In today’s economic landscape, no business model, company, or industry is immune to disruption. Every industry and organization needs to transform… or perish. At O’Reilly’s Next:Economy summit, the geeks met the suits to explore the future of work in an era of sweeping technology-driven transformation. This complete video compilation puts you at the center of every presentation.You’ll hear from key executives of companies driving the transformation; economists, journalists and policymakers studying it; and people on the front lines of the revolution: workers taking on new jobs in new kinds of businesses, along with inventors, investors, and entrepreneurs who are changing the world with their products and services.You’ll also hear from a broad spectrum of businesses whose industries are now undergoing transformation. Everyone’s asking WTF? (“What’s the future?”), with questions that include:Which technologies will help existing businesses deliver experiences that equal or exceed those of new economy companies?How can augmented reality be used to “upskill” workers and consumers, creating enormous new sources of productivity?How will software agents and applied machine learning transform business workflows, not just consumer experiences?What tools and practices make it possible to manage a truly distributed, on-demand workforce?What kinds of industries—and new opportunities—can best take advantage of the 21st century approach to work?Pick up these videos and learn how technology is shaping the future of industries, companies, and the nature of work.Setting the stageOpening welcome – Tim O’Reilly (O’Reilly Media), Steven Levy (Backchannel), Lauren Smiley (Medium) 09m 00sNo ordinary disruption – James Manyika (McKinsey Global Institute) 20m 28sMinds and MachinesFrom self-driving cars to retraining humans – Sebastian Thrun, Co-Founder and CEO, Udacity 16m 33sThe future of personal assistants – Adam Cheyer, Co-founder and VP of Engineering, Viv and Alexandre Lebrun, Head, Wit.ai, Facebook 16m 09sWill robots augment us or rule us? – John Markoff, Journalist, New York Times; and Jerry Kaplan, Visiting Lecturer, and Fellow at The Stanford Center for Legal Informatics, Stanford University 16m 21s“Knowledge Work”: No longer safe from automation – Kristian Hammond, Chief Scientist, Narrative Science 12m 11sThe first machine age isn’t over yetThe small scale factory of the future – Limor Fried, hacker, slacker, code cracker, Adafruit Industries 14m 13sOne, two, three, boom! – Mark Hatch, CEO, TechShop 10m 05sWhy services aren’t enough – Jeff Immelt, Chairman and CEO, General Electric 17m 12sWorkers in a world of continuous partial employmentDoes on demand require independent contractors? – Leah Busque, Founder, TaskRabbit 19m 34sWhat’s it like to drive for Uber or Lyft? – Eric Barajas, Driver, Uber; Jon Kessler, Driver, Lyft; and Kelly Dessaint, Driver, National Veterans Cab 24m 49sNetworks and the nature of the firmThe changing nature of work – Esko Kilpi, Managing Director, Esko Kilpi Company 08m 01sWhat’s the investment opportunity? – Simon Rothman, Partner, Greylock Partners; Gary Swart, Venture Partner, Polaris Partners; and James Cham, Bloomberg Beta 18m 11sSupporting workers in the on-demand economy – Nick Grossman, General Manager, Union Square Ventures 10m 18sCreating better teams – Stewart Butterfield, Co-founder and CEO, Slack 19m 25sTax and accounting tools for the franchise of one – Brad Smith, President and CEO, Intuit 13m 54sFlexibility needed: Not just for on-demand workers – Anne-Marie Slaughter, President and CEO, New America 24m 00sHumans need not apply? Not so fast! – Nick Hanauer (Second Avenue Partners) 20m 45sThe entrepreneurial learner and the new career arcManaging talent in the networked age – Reid Hoffman, Co-Founder & Executive Chairman | Partner, LinkedIn | Greylock Partners; Zoë Baird, CEO and President, Markle Foundation 17m 59sExponential teaching – Kimberly Bryant, Founder, Black Girls CODE 17m 17sMatching workers with opportunities at high velocity – Stephane Kasriel, CEO, Upwork 17m 49sAugmented workersIntelligent agents, augmented reality, and the future of productivity – Satya Nadella, CEO, Microsoft 18m 47sAugmented reality in the factory – Brian Mullins, Founder and CEO, DAQRI 08m 47sReinventing healthcare – Lynda Chin, Director, Institute for Health Transformation 14m 13sWhat if the robots do take all our jobs?Policy action recommendations for the 21st century economy – Zoë Baird, CEO and President, Markle Foundation; Neera Tanden, President, Center for American Progress; and Felicia Wong, President and CEO, Roosevelt Institute 21m 29sRewiring the US labor market – Byron Auguste, Managing Director, Opportunity@Work 15m 20sWorker voice in the 21st century – Jess Kutch, Digital Strategist and Co-founder, Coworker.org; Michelle Miller, Co-founder, Coworker.org 05m 38sReinventing the labor union – Andrew Stern, Senior Fellow, Columbia University; Liz Shuler, Secretary-Treasurer / CFO, AFL-CIO 19m 51sPortable benefits and the “shared security account” – Laura Tyson, Professor & Director of Institute for Business and Social Impact, Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley; Nick Hanauer, Co-founder and Partner, Second Avenue Partners; and David Rolf, President, SEIU 775 24m 24sWork, not jobs, and the future we wantReinventing public transportation – Logan Green, CEO, Lyft 12m 52sA people-centered economy – Chad Dickerson, CEO, Etsy 19m 01sEnable people, and they will amaze you – Evan Williams, CEO, The Obvious Corporation 23m 33sClosing remarks – Tim O’Reilly (O’Reilly Media), Steven Levy (Backchannel), and Lauren Smiley (Medium) 02m 07sTag: Next-Economy 2015 – San Francisco, California – O’Reilly Review. 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