i love how you pulled out the search in particular, because people work so hard on there's a saying among the searchten that search is a problem that will never be solved. And i can't wait for gogle to have its headquarters back open. All my lectures are now a u twu playlist,. If anybody wants to look at the lecture about how larry and sirgay figured out that a hot dog was not just the same as a warm puppy, when you're doing the search. A lastly, what has life been like for you during the pandemic? And what have you missed most? I mean, you sort of alluded to it with travel, just being out
Author Walter Isaacson discusses his recent book "The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race", a gripping account of how Nobel Prize winner Jennifer Doudna and her colleagues launched a revolution that will allow us to cure diseases, fend off viruses, and have healthier babies.
Bestselling author of "Steve Jobs" (2011), "Einstein: His Life and Universe" (2007) and more, Walter Isaacson has established himself as the biographer of creativity, innovation, and genius. Einstein was the genius of the revolution in physics, and Steve Jobs was the genius of the revolution in digital technology. We are now on the cusp of a third revolution in science, a revolution in biochemistry that is capable of curing diseases, fending off viruses, and improving the Human species itself. The genius at the center of his newest book "The Code Breaker" is American biochemist Jennifer Doudna, who is considered one of the prime inventors of CRISPR, a system that can edit DNA.
Moderated by Leigh Gallagher.
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