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Chad Jenkins: All the way from
Los Altos Hills, California,
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Mr. Henry Evans.
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(Applause)
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Henry Evans: Hello.
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My name is Henry Evans,
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and until August 29th, 2002,
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I was living my version of the American dream.
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I grew up in a typical American town near St. Louis.
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My dad was a lawyer.
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My mom was a homemaker.
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My six siblings and I were good kids,
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but caused our fair share of trouble.
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After high school, I left home to study
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and learn more about the world.
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I went to Notre Dame University
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and graduated with degrees
in accounting and German,
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including spending a year of study in Austria.
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Later on, I earned an MBA at Stanford.
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I married my high school sweetheart, Jane.
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I am lucky to have her.
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Together, we raised four wonderful children.
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I worked and studied hard
to move up the career ladder,
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eventually becoming a chief financial officer
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in Silicon Valley, a job I really enjoyed.
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My family and I bought our first and only home
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on December 13, 2001,
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a fixer-upper in a beautiful spot
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of Los Altos Hills, California,
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from where I am speaking to you now.
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We were looking forward to rebuilding it,
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but eight months after we moved in,
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I suffered a stroke,
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likely caused by a birth defect.
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Overnight, I became a mute quadriplegic
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at the ripe old age of 40.
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It took me several years,
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but with the help of an incredibly supportive family,
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I finally decided life was still worth living.
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I became fascinated with using technology
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to help the severely disabled,
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had tracking devices sold commercially
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by the company Madentec
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convert my tiny head movements
into cursor movements,
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and enabled my use of a regular computer.
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I can surf the web, exchange email with people,
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and routinely destroy my friend Steve Cousins
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in online word games.
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This technology allows me to remain engaged,
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mentally active,
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and feel like I am a part of the world.
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One day, I was lying in bed watching CNN,
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when I was amazed by Professor Charlie Kemp
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of the Healthcare Robotics Lab at Georgia Tech
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demonstrating a PR2 robot.
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I emailed Charlie and
Steve Cousins of Willow Garage,
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and we formed the Robots For Humanity Project.
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For about two years, Robots For Humanity
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developed ways for me to use the PR2
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as my body surrogate.
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I shaved myself for the first time in 10 years.
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From my home in California,
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I shaved Charlie in Atlanta. (Laughter)
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I handed out Halloween candy.
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I opened my refrigerator on my own.
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I began doing tasks around the house.
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I saw new and previously unthinkable possibilities
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to live and contribute,
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both for myself and others in my circumstance.
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All of us have disabilities in one form or another.
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For example, if either of us
wants to go 60 miles an hour,
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both of us will need an assistive device called a car.
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Your disability doesn't make you
any less of a person,
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and neither does mine.
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By the way, check out my sweet ride. (Laughter)
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Since birth, we have both suffered from the inability
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to fly on our own.
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Last year, Kaijen Hsiao of Willow Garage
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connected with me Chad Jenkins.
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Chad showed me how easy it is
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to purchase and fly aerial drones.
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It was then I realized that I could also use
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an aerial drone to expand the worlds
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of bed-ridden people through flight,
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giving a sense of movement and control
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that is incredible.
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Using a mouse cursor I control with my head,
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these web interfaces allow me
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to see video from the robot
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and send control commands
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by pressing buttons in a web browser.
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With a little practice, I became
good enough with this interface
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to drive around my home on my own.
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I could look around our garden
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and see the grapes we are growing.
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I inspected the solar panels on our roof. (Laughter)
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One of my challenges as a pilot is to land the drone
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on our basketball hoop.
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I went even further by seeing if I could use
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a head-mounted display, the Oculus Rift,
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as modified by Fighting Walrus,
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to have an immersive experience
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controlling the drone.
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With Chad's group at Brown,
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I regularly fly drones around his lab
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several times a week
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from my home 3,000 miles away.
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All work and no fun makes for a dull quadriplegic,
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so we also find time to play friendly games
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of robot soccer. (Laughter)
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I never thought I would be able to casually
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move around a campus like Brown on my own.
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I just wish I could afford the tuition. (Laughter)
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CJ: Henry, all joking aside,
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I bet all of these people here
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would love to see you fly this drone
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from your bed in California 3,000 miles away.
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(Applause)
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Okay Henry, have you been to DC lately?
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(Laughter)
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Are you excited to be at TEDxMidAtlantic?
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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Can you show us how excited you are?
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(Laughter)
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All right, big finish.
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Can you show us how good of a pilot you are?
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(Applause)
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All right, we still have a little ways to go with that,
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but I think it shows the promise.
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What makes Henry's story amazing
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is it's about understanding Henry's needs,
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understanding what people in Henry's situation
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need from technology,
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and then also understanding
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what advanced technology can provide,
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and then bringing those two things together
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for use in a wise and responsible way.
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What we're trying to do is democratize robotics,
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so that anybody can be a part of this.
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We're providing affordable,
off-the-shelf robot platforms
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such as the AR drone, 300 dollars,
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the Suitable Technologies Beam,
only 17,000 dollars,
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along with open-source robotics software
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so that you can be a part of what we're trying to do.
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And our hope is that, by providing these tools,
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that you'll be able to think of better ways
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to provide movement for the disabled,
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to provide care for our aging population,
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to help better educate our children,
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to think about what the new types
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of middle class jobs could be for the future,
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to both monitor and protect our environment,
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and to explore the universe.
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Back to you, Henry.
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HE: Thank you, Chad.
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With this drone setup, we show the potential
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for bedridden people to once again be able
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to explore the outside world,
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and robotics will eventually provide
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a level playing field
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where one is only limited by their mental acuity
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and imagination,
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where the disabled are able to perform
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the same activities as everyone else,
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and perhaps better,
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and technology will even allow us to provide
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an outlet for many people who are presently
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considered vegetables.
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One hundred years ago,
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I would have been treated like a vegetable.
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Actually, that's not true.
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I would have died.
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It is up to us, all of us, to decide how
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robotics will be used, for good or for evil,
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for simply replacing people
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or for making people better,
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for allowing us to do and enjoy more.
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Our goal for robotics is to
unlock everyone's mental power
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by making the world more physically accessible
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to people such as myself and others like me
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around the globe.
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With the help of people like you,
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we can make this dream a reality.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)