

    we all are blessed to witness professor like sir winston 😍.

  • @shashi_kamal_chakraborty
    @shashi_kamal_chakraborty 2 года назад +8

    Well, I think the title of the video should have been "How to give a Talk/Lecture". It's not about "How to Speak". Great one.

  • @gregorybattis9588
    @gregorybattis9588 3 года назад +551

    RIP Professor Winston. Thank you for making this I have learned so much from everyone at MIT including Professor Winston, you will forever be missed.

    • @lcopywriter5102
      @lcopywriter5102 2 года назад +77

      Such a brilliant, sharp and witty man. But listening to him breathe as he spoke made me deeply apprehensive for his health. One more lesson to take away: get control of your weight, no matter what it takes.

    • @AnthaKharana
      @AnthaKharana 2 года назад +25

      He was huffing and puffing, out of breath, pale as a sheet... Poor man, RIP

    • @drgeorgetayloriii4280
      @drgeorgetayloriii4280 2 года назад +5

      You were so fortunate to have him! Great lecture.

    • @ragnaraxelson59
      @ragnaraxelson59 2 года назад +2

      Did he died?

    • @gaanabajana9343
      @gaanabajana9343 2 года назад +7

      How to give a Awesome Talk/Presentation ?
      Part-1:ruclips.net/video/tOWPfIxZmME/видео.html
      Part-2: ruclips.net/video/fUAvh_zCats/видео.html
      Part-3:ruclips.net/video/2xw2HUjTdYM/видео.html
      Part-4:ruclips.net/video/3xwQcO0Xci8/видео.html
      Part-5:ruclips.net/video/GtG0RbLh4yo/видео.html

  • @anos5054
    @anos5054 2 месяца назад +2

    Salvei essa palestra há um tempo e so vim ver agora(grande ultraje).
    Ela me mudou significativamente e melhorou meu dia. Agradeço ao professor,ele com certeza é eterno,mesmo nao estando mais por aqui(quando soube, após terminar de assistir,senti como se tivesse perdido um amigo).Gostaria de ter tido professores mais inspiradores na escola. Agradeço pelo aprendizado!

  • @nahidashraf9961
    @nahidashraf9961 9 месяцев назад +2

    I was unable to speak till I watched the video. Now my mom is searching "How to stop anyone to speak'

  • @aptmix
    @aptmix 2 года назад +17

    RUclips is the greatest tool on the planet. MIT lectures for free. So much information at our fingertips all we have to do is seek it out. Amazing.

  • @user-sh9im1wc3e
    @user-sh9im1wc3e 2 месяца назад

    Thank you MIT for putting these lectures on RUclips!

  • @user-xm8wz5sg2p
    @user-xm8wz5sg2p 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm very grateful for all of these MIT Open Course Ware videos. I'm from the Netherlands and have studied at three different colleges here, without graduating once because I could not drag myself through the motions. I wanted to become an educator but the courses here are very blinkered and unimaginative. I started my own business instead in hopes of having a positive, fresh and creative influence on education in the Netherlands as a whole. We provide educational material that teachers and professors can use in their own classes and lectures as they see fit. This, these online lectures and hours of free, easily accessible and diverse knowledge are a true gift! Eventhough I never graduated from college or university, I am still able to broaden my horizons by watching these videos and studying their contents in my spare time! This lecture in particular helped me with the many pitches I get to give at schools.
    Thank you for this.

  • @guitar_md
    @guitar_md 2 года назад +154

    I have pretty severe ADHD and watched this entire lecture. And was really shocked that I did. What was especially interesting was how my perception of him changed from the beginning to the end. I started off with my head in the clouds as I usually do, and when he mentioned the importance of repetition because most people will be in a fog at multiple points during a presentation, my ears perked up. Suddenly I felt like this went from a normal lecture to something a lot deeper.
    And by the end, it was a complete transformation. Including the joke about "I tell a joke at the end so people will think they've been having fun the whole time." That hit right on the nose. I was listening intently from the beginning, but it transformed from this air of seriousness to something more personal by the end, where he really made an impression about the kind of person he was.
    I went into this knowing absolutely nothing about this guy, and I'm also a college dropout so it's not like I'm well seasoned in these things. Just absolutely blew my mind how he tied everything together by the end and how absolutely and brilliantly self-contained this entire presentation was. For someone like me to be enthralled by something like this, and to have paid attention for the entire duration of it without shifting my attention to anything else, really speaks volumes about what happens when you develop your communication skills to such a high level.

    • @vijaysaisundar1525
      @vijaysaisundar1525 9 месяцев назад +3

      I can relate to you on this so much, at first i was losing my attention after 7 mins but i forced myself to watch it, but after that point where he explains how people get fogged brain my attention was towards him for the rest of the video.
      Im glad that i can watch this lecture from the other side of the world

  • @spandanhetfield
    @spandanhetfield 3 года назад +65

    He was the first professor I took a class with at MIT. He would tell amazing stories of the days AI was in it infancy, stories of people like Gerry Sussman, Sam Papert and Marvin Minsky. In the last class he said something which I have taken on along as his greatest teaching - "You can do it. Only you can do it. But you can't do it alone" :)
    Rest in peace Professor Winston, and thanks for all your teachings through your life :)

  • @prezsenna3785
    @prezsenna3785 2 месяца назад

    Amazing Lecture by Mr.Winston. The way he seperated each piece of the communication process and explained the thought process behind it is just amazing. Thanks to MIT for making this courseware avaialable.

  • @rouwo6115
    @rouwo6115 Месяц назад +1

    I always wondered if I have problems focusing, but after watching this whole thing and not having to keep repeating and not even having to put it on double speed, I realized that I have never listened to such a smart engaging down to earth lecturer! grateful, Salam.

  • @MrPaulMorris
    @MrPaulMorris Год назад +208

    "Don't end on 'Thank you'." I'd temper that by saying, use it sparingly. I taught IT in high school and, of my many groups, one was consistently a pleasure to teach: well behaved, motivated, interested in the work and just the sort of class that makes teaching easy rather than a challenge. After two years I felt confident that, so long as they were able to reproduce in the exams what they had shown in class, all would have the ability to gain good final grades.
    In our final session before they left the school on study leave, after a few last tips on examination techniques and expressing my confidence in them, I concluded with "It has been a real pleasure to teach you over the last two years and I'd just like to close by saying... Good luck and thank you!" This was greeted with a momentary silence then applause from all corners. I was never a teacher who would be listed in the 'inspirational' section by students; workmanlike and methodical was more my style so this came as something of a surprise.
    I was more surprised some years later to be approached by a young man who introduced himself as one of that group. I didn't recognise him or remember him by name (to be honest, I've always had a terrible memory for names and faces--which was always something of a handicap in my teaching days) but what he said made a lasting impression. He told me that he and his classmates left that last lesson boosted and confident and feeling that my expression of thanks was sincere because it was so unexpected. He said, "A lot of teachers thank you or praise you every time even if you've not done anything special. When you looked over our shoulders at our screens and said 'Good' we were happy. If you said 'Excellent' we thought we'd won a prize--even if it was just for getting the format right for a business letter! When you thanked us for our work and wished us good luck it meant a lot because it was real."
    'Thank you' has a place when it is meant sincerely, otherwise it is just hot air and a weak closing.

    • @allysonhanks9159
      @allysonhanks9159 Год назад

      Hi Paul how are you doing 😉

    • @shadowingyou
      @shadowingyou Год назад +13

      I'll agree with that statement. Using common phrases more often than it should ruins the entire legitimacy of emotional impact it was supposed to deliver to begin with.
      To be honest, the phrase "Thank you" has been entirely ruined because I hear it so often it actively annoys me. Don't thank me unless I had done something significant, I didn't ask for anyone's pity. Don't congratulate me unless I've made a large enough impact. Don't apologize unless there was a strong emotional impact to that of which you feel was too far from the line to cross, specifically don't apologize for what was said, but rather how it was said. It means more to not apologize for the actions but rather the reasoning for those actions, then build the expectations going forward followed by promises to how you'll maintain your promises.
      It's saddening to see how common these strong emotional impact phrases are being used in such a way that many argue it is supposed to show "emotional support" where the opposite closely follows due to the commonality causing those impacts to be less significant.

    • @LeelaSankharM
      @LeelaSankharM Год назад +8

      ​@@shadowingyou i say thank you and sorry often, and i believe iam saying at the right moment.
      if i hit someone in a moving bus, should i say sorry or i shouldnt because its just an accident and it doesnt had "strong emotional impact to that of which you feel was too far from the line to cross" ??
      if someone came to my home even there home is other direction but just to give me something which i forgot in the class, should i thank them for taking there time to visit my home and returning it or i shouldnt because what they did was not significant or they didnt came to my home for my pity.

    • @hanatemonstas4485
      @hanatemonstas4485 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@shadowingyou Sounds like you have some issues to sort out if a simple phrase of goodwill urks you so much. Hope you are able to get the help you need.

    • @shadowingyou
      @shadowingyou 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@LeelaSankharM If you believe you are saying the phrases at the opportune moments, then that's more power to you. I'm not certain what sort of question you are asking from me though. I've made my point quite clear, say it too often and it loses all meaning.
      For those who don't often hear these praises or apologies, it can mean the world to them. It's all subjective. My position is not the same as someone else's.
      Some years ago I had $100.00 on me, driving somewhere. There was a homeless man asking for money on one of those left-turn lanes. I don't know the area you live in so I'm not aware if you'd even know what I mean. But these guys are quite common and I decided to hand him the $100.00 since I was far better off than they were. I've never seen a man break into tears that quickly and be that grateful.
      Out of curiosity, I done this again to someone else. They never broke a tear and their gratitude was insincere.
      Value of praise and apologies is different for people, but when someone is obviously begging for money but shows no gratitude, that means something is wrong. Especially if the gift was great, relative to their position. For the second person, it'd be no different than if you were to hand me $100.00. I'd say thanks and move on like nothing happened. For those truly struggling, you'll see the pure form of sincerity and gratitude towards you.
      There is a place for these sincerities, but knowing when and how to use them should match what's going on.
      I wish you the best and hope my further explanation further cleared any misunderstandings you had when you first read my comment.

  • @seonaxus
    @seonaxus 2 года назад +406

    When I was young, my father passed on the wisdom about presentations he'd been taught in business in the 80s. One slide should contain the prompts and diagrams for at least five minutes of talking. In other words if you are giving a 20 min business presentation, you should, at most, have four fairly basic slides. You are there to talk and be listened to, if you would prefer people be reading then write and distribute a report

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB 2 года назад

      Lies again? Speak Sensual

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 2 года назад +7

      no more than 2 minutes per slide due to human attention span.
      Learn from advertising. Each slide is one advert. Bang-bang-bang, their minds must be made to lose control of reality. Only then you could plant your ideas in their heads.
      Make that sale, boy.

    • @iancasey1486
      @iancasey1486 2 года назад +3

      I agree.
      Too many slide transitions only serves as distractions.
      Not having slides on long enough, the listener "reader" would not be able to digest what was written.
      The audience would have the choice to STOP listening so that they can rapidly read the slide before it's removed.
      Or they'll STOP reading the slides to avoid any distractions to what is said.
      Slides used only to prompt the speaker is not for the audience consumption.
      Also, another salient point is that on RUclips our comments are based on what is showen in the videos NOT on the experience of the live audience!
      Though it may be convenient to be able to rewind and pause the videos, it's also annoying to have the same done to the audio content.
      IMHO

    • @Fredrikbb
      @Fredrikbb 2 года назад +4

      correct. There's a great video here on youtube called "Death by Powerpoint".

    • @iancasey1486
      @iancasey1486 2 года назад +1

      @@reasonerenlightened2456 Advertising is different as it serves to peek curiousity/grab attention for a short while and not to impart information!
      A very short intro to a talk is like an ad - "what, why I should continue listening?"

  • @Kirstax
    @Kirstax 4 месяца назад

    The fact I watched this entire talk, was not bored, laughed and remember what I watched tells you everything you need to know.

  • @dimii27
    @dimii27 Год назад +6

    This lecture is 10x more effective than every lecture I've attended in my college so far

  • @pierdolio
    @pierdolio 4 года назад +80

    “Not a dynamic speaker” I thought but I watched for over an hour because the thoughts presented were so compelling.

    • @AetheriusLamia
      @AetheriusLamia 4 года назад +3

      It was more how he presented them -- disarmingly captivating because he focused your attention on his person without the fast visuals common to RUclips videos.

    • @louieberg2942
      @louieberg2942 4 года назад +7

      It bolsters his point. The way he spoke is in itself not engaging. It was rather slow, interspersed with drinking and the effects of age on the lung capacity. If he did not employ his own ideas on speaking, he'd probably be quite dull. Yet, he managed to be captivating and he got his point across. Through humour, guiding the viewers' attention to where it needed to be, and by giving and demanding a degree of respect, it was a great talk by a man who knows what he is doing.

    • @rokpodlogar6062
      @rokpodlogar6062 4 года назад +2

      you could hear in his breathing his stamina was very low.

    • @yoonsunchoe3658
      @yoonsunchoe3658 3 года назад +2

      His lecture is an excellent example that when we have superb contents, we don't have to sing and dance to embellish the style of delivery. No disrespect to marketing, but great products sell themselves.

    • @twodogzdogue8710
      @twodogzdogue8710 3 года назад +3

      Surprising how within 10min I could concentrate completely on everything he was talking about, well planned & interspersed with his likeable dry wit. What is amazing is that I have ADD & have serious trouble holding thought processes, like if I'm listening to someone but what I don't understand is, this talk wasn't totally of interest to me (because I thought the talk was about how to speak well) - what I'm trying to say is he kept my attention even though I am not a College age person or even still in the workforce & doubt I will ever be standing in front of a group of people giving a talk, that's for sure.
      He must've surely had a great gift to keep me interested.
      Vale Mr Winston 💐
      The cycle continues 👏

  • @byduhlusional
    @byduhlusional 4 года назад +67

    I still remember Patrick teaching me about the Rumpelstiltskin principle. Rest in peace, sir.

    • @humairimam
      @humairimam 4 года назад +7

      @Moduhlize, please do share the Rumpelstiltskin principle. Thank you

    • @TheR971
      @TheR971 4 года назад +12

      alum.mit.edu/slice/rumpelstiltskin-principle

    • @humairimam
      @humairimam 4 года назад +2

      @Roman Riesen, thank you 🙏🏻

    • @SamandRie
      @SamandRie 4 года назад +2

      @@TheR971 beautiful, short and sweet. my propulsion prof makes an effort to learn everyones name and it really does change the prof-student dynamic

    • @ChandravijayAgrawal
      @ChandravijayAgrawal 4 года назад +11

      he always repeated that in lectures,it precisely goes like this, "if you give name to something you get power over it".
      and that's it.
      Thats your Rumpelstilskin principle

  • @saqlain_ch
    @saqlain_ch 7 месяцев назад +3

    Loved this video, I usually skip videos longer than a minute or two but this one I watched this for 4 hours took notes from it, and saved them for the rest of my life.
    Love Prof. Patrick Winston ❤.

  • @zumraozturk2186
    @zumraozturk2186 2 года назад +80

    R.I.P Prof.Winston.
    The whole lecture is awesome but this part hits different : ''You never get used to being ignored. Your ideas are like your children. And you don't want them to go into the world in rags. Make sure you have these techniques, these mechanisms, these thoughts about how to present ideas that you have so that they're recognized for the value is in them. Concern yourself with packaging!"
    That part was the essential take away from he lecture to me as an introvert with knowledge and ideas but not doing the best with packaging to present them. Thanks to lecture I will be approaching this problem differently. I believe this is what he meant when he said " I teach people how to think.".
    Thanks for making available this invaluable lecture.

    • @alexandrumamuleanu8811
      @alexandrumamuleanu8811 Год назад +2

      what he also did super well is that while he was listing the tips, he was illustrating them at the same time

    • @matthewprayer3423
      @matthewprayer3423 Год назад

      I was browsing my RUclips when i saw your profile and decided to say hello to you. I hope we can become good friends? I hope to get a good response from you 🌹🌹🌹

    • @dynamo7731
      @dynamo7731 Год назад +1

      Hi

    • @ademrabhi2800
      @ademrabhi2800 Год назад +1

      hi
      hello

    • @matthewprayer3423
      @matthewprayer3423 Год назад

      How are you doing today.

  • @bigsky1970
    @bigsky1970 4 года назад +127

    This lecture explains why so many Ted Talks can appear to be engaging, but you end up not learning much from them.
    I've never been much of a fan of PowerPoint presentations, for the very reasons Prof. Winston pointed out.

    • @owendubs
      @owendubs 4 года назад +9

      I'm pretty sure the intended takeaway was that PowerPoints are a tool that's commonly misused. I agree with you though, speakers that use slides as a crutch are pretty lame.

    • @nati1025
      @nati1025 4 года назад +4

      I was thinking some similar thoughts, I would like him to give diagnosis of several TED Talks

    • @DavidAndrewsPEC
      @DavidAndrewsPEC 4 года назад +9

      @@nati1025 Sadly, having died, he can't do that.
      But, because of this lecture, we can. And we should!
      This may have been a non-disclosed empowerment promise! ;)

    • @nati1025
      @nati1025 4 года назад

      @@DavidAndrewsPEC I was not aware of that

    • @DavidAndrewsPEC
      @DavidAndrewsPEC 4 года назад +2

      @@nati1025 I only found out whilst watching this, so don't worry about not knowing. I wasn't being a smart-arse ... just lamenting that both you and I would have loved to have seen him dissect a bunch of TED talks.
      However - given what he gave us in this lecture - we're pretty well equipped to go and dissect them ourselves now. ;)

  • @iwayansuandi
    @iwayansuandi 3 месяца назад +1

    The fact that this lecture is free is amazing. Love the internet❤. Thanks to all bodies that allow it to be uploaded on the net

  • @aoihana1042
    @aoihana1042 Год назад

    I rewatch Dr. Winston's talk before every major talk I have to deliver

  • @MrSamdogz
    @MrSamdogz Год назад +100

    By FAR the best part of this talk is Professor Winston pursing his lips after his masterful conclusion so as not to say “thank you.” A true man of his craft. Thank you MIT for providing such an awesome lecture for free and thank you Professor Winston for your contributions to our planet. I will definitely be reading more of your works! RIP❤

  • @hernatundag601
    @hernatundag601 Месяц назад +1

    Wow, I am astonished. Thank you professor Winston for sharing your wisdom and knowledge with us.

  • @yumchuckit
    @yumchuckit 3 года назад +51

    I love his quiet smile of satisfaction after he shakes the hand and receives the applause - mission accomplished.

    • @katierobertsfnp6403
      @katierobertsfnp6403 3 года назад +2

      I couldn’t help but wonder if, but for a moment, it crossed his great mind, that he’d just completed his well-loved contribution, for the last time.
      Rest In Peace Good Sir.
      KT

    • @anton23001
      @anton23001 3 года назад

      Did you notice he was shaking hand to Steve Jobs?

  • @johnparadise3134
    @johnparadise3134 3 года назад +17

    5:52 I’ve always heard: First, tell them what you’re going to tell them. And then tell them. And then tell them what you told them.

  • @PacVan12
    @PacVan12 3 месяца назад

    This is amazing, for the past 18 years I haven't been able to speak, but now I suddenly do

  • @commenteroftruth9790
    @commenteroftruth9790 10 месяцев назад

    that last part about how to end a talk was very very impactful on the entirety of the talk. This was some good lore.