 鲜花( 152)  鸡蛋( 1)
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q% w1 T9 L7 T* @$ [* M. \) P2 uRandy Pausch’s Last Lecture: Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams
4 s+ t+ K5 ?0 x7 |; o. k6 C0 HGiven at Carnegie Mellon University6 ]" g2 A6 `- H& i/ ~2 k3 S
Tuesday, September 18, 2007 R# M/ |9 f* z! @
McConomy Auditorium
F% o6 s( U' O8 Q' X3 \For more information, see www.randypausch.com
8 k8 e3 a# a$ e% X© Copyright Randy Pausch, 200710 Y% Q, _% i) S' n/ |7 d- Z% A7 i
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Introduction by Indira Nair, Carnegie Mellon’s Vice Provost for Education:) }; J+ \3 j. u" {6 W
Hi. Welcome. It’s my pleasure to introduce you to the first of our new university’s lectures titled# I! Y! A# B8 k5 i8 z9 l# {2 `
Journeys – lectures in which members of our community will share with us reflections and insights
1 s9 y9 f; i6 h! don their personal and professional journeys. Today’s Journey’s lecture as you all know is by! @, r) }9 o( N. t1 B
Professor Randy Pausch. The next one is on Monday, September 24th by Professor Roberta Klatzky.; R6 k( h* D3 J0 x
To introduce Professor Randy Pausch, our first Journeys speaker, I would like to introduce Randy’s
9 D' C) s) _( z: Y, efriend and colleague, Steve Seabolt. Steve has been at Electronic Arts for six years and is the Vice
- s5 ?& P. r8 J5 p% q, H6 _President of Global Brand Development for The Sims label at Electronic Arts. As you all know, The0 x+ ]& c- X9 ^) R
Sims is one of the most, if not the most successful PC games in the world, with sales approaching
: z+ d2 ~# Z& p4 @4 Jover $100,000,000. Prior to that, Steve was the Vice President for Strategic Marketing and7 S9 l& s/ O' W0 y$ ]
Education at EA, bridging academia and Electronic Arts. His goal was to work with academics so
' J" p, G0 T+ G$ r8 Z: Z+ y) E: ithere was an effective educational pathway for kids with building games as their dreams. It was in, v Q# j4 ?4 o5 M) C, a
that role that Randy and Steve became colleagues and friends. Before Electronic Arts, Steve was the( @# Z* E8 T- C& }
worldwide Ad Director for Time Magazine and CEO of Sunset Publishing, which is a very favorite2 r1 P# `1 t" u; R" {
magazine in the Southwest, and as CEO there, one of the things he started was school tours,
: [; G4 g7 R( e! [6 h6 N2 gbecause like Randy he shares a passion for inspiring kids of all ages to share their excitement for; D* n8 F8 n3 V
science and technology.1 c/ Y( M; o% ]- O7 W. |7 [; a$ c
So to introduce Randy, his friend Steve Seabolt. Steve?) e8 B9 V- e) D- u7 D
[applause]- J1 W3 \& p6 h: ^: Z) f. I$ j' ~1 z
Steve Seabolt, Vice President of Worldwide Publishing and Marketing for Electonic Arts (EA):% t5 _: c4 y: [3 j: D7 S1 d
Thank you very much. I don’t mean to sound ungracious by correcting you, but given that our PR
( T+ w6 j: w/ Q$ |6 v. r* q& E: Xpeople are probably watching this on webcast, I’d catch heck if I went home and didn’t say that it1 X; o3 ^4 F% h! m
was 100 million units for The Sims. [laughter] Not that big numbers matter to Electronic Arts./ Z* \/ ?. x, [" T* o9 e
[laughter]3 i1 B7 @# [ X" a# Y/ u
I don’t see any empty seats anywhere, which is a good thing, which means I just won a bet from& M; [* T: {1 k7 c O0 a
Randy as a matter of fact. Depending upon who’s version of the story you hear, he either owes me/ z7 n' y, y& ]. j. r" G
20 dollars or his new Volkswagen. [laughter] So, I’ll take the car.
( A- H1 y4 O) v/ i% ?It’s a pleasure to be here, thank you very much. I’m going to start by covering Randy’s academic
- d, i" T+ j1 I5 `credentials. It’s a little bizarre for me to be standing here at Carnegie Mellon, which is a school I
7 ^: u+ F, @( h. t; Dcouldn’t get into no matter how much I contributed to this institution. [laughter] But, no really, I’m7 u+ Y' F- o. h
not kidding! You all think, oh gosh he’s humble. Really, no, I’m not humble at all. Very average SAT
) o- L) F7 V3 o1 Pscores, you know, right in the middle of my high school class of 900. Anyway, Randy. Randy earned6 ~+ z5 X+ e& c; h. |
– it really pisses me off that Randy’s so smart—actually I called him, we decided about, what, four0 R. a' D2 S! @ C" |9 I! r4 f
weeks, ago and we heard the news went from bad to horrific. It was on a Wednesday night and I# m) N y# e; Q( y
said look – we have two choices. We can play this really straight and very emotional , or we can go
$ S+ }! s# k' s$ X5 c' ~; Fto dark humor. And for those of you who know Randy well, he was like oh, dark humor! So I called4 b) j N8 b# g) @7 s7 T0 r- A
him the next day and I was like, dude you can’t die. And he’s like, what do you mean? And I said,/ I$ n4 r( e3 O/ @0 W
well, when you die, the average of IQ of Seabolt’s friends is going to like drop 50 points. [laughter] To( X- H, v; A j- k: Y0 N
which he responded, we need to find you some smarter friends. [laughter] So you’re all smart
- F$ F' ?/ r# ^# S; x: Obecause you’re here, so if you want to be my friend, I’ll be over in a corner of the reception room.8 @9 G) \$ E; _# K, j
Randy earned his undergraduate degree in Computer Science at Brown in 1982. His Ph.D. in CS from! M3 R B7 U5 H6 M
Carnegie Mellon in 1988 and taught at the University of Virginia where he was granted tenure a year1 A/ _2 [* e' X: p
early. He joined the Carnegie Mellon faculty in 1997 with appointments in the CS, HCI and Design
% n+ X+ r4 `* l! _% |& Z3 sdepartments. He has authored or co-authored five books and over 60 reviewed journal and% Y2 |9 ]5 {. ?% ~7 `
conference proceeding articles, none of which I would understand. With Don Marinelli, he founded
! a/ c# g F! U( Bthe Entertainment Technology Center, which quickly became the gold standard organization for
4 N) \( c L& \: H# i3 P Ntraining artists and engineers to work together. It is my view and the view of our company,
* v( S6 s# ~+ U" B9 i1 [4 tElectronic Arts, that the ETC is the interactive program by which all others in the world are judged.
) F, b* H$ j4 n, p8 f% |I met Randy in the Spring of 2004, and when I look back it’s sort of hard to imagine it’s only been
C/ G/ K8 a! J2 S" M1 O; \three years given the depth of our friendship. The ETC already had a very strong relationship with6 m# t/ I5 Q& x4 L+ e+ F
EA and with Randy. And Randy as he always does, for those of you who know him well, wanted to
' P, f8 g5 X0 C( Vlearn more, with his own eyes, about how the games business works, and how games really got
4 Q8 j4 a: J. `; U( F( W) d7 Cmade. So he spent a summer in residence at EA, and I was his primary contact point. We were in
2 q5 D8 w2 S9 R$ w& m, o8 v3 _my view the odd couple. Randy the brilliant, charming, Carnegie educated CS professor. And me
9 @+ k! W4 |4 J' Cwho went to the University of Iowa on a wing and a prayer. We spent a lot of time together that8 V5 U" j: l* h/ k
semester and for those of you who know Randy well, that’s a lot of turkey sandwiches on white
) ]( s7 {. U( Q& ebread with mayo. [laughter, clapping] My kids tease me about being “white.” There’s nobody more" ~+ G+ ~, `4 P
“white” than Randy. [laughter] We spent an enormous amount of time together. We taught each9 u, y1 G4 U* y; M0 ]2 h/ ?- m% B
other about each other’s very interesting, strange cultures to the other. Academic versus the
( N; `. p( \% a5 u$ zcorporate world. And we developed a deep friendship woven together with stories about our kids,% }. a2 x$ s4 j5 x2 Z8 _* h
our wives, our parents, as well as deep discussions about the paramount nature of integrity in
! L1 ?' B* q/ [. d$ h0 M8 E. N' I! ~everything you do, family first, religion, our shared joy in connecting people and ideas, and8 B4 Y4 J7 [& |& G4 n" W$ a% u4 {
deploying money and influence to do good. And the importance of having a lot of laughs along the3 n9 u0 \8 Z' d: E$ m% o
way.1 C9 V) l4 o$ M" I
Randy’s dedication to making the world a better place is self evident to anyone who has crossed l" W3 i: n: E4 B# v
paths with him. Whether it’s directly influencing students, creating organizations like the ETC,
3 w2 T5 S* _7 ]# s7 j% C7 G/ A: nbuilding tools like Alice or doing what he probably does best, which is bridging cultures. As Ben
+ C/ f# i9 w2 O, o% kGordon, EA’s Chief Creative Officer, says of Randy, even more important than Randy’s academic,
" n) T6 d4 R9 ]# @$ i) Mphilanthropic, and entrepreneurial accomplishments has been his humanity and the enthusiasm he' h; B( I9 q% x6 Y% Q9 g0 `9 W6 u
brings to students and coworkers on a daily basis.5 d; V7 j* k9 Y# n; @ L1 W
For those of you who know Randy, Randy brings a particular zest for life and humor, even while" B0 |" `- C6 ^
facing death. To Randy, this is simply another adventure. It is my great honor to introduce Dylan,
1 v& k! b" B- F' e0 J( }* F: PLogan and Chloe’s dad, Jai’s husband, and my very dear friend, Dr. Randy Pausch. [applause]
) u' l( j+ }( A2 ?- qRandy Pausch:! y( ~# l6 p* n$ M
[responding to a standing ovation] Make me earn it. [laughter]" m$ Z9 e }0 v9 T; g# q# ~1 V
It’s wonderful to be here. What Indira didn’t tell you is that this lecture series used to be called the
/ Q- f- \7 F% Z" X8 f/ U3 `Last Lecture. If you had one last lecture to give before you died, what would it be? I thought, damn,
5 w) Q! S* @5 M. a yI finally nailed the venue and they renamed it. [laughter]
- o9 ]( l/ r$ p d6 ?5 ASo, you know, in case there’s anybody who wandered in and doesn’t know the back story, my dad8 s8 G5 n( I( f, N+ s
always taught me that when there’s an elephant in the room, introduce them. If you look at my CAT3 X- b* Y0 j" y% t4 z( a
scans, there are approximately 10 tumors in my liver, and the doctors told me 3-6 months of good
! B- [0 t4 t3 v" x6 Fhealth left. That was a month ago, so you can do the math. I have some of the best doctors in the7 C/ H# w4 A5 J' _( a/ M& `
world. Microphone’s not working? Then I’ll just have to talk louder. [Adjusts mic] Is that good? All3 L" c @. c6 _% l& e0 i
right. So that is what it is. We can’t change it, and we just have to decide how we’re going to. `! G% Q. _ ]4 K! M
respond to that. We cannot change the cards we are dealt, just how we play the hand. If I don’t
4 j6 n( E9 z$ {) ~seem as depressed or morose as I should be, sorry to disappoint you. [laughter] And I assure you I
- X# i5 ~: Y/ k9 P* k$ bam not in denial. It’s not like I’m not aware of what’s going on. My family, my three kids, my wife,
: c- l O5 N, _' {% b- y. \* jwe just decamped. We bought a lovely house in Virginia, and we’re doing that because that’s a
. a( ], I8 n: z" Y. V- _better place for the family to be, down the road. And the other thing is I am in phenomenally good
3 C/ e8 C3 j$ q+ Zhealth right now. I mean it’s the greatest thing of cognitive dissonance you will ever see is the fact
* b% @& v, A& E d/ o9 ]5 k vthat I am in really good shape. In fact, I am in better shape than most of you. [Randy gets on the
4 {3 C' e7 w, d' ]4 ~3 ]ground and starts doing pushups] [Applause] So anybody who wants to cry or pity me can down and
) E, A$ |& Y5 Y4 e; H1 ido a few of those, and then you may pity me. [laughter]
[' R" T$ Q& H6 GAll right, so what we’re not talking about today, we are not talking about cancer, because I spent a" Q' y, j, H- E. p x9 @/ ~
lot of time talking about that and I’m really not interested. If you have any herbal supplements or; B6 m0 @3 z4 r `7 ]8 G
remedies, please stay away from me. [laughter] And we’re not going to talk about things that are" n& h5 p& ^+ y/ H8 U4 w+ ] ?8 t
even more important than achieving your childhood dreams. We’re not going to talk about my wife,
5 d' U- I! i* W5 S4 t# dwe’re not talking about my kids. Because I’m good, but I’m not good enough to talk about that* K+ z- a# C M+ m
without tearing up. So, we’re just going to take that off the table. That’s much more important.9 u, ^, `4 P( ]
And we’re not going to talk about spirituality and religion, although I will tell you that I have
0 E9 ]7 U9 Y; m- {+ U: E" vachieved a deathbed conversion. [dramatic pause] … I just bought a Macintosh. [laughter and; a( x" b; r' k" S$ A5 Z
clapping] Now I knew I’d get 9% of the audience with that … All right, so what is today’s talk about
, w! @* `3 V0 u$ ?' i2 lthen? It’s about my childhood dreams and how I have achieved them. I’ve been very fortunate that3 J4 |! E. z0 T7 |9 f4 O
way. How I believe I’ve been able to enable the dreams of others, and to some degree, lessons# G/ g: _/ j- k4 h( y! ^, r4 g3 k
learned. I’m a professor, there should be some lessons learned and how you can use the stuff you# i, F2 y; ~# M. {" s
hear today to achieve your dreams or enable the dreams of others. And as you get older, you may
5 _5 z' L" |7 C6 ]4 E7 Zfind that “enabling the dreams of others” thing is even more fun. t; m3 ^ @9 C0 E8 t* b$ a
So what were my childhood dreams? Well, you know, I had a really good childhood. I mean, no
" K) j" _/ l1 c, [2 g1 l* Xkidding around. I was going back through the family archives, and what was really amazing was, I/ I/ a3 Z2 X7 o8 R
couldn’t find any pictures of me as a kid where I wasn’t smiling. And that was just a very gratifying0 R0 o. M' Z K5 h( W2 n
thing. There was our dog, right? Aww, thank you. And there I actually have a picture of me+ q1 s8 Q9 J5 e" f, h" R% I
dreaming. I did a lot of that. You know, there’s a lot of wake up’s! I was born in 1960. When you
; @: B7 {7 E6 o/ I: c" \. @) ware 8 or 9 years old and you look at the TV set, men are landing on the moon, anything’s possible. U. g* }5 h( X" C2 h: I
And that’s something we should not lose sight of, is that the inspiration and the permission to. F: _9 ]! h* n4 m
dream is huge.& { N. f: T: p0 H
So what were my childhood dreams? You may not agree with this list, but I was there. [laughter]
7 ^6 G7 T# u: T c* ^: OBeing in zero gravity, playing in the National Football League, authoring an article in the World Book
6 \- Z$ E0 t. e3 bEncyclopedia – I guess you can tell the nerds early. [laughter] Being Captain Kirk, anybody here have
: d: T! k. [: f# ^that childhood dream? Not at CMU, nooooo. I wanted to become one of the guys who won the big+ O# K: F+ H5 {5 Z1 y- P
stuffed animals in the amusement park, and I wanted to be an Imagineer with Disney. These are not
8 z4 u( \, K# g/ ~4 n# G8 ksorted in any particular order, although I think they do get harder, except for maybe the first one.
8 j% s3 y' l8 Z; \" mOK, so being in zero gravity. Now it’s important to have specific dreams. I did not dream of being an, V- n( y/ i$ |
astronaut, because when I was a little kid, I wore glasses and they told me oh, astronauts can’t have
% T9 I$ Y8 c0 E5 n8 x2 vglasses. And I was like, mmm, I didn’t really want the whole astronaut gig, I just wanted the floating.' V* Y. Z" p: e( T9 S+ A- t& Z0 v
So, and as a child [laughter], prototype 0.0. [slide shown of Randy as a child lying in floatingformation: O6 K6 O4 O3 O+ a! ]) R3 l
on a table top] But that didn’t work so well, and it turns out that NASA has something8 P3 D- k0 }5 z l$ m- K) n' V5 M
called the Vomit Comet that they used to train the astronauts. And this thing does parabolic arcs,5 {0 t. V) d' s) V
and at the top of each arc you get about 25 seconds where you’re ballistic and you get about, a
2 W- y( P9 i3 b; P; b0 V8 Zrough equivalent of weightlessness for about 25 seconds. And there is a program where college
7 t% w" [2 L) p3 P) L$ p2 |8 f `students can submit proposals and if they win the competition, they get to fly. And I thought that( Q9 Z8 L+ t1 E2 }( x u9 i
was really cool, and we had a team and we put a team together and they won and they got to fly.
/ u' F+ _' Q' {$ P3 PAnd I was all excited because I was going to go with them. And then I hit the first brick wall, because% |6 J! ]% K7 P4 v8 G
they made it very clear that under no circumstances were faculty members allowed to fly with the4 K/ o) Y6 \+ \1 p, `2 w3 J/ ^+ E4 E
teams. I know, I was heartbroken. I was like, I worked so hard! And so I read the literature very5 T5 U% C m/ v q8 \
carefully and it turns out that NASA, it’s part of their outreach and publicity program, and it turns
4 ]0 P. R& A6 L4 W, rout that the students were allowed to bring a local media journalist from their home town.
. H$ N( @6 ~' _# W+ z3 K o9 ?' [[laughter] And, [deep voice] Randy Pausch, web journalist. [regular voice] It’s really easy to get a
$ b7 i5 P7 p1 [8 opress pass! [laughter] So I called up the guys at NASA and I said, I need to know where to fax some1 F# a! M0 M0 O( ?5 e
documents. And they said, what documents are you going to fax us? And I said my resignation as+ G. X* C, T9 h4 |/ ]0 r0 N
the faculty advisor and my application as the journalist. And he said, that’s a little transparent, don’t' Y* ?3 [: w" _' J/ ]8 V4 W4 n
you think? And I said, yeah, but our project is virtual reality, and we’re going to bring down a whole
1 G, E6 w7 r- k: E4 ]! U' r: M8 Cbunch of VR headsets and all the students from all the teams are going to experience it and all those- K0 q% f6 ]2 a5 j
other real journalists are going to get to film it. Jim Foley’s [who is nodding in the audience] going4 E5 w4 @2 u" ~
oh you bastard, yes. And the guy said, here’s the fax number. So, indeed, we kept our end of the* s6 @ Q( l- q5 |
bargain, and that’s one of the themes that you’ll hear later on in the talk, is have something to bring
2 i0 ]$ W6 \6 u1 uto the table, right, because that will make you more welcome. And if you’re curious about what* l4 R6 x6 a5 |, L
zero gravity looks like, hopefully the sound will be working here. [slide shows videotape from
' R Z/ c/ D, N% j' C- nRandy’s zero gravity experience] There I am. [laughter] You do pay the piper at the bottom. [laugher,& L$ V: K& t1 k# Z
as the people in the video crash to the floor of the plane on the video] So, childhood dream number, S+ m3 ~5 T7 y$ j: b
one, check.1 H9 |& K9 i5 _1 {+ G
OK, let’s talk about football. My dream was to play in the National Football League. And most of W3 C% L. O# n' q7 l
you don’t know that I actually – no. [laughter] No, I did not make it to the National Football League,
/ B; \3 A! ? K8 U) l% j' ?; J7 Q) d0 ]but I probably got more from that dream and not accomplishing it than I got from any of the ones
1 g0 S9 Q' ^% wthat I did accomplish. I had a coach, I signed up when I was nine years old. I was the smallest kid in
8 M: J, n; F, G2 P( ~the league, by far. And I had a coach, Jim Graham, who was six-foot-four, he had played linebacker: T C9 d. d( [! I
at Penn State. He was just this hulk of a guy and he was old school. And I mean really old school." D5 [9 X0 X. D, ~9 e& a* X1 g" A
Like he thought the forward pass was a trick play. [laughter] And he showed up for practice the first
% W- @9 H; s3 i4 \9 n" }$ kday, and you know, there’s big hulking guy, we were all scared to death of him. And he hadn’t( l/ f- B4 [9 q$ ?) k# s
brought any footballs. How are we going to have practice without any footballs? And one of the0 O( I2 K" s5 t) l/ z2 E
other kids said, excuse me coach, but there’s no football. And Coach Graham said, right, how many' Z& m, K9 y; E4 ^
men are on a football field at a time? Eleven on a team, twenty-two. Coach Graham said, all right,# \4 k& `4 Z9 K3 P" U" F
and how many people are touching the football at any given time? One of them. And he said, right,9 C* h4 o/ m2 L+ y4 V8 ]; n
so we’re going to work on what those other twenty-one guys are doing. And that’s a really good( X" V% R- h" ~% F" _
story because it’s all about fundamentals. Fundamentals, fundamentals, fundamentals. You’ve got
, |7 j! @5 T1 Vto get the fundamentals down because otherwise the fancy stuff isn’t going to work. And the other6 w5 K0 C6 T) z" n* @; E" ~9 S8 A3 Q. ?
Jim Graham story I have is there was one practice where he just rode me all practice. You’re doing
, A! ]" A; b* z8 Mthis wrong, you’re doing this wrong, go back and do it again, you owe me, you’re doing push-ups& F! V# M5 A7 O1 R1 \: }) Q* i
after practice. And when it was all over, one of the other assistant coaches came over and said,( y* s) y8 x( x5 Q
yeah, Coach Graham rode you pretty hard, didn’t he? I said, yeah. He said, that’s a good thing. He2 q* m4 F" R) ~' J) Y+ l
said, when you’re screwing up and nobody’s saying anything to you anymore, that means they gave! ~( ]( R& F4 e( C3 Y6 M
up. And that’s a lesson that stuck with me my whole life. Is that when you see yourself doing
" s# U& j# R9 s% x) ` |, s; Ksomething badly and nobody’s bothering to tell you anymore, that’s a very bad place to be. Your
! y& _7 n# j p. F& D/ e: xcritics are your ones telling you they still love you and care., K% }+ u+ `3 |( l5 C l
After Coach Graham, I had another coach, Coach Setliff, and he taught me a lot about the power of& M/ F' q1 G% K2 P; h* f
enthusiasm. He did this one thing where only for one play at a time he would put people in at like
7 f) {. Z1 {: lthe most horrifically wrong position for them. Like all the short guys would become receivers, right?+ n/ K9 X- t# i8 q' r
It was just laughable. But we only went in for one play, right? And boy, the other team just never
0 S) t) j" K4 m1 O- k S- Gknew what hit ‘em them. Because when you’re only doing it for one play and you’re just not where# J) k. d$ w* i! L# U& ^7 G
you’re supposed to be, and freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose, boy are you going
* n- t8 h0 ^. s1 t0 lto clean somebody’s clock for that one play. And that kind of enthusiasm was great. And to this+ g7 i4 ^2 `6 ]0 h" X
day, I am most comfortable on a football field. I mean, it’s just one of those things where, you- j0 x1 \' f7 ?& }, C! r, n, D
know, [pulls out a football] if I’m working a hard problem, people will see me wandering the halls) ^7 b# e0 L1 L7 _: Q
with one of these things, and that’s just because, you know, when you do something young enough6 w* F7 h0 n. A( G# o! [% a
and you train for it, it just becomes a part of you. And I’m very glad that football was a part of my5 Z0 m \) O( @; @
life. And if I didn’t get the dream of playing in the NFL, that’s OK. I’ve probably got stuff more
1 E ^! e2 E4 `; O: `- hvaluable. Because looking at what’s going on in the NFL, I’m not sure those guys are doing so great8 B3 C5 K3 q9 x' u# F' i! \
right now.4 \0 w0 d& b/ Y" f6 }7 |0 r! `
OK, and so one of the expressions I learned at Electronic Arts, which I love, which pertains to this, is, V: _" }% G* [
experience is what you get when you didn’t get what you wanted. And I think that’s absolutely
, X* n" v% i. p; tlovely. And the other thing about football is we send our kids out to play football or soccer or
. ~) O9 g. [' }2 M2 ?7 i4 Xswimming or whatever it is, and it’s the first example of what I’m going to call a head fake, or
! @+ A( N+ {9 W9 g& Xindirect learning. We actually don’t want our kids to learn football. I mean, yeah, it’s really nice that
* l5 y; f% S7 U/ B HI have a wonderful three-point stance and that I know how to do a chop block and all this kind of
* }- x. ^, ]! ~4 C' q; Qstuff. But we send our kids out to learn much more important things. Teamwork, sportsmanship,
: @% v3 T( R6 X9 w) ^& H: X6 wperseverance, etcetera, etcetera. And these kinds of head fake learning are absolutely important.
$ b' `' ^( ^ N, Z4 j; S8 @- Q4 ?And you should keep your eye out for them because they’re everywhere.8 V9 H6 l$ P& N3 C
All right. A simple one, being an author in the World Book Encyclopedia. When I was a kid, we had
# R* v, E- T( B J! A6 j1 E; x+ hthe World Book Encyclopedia on the shelf. For the freshman, this is paper. … We used to have these
1 M2 D" f- d7 S9 jthings called books. [laughter] And after I had become somewhat of an authority on virtual reality,6 M/ Q& \/ k0 Y3 ]. u+ P$ n. q: E
but not like a really important one, so I was at the level of people the World Book would badger.
8 M, `# x$ u2 b: u6 \They called me up and I wrote an article, and this is Caitlin Kelleher [shows slide of Caitlin wearing# y: S3 S! t" G6 y
virtual reality headset manipulating a 3D world], and there’s an article if you go to your local library
2 u$ E4 o6 B& u. W* {where they still have copies of the World Book. Look under V for Virtual Reality, and there it is. And
; ~. o- D6 |! a/ L: I8 z p# B1 Aall I have to say is that having been selected to be an author in the World Book Encyclopedia, I now
! d% `0 B6 D2 {8 A: Gbelieve that Wikipedia is a perfectly fine source for your information because I know what the4 I' K( A2 Q# H7 t! Z# T1 M
quality control is for real encyclopedias. They let me in.9 I# X2 l: t$ b5 s& T4 a# C6 Y* m
All right, next one. [laughter] [shows slide “Being like Meeting Captain Kirk”] At a certain point you
, B: N, M9 G. m. I& ejust realize there are some things you are not going to do, so maybe you just want to stand close to. n# ~/ q8 y5 Q& f1 r
the people. And I mean, my god, what a role model for young people. [laughter] [shows slide of' s( H& W% Y. \! \% Q& l( `, Y
Captain Kirk sitting at his control station on the Starship Enterprise] I mean, this is everything you8 x1 Z4 N) u2 W* ~$ I
want to be, and what I learned that carried me forward in leadership later is that, you know, he* t4 a* \8 f Z" b
wasn’t the smartest guy on the ship. I mean, Spock was pretty smart and McCoy was the doctor and; Y1 g! B$ E; g3 }: [: b
Scotty was the engineer. And you sort of go, and what skill set did he have to get on this damn thing
. ?/ d' b* l3 v2 A ~and run it? And, you know, clearly there is this skill set called leadership, and, you know, whether or! ]3 o* U: L) H* D8 X* F+ q
not you like the series, there’s no doubt that there was a lot to be learned about how to lead people
6 C: E$ G, @. k( V/ X# kby watching this guy in action. And he just had the coolest damn toys! [laughter] [shows slide of6 |4 Q3 ~, M7 P$ e' A0 u8 r' h+ i2 i
Star Trek gadgets] I mean, my god, I just thought it was fascinating as a kid that he had this thing5 |8 D# k, \9 h. U1 n
[Takes out Star Trek Communicator] and he could talk to the ship with it. I just thought that was just
! J2 s: p$ j* h1 W6 Ispectacular, and of course now I own one and it’s smaller. [takes out cell phone] So that’s kind of
4 w7 f* N" Y6 e; ecool.+ \; J4 ^) K5 C) B/ d; d
So I got to achieve this dream. James T. Kirk, and his alter ego William Shatner, wrote a book, which
$ O& j# V. k8 r9 Y- wI think was actually a pretty cool book. It was with Chip Walter who is a Pittsburgh- based author4 U0 Q7 ]/ M* ]3 v, q
who is quite good, and they wrote a book on basically the science of Star Trek, you know, what has
- X2 K) f! g8 M- J8 }5 }0 Y& h5 Dcome true. And they went around to the top places around the country and looked at various things8 N# f' m: Q* H# t' ]" [6 H
and they came here to study our virtual reality setup. And so we build a virtual reality for him, it% [6 V# Y0 e5 {, V. V0 t* w$ o k) w4 ]
looks something like that. [shows slide of virtual Star Trek bridge from the 1960’s TV show] We put it6 }2 S& x: D0 S
in, put it to red alert. He was a very good sport. [sarcastically] It’s not like he saw that one coming.
1 E# E% p/ q6 I5 p1 O# Y8 [[laughter] And it’s really cool to meet your boyhood idol, but it’s even cooler when he comes to you
# V |& p( w/ M5 ?: g2 Q; A- oto see what cool stuff you’re doing in your lab. And that was just a great moment.
' ?" L4 j' K# \2 ]1 \All right, winning stuffed animals. This may seem mundane to you, but when you’re a little kid and% X- `: l F8 O3 J6 u5 f# Z
you see the big buff guys walking around the amusement park and they’ve got all these big stuffed+ }' l- k& a' o0 q
animals, right? And this is my lovely wife, and I have a lot of pictures of stuffed animals I’ve won. t4 E5 E' L% h1 E: B: b6 d( a" R! g1 g
[laughter] [shows slides of several large stuffed animals] That’s my dad posing with one that I won.8 q' D4 _; }! x' N. @5 |, e$ X5 i
I’ve won a lot of these animals. There’s my dad, he did win that one, to his credit. And this was just
3 F1 w+ \) h; B+ C1 ?4 O9 Ka big part of my life and my family’s life. But you know, I can hear the cynics. In this age of digitally1 T1 x/ L& a# f7 ^ N9 ]1 T C
manipulated images, maybe those bears really aren’t in the pictures with me, or maybe I paid: w* I' i9 e/ S/ E3 v' _5 P
somebody five bucks to take a picture in the theme park next to the bear. And I said, how, in this
( m) V) M* V: Hage of cynicism can I convince people? And I said, I know, I can show them the bears! Bring them
. Y& q% J- p% q `: jout. [several large stuffed animals are brought onto the stage] [laughter and clapping] Just put them- a K. B+ p- w4 p! E8 A
back against the wall.
m3 z$ ?/ \: Q4 D7 \* E' v. i* ^Jai Pausch (Randy’s wife):+ E) j( v$ H: s* o# A. J/ D
It’s hard to hear you. [adjusts Randy’s microphone]: X$ \ l/ i% X# {. |
Randy Pausch:, ^; I1 p8 ^9 c& u* S% H e
Thanks honey. [laughter] So here are some bears. We didn’t have quite enough room in the moving$ p* n+ b$ P1 H$ I+ n$ P4 ]; u
truck, and anybody who would like a little piece of me at the end of this, feel free to come up and1 v& s' X8 X9 m1 m& ~
take a bear, first come, first served.
) W* I' L9 H" aAll right, my next one. Being an Imagineer. This was the hard one. Believe me, getting to zero" z. r/ O r! |/ }! g, O
gravity is easier than becoming an Imagineer. When I was a kid, I was eight years old and our family
9 H: R# V( I# h+ J, F/ xtook a trip cross-country to see Disneyland. And if you’ve ever seen the movie National Lampoon’s
/ j) H3 _( h8 g' V- NVacation, it was a lot like that! [laughter] It was a quest. [shows slides of family at Disneyland] And
; i! I. Y: } bthese are real vintage photographs, and there I am in front of the castle. And there I am, and for
0 R: @) O* r. G/ ?2 }those of you who are into foreshadowing, this is the Alice ride. [laughter] And I just thought this was C7 m+ U8 K2 N9 X
just the coolest environment I had ever been in, and instead of saying, gee, I want to experience this,7 `6 X9 L6 M" ^& u! A
I said, I want to make stuff like this. And so I bided my time and then I graduated with my Ph.D.% i# X" c! o5 Q6 h* L+ s
from Carnegie Mellon, thinking that meant me infinitely qualified to do anything. And I dashed off
& Q5 }4 T' N/ i% Fmy letters of applications to Walt Disney Imagineering, and they sent me some of the damned nicest% u- N4 Q: ~$ Y h; A- u
go-to-hell letters I have ever gotten. [laughter] I mean it was just, we have carefully reviewed your. U- R4 j% W, l4 w, @0 Y
application and presently we do not have any positions available which require your particular
& A- ?; ]4 f2 @2 J! |2 K; n, P2 zqualifications. Now think about the fact that you’re getting this from a place that’s famous for guys5 V8 J( |8 S! }3 j4 a
who sweep the street. [laughter] So that was a bit of a setback. But remember, the brick walls are$ |2 p4 g2 x1 X( U7 B
there for a reason. The brick walls are not there to keep us out. The brick walls are there to give us8 D' c$ a" x5 E0 E/ t! W
a chance to show how badly we want something. Because the brick walls are there to stop the6 H s+ z! h! Q: H
people who don’t want it badly enough. They’re there to stop the other people.
, U) r0 }9 V7 U! BAll right, fast forward to 1991. We did a system back at the University of Virginia called Virtual
8 X' l. f0 i# h; TReality on Five Dollars a Day. Just one of those unbelievable spectacular things. I was so scared" l/ h1 r9 r/ o
back in those days as a junior academic. Jim Foley’s here, and I just love to tell this story. He knew
M1 F; A6 P( V' l* bmy undergraduate advisor, Andy Van Dam, and I’m at my first conference and I’m just scared to3 [2 N( j6 p6 D0 Z7 _0 w. D
death. And this icon in the user interface community walks up to me and just out of nowhere just$ _" M0 w+ K" O. |9 I/ t, X8 m' q
gives me this huge bear hug and he says, that was from Andy. And that was when I thought, ok,7 `- x7 t% M+ E# n
maybe I can make it. Maybe I do belong. And a similar story is that this was just this unbelievable2 ~6 b4 P5 U8 }( e0 b5 S. i/ f
hit because at the time, everybody needed a half a million [dollars] to do virtual reality. And
8 x7 ~/ p2 T- X. W7 r# I5 O" [everybody felt frustrated. And we literally hacked together a system for about five thousand dollars+ l; t/ @2 M4 b& {
in parts and made a working VR system. And people were just like, oh my god, you know, the- n( u. }5 } l7 ^
Hewlett Packard garage thing. This is so awesome. And so I’m giving this talk and the room has just
6 l! P: G3 j* [/ Q! H- qgone wild, and during the Q and A, a guy named Tom Furness, who was one of the big names in
2 J) g2 ]* N$ T# @9 _virtual reality at the time, he goes up to the microphone and he introduces himself. I didn’t know
/ }: _. G- H( l& J8 l- L$ `what he looked like but I sure as hell knew the name. And he asked a question. And I was like, I’m: X- K% D7 d& F
sorry did you say you were Tom Furness? And he said yes. I said, then I would love to answer your! h# I) c- x* W! C
question, but first, will you have lunch with me tomorrow? [laughter] And there’s a lot in that little
( ~0 b0 p9 u w; W9 p% Umoment, there’s a lot of humility but also asking a person where he can’t possibly say no. [laughter]
! t* U# O: U# M, Y0 z! x2 ]; UAnd so Imagineering a couple of years later was working on a virtual reality project. This was top! u' B# I0 A2 T( x5 M: J/ J% v
secret. They were denying the existence of a virtual reality attraction after the time that the
" ]0 e" I1 |! h( y) Xpublicity department was running the TV commercials. So Imagineering really had nailed this one7 ^- X8 J0 D( Y: _& C
tight. And it was the Aladdin attraction where you would fly a magic carpet, and the head mounted
/ d* y1 ~5 g7 L/ K1 R# gdisplay, sometimes known as gator vision. And so I had an in. As soon as the project had just, you
3 s- N. R% y; a- `* U. z) Lknow they start running the TV commercials, and I had been asked to brief the Secretary of Defense
9 ?. H5 B: Z, {5 H; _4 P- z4 v' n) Kon the state of virtual reality. OK, Fred Brooks and I had been asked to brief the Secretary of2 |, e& b8 O' l* r2 n# ?0 _
Defense, and that gave me an excuse. So I called them. I called Imagineering and I said, look, I’m7 g- K0 p9 |3 W$ U
briefing the Secretary of Defense. I’d like some materials on what you have because it’s one of the
% A9 @+ m9 b" j2 lbest VR systems in the world. And they kind of pushed back. And I said, look, is all this patriotism1 P F+ l2 J5 V8 k* D4 i
stuff in the parks a farce? And they’re like, hmm, ok. [laughter] But they said this is so new the PR
$ I' S; J" {9 q2 ?+ Vdepartment doesn’t have any footage for you, so I’m going to have to connect you straight through
7 T! P( q( d) w6 dto the team who did the work. Jackpot! So I find myself on the phone with a guy named Jon Snoddy
" g3 Y5 W) n- G9 q. S; _who is one of the most impressive guys I have ever met, and he was the guy running this team, and1 w) ?3 G8 f; x0 S1 q" c3 `4 `
it’s not surprising they had done impressive things. And so he sent me some stuff, we talked briefly! O% g* k/ I Q7 M. Z% y) L' v
and he sent me some stuff, and I said, hey, I’m going to be out in the area for a conference shortly,
% G m$ r8 a, w# Vwould you like to get together and have lunch? Translation: I’m going to lie to you and say that I
1 q+ o, Q& C& t; x& vhave an excuse to be in the area so I don’t look too anxious, but I would go to Neptune to have
0 j* v( ^& }0 _' E7 G! elunch with you! [laughter] And so Jon said sure, and I spent something like 80 hours talking with all! M8 g9 i6 r4 x+ N) ]+ H, d& m
the VR experts in the world, saying if you had access to this one unbelievable project, what would. P5 d7 T* D' l3 m4 f4 w# u
you ask? And then I compiled all of that and I had to memorize it, which anybody that knows me
" M7 H ~0 j( _" I2 aknows that I have no memory at all, because I couldn’t go in looking like a dweeb with, you know, [in
( X9 l- }. `# r, d$ p" adweeby voice] Hi, Question 72. So, I went in, and this was like a two hour lunch, and Jon must have A- o: c8 s' p5 P; z
thought he was talking to some phenomenal person, because all I was doing was channeling Fred! C5 `' \8 M' G1 v3 Y/ G* X
Brooks and Ivan Sutherland and Andy Van Dam and people like that. And Henry Fuchs. So it’s pretty+ r; E g1 f0 G, j! J. I9 @
easy to be smart when you’re parroting smart people. And at the end of the lunch with Jon, I sort0 \7 q- H! ` A$ q, F& v% d3 T
of, as we say in the business, made “the ask.” And I said, you know, I have a sabbatical coming up.9 r; Q! k& P& K+ [5 n
And he said, what’s that? [laughter] The beginnings of the culture clash. And so I talked with him+ Y1 d `5 _5 |+ D- B
about the possibility of coming there and working with him. And he said, well that’s really good% V% o+ F* T' ~9 {# D: O2 g1 F# O( ~
except, you know, you’re in the business of telling people stuff and we’re in the business of keeping
) s* G! P* ?8 Wsecrets. And then what made Jon Snoddy Jon Snoddy was he said, but we’ll work it out, which I
3 a ?2 W4 b$ o" Hreally loved. The other thing that I learned from Jon Snoddy – I could do easily an hour long talk just
) y. e. s" u$ a4 [on what have I learned from Jon Snoddy. One of the things he told me was that wait long enough
. D: W( _' i1 M- fand people will surprise and impress you. He said, when you’re pissed off at somebody and you’re* Z% e- |; W! \0 v
angry at them, you just haven’t given them enough time. Just give them a little more time and# }- K( V: A# f0 A
they’ll almost always impress you. And that really stuck with me. I think he’s absolutely right on* _0 K1 n! p5 E4 b, o# j
that one. So to make a long story short, we negotiated a legal contract. It was going to be the first –& Z: Q8 p# j. W
some people referred to it as the first and last paper ever published by Imagineering. That the deal
, e/ V3 l6 S! lwas I go, I provide my own funding, I go for six months, I work with a project, we publish a paper.
! l4 H' V+ }/ e. ~$ y; nAnd then we meet our villain. [shows slide of a picture of a former dean of Randy’s] I can’t be all
. @( b( d( f# isweetness and light, because I have no credibility. Somebody’s head’s going to go on a stick. Turns
8 i4 \8 v, J' P) b/ zout that the person who gets his head on a stick is a dean back at the University of Virginia. His6 s9 y2 _! g) p4 H
name is not important. Let’s call him Dean Wormer. [laughter] And Dean Wormer has a meeting
+ u& a# a) ?9 c+ M. D0 z7 l- i: N& s/ |: qwith me where I say I want to do this sabbatical thing and I’ve actually got the Imagineering guys to3 y9 c9 H0 u. s8 g$ ]
let an academic in, which is insane. I mean if Jon hadn’t gone nuts, this would never have been a
% E8 f. ~3 N" a, l* ipossibility. This is a very secretive organization. And Dean Wormer looks at the paperwork and he
: u2 w* p( U% }( l/ f: p1 p( bsays, well it says they’re going to own your intellectual property. And I said, yeah, we got the$ }1 x# H2 f* S+ M
agreement to publish the paper. There is no other IP. I don’t do patentable stuff. And says, yeah,
! \4 U$ V, `: w. x+ [4 h; nbut you might. And so deal’s off. Just go and get them to change that little clause there and then
8 G) e( U7 H/ [( dcome back to me. I’m like, excuse me? And then I said to him, I want you to understand how( J, h. r: A3 v' @3 v) a
important this is. If we can’t work this out, I’m going to take an unpaid leave of absence and I’m just' }# T+ k+ _! I# R- t
going to go there and I’m going to do this thing. And he said, hey, I might not even let you do that. I
: P0 b1 p5 R) W5 B3 s) B2 wmean you’ve got the IP in your head already and maybe they’re going to suck it out of you, so that’s- I) B" y+ ?5 m2 _! U+ {, i
not going to fly either. [laughter] It’s very important to know when you’re in a pissing match. And% T. L) q- p/ \
it’s very important to get out of it as quickly as possible. So I said to him, well, let’s back off on this.
5 Z) Z' I, L$ e3 M# c9 }# WDo we think this is a good idea at all? He said, I have no idea if this is a good idea. I was like,
3 A N7 O, _5 r! o3 ]1 X0 d: z[sarcastically] OK, well we’ve got common ground there. Then I said, well is this really your call?
! `5 N( B) W1 a. |7 |* F" rIsn’t this the call of the Dean of Sponsored Research if it’s an IP issue? And he said, yeah, that’s true.
6 u4 d9 v. @) {. c* C; Q1 B4 gI said, but so if he’s happy you’re happy? [So he says] Yeah, then I’d be fine. Whoosh! Like Wile E.
+ g8 S7 Z! H- N- _: c Q q$ j8 LCoyote, I’m gone in a big ball of dust. And I find myself in Gene Block’s office, who is the most
% A: g& M$ y0 L$ k8 ?( Q, Qfantastic man in the world. And I start talking to Gene Block and I say let’s start at the high level,/ K' y% t: Z; N, J9 w; `
since I don’t want to have to back out again. So let’s start at the high level. Do you think this is a' U: m. l1 E- h
good idea? He said, well if you’re asking me if it’s a good idea, I don’t have very much information.
2 b6 u3 [; ~+ a# N2 `0 Z, rAll I know is that one of my star faculty members is in my office and he’s really excited, so tell me
3 q; B/ Y( [6 R4 A. Cmore. Here’s a lesson for everybody in administration. They both said the same thing. But think
6 w" h3 d1 ^! s* F' @2 L* @, U6 babout how they said it, right? [In a loud, barking voice] I don’t know! [In a pleasant voice] Well, I
: [9 g4 {, m' f! t, Udon’t have much information, but one of my start faculty members is here and he’s all excited so I
8 l+ d" j" {7 X9 z5 S/ a/ Q/ Ywant to learn more. They’re both ways of saying I don’t know, but boy there’s a good way and a bad* v/ @/ }4 g: T
way. So anyway, we got it all worked out. I went to Imagineering. Sweetness and light. And all’s
; w1 i' }/ D0 H! }1 e* h1 m# u1 |well that ends well.
; p6 c3 i: ~. |6 a+ xSome brick walls are made of flesh. So I worked on the Aladdin Project. It was absolutely
. r/ L( F* B0 ?( Mspectacular, I mean just unbelievable. Here’s my nephew Christopher. [Shows slide of Christopher
- j3 U( q5 l, M; d3 z/ `& J) l \5 V3 aon Aladdin apparatus] This was the apparatus. You would sit on this sort of motorcycle-type thing.
! r8 Y0 g$ ^! G7 H( U* H& b% H5 D5 UAnd you would steer your magic carpet and you would put on the head-mounted display. The headmounted
1 s8 C8 \4 H' e, p% S* Edisplay is very interesting because it had two parts, and it was a very clever design. To get- q9 A1 Y. Y4 d" h, j J* _: y
throughput up, the only part that touched the guest’s head was this little cap and everything else
. |2 K7 E6 N7 T4 L, Z: @clicked onto it – all the expensive hardware. So you could replicate the caps because they were! ?. \1 Y& f# M; e' S
basically free to manufacture. [Showing slide of Randy cleaning a cap] And this is what I really did is
J* i2 k4 o/ A7 BI was a cap cleaner during the sabbatical. [laughter] I loved Imagineering. It was just a spectacular. ~6 G) e. k1 L2 _1 ?6 h, k# H$ U* O
place. Just spectacular. Everything that I had dreamed. I loved the model shop. People crawling m& Q) g3 r' t8 H. R4 E- B
around on things the size of this room that are just big physical models. It was just an incredible
1 `, m6 t4 ]. f6 o* lplace to walk around and be inspired. I’m always reminded of when I went there and people said,
, p9 l2 L( {5 }do you think your expectations are too high? And I said, you ever see the movie Charlie and the
: o/ P8 Q" u# T3 q1 QChocolate Factory? Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory? Where Gene Wilder says to the little- y2 S9 B3 u& U$ B' d
boy Charlie, he’s about to give him the chocolate factory. He says “Well Charlie, did anybody ever
8 \6 i0 [1 A/ G( V1 p1 { ~+ w% ltell you the story of the little boy who suddenly got everything he ever wanted?” Charlie’s eyes get
( A6 T, P& o& Q! ?( qlike saucers and he says, “No, what happened to him?” Gene Wilder says, “He lived happily ever5 n% n/ G* A6 Z a( B
after.” [laughter]: f0 W* _% R/ J/ i' z: c/ l2 D' g
OK, so working on the Aladdin VR, I described it as a once in every five careers opportunity, and I
3 S7 f1 |- Z* [stand by that assessment. And it forever changed me. It wasn’t just that it was good work and I got6 l( b! e2 B& x
to be a part of it. But it got me into the place of working with real people and real HCI user interface
& Z3 N" A* y3 o( cissues. Most HCI people live in this fantasy world of white collar laborers with Ph.D.s and masters
+ S4 I4 L! W% W$ ` _) |6 Pdegrees. And you know, until you got ice cream spilled on you, you’re not doing field work. And
, Q6 S8 W' U- I, |0 F) t5 o4 Bmore than anything else, from Jon Snoddy I learned how to put artists and engineers together, and
8 G6 v% L0 c2 k9 tthat’s been the real legacy.. K Q9 v1 q" R# R
We published a paper. Just a nice academic cultural scandal. When we wrote the paper, the guys at8 i; m1 b4 ?3 p
Imagineering said, well let’s do a nice big picture. Like you would in a magazine. [Showing slide of
9 D: }/ A! g1 y0 W3 p/ Pfirst page of the paper, with a photo at the top that spans two columns]. And the SIGGRAPH2 I+ ]* W& M! L3 D6 \: K( p$ [
committee, which accepted the paper, it was like this big scandal. Are they allowed to do that?
4 F; O. g$ S* g9 L6 a[laughter] There was no rule! So we published the paper and amazingly since then there’s a( s( E# [6 t; ?# H' n1 _
tradition of SIGGRAPH papers having color figures on the first page. So I’ve changed the world in a7 e9 L& A) c# A* J5 E: @
small way. [laughter] And then at the end of my six months, they came to me and they said, you
! @3 }) y" Q+ `3 p5 @5 U3 |. S6 Twant to do it for real? You can stay. And I said no. One of the only times in my life I have surprised
5 {2 L$ D( ^; \my father. He was like, you’re what? He said, since you were, you know [gesturing to height of a
$ X8 n9 S/ _2 b$ F5 i% @4 k( Kchild’s head],this is all you wanted, and now that you got it, and you’re… huh? There was a bottle of
; ]7 j4 ^/ w9 f- i/ f, u, YMaalox in my desk drawer. Be careful what you wish for. It was a particularly stressful place.
+ D" L1 `: ^% K0 I, mImagineering in general is actually not so Maalox-laden, but the lab I was in – oh, Jon left in the
' {$ m/ R4 i$ q* Pmiddle. And it was a lot like the Soviet Union. It was a little dicey for awhile. But it worked out OK.
5 k8 l& D& c2 |; T9 t2 q! OAnd if they had said, stay here or never walk in the building again, I would have done it. I would5 r6 b7 v9 X0 X, K9 Z
have walked away from tenure, I would have just done it. But they made it easy on me. They said+ {( I- X. O* n/ W2 W
you can have your cake and eat it too. And I basically became a day-a-week consultant for+ g2 W( p# ]( }4 k6 J* M# i2 d% I
Imagineering, and I did that for about ten years. And that’s one of the reasons you should all/ F& h" V& o" k7 z! ?+ l
become professors. Because you can have your cake and eat it too.
% H) E; N+ m3 Z: @* k3 ~' R. Y# UI went and consulted on things like DisneyQuest. So there was the Virtual Jungle Cruise. And the/ }% \8 e" ~( a; S# ~6 S$ y* X
best interactive experience I think ever done, and Jesse Schell gets the credit for this, Pirates of the
; ~6 ~! c0 g' m/ D( hCaribbean. Wonderful at DisneyQuest.
2 U8 \- s( S. q5 Z+ ]" q! t* rAnd so those are my childhood dreams. And that’s pretty good. I felt good about that. So then the
\, a, x3 R! oquestion becomes, how can I enable the childhood dreams of others. And again, boy am I glad I" K$ n$ m# z4 [* h& p
became a professor. What better place to enable childhood dreams? Eh, maybe working at EA, I
n5 |4 l4 u& u, E7 edon’t know. That’d probably be a good close second. And this started in a very concrete realization
' r4 P9 w: o% y% @& S7 a. n; p; [that I could do this, because a young man named Tommy Burnett, when I was at the University of
6 `& O" w9 ~; C' P1 l9 q- |Virginia, came to me, was interested in joining my research group. And we talked about it, and he" |; Z+ I7 u! J
said, oh, and I have a childhood dream. It gets pretty easy to recognize them when they tell you.
, @" T w% u6 L' ^8 aAnd I said, yes, Tommy, what is your childhood dream? He said, I want to work on the next Star/ i/ |+ e5 t1 e W/ m3 H+ v
Wars film. Now you got to remember the timing on this. Where is Tommy, Tommy is here today.2 } J$ a0 j0 ^/ l. [$ l; V
What year would this have been? Your sophomore year.
1 R; W9 @- D# f( y) E0 u7 YTommy:1 j' t/ H, f4 e' L- T" y
It was around ’93.
& G% A4 B& C: U, |Randy Pausch:
+ a# F/ v# ]! c6 E# {/ EAre you breaking anything back there young man? OK, all right, so in 1993. And I said to Tommy,
! A2 i4 p$ m6 i ]/ P' T2 l0 Myou know they’re probably not going to make those next movies. [laughter] And he said, no, THEY
- e: {- G1 L8 }ARE. And Tommy worked with me for a number of years as an undergraduate and then as a staff
' i( ^3 g/ t- q* \member, and then I moved to Carnegie Mellon, every single member of my team came from Virginia2 R- v0 T. { R: X7 H* m9 f) E
to Carnegie Mellon except for Tommy because he got a better offer. And he did indeed work on all( j( Y2 B* \) u
three of those films. And then I said, well that’s nice, but you know, one at a time is kind of$ B& q7 F# t" W5 n- c: ^
inefficient. And people who know me know that I’m an efficiency freak. So I said, can I do this in
4 a; h" T5 t# j8 ?5 a& l* l; Y3 kmass? Can I get people turned in such a way that they can be turned onto their childhood dreams?5 m: X' F6 c. W2 A7 A( E
And I created a course, I came to Carnegie Mellon and I created a course called Building Virtual ^7 b2 C8 T$ e; o
Worlds. It’s a very simple course. How many people here have ever been to any of the shows?
+ S. B6 A" A- ~, v3 e; W7 j E[Some people from audience raise hands] OK, so some of you have an idea. For those of you who5 s; C3 D. z* Z( F$ _
don’t, the course is very simple. There are 50 students drawn from all the different departments of
7 d& [) u# x7 E, othe university. There are randomly chosen teams, four people per team, and they change every
( f: P7 J5 `! c6 p# I! Hproject. A project only lasts two weeks, so you do something, you make something, you show
7 d/ _' c8 N# u* m4 ]something, then I shuffle the teams, you get three new playmates and you do it again. And it’s
8 z5 E. j; F$ t8 x; xevery two weeks, and so you get five projects during the semester. The first year we taught this
, t% |! v( h! J7 tcourse, it is impossible to describe how much of a tiger by the tail we had. I was just running the2 N+ ~- F% G% d, T
course because I wanted to see if we could do it. We had just learned how to do texture mapping. {6 i' ?3 g$ F# z: b
on 3D graphics, and we could make stuff that looked half decent. But you know, we were running8 g: o2 [' W5 H* @7 t3 r
on really weak computers, by current standards. But I said I’ll give it a try. And at my new university
: M8 O0 s$ M* @, {$ S* [ V8 ]$ {[Carnegie Mellon] I made a couple of phone calls, and I said I want to cross-list this course to get all
7 @2 }2 l% ?5 w, y( zthese other people. And within 24 hours it was cross-listed in five departments. I love this
3 Z7 P! _- L. [7 w8 @4 H# Muniversity. I mean it’s the most amazing place. And the kids said, well what content do we make? I0 I/ Z6 r# |& V4 N; ?
said, hell, I don’t know. You make whatever you want. Two rules: no shooting violence and no E W6 M4 H ^2 u5 Y+ a
pornography. Not because I’m opposed to those in particular, but you know, that’s been done with9 L& w* l: h4 y& d. {$ E6 a
VR, right? [laughter] And you’d be amazed how many 19-year-old boys are completely out of ideas. k, f7 ^: y$ x
when you take those off the table. [laughter and clapping]
9 G! x# k4 N# K' _4 r2 KAnyway, so I taught the course. The first assignment, I gave it to them, they came back in two K/ L) ]$ y: g/ P
weeks and they just blew me away. I mean the work was so beyond, literally, my imagination,
0 Z0 C; w4 N6 ?8 I3 {because I had copied the process from Imagineering’s VR lab, but I had no idea what they could or1 L; m7 {3 p8 _9 E% D- ]
couldn’t do with it as undergraduates, and their tools were weaker, and they came back on the first& L, j9 R% O+ {6 N, M3 ^- B, a1 x
assignment, and they did something that was so spectacular that I literally didn’t, ten years as a& } z) `6 `+ k; x& n" N A
professor and I had no idea what to do next. So I called up my mentor, and I called up Andy Van
% C% x2 a6 F8 i' q$ p9 ~& O8 p% YDam. And I said, Andy, I just gave a two-week assignment, and they came back and did stuff that if I
# i! A: W5 F2 |9 J; dhad given them a whole semester I would have given them all As. Sensei, what do I do? [laughter], }* ]8 A) W* _5 ]- d
And Andy thought for a minute and he said, you go back into class tomorrow and you look them in
+ {) Z7 @5 y# b% ethe eye and you say, “Guys, that was pretty good, but I know you can do better.” [laughter] And that
' _( C3 P! Y0 K r' Jwas exactly the right advice. Because what he said was, you obviously don’t know where the bar8 U+ d0 \# j# w. J' m* Q, K
should be, and you’re only going to do them a disservice by putting it anywhere. And boy was that
( G$ W1 k2 Y0 L0 A; Tgood advice because they just kept going. And during that semester it became this underground3 `) Z+ S% }( W9 {, r- Y' ^
thing. I’d walk into a class with 50 students in it and there were 95 people in the room. Because it
! Z/ a7 v3 |5 [8 @! [1 V/ j& Jwas the day we were showing work. And people’s roommates and friends and parents – I’d never- ^: Y" \* O% W3 _ T) E" q: f) N
had parents come to class before! It was flattering and somewhat scary. And so it snowballed and
2 x8 k/ ?& \5 T: o# Uwe had this bizarre thing of, well we’ve got to share this. If there’s anything I’ve been raised to do,
1 S& m" R/ x5 o* {it’s to share, and I said, we’ve got to show this at the end of the semester. We’ve got to have a big
5 [+ O* k$ o2 l4 Ishow. And we booked this room, McConomy. I have a lot of good memories in this room. And we
- @: Y; \4 u+ P+ q% H2 L% y1 ^3 qbooked it not because we thought we could fill it, but because it had the only AV setup that would% v) Y: q! @! J, `0 y9 G( L0 [
work, because this was a zoo. Computers and everything. And then we filled it. And we more than) a2 R4 A: c5 g5 w+ I4 c0 x
filled it. We had people standing in the aisle. I will never forget the dean at the time, Jim Morris( E1 g3 P( _' h; h" y# h
was sitting on the stage right about there. We had to kind of scoot him out of the way. And the* l$ p+ G) Q9 p0 y y+ A. s
energy in the room was like nothing I had ever experienced before. And President Cohen, Jerry
- G6 @; a, D' U \+ G# _Cohen was there, and he sensed the same thing. He later described it as like an Ohio State football- ~$ K: x. p* V: H3 f4 i( O8 o8 K* S
pep rally. Except for academics. And he came over and he asked exactly the right question. He
. g0 I+ K" t1 ~$ u9 Wsaid, before you start, he said, where are these people from? He said, the audience, what% X' D) h7 X% D- i6 L( l0 F# T
departments are they from? And we polled them and it was all the departments. And I felt very& U4 i$ {% @2 X8 ]
good because I had just come to campus, he had just come to campus, and my new boss had seen in7 K/ a1 F/ k/ D
a very corporal way that this is the university that puts everybody together. And that made me feel
1 w; D N7 a( G) N) d- ~+ _: g! ljust tremendous.5 e% @3 |5 |! B! p; A
So we did this campus-wide exhibition. People performed down here. They’re in costume, and we0 u5 R5 T6 o& z2 w" u
project just like this and you can see what’s going on. You can see what they’re seeing in the head
1 e, J% H) z- h& H O/ @mount. There’s a lot of big props, so there’s a guy white water rafting. [shows slides of a BVW show]
) B Y0 O9 w, v) K# ^' z7 yThis is Ben in E.T. And yes, I did tell them if they didn’t do the shot of the kids biking across the
! U* G p% m7 m2 n+ C' J! R3 I2 qmoon I would fail him. That is a true story. And I thought I’d show you just one world, and if we can
4 j8 c; Y" L7 k4 J! P# o; }get the lights down if that’s at all possible. No, ok, that means no. All right. All right we’ll just do+ }# k2 ^; Z; { M# P, v9 O9 r
our best then. [Shows “Hello.world” world done in the BVW class, audience applauds at the end.] It
, I3 \- r" n5 Swas an unusual course. With some of the most brilliant, creative students from all across the6 v" c9 S) L, q$ h0 e# x
campus. It just was a joy to be involved. And they took the whole stage performance aspect of this" v2 I8 g Z: F9 }5 g, U
way too seriously [shows pictures of very strange costumes students wore]. And it became this
% y9 H% [; {$ }2 I! O# T" o9 |campus phenomenon every year. People would line up for it. It was very flattering. And it gave kids
- m# J; R9 x6 xa sense of excitement of putting on a show for people who were excited about it. And I think that
4 j! T' R7 o/ a/ ?4 ?that’s one of the best things you can give somebody – the chance to show them what it feels like to
- |5 D2 W* X) T F) Z( Kmake other people get excited and happy. I mean that’s a tremendous gift. We always try to" {3 d! u% Z( m9 j" A1 H/ g
involve the audience. Whether it was people with glow sticks or batting a beach ball around… or
! |7 E8 a/ a, Z+ X0 D, Tdriving [shows photo of audience members leaning in their seats to steer a car]. This is really cool.
) Z3 D b' g+ u3 X* {$ U8 UThis technology actually got used at the Spiderman 3 premiere in L.A., so the audience was
# }& G; n7 d7 a6 icontrolling something on the screen, so that’s kind of nice. And I don’t have a class picture from
+ n% H8 l" Q) pevery year, but I dredged all the ones that I do have, and all I can say is that what a privilege and an1 z6 E* @$ H* ~: l6 X8 k5 l/ }) w
honor it was to teach that course for something like ten years.0 B, \1 X( x7 v, N( }
And all good things come to an end. And I stopped teaching that course about a year ago. People7 {2 g# x% T& k4 v, C
always ask me what was my favorite moment. I don’t know if you could have a favorite moment.# t" U. ^/ e- D
But boy there is one I’ll never forget. This was a world with, I believe a roller skating ninja. And one1 h) D) w# g* C; a
of the rules was that we perform these things live and they all had to really work. And the moment) S4 G5 Z7 o! X+ c* I
it stopped working, we went to your backup videotape. And this was very embarrassing. [Shows0 c' P) K. f5 s7 ^' r w; y: [, o# U
image of Roller Ninja world presentation] So we have this ninja on stage and he’s doing this roller" ]# J" {, H6 [; \9 ~" g3 s
skating thing and the world, it did not crash gently. Whoosh. And I come out, and I believe it was
9 u9 r4 n0 ], g' z1 I9 mSteve, Audia, wasn’t it? Where is he? OK, where is Steve? Ah, my man. Steve Audia. And talk7 Z" ^% W, b& r
about quick on your feet. I say, Steve, I’m sorry but your world has crashed and we’re going to go to2 m* c8 B2 |' e9 H0 @$ g
videotape. And he pulls out his ninja sword and says, I am dishonored! Whaaa! And just drops!
$ ?* u) C* t" \4 |3 x, _[applause and laughter] And so I think it’s very telling that my very favorite moment in ten years of
2 a. T( N4 q7 |1 q0 Zthis high technology course was a brilliant ad lib. And then when the videotape is done and the
+ [, {6 y' o4 K, |lights come up, he’s lying there lifeless and his teammates drag him off! [laughter] It really was a
; w4 K+ C8 m/ Y5 ofantastic moment.
; j8 x7 e k% \And the course was all about bonding. People used to say, you know, what’s going to make for a
X* ~5 a% I$ _3 Bgood world? I said, I can’t tell you beforehand, but right before they present it I can tell you if the
7 e/ ~0 r+ c9 Z2 W9 L7 nworld’s good just by the body language. If they’re standing close to each other, the world is good.. y. P! R- Y0 m; ]$ ~8 C
And BVW was a pioneering course [Randy puts on vest with arrows poking out of the back], and I
* |* W; [3 b8 D0 A6 N5 }6 \4 Awon’t bore you with all the details, but it wasn’t easy to do, and I was given this when I stepped
7 X0 m/ a# R6 |' ^ A! Ldown from the ETC and I think it’s emblematic. If you’re going to do anything that pioneering you
2 _ {# r" B4 e; y: W( N H/ h5 T/ j. bwill get those arrows in the back, and you just have to put up with it. I mean everything that could+ L7 ^' M+ e3 l) Z! \* }5 s
go wrong did go wrong. But at the end of the day, a whole lot of people had a whole lot of fun.
5 M: k# j. ~; |7 o, WWhen you’ve had something for ten years that you hold so precious, it’s the toughest thing in the' Z& p% v" t3 v0 C i7 }4 E
world to hand it over. And the only advice I can give you is, find somebody better than you to hand
4 y! d$ T# \$ h1 C+ j* R) tit to. And that’s what I did. There was this kid at the VR studios way back when, and you didn’t have
) h2 Q) q1 A5 C, t( Xto spend very long in Jesse Schell’s orbit to go, the force is strong in this one. And one of my
9 V# G! h) D4 s9 dgreatest – my two greatest accomplishments I think for Carnegie Mellon was that I got Jessica4 j3 p- k. D# T% v4 C0 L
Hodgins and Jesse Schell to come here and join our faculty. And I was thrilled when I could hand this1 `$ Y* C7 p4 z8 g( M# a, u3 |: H
over to Jesse, and to no one’s surprise, he has really taken it up to the next notch. And the course is0 f# P& p1 [) t
in more than good hands – it’s in better hands. But it was just one course. And then we really took# t( }. J1 X/ r) O: W z& X
it up a notch. And we created what I would call the dream fulfillment factory. Don Marinelli and I {6 k9 ?* w0 k# {4 p
got together and with the university’s blessing and encouragement, we made this thing out of whole, t b- \6 {7 @' z6 _
cloth that was absolutely insane. Should never have been tried. All the sane universities didn’t go$ b' \5 J3 N* \% u: E
near this kind of stuff. Creating a tremendous opportunistic void. So the Entertainment Technology& z; l M' M0 l9 T# [6 M9 M! u
Center was all about artists and technologists working in small teams to make things. It was a twoyear
' m! F& f3 N% v3 g1 y" [0 c6 ?professional master’s degree. And Don and I were two kindred spirits. We’re very different –
, `$ M5 P. P0 {anybody who knows us knows that we are very different people. And we liked to do things in a new
, H4 y& ^4 c8 ]7 Q; M4 W# D) i+ cway, and the truth of the matter is that we are both a little uncomfortable in academia. I used to1 X9 m3 t1 ^8 Z5 v" p1 N
say that I am uncomfortable as an academic because I come from a long line of people who actually
7 E" n/ O1 ~4 C# K) @- kworked for a living, so. [Nervous laughter] I detect nervous laughter! And I want to stress, Carnegie, ?, w9 x2 S: r# U% o _) B/ } @
Mellon is the only place in the world that the ETC could have happened. By far the only place.) s' X G" W9 u$ L% F( \
[Shows slide of Don Marinelli in tye-dyed shirt, shades and an electric guitar, sitting on a desk next
: f. K/ Z" H H) ]) @! rto Randy, wearing nerd glasses, button-up shirt, staring at a laptop. Above their heads were the( ~8 {8 `8 `* |6 u$ P
labels “Right brain/Left brain”] [laughter] OK, this picture was Don’s idea, OK? And we like to refer& `. Y) W# h( C4 |
to this picture as Don Marinelli on guitar and Randy Pausch on keyboards. [laughter] But we really `. e: H, O7 ^% z- X C; A. c" {" M0 L
did play up the left brain, right brain and it worked out really well that way. [Shows slide of Don3 B: t: m$ u2 t9 c/ r
looking intense] Don is an intense guy. And Don and I shared an office, and at first it was a small
$ k* u% q0 p, m1 l: _3 s' qoffice. We shared an office for six years. You know, those of you who know Don know he’s an
$ E0 I* {8 t7 [. o6 m/ _intense guy. And you know, given my current condition, somebody was asking me … this is a f, P# [* U# S) l
terrible joke, but I’m going to use it anyway. Because I know Don will forgive me. Somebody said,
3 B" L" W# d$ ~3 |% v/ C/ zgiven your current condition, have you thought about whether you’re going to go to heaven or hell?6 t& Y# D# G0 b& H1 m" l' P, v
And I said, I don’t know, but if I’m going to hell, I’m due six years for time served! [laughter] I kid.
: P" l5 x4 b' G" WSharing an office with Don was really like sharing an office with a tornado. There was just so much
, l/ H5 w) E( U/ ~( u: Senergy and you never knew which trailer was next, right? But you know something exciting was1 K; ]7 {; u$ x: }
going to happen. And there was so much energy, and I do believe in giving credit where credit is; W. n/ m( \5 R+ J6 l" y# n' y7 m6 m
due. So in my typically visual way, if Don and I were to split the success for the ETC, he clearly gets
) w0 h) Q! j' othe lion’s share of it. [Shows image of a pie chart divided 70/30 (Don/Randy) ] He did the lion’s share
" O% G: O5 F/ }' H2 c/ L5 D9 rof the work, ok, he had the lion’s share of the ideas. It was a great teamwork. I think it was a great
% @3 i- c' i* J. [3 P* }; i3 i1 Oyin and a yang, but it was more like YIN and yang. And he deserves that credit and I give it to him5 z1 ]( ~4 F& m6 E- B9 r. K
because the ETC is a wonderful place. And he’s now running it and he’s taking it global. We’ll talk
* r9 c, x; z8 H% V# h; ]* Tabout that in a second.
1 X4 Y3 F6 \1 IDescribing the ETC is really hard, and I finally found a metaphor. Telling people about the ETC is like
: \- Q2 s* e. P) U6 Idescribing Cirque du Soleil if they’ve never seen it. Sooner or later you’re going to make the. ?7 E8 O+ d7 O6 p, L& P0 k
mistake. You’re going to say, well it’s like a circus. And then you’re dragged into this conversation
0 E% H2 c! p5 Fabout oh, how many tigers, how many lions, how many trapeze acts? And that misses the whole
) q8 C6 n: S3 x: N9 j- G4 E) gpoint. So when we say we’re a master’s degree, we’re really not like any master’s degree you’ve" e2 M' Z m5 L+ a
ever seen. Here’s the curriculum [Shows slide of ETC curriculum, listing “Project Course” as the only$ j- J, w1 g8 u& W& `
course each semester; audience laughs] The curriculum ended up looking like this. [shows slightly
7 ^; C, a' F" i5 Smore detailed slide]. All I want to do is visually communicate to you that you do five projects in) d7 }2 q, H/ y+ U" x! m
Building Virtual Worlds, then you do three more. All of your time is spent in small teams making2 ~; D- W6 ?1 a8 e0 x, c
stuff. None of that book learning thing. Don and I had no patience for the book learning thing. It’s
% q- T: C% l- M: s# H& b" Pa master’s degree. They already spent four years doing book learning. By now they should have
3 I) r0 y3 z! rread all the books.' e: C( o- R: o
The keys to success were that Carnegie Mellon gave us the reins. Completely gave us the reins. We
' V( x; O; N# [9 Uhad no deans to report to. We reported directly to the provost, which is great because the provost- p, q6 F9 l$ p# u. ]
is way too busy to watch you carefully. [laughter] We were given explicit license to break the mold.; o0 K# ^$ _9 M( m# ?/ x
It was all project based. It was intense, it was fun, and we took field trips! Every spring semester in' e* i& X( S# v0 ]) E8 _
January, we took all 50 students in the first year class and we’d take them out to Pixar, Industrial: I Y" h9 m/ J
Light and Magic, and of course when you’ve got guys like Tommy there acting as host, right, it’s$ X8 Z+ `. `4 B' {/ f
pretty easy to get entrée to these places. So we did things very, very differently. The kind of7 q1 C! K1 I8 H
projects students would do, we did a lot of what we’d call edutainment.
/ s n6 o1 _) w5 l' f2 C; NWe developed a bunch of things with the Fire Department of New York, a network simulator for
+ k; z) H8 S. utraining firefighters, using video game-ish type technology to teach people useful things. That’s not& s# S9 m' m; P3 N4 {! E7 }' L0 t
bad. Companies did this strange thing. They put in writing, we promise to hire your students. I’ve1 o3 t$ N0 ]: Z+ a. C) _
got the EA and Activision ones here. I think there are now, how many, five? Drew knows I bet.3 E- f8 k9 Q3 M, L
[Drew Davison, head of ETC-Pittsburgh, gestures with five fingers]. So there are five written
8 _) @0 v* L* }4 H/ ~: ~agreements. I don’t know of any other school that has this kind of written agreement with any! ~% s3 C1 Y6 w0 v: \+ l: u& j
company. And so that’s a real statement. And these are multiple year things, so they’re agreeing to# a; t; n' g$ r/ G$ C x# q( E. \
hire people for summer internships that we have not admitted yet. That’s a pretty strong statement
; L. y, G+ V# H+ A2 x6 N0 ^about the quality of the program. And Don, as I said, he’s now, he’s crazy. In a wonderful
- ^" Y1 \$ K: p$ Ucomplimentary way. He’s doing these things where I’m like, oh my god. He’s not here tonight. D; R+ H" v3 e8 U) S* n( ?/ Q; P: F
because he’s in Singapore because there’s going to be an ETC campus in Singapore. There’s already
0 u9 H4 f; q% a4 J: s$ J/ Son in Australia and there’s going to be on in Korea. So this is becoming a global phenomenon. So I" e" \" U1 {) Q: a( |, l, K. f0 h" O
think this really speaks volumes about all the other universities. It’s really true that Carnegie Mellon
5 }! @5 q9 g, e. G; _is the only university that can do this. We just have to do it all over the world now.
) S# l& i. F8 Y; y, p/ D/ l8 bOne other big success about the ETC is teaching people about feedback [puts up bar chart where- F2 g ] f) u1 j, Y% l6 X
students are (anonymous) listed on a scale labeled “how easy to work with” ] -- oh I hear the& w4 s6 g @3 r
nervous laughter from the students. I had forgotten the delayed shock therapy effect of these bar6 J5 s* k- ~/ ?; h
charts. When you’re taking Building Virtual Worlds, every two weeks we get peer feedback. We put. _( i4 W( F+ G. @0 |' W+ j2 o9 h
that all into a big spreadsheet and at the end of the semester, you had three teammates per project,
/ a' P$ u4 o" [' g' e& T8 x; ~five projects, that’s 15 data points, that’s statistically valid. And you get a bar chart telling you on a }/ s7 ]6 U' U, C
ranking of how easy you are to work with, where you stacked up against your peers. Boy that’s hard' @' Q" Z, U9 J5 [ Y' @2 R
feedback to ignore. Some still managed. [laughter] But for the most part, people looked at that and
% ]5 _5 h# ?1 \2 f' Qwent, wow, I’ve got to take it up a notch. I better start thinking about what I’m saying to people in! I; V) l" k! Y
these meetings. And that is the best gift an educator can give is to get somebody to become self3 q3 T/ D# i9 u8 h+ c9 Z; K
reflective.
$ }7 O; x6 y. X( R. r8 D8 K( oSo the ETC was wonderful, but even the ETC and even as Don scales it around the globe, it’s still very
. k3 }4 U# X3 {labor intensive, you know. It’s not Tommy one-at-a-time. It’s not a research group ten at a time.
5 R# {: O& Z6 p& F5 k1 J' PIt’s 50 or 100 at a time per campus times four campuses. But I wanted something infinitely scalable.2 f5 W- j( ?( s. } E$ S! o8 m6 |
Scalable to the point where millions or tens of millions of people could chase their dreams with' K7 h e5 }5 ]/ _& o. Q
something. And you know, I guess that kind of a goal really does make me the Mad Hatter. [Puts on
4 q) ~" q: U; Ga Mad Hatter’s green top hat]. So Alice is a project that we worked on for a long, long time. It’s a3 q* `# y1 ^7 |. n# |1 [% i
novel way to teach computer programming. Kids make movies and games. The head fake – again, `5 S; m a, k9 K3 S
we’re back to the head fakes. The best way to teach somebody something is to have them think
; p) _, o, D1 Y+ X) @they’re learning something else. I’ve done it my whole career. And the head fake here is that9 F' D* [! `) ?9 F& l6 x" D8 w
they’re learning to program but they just think they’re making movies and video games. This thing2 U( s! k" S6 `. O9 S+ x
has already been downloaded well over a million times. There are eight textbooks that have been
: y d& Z1 v3 gwritten about it. Ten percent of U.S. colleges are using it now. And it’s not the good stuff yet. The
; M; f, j$ a! A4 ^9 M3 n" ugood stuff is coming in the next version. I, like Moses, get to see the promised land, but I won’t get/ j K7 Q4 }, ^6 W
to set foot in it. And that’s OK, because I can see it. And the vision is clear. Millions of kids having
( X( Y- D f: xfun while learning something hard. That’s pretty cool. I can deal with that as a legacy. The next
0 K6 n. v- P y* nversion’s going to come out in 2008. It’s going to be teaching the Java language if you want them to
) Y; P! J& u5 T0 I. lknow they’re learning Java. Otherwise they’ll just think that they’re writing movie scripts. And2 r5 N# b- k( j* \, A# e* G
we’re getting the characters from the bestselling PC video game in history, The Sims. And this is
* \, j+ i3 m' i6 \1 \already working in the lab, so there’s no real technological risk. I don’t have time to thank and
1 K& _! a1 d6 w$ M5 t8 d, C( L Pmention everybody in the Alice team, but I just want to say that Dennis Cosgrove is going to be R0 M* M+ n; J4 S2 J8 J/ p
building this, has been building this. He is the designer. This is his baby. And for those of you who
6 O/ H. u7 N0 N: {% N2 D+ g, ]3 Yare wondering, well, in some number of months who should I be emailing about the Alice project,4 C: q8 y5 v2 p6 B2 V
where’s Wanda Dann? Oh, there you are. Stand up, let them all see you. Everybody say, Hi Wanda.$ S1 H, N2 D" ~( ?* l- g1 B
Audience:
- B9 d& ~) N& N( hHi, Wanda.4 u1 h. P; K5 o0 H" e
Randy Pausch:" T2 {/ s9 d" `
Send her the email. And I’ll talk a little bit more about Caitlin Kelleher, but she’s graduated with her* \9 Q$ |7 A* h& K, J
Ph.D., and she’s at Washington University, and she’s going to be taking this up a notch and going to$ R& [0 ^4 R- d
middle schools with it. So, grand vision and to the extent that you can live on in something, I will. q; O% e. }4 Q: w
live on in Alice.* {" N8 `8 h3 P6 r
All right, so now the third part of the talk. Lessons learned. We’ve talked about my dreams. We’ve9 ?4 m5 n5 u. I8 H0 S1 N
talked about helping other people enable their dreams. Somewhere along the way there’s got to be
* q Q9 e: j" I8 U5 S5 wsome aspect of what lets you get to achieve your dreams. First one is the rule of parents, mentors
: v# ?, c* `/ q: k" S. Iand students. I was blessed to have been born to two incredible people. This is my mother on her' U8 t9 Z; N0 E6 _3 j$ ?
70th birthday. [Shows slide of Randy’s mom driving a race car on an amusement park race course]
# n7 U: b( G. X. [; a[laughter] I am back here. I have just been lapped. [laughter] This is my dad riding a roller coaster3 p `. |- t1 `4 G9 O
on his 80th birthday. [Shows slide of dad] And he points out that he’s not only brave, he’s talented
- f4 a& i9 d+ P) h8 Qbecause he did win that big bear the same day. My dad was so full of life, anything with him was an- X; N, s0 Z/ y: G
adventure. [Shows picture of his Dad holding a brown paper bag.] I don’t know what’s in that bag,
! _* V1 o9 b1 P4 W5 U; w; t6 wbut I know it’s cool. My dad dressed up as Santa Claus, but he also did very, very significant things
7 Q1 p" S. i5 a. `/ A. l3 uto help lots of people. This is a dormitory in Thailand that my mom and dad underwrote. And every
6 D) O( D( w0 [year about 30 students get to go to school who wouldn’t have otherwise. This is something my wife" w- p' z& }1 b; y+ q! s( E: X) B: E
and I have also been involved in heavily. And these are the kind of things that I think everybody$ j' \* b% ~6 b2 z
ought to be doing. Helping others.- f5 w. c/ f( W9 f' i& P3 N5 E1 c
But the best story I have about my dad – unfortunately my dad passed away a little over a year ago
5 t) |9 Q) s, g/ c5 R– and when we were going through his things, he had fought in World War II in the Battle of the
/ j! ]9 d) s- z* `8 JBulge, and when we were going through his things, we found out he had been awarded the Bronze7 B1 a# A" l2 M$ k0 e$ d) R8 M
Star for Valor. My mom didn’t know it. In 50 years of marriage it had just never come up.
l0 z" B) A* c D/ S+ AMy mom. [Shows picture of Randy as a young child, pulling his Mom’s hair]. Mothers are people
/ m8 s6 {/ g: {2 H& mwho love even when you pull their hair. And I have two great mom stories. When I was here3 @* o" u3 e* J' c
studying to get my Ph.D. and I was taking something called the theory qualifier, which I can
3 A) T3 [( X* d, y0 Mdefinitively say is the second worst thing in my life after chemotherapy. [laughter] And I was
/ L( c* | P- N3 z- Pcomplaining to my mother about how hard this test was and how awful it was, and she just leaned
3 z: p. |1 }4 Nover and she patted me on the arm and she said, we know how you feel honey, and remember when
' J7 _/ W% @+ U0 k6 q& F0 yyour father was your age he was fighting the Germans. [laugher] After I got my Ph.D., my mother
9 f7 c/ G/ N. x) D. y* Ztook great relish in introducing me as, this is my son, he’s a doctor but not the kind that helps people.
% K. O" }! t3 C. L; s* t[laughter] These slides are a little bit dark [meaning “hard to see”], but when I was in high school I( Z7 c9 ]0 j+ ~) s' ?4 H
decided to paint my bedroom. [shows slides of bedroom] I always wanted a submarine and an
. u+ i; |- {% Z+ yelevator. And the great thing about this [shows slide of quadratic formula painted on wall]" B9 Z, E+ f# y; o- E! l5 {
[interrupted by laughter] – what can I say? And the great thing about this is they let me do it. And
8 e( ?! N* z) a4 A9 Rthey didn’t get upset about it. And it’s still there. If you go to my parent’s house it’s still there. And
% X) D& H; ^( g4 manybody who is out there who is a parent, if your kids want to paint their bedroom, as a favor to me
5 ?6 Q, V9 M" f1 W2 W1 Z3 Jlet them do it. It’ll be OK. Don’t worry about resale value on the house.
# Y& M2 a7 J: m+ P& O1 X; l* xOther people who help us besides our parents: our teachers, our mentors, our friends, our0 g/ g* ] T* P9 _7 G6 L$ |+ r G$ D
colleagues. God, what is there to say about Andy Van Dam? When I was a freshman at Brown, he
# Q2 N; p. W3 k+ r/ ^ Wwas on leave. And all I heard about was this Andy Van Dam. He was like a mythical creature. Like a! | b6 \( M; G+ t* x: X8 T
centaur, but like a really pissed off centaur. And everybody was like really sad that he was gone, but# |/ J8 I: ~6 T/ M& x. y* d
kind of more relaxed? And I found out why. Because I started working for Andy. I was a teaching; W: v3 v! C9 L: w% q9 O
assistant for him as a sophomore. And I was quite an arrogant young man. And I came in to some9 u0 o5 p5 g. x% |7 M- \
office hours and of course it was nine o’clock at night and Andy was there at office hours, which is
+ X! O6 U, |& c7 y# X" p# Zyour first clue as to what kind of professor he was. And I come bounding in and you know, I’m just# g; _( L& q" \
I’m going to save the world. There’re all these kids waiting for help, da da, da da, da da, da da, da4 E5 t' {1 M( m2 p
da. And afterwards, Andy literally Dutch-uncled – he’s Dutch, right? He Dutch-uncled me. And he5 v0 R0 M0 @( ?% b5 B8 g* ~) B
put his arm around my shoulders and we went for a little walk and he said, Randy, it’s such a shame) d, |/ L" [7 f+ b! Y1 `
that people perceive you as so arrogant. Because it’s going to limit what you’re going to be able to
, b5 k5 p: O) A5 l$ y& [accomplish in life. What a hell of a way to word “you’re being a jerk.” [laughter] Right? He doesn’t
/ k& P7 A( |: `& z% @8 Isay you’re a jerk. He says people are perceiving you this way and he says the downside is it’s going
3 I! {' F8 m( M. Rto limit what you’re going to be able to accomplish.
v' V- O ?" I4 o* Y% [When I got to know Andy better, the beatings became more direct, but. [laughter] I could tell you1 w7 B% M4 c$ m
Andy stories for a month, but the one I will tell you is that when it came time to start thinking about7 ~' }/ R' D3 v# G: [
what to do about graduating from Brown, it had never occurred to me in a million years to go to
( W" {9 A9 i+ }0 z6 Agraduate school. Just out of my imagination. It wasn’t the kind of thing people from my family did.
0 ]: G z; Y7 I0 Z; i1 gWe got, say, what do you call them? …. jobs. And Andy said, no, don’t go do that. Go get a Ph.D.
O! V9 i0 E) u! N3 K. t! ~' ?Become a professor. And I said, why? And he said, because you’re such a good salesman that any, N$ g/ ^0 j' M; _. V' r" y
company that gets you is going to use you as a salesman. And you might as well be selling
; a1 k0 ^$ w0 v8 {! k# P/ Asomething worthwhile like education. [long pause, looks directly at Andy van Dam] Thanks.
# V$ N% [, g/ i7 q# t0 F3 ZAndy was my first boss, so to speak. I was lucky enough to have a lot of bosses. [shows slide of8 k- U9 V. A% e6 Z
various bosses] That red circle is way off. Al is over here. [laughter] I don’t know what the hell
/ d. q7 X5 P" X% x! W$ Yhappened there. He’s probably watching this on the webcast going, my god he’s targeting and he8 { H9 D3 S5 l7 Z
still can’t aim! [laughter] I don’t want to say much about the great bosses I’ve had except that they& S" m ?; t! S8 j' h) e& O( d) z
were great. And I know a lot of people in the world that have had bad bosses, and I haven’t had to
/ O( I2 U; J: ?endure that experience and I’m very grateful to all the people that I ever had to have worked for.
" `0 E9 L3 y, x6 rThey have just been incredible.
- i0 o1 S. P; n* A" x1 oBut it’s not just our bosses, we learn from our students. I think the best head fake of all time comes
) D2 q. E8 G8 J+ D, C# w. f5 Bfrom Caitlin Kelleher. Excuse me, Doctor Caitlin Kelleher, who just finished up here and is starting at9 v# z3 V* F8 n8 H' A
Washington University, and she looked at Alice when it was an easier way to learn to program, and
& w( w) n8 b8 ~/ r Eshe said, yeah, but why is that fun? I was like, ‘cause uh, I’m a compulsive male…I like to make the
0 g* A' J7 R! M5 ~/ X Z, tlittle toy soldiers move around by my command, and that’s fun. She’s like, hmm. And she was the
- K$ n& \9 e- x- f) w* ^one who said, no, we’ll just approach it all as a storytelling activity. And she’s done wonderful work
$ }2 t9 v% m4 g T4 M. H$ N# oshowing that, particularly with middle school girls, if you present it as a storytelling activity, they’re# L% S" a! m" S6 l$ U
P a u s c h P a g e | 19
' l+ P7 H6 O9 b8 |" V6 ^/ N7 Hperfectly willing to learn how to write computer software. So all-time best head fake award goes to) V9 O" R+ ?3 V* ]3 r' c; h% I
Caitlin Kelleher’s dissertation.1 |6 a5 Q8 v' [& d: u3 G2 y" e3 [
President Cohen, when I told him I was going to do this talk, he said, please tell them about having8 g: w- H8 m7 s8 C
fun, because that’s what I remember you for. And I said, I can do that, but it’s kind of like a fish
+ e4 s8 _& m) n( Qtalking about the importance of water. I mean I don’t know how to not have fun. I’m dying and I’m* ^8 X! @+ P+ i5 c6 Y2 A
having fun. And I’m going to keep having fun every day I have left. Because there’s no other way to: w/ g7 h( y! ?/ \$ m1 I
play it.! y7 _ F/ X) Z7 }( I- {
So my next piece of advice is, you just have to decide if you’re a Tigger or and Eeyore. [shows slide
" A7 {( E, F0 i; |. C/ j( uwith an image of Tigger and Eeyore with the phrase “Decide if you’re Tigger or Eeyore”] I think I’m, Y+ j% T. H" }: H
clear where I stand on the great Tigger/Eeyore debate. [laughter] Never lose the childlike wonder.- x q& e$ S0 `. m. B4 c
It’s just too important. It’s what drives us. Help others. Denny Proffitt knows more about helping
. U1 t- H* l6 i: N* ~; F/ k! Gother people. He’s forgotten more than I’ll ever know. He’s taught me by example how to run a7 M1 f* O( o8 }" b* v/ X
group, how to care about people. M.K. Haley – I have a theory that people who come from large
/ w' _' J3 A3 O' R% R/ k# vfamilies are better people because they’ve just had to learn to get along. M.K. Haley comes from a) } O9 Z, |( B9 }0 d9 H- j3 `/ k
family with 20 kids. [audience collectively “aaahs”] Yeah. Unbelievable. And she always says it’s' N8 S5 N7 _( r$ Z, |
kind of fun to do the impossible. When I first got to Imagineering, she was one of the people who- {) X8 E! w0 L/ S9 u2 l
dressed me down, and she said, I understand you’ve joined the Aladdin Project. What can you do?$ W# o# {) L x, J
And I said, well I’m a tenured professor of computer science. And she said, well that’s very nice) A) G( y/ f2 U9 T+ F3 t
Professor Boy, but that’s not what I asked. I said what can you do? [laughter]) m" O0 q+ ]) s! ?2 H8 @
And you know I mentioned sort of my working class roots. We keep what is valuable to us, what we$ G$ o; `4 a2 L2 l6 T( T& X, u
cherish. And I’ve kept my [high school] letterman’s jacket all these years. [Puts on letterman’s
5 X, W+ Y( C/ z" A* ejacket] I used to like wearing it in grad school, and one of my friends, Jessica Hodgins would say, why
: b% i* g+ ]7 c" Rdo you wear this letterman’s jacket? And I looked around at all the non-athletic guys around me
! x: E$ ?* ^( K. dwho were much smarter than me. And I said, because I can. [laughter] And so she thought that was
& v& l8 g7 w3 j" t4 f$ H, Va real hoot so one year she made for me this little Raggedy Randy doll. [takes out Raggedy Randy]
! B3 I. e' F$ |[laughter] He’s got a little letterman’s jacket too. That’s my all-time favorite. It’s the perfect gift for
3 \4 ?& U' B- ]" S* v' Bthe egomaniac in your life. So, I’ve met so many wonderful people along the way., ]; C0 M8 J5 J+ ?% i7 O
Loyalty is a two way street. There was a young man named Dennis Cosgrove at the University of! o# \, H8 h8 ?; V) @# X4 w
Virginia, and when he was a young man, let’s just say things happened. And I found myself talking3 x5 I- m0 U+ o$ [) K
to a dean. No, not that dean. And anyway, this dean really had it in for Dennis, and I could never: x, R1 }( K3 h/ _" b9 ^0 P
figure out why because Dennis was a fine fellow. But for some reason this Dean really had it in for2 d. X8 d8 A# Z
him. And I ended up basically saying, no, I vouch for Dennis. And the guy says, you’re not even
! l" I* l$ G& dtenured yet and you’re telling me you’re going to vouch for this sophomore or junior or whatever? I
1 m$ j( \! o, Fthink he was a junior at the time. I said, yeah, I’m going to vouch for him because I believe in him.$ C$ P. c7 q6 X1 V) X
And the dean said, and I’m going to remember this when your tenure case comes up. And I said,! l& c, o9 _$ q1 i2 `+ U& x% a! M
deal. I went back to talk to Dennis and I said, I would really appreciate you… that would be good.
n7 l" b+ F" ]- D* }2 QBut loyalty is a two-way street. That was god knows how many years ago, but that’s the same! L7 s% Q6 T# f) _1 d
Dennis Cosgrove who’s carrying Alice forward. He’s been with me all these years. And if we only
4 l3 N/ P, `. H0 m2 c3 V: V+ Z/ p! rhad one person to send in a space probe to meet an alien species, I’m picking Dennis. [laughter] You
' Y, Y6 g; O7 `) `* Hcan’t give a talk at Carnegie Mellon without acknowledging one very special person. And that would
0 ~, ], U" n- e2 ~1 o$ F. L* xbe Sharon Burks. I joked with her, I said, well look, if you’re retiring, it’s just not worth living' v+ g0 R( h8 P! L. D& C/ w
anymore. Sharon is so wonderful it’s beyond description, and for all of us who have been helped by
1 E+ g( d4 Y2 _1 k7 K/ @8 I& p* \her, it’s just indescribable. I love this picture because it puts here together with Syl, and Syl is great
8 @; j8 {; O- S0 k( Sbecause Syl gave the best piece of advice pound-for-pound that I have ever heard. And I think all+ w" y2 e4 \: Z5 w: ^7 v; o
young ladies should hear this. Syl said, it took me a long time but I’ve finally figured it out. When it5 e9 d$ I! A* `; B- E' v; c( M
comes to men that are romantically interested in you, it’s really simple. Just ignore everything they
9 j% `- J% ]6 }% v) |say and only pay attention to what they do. It’s that simple. It’s that easy. And I thought back to2 P" Y! }8 E) f$ A
my bachelor days and I said, damn. [laughter]
% z5 i; t8 B7 z+ \% ~1 L0 GNever give up. I didn’t get into Brown University. I was on the wait list. I called them up and they
7 e( i7 a( V5 u) x7 y: ~eventually decided that it was getting really annoying to have me call everyday so they let me in. At Y: i2 ^" h* S8 B% r {0 j5 ^
Carnegie Mellon I didn’t get into graduate school. Andy had mentored me. He said, go to graduate
9 n% `; k3 M) }$ E. D! Aschool, you’re going to Carnegie Mellon. All my good students go to Carnegie Mellon. Yeah, you( `9 K# }" s$ p# J
know what’s coming. And so he said, you’re going to go to Carnegie Mellon no problem. What he ]7 O- b) K" q7 [
had kind of forgotten was that the difficulty of getting to the top Ph.D. program in the country had
% v$ ]1 W2 F+ J/ I' J3 `really gone up. And he also didn’t know I was going to tank my GRE’s because he believed in me.2 b! Y: v$ _( x: k! s+ p
Which, based on my board scores was a really stupid idea. And so I didn’t get into Carnegie Mellon.% j" f( A4 h+ g* N/ i
No one knows this. ‘Til today I’m telling the story. I was declined admission to Carnegie Mellon.
% K; a0 S! |6 k( N$ T& ?And I was a bit of an obnoxious little kid. I went into Andy’s office and I dropped the rejection letter& L2 k7 H1 ~ K/ a: K5 y
on his desk. And I said, I just want you to know what your letter of recommendation goes for at
+ g7 [; J2 ]7 }, H2 uCarnegie Mellon. [laughter] And before the letter had hit his desk, his hand was on the phone and
9 o) ]8 M/ S0 F3 g: `8 |" ]' ~1 |4 F% ahe said, I will fix this. [laughter] And I said, no no no, I don’t want to do it that way. That’s not the
+ H. n7 A% e9 O* m9 h! U7 L9 [way I was raised. [In a sad voice] Maybe some other graduate schools will see fit to admit me.$ @4 A5 H) y8 _. a% @
[laughter] And he said, look, Carnegie Mellon’s where you’re going to be. He said, I’ll tell you what,/ l2 n# q4 P `. i2 E
I’ll make you a deal. Go visit the other schools. Because I did get into all the other schools. He said,
+ q3 P- C% J; t- a y% Tgo visit the other schools and if you really don’t feel comfortable at any of them, then will you let me! \+ u3 \' ?' ?# ^* M- s" L
call Nico? Nico being Nico Habermann [the head of Carnegie Mellon’s Computer Science Dept.] and
6 {! L' ]! K- U6 Q, U+ a1 FI said, OK deal. I went to the other schools. Without naming them by name -- [in a coughing voice]" ^ S: o" U$ o
Berkeley, Cornell. They managed to be so unwelcoming that I found myself saying to Andy, you
) c1 u) }7 @. Rknow, I’m going to get a job. And he said, no, you’re not. And he picked up the phone and he talked
& k/ u- V4 C% V/ t# i. L/ P1 {in Dutch. [laughter] And he hung up the phone and he said, Nico says if you’re serious, be in his
& V8 ]. t, C3 Z4 a9 Qoffice tomorrow morning at eight a.m. And for those of you who know Nico, this is really scary. So+ t0 |. O9 M5 o. ]0 P5 B
I’m in Nico Habermann’s office the next morning at eight a.m. and he’s talking with me, and frankly I' K1 F' y: t, z0 @
don’t think he’s that keen on this meeting. I don’t think he’s that keen at all. And he says, Randy,7 F/ h9 y3 N+ P8 ^" m
why are we here? And I said, because Andy phoned you? Heh-heh. [laughter] And I said, well, since
: Q4 f% n* S6 @you admitted me, I have won a fellowship. The Office of Naval Research is a very prestigious
( l+ G7 I8 v Y8 {9 {- W% ]9 Gfellowship. I’ve won this fellowship and that wasn’t in my file when I applied. And Nico said, a+ S3 R# q- I8 J5 A5 ]& M
fellowship, money, we have plenty of money. That was back then. He said, we have plenty of
* c! L- w* G1 M3 m# a/ ~- Ymoney. Why do you think having a fellowship makes any difference to us? And he looked at me.% t; z# j' l6 y
There are moments that change your life. And ten years later if you know in retrospect it was one of! C8 C( z" \; E" q8 l5 l4 i6 B
those moments, you’re blessed. But to know it at the moment …. with Nico staring through your
0 V' _6 q$ ], X4 W! ]4 CP a u s c h P a g e | 21
0 E L6 o7 C [; ]) K- n4 Msoul. [laughter] And I said, I didn’t mean to imply anything about the money. It’s just that it was an
f3 V( V1 y5 K$ z6 Z4 V2 thonor. There were only 15 given nationwide. And I did think it was an honor that would be, p+ l a( {) }5 O5 j Z8 C* ]7 A
something that would be meritorious. And I apologize if that was presumptuous. And he smiled. a) i8 ^* b' U: Y1 m$ v
And that was good.
2 L, N( O Q9 ESo. How do you get people to help you? You can’t get there alone. People have to help you and I% Q7 b2 D z' H: I7 @# x( \. n
do believe in karma. I believe in paybacks. You get people to help you by telling the truth. Being$ o& n6 A7 K8 i! i) e: X
earnest. I’ll take an earnest person over a hip person every day, because hip is short term. Earnest* P7 e* ?+ |- t, o f
is long term.
6 g- P) |. T7 ^* E. }' eApologize when you screw up and focus on other people, not on yourself. And I thought, how do I
4 Y* ?* M$ t1 S; Vpossibly make a concrete example of that? [Speaking to stage hand] Do we have a concrete; ~2 M2 I; u- C0 W9 m# S, c
example of focusing on somebody else over there? Could we bring it out? [Speaking to audience]
% ?1 z8 ^: `# m$ h# v* M/ ?) M2 m/ R4 {. dSee, yesterday was my wife’s birthday. If there was ever a time I might be entitled to have the focus
# N0 Q+ x3 X5 ]* W7 x1 z5 D# p* ]on me, it might be the last lecture. But no, I feel very badly that my wife didn’t really get a proper
$ k5 J- ?! ^3 I0 Y9 z6 obirthday, and I thought it would be very nice if 500 people— [an oversized birthday cake is wheeled
2 d+ C" _5 d4 ?7 i5 A% O& bonto the stage] [applause] Happy—2 p1 R5 Z9 R7 n6 a) T" T
Everyone:2 h! V$ Q0 M C' N) n0 {/ P( q# G
…birthday to you [Randy: her name is Jai], happy birthday to you. Happy birthday dear Jai, happy
0 C6 L, B5 k e2 O2 X% Pbirthday to you! [applause]8 z& c# R% g7 y# b
[Jai walks on stage, teary-eyed. She walks with Randy to the cake. Randy: You gotta blow it out. The3 h7 b8 ~7 I! l2 L
audience goes quiet. Jai blows out the candle on the cake. Randy: All right. Massive applause.]2 O1 D9 e" Y$ X' N9 o* u
Randy Pausch:, P% \$ b6 B1 I" k/ x
And now you all have an extra reason to come to the reception. [laughter] Remember brick walls let7 `& w8 b2 m7 K' d1 i
us show our dedication. They are there to separate us from the people who don’t really want to
# K9 L1 g1 a2 g9 t$ hachieve their childhood dreams. Don’t bail. The best of the gold’s at the bottom of barrels of crap.
9 i: R7 [, [; U) h4 V4 V+ m[Shows slide of Steve Seabolt next to a picture of The Sims] [laughter] What Steve didn’t tell you was
6 _! `6 ?; D; i2 m- R% Athe big sabbatical at EA, I had been there for 48 hours and they loved the ETC, we were the best, we9 E, B7 p j! |# v9 ^; o4 z4 P
were the favorites, and then somebody pulled me aside and said, oh, by the way, we’re about to
* m8 h. h% o4 w: N9 sgive eight million dollars to USC to build a program just like yours. We’re hoping you can help them* |" B& |* }, W& t& ^8 p
get it off the ground. [laughter] And then Steve came along and said, they said what? Oh god. And
# [8 z) M g( K9 z5 P, e( Sto quote a famous man, I will fix this. And he did. Steve has been an incredible partner. And we
2 ^2 R+ ^; Z; A9 p( Q/ A( v/ d1 Lhave a great relationship, personal and professional. And he has certainly been point man on9 c, @& G3 @! r# y7 {2 s
getting a gaming asset to help teach millions of kids and that’s just incredible. But, you know, it0 g* R9 B x! _% ?. K9 e9 {
certainly would have been reasonable for me to leave 48 hours after that sabbatical, but it wouldn’t, ` U7 D# s' L4 c
have been the right thing to do, and when you do the right thing, good stuff has a way of happening.
! V0 W! |4 S& Y/ l- T8 NGet a feedback loop and listen to it. Your feedback loop can be this dorky spreadsheet thing I did, or4 l) Y: ~' [7 U0 l6 Z
it can just be one great man who tells you what you need to hear. The hard part is the listening to it.7 O( x1 F* J6 @! e
P a u s c h P a g e | 221 O9 w! J2 f& p
Anybody can get chewed out. It’s the rare person who says, oh my god, you were right. As opposed
& U* s1 n) l0 vto, no wait, the real reason is… We’ve all heard that. When people give you feedback, cherish it and
1 A7 _% ^4 a& { }( Q3 c$ n; vuse it./ `( n" L$ X) y5 x/ o
Show gratitude. When I got tenure I took all of my research team down to Disneyworld for a week.
5 b% N" q) u0 v6 U! Q5 eAnd one of the other professors at Virginia said, how can you do that? I said these people just
9 g9 @% u( u7 u" R& j9 ?busted their ass and got me the best job in the world for life. How could I not do that?8 x" _* R0 w% E! o
Don’t complain. Just work harder. [shows slide of Jackie Robinson, the first black major league& G2 i1 L+ {4 g/ K L
baseball player] That’s a picture of Jackie Robinson. It was in his contract not to complain, even
5 M( e, c# w2 z6 D2 vwhen the fans spit on him.
8 f5 m% u& a4 P9 ~Be good at something, it makes you valuable.
; c1 v0 k6 f' A" w7 BWork hard. I got tenure a year early as Steve mentioned. Junior faculty members used to say to me,2 t' w4 u; z# n1 j
wow, you got tenure early. What’s your secret? I said, it’s pretty simple. Call my any Friday night in
1 W: K4 Z5 o+ r- o+ `( w, o) u2 |my office at ten o’clock and I’ll tell you.
, F" v: y" d' b! i cFind the best in everybody. One of the things that Jon Snoddy as I said told me, is that you might
& Y% `" e H+ ?7 G( _have to wait a long time, sometimes years, but people will show you their good side. Just keep: ^) E2 M( q4 W8 g
waiting no matter how long it takes. No one is all evil. Everybody has a good side, just keep waiting,% t" S9 J5 Y W( V0 u* b! i! C% ?
it will come out.- G) e: F) L0 ]5 G7 o( a0 T( _( q( w# t+ l
And be prepared. Luck is truly where preparation meets opportunity.
7 ~0 d- C+ D1 t2 `So today’s talk was about my childhood dreams, enabling the dreams of others, and some lessons
3 [( R9 w7 Y/ N y$ L$ clearned. But did you figure out the head fake? [dramatic pause] It’s not about how to achieve your
/ B% _- _1 o( Ndreams. It’s about how to lead your life. If you lead your life the right way, the karma will take care
6 x1 b+ R$ U3 \' P! ]7 A/ d+ _of itself. The dreams will come to you.9 T# N2 o( A8 |& m: U
Have you figured out the second head fake? The talk’s not for you, it’s for my kids. Thank you all,
; O- Z: ?- p3 M1 s9 K* o8 N' rgood night./ u4 F3 J0 B# L g1 Q
[applause; standing ovation for 90 seconds; Randy brings Jai onto the stage and they take a bow; they sit
2 I: i0 {( x# M! H6 S* @down in their seats; standing ovation continues for another minute]
% m) e: i! U7 RRandy Bryant:/ W3 D) r U+ ?( @' N# p
Thank you everyone. I’d like to thank all of you for coming. This really means a lot I know to Randy.2 V/ x5 t. d* o. O" n' p5 W) {7 C7 H2 Q
He had this theory even up to yesterday that there wouldn’t be anyone in the room.! x0 }2 \( r# }' w+ ]( K* Y
Randy Pausch [from seat]:
$ H* q& [- C% H- _6 y; Y, mAfter CS50…( U& b4 S6 I) ] w# c6 u" c
Randy Bryant:
1 Y1 c1 i- o" B1 F/ CI know. I’m the other Randy. That’s been my role here for the past 10 years ever since Randy
9 V! ~, p% b* I% }/ E! XPausch came here on the faculty. And what I mean by that is, I introduce myself. I’m Randy Bryant$ F* Y/ a, c1 X! _/ h
from Computer Science. They go, oh, Randy from CS. You’re the one that does all that cool stuff of
1 D' z; L$ p) g7 U" `4 l. Bbuilding virtual worlds and teaching children how to program. And I go, no, no, sorry. That’s the/ O! G9 B% E/ j6 K7 A0 i
other Randy. I’m the wrong one. Sorry, I’m just like a dull nerd. [laughter] So, but I’m very pleased/ V1 r+ M& P2 C5 c: D* R8 ^0 r. T1 B. Q
today to be able to sort of run a brief series of ways in which we want to recognize Randy for his k# k9 \/ l1 N
contributions he’s made to Carnegie Mellon, to computer science and to the world at large. So we
6 @) h E9 L( p3 Y% E7 \have a few – it will be a brief program. We have a few people I’ll be bringing up one after the other.
3 n$ n/ G- c! w7 m* K# Z% s! cI’m sort of the MC here. So first I’d like to introduce who you’ve already met, Steve Seabolt from
) F, K# m/ Y* u) wElectronic Arts. [applause]" I$ d- I$ g! q
Steve Seabolt:5 ?, l* H$ F j2 k9 Y! W+ Q \
My family wondered whether or not I would make it through the introduction. [voice starts to crack
& q4 ] G( `' \( Z7 ]$ A3 R$ Sup] And I did that but I might not do so well now. So bear with me. As Randy mentioned, he and I,' s" Q/ F: {/ R# [! \ H
Carnegie Mellon and Electronic Arts share a particular passion about nurturing young girls and trying) b. Z7 l0 x, _( Z+ t( ?( H
to encourage young girls to stay with math and stay with science. Every geek in the world shouldn’t
; O) v' m" z6 ?5 `) hbe a guy. You know, it’s such a twist of fate that there’s so many people that are worried about offshoring,
/ j7 [( ^0 C/ Xand at the same time companies are forced to off-shore, there are fewer and fewer
5 Y( k0 Z" H& k/ F# D' Fstudents entering computer science. And the number of women entering computer science just
: x r* T7 T( ]! U# U" M( C' Mkeeps dropping like a rock. There are way too few Caitlins in this world. And Caitlin, we need so
' Y" k: Z5 O" k- p/ h# |# imany more of you. And with that in mind, Electronic Arts has endowed a scholarship fund. It’s the
5 p1 \' A6 b5 V( URandy Pausch endowed scholarship fund, established in 2007 by EA. In honor of Randy’s leadership
! Y' {/ w8 ]1 ?8 g9 land contribution to education, computer science, digital entertainment, and his commitment to/ ~, ^& w6 g+ Z& I) R8 b4 B8 V
women in technology. This scholarship will be awarded annually to a female undergraduate CMU
( _- ~' {& f' `" s5 \& R7 N! bstudent who demonstrates excellence in computer science and a passion in the pursuit of a career in! u" z7 b3 H& u' H
video games. Randy, we’re so honored to do this in your name. [applause]. H" y8 s( w: C" {8 l5 E" Y
Randy Bryant:! _2 b3 X- i$ P+ k
Next I’d like to introduce Jim Foley. He’s on the faculty at Georgia Tech and he’s here representing
7 B# J: @ G. R5 T5 R1 h) ]" G$ othe ACM Special Interest Group in Computer Human Interaction. Jim. [applause]
2 r$ h0 P6 s) b+ Q; e$ YJim Foley:
' x) Y2 y) G) C[motions to Randy Pausch to come on stage; gives him a hug] That was for Jim. [applause] ACM, the" Z- O: e* l* t7 H5 r
Association for Computing Machinery is a group of about 100,000 computing professionals. One of
( h8 d! h @. Q% L4 z; I( ytheir special areas of interest is computer human interaction. A few weeks ago, someone who’s a% Q! ~/ V( O6 I& z% N' }' Y2 H
very good friend of Randy’s wrote a citation which was endorsed by a number of people and went to
, y/ [5 G7 x3 u# c7 gthe executive committee of SIGCHI, which on behalf of the SIGCHI membership, has authorized this
; n. {$ r4 x: U! `$ v6 F/ yspecial presentation. The citation was written by Ben Schneiderman and worked on then by Jenny
, c1 H7 H- P0 I3 @0 |! KPreese and Ben Peterson, and endorsed by a whole bunch of your friends and now from the+ b! y$ f5 l. l. Z' U7 _) i5 j
executive committee. So let me read to you the citation. Special award for professional1 k8 }0 U& _1 d S$ g
contributions. Randy Pausch’s innovative work has spanned several disciplines and has inspired both
, T' {3 j% ~/ Y2 p$ ?$ Fmature researchers and a generation of students. His deep technical competence, choice of/ x$ \' d6 e( J5 Z4 \- V
imaginative projects and visionary thinking are always combined with energy and passion. We’ve+ T. \8 P- H! p
seen that. From his early work on the simple user interface toolkit to his current work on 3D Alice
i7 T0 F) a cprogramming language, he has shown that innovative tool design enables broad participation in
4 d1 l i: \ O. @0 |5 zprogramming, especially by women and minorities. Randy Pausch has vigorous commitment to
! D) R2 a. y) [& E& U' Bengaging students at every level by compelling and intellectually rigorous projects, and his appealing; `9 M2 A+ }2 `- Z; L# O2 [0 q, u
lecture style for a role-model for every teacher and lecture. Yes, yes yes. [voice starts to crack up]' Q! f' ?5 T( v/ j( a* Z7 G
His work has helped make team project experiences and educational computing research more/ {" `6 e/ ?0 E+ t& d7 n* b: H: R
common and respected. As a National Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator, a Lilly H7 m8 H! ?( M2 n* W
Teaching Foundation Teaching Fellow, co-founder of the CMU ET Center and consultant for Disney
6 B# C U% }7 W) v) lImagineering and EA, Randy’s done pioneering work in combining computing interface design and
; R4 G9 e0 a; G* i( K9 l4 Jemotionally rich experiences. For these and many other contributions, the ACM SIGCHI executive3 |2 ^% }5 z6 O: d1 U
council is proud to present to Randy Pausch a special award for professional contributions.. d" S# l g: L$ j! V2 B* W' G
[applause] [Randy comes back on stage to receive award]
9 `% D* b' V" r- |$ }+ G7 vRandy Bryant:
/ f1 I5 |0 F) v L: Q x, `Thank you, Jim. Next I’d like to introduce Jerry Cohen, the President of Carnegie Mellon University.* u& [0 i& `# m: Y i
[applause]2 [( w; q6 v3 c# O
Jerry Cohen:
1 i% w+ c% R& y2 g5 VThank you other Randy. [Tries to move Randy Pausch’s bag of props to the side of the podium] You
S+ F8 X: `/ |9 E/ C, e; U) u7 ?: M6 Uknow you’re traveling heavy, buddy. Many of us have been thinking about and talking about how
& ~3 d! b" u: \# J+ y0 iwe can recognize you on this campus in a way that is lasting and fitting in terms of what you meant! O4 ]8 v0 X+ G5 x' I4 G
to this university. A lot of people are involved in this. You thought the provost wasn’t paying3 F& U$ Q0 a/ P1 B" `' q+ O' H, u
attention all those years. [laughter] Actually, one of the ways we’re going to remember you is this& D+ O& _& q- h4 x
$50,000 bill for stuffed animals. $47,862.32 for pizza. You’ve made great contributions, Randy, we
' T$ U7 \: {7 n: V% y1 Freally appreciate it. [laughter] One thing we could not do, regrettably, is figure out a way to capture
1 T1 n1 D) F1 D0 Rthe kind of person that you are. You’re humanity, what you’ve meant to us as a colleague, as a
- I! z' D* V4 z' }! Q! zteacher. As a student. And as a friend. There’s just no way to capture that. There is our memories, L9 b5 d+ i) P. E I. [' c
however. And there is a way to remember you every day, as people walk this campus. So we’ve8 G( @& h4 {$ ^/ q
come up with an idea. You’ve done great things for this campus and for computer science and for
- D% T; t7 C. W( O# {" ~( z8 ~" d9 Wthe world. Surely Alice will live on. But the one we’re going to focus on right now is what you’ve
Q% {, ?* r0 ?, P, ~ Ndone to connect computer science with the arts. It was remarkable, it was stunning. It’s had4 A0 T4 }1 U1 O) ?
enormous impact, and it will last, I daresay forever. So to recognize that, we are going to do the
' k3 [2 p9 b/ b4 {2 d& V; Vfollowing. Good job, other Randy. [laughter, as Randy Bryant gets the projector to show the next' @( w( I- D; D7 x8 s, e: ^
slide] In order to effect this, we had to build a building. [Shows slide of mockup of Gates building] A
; G1 ]! N. I" X0 n: G Xhundred million dollar building which will allow us to do the following. You’ll note, by the way, to* p6 l0 f0 G7 n% }- V% G
orient people. So the Purnell Center for the Arts is the home of the School of Drama. That modern+ q* m, m8 G( d' @( f9 B5 L
looking new thing, half of which has a green roof, is the new Gates Center for Computer Science.$ O0 T0 t7 {8 c' G8 S5 T6 j$ q
And we had long planned to connect these two physically, both to allow people to get down from! E% Z, j; ~ a: p' ]! h
the cut to lower campus, and you have to admit it carries tremendous symbolic importance. Well5 U* F0 ?: F( D2 G7 Y8 X- T
on behalf of the Board of Trustees of Carnegie Mellon and on behalf of the entire university, I’m: B' X0 h' l' V
pleased to announce today that the bridge connecting these two will be known as the Randy Pausch
7 u5 D3 W1 Q5 D ~, tMemorial Footbridge. [shows slide of mockup of bridge] [applause] Now actually based on your talk, Y% G% @0 }5 a& s/ l
today we’re thinking now about putting up a brick wall up at either end, and let students see what7 C0 r# S6 u! i* z9 u- ]. a
they can do with it. [laughter] Randy, there’ll be a generation of students and faculty to come here
, q/ o9 ~9 }, ?5 }% ewho will not know you, but they will cross that bridge, they will see your name, and they’ll ask those6 S8 H9 p* m" J$ x
of us who did know you. And we will tell them that unfortunately they were not able to experience/ x! E8 N% W- V( [
the man, but they are surely experiencing the impact of the man. Randy, thank you for all that
5 z$ d c0 |- r% pyou’ve done for Carnegie Mellon. We’re going to miss you. [applause] [Randy walks on stage and8 m+ |. [6 n8 \$ i
gives Jerry a hug]7 C( f, B" }- S- ]. H( o _; F
Randy Bryant:* P5 d: ^; w3 w+ h/ l
So every good show needs a closing act, and so to do that I’ll invite Andy Van Dam. [applause]
8 Y |+ e. B7 N6 Z5 u. E0 g3 u! BAndy Van Dam:
- ^" R9 K g( _' G- ]Oh how I love having the last word. [applause] But to have to go on after that fabulous show, I don’t& }1 `; S0 ^9 N6 X& K
know whether that was good planning. Well I started in Brown in 1965 and it has been my pleasure+ M- ^5 k) t! U6 s( y2 B3 e
and great joy not just to teach thousands of undergraduates and some graduates, but also to work+ T' m3 ~! c9 r8 N2 @' `$ T' w
one-on-one with a couple hundred of them. And over 35 have followed me into teaching I’m proud$ t- O& D ^' W& E v3 q u
to say. Out of those best and brightest it was very clear that Randy would stand out. He showed
; O c, k; U; Kgreat promise early on and a passion about our field and about helping others that you’ve seen
) |' w `+ ^$ t! u7 F& oamply demonstrated today. It was matched by fierce determination and by persistence in the face
$ {" s8 _- W; Q0 o7 d# o6 y/ oof all brick wall odds. And you’ve heard a lot about that and seen that demonstrated as he fights' q1 A/ {( @, V
this terrible disease. Like the elephant’s child, however, he was filled with satiable curiosity, you4 }9 O/ \9 `0 Z% M( k
remember that. And what happened to the elephant’s child, he got spanked by all of his relations,1 n9 n, H; W ]
and you’ve heard some of that. He was brash, he had an irrepressible, raucous sense of humor,
3 P$ }* Y& n7 C/ K m4 \, wwhich led to the fantastic showmanship that you saw today. He was self-assured, occasionally to+ [- e) s F, ]" j3 v3 D
the point of outright cockiness. And stubborn as a mule. And I’m a Dutchman and I know from
. y4 U& C* ?7 h! N( v H V+ y7 xstubbornness. The kind way to say it is he had an exceedingly strong inner compass, and you’ve9 ]4 G; N+ m. |: X# f; P% U/ ^2 R- f
seen that demonstrated over and over again. Now, having been accused of many such traits myself,/ f" p* R. l. r) `$ y
I rather thought of them as features, not bugs. [laughter] Having had to learn English the hard way, I4 K- b7 S, }- e8 u0 G
was a fanatic about getting students to speak and write correct English from the get-go. And Randy
( b# ^, r# [$ L& Othe mouth had no problem with that. But he did have one problem. And I’m having a problem with
: t3 _; g+ S$ \5 q# j# Ymy machine here, here we go. [gets slide to project on screen]. And that was another part of my# F, ?; x! E5 {7 a! k+ l
fanaticism which dealt with having American students learn about foreign cultures. And specifically5 z* i) d5 X/ c1 N( e
about food cultures, and more specifically yet, about Chinese food culture. So I would take my- k7 t. W3 T- y3 P( ?9 {
students to this wonderful Chinese restaurant where they cooked off the menu using a Chinese
7 q2 {4 e% w/ A( P/ @8 Zmenu. And I tried to get Randy to sample this. But would Mr. White Bread touch that stuff?3 S; {0 y6 e/ j+ o$ U5 X
[laughter] Absolutely not. And worse, he refused to learn to eat with chopsticks. I was chairman at
* h# A3 U2 s. C6 Athe time and I said, Randy, you know, I’m not going to let you graduate if you don’t learn to eat with
9 A& H1 v6 u$ K+ G* l/ m kchopsticks! [laughter] It’s a requirement, didn’t you see that? He of course didn’t believe that. And: _* F/ @, e" B6 S
so it came time for graduation and I handed him his diploma. And this was the picture one of my
+ {! h$ ~0 K# `4 d6 U" T% N( ^: ]friends took. [Shows slide of Brown University commencement, 1982, Randy dressed in his cap and# `; |/ V$ I( _% {! Y
gown, opening his diploma, his mouth wide open in surprise] And what you see is Randy opening his7 r7 T5 k# B* Y. S m( G* z# g
diploma to show it to his parents, and there was an autographed copy of the menu in Chinese and+ X/ z6 L& t0 F" X ^" F6 Q& V
no diploma. [laughter, applause] It was one of the few times I got the better of him, I have to
$ @ z7 C* G0 L) X# I2 w" p3 f0 dconfess. Well here we are today, all of us, and hundreds and hundreds of people all over the+ b) z8 P6 e# e, f% C
country, I dare say all over the world, participating in this great event to celebrate you and your life.; d( s. Y, R7 L9 C
Randy is the person, the Mensch, as we say in Yiddish. Your manifold accomplishments as a model( B% L2 U0 j9 j* {6 Q: A* q
academic, especially as a mentor to your students. Your Disneyland expeditions not only were* v7 Q( N& k' L" x7 p3 m
unique but they are legendary. You have more than fulfilled the terms of Brown University Charter,0 o" R' T" Z( |+ S! s) C8 _
which are: to discharge the offices of life with usefulness and reputation. Your utter devotion to. |2 @/ q* p1 R- T( M
your family and your career are exemplary, and continue unabated as you cope with the immensity
- b; Y1 }7 ^ r1 g4 ~, e! W- Jof your situation. You exemplify undaunted courage and grace under pressure. The most terrible
! @$ B/ b K% A5 c8 Q9 l8 H+ }pressure one can imagine. Randy, you have been and you will continue to be a role model for us.# U+ z, Q& C5 E' i6 [1 x0 j
[Voice starts cracking up] Thank you so much for all you have done for us. And to allow us to tell! S' ^9 S. u( Z F/ P) t7 V3 V
you privately and in such a public way how much we admire, honor, and indeed love you. [applause]
0 M D& h8 j! i/ s2 u[standing ovation]0 ]1 n' T, q& U: j& p
' P+ j7 X4 a% C( U2 x3 [5 d
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