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404, the story of a page not found

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    So what I want to try to do is tell a quick story
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    about a 404 page and a lesson that was learned as a result of it.
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    But to start it probably helps to have an understanding
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    of what a 404 page actually is.
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    The 404 page is that.
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    It's that broken experience on the Web.
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    It's effectively the default page
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    when you ask a website for something and it can't find it.
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    And it serves you the 404 page.
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    It's inherently a feeling of being broken when you go through it.
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    And I just want you to think a little bit about, remember for yourself,
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    it's annoying when you hit this thing.
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    Because it's the feeling of a broken relationship.
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    And that's where it's actually also interesting to think about,
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    where does 404 come from?
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    It's from a family of errors actually --
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    a whole set of relationship errors,
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    which, when I started digging into them,
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    it looks almost like a checklist
    for a sex therapist or a couples counselor.
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    You sort of get down there to the bottom and things get really dicey.
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    (Laughter)
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    Yes.
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    But these things are everywhere.
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    They're on sites big, they're on sites small.
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    This is a global experience.
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    What a 404 page tells you
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    is that you fell through the cracks.
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    And that's not a good experience
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    when you're used to experiences like this.
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    You can get on your Kinect
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    and you can have unicorns dancing
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    and rainbows spraying out of your mobile phone.
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    A 404 page is not what you're looking for.
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    You get that, and it's like a slap in the face.
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    Trying to think about how a 404 felt,
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    and it would be like if you went to Starbucks
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    and there's the guy behind the counter
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    and you're over there and there's no skim milk.
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    And you say, "Hey, could you bring the skim milk?"
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    And they walk out from behind the counter and they've got no pants on.
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    And you're like, "Oh, I didn't want to see that."
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    That's the 404 feeling.
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    (Laughter)
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    I mean, I've heard about that.
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    So where this comes into play and why this is important
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    is I head up a technology incubator,
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    and we had eight startups sitting around there.
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    And those startups are focused on what they are, not what they're not,
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    until one day Athletepath,
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    which is a website that focuses on services for extreme athletes,
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    found this video.
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    (Video) Guy: Joey!
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    Crowd: Whoa!
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    Renny Gleeson: You just ... no, he's not okay.
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    They took that video and they embedded it in their 404 page
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    and it was like a light bulb went off for everybody in the place.
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    Because finally there was a page
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    that actually felt like what it felt like to hit a 404.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    So this turned into a contest.
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    Dailypath that offers inspiration
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    put inspiration on their 404 page.
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    Stayhound, which helps you find pet sitters through your social network,
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    commiserated with your pet.
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    Each one of them found this.
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    It turned into a 24-hour contest.
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    At 4:04 the next day, we gave out $404 in cash.
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    And what they learned
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    was that those little things, done right, actually matter,
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    and that well-designed moments can build brands.
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    So you take a look out in the real world,
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    and the fun thing is you can actually hack these yourself.
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    You can type in an URL and put in a 404 and these will pop.
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    This is one that commiserates with you.
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    This is one that blames you.
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    This is one that I loved.
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    This is an error page,
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    but what if this error page was also an opportunity?
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    So it was a moment in time
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    where all of these startups had to sit and think
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    and got really excited about what they could be.
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    Because back to the whole relationship issue,
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    what they figured out through this exercise
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    was that a simple mistake can tell me what you're not,
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    or it can remind me of why I should love you.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
404, the story of a page not found
Speaker:
Renny Gleeson
Description:

Oops! Nobody wants to see the 404: Page Not Found. But as Renny Gleeson shows us, while he runs through a slideshow of creative and funny 404 pages, every error is really a chance to build a better relationship.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
04:07

English subtitles

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