tv Charlie Rose Bloomberg October 3, 2017 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT
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♪ studios infrom our new york city, this is charlie rose. on jeff gordon, charlie -- charlie rose is on way -- a way on assignment. -- at least 50 people were killed and more than 500 injured as of this evening. it is the deadliest shooting in modern u.s. history. the government has been identified as stephen paddock of mesquite, nevada. to kill himself up for swat team interferes hotel room.
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here's a look at the cbs evening news coverage of this case events. >> america is a nation in mourning tonight after the deadliest mass shooting in modern u.s. history. it happened behind me. that is the 43 story and live a hotel and casino. a heavilypolice say armed, and broke windows and fire down on thousands of people attending an open-air concert. many fled down the street behind me here. you can see bloody footprints on close theyk and the let the hand as they literally ran for their lives. at least 59 people killed, most of them by the gunfire occurred police say the gunman, stephen
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paddock killed himself before they arise. they have found no links to terrorism. we have found extended coverage tonight. >> country music star jason aldean was on stage on the firing again -- began. time,y after 10:00 local but it took a full 20 seconds for people to realize this was not fireworks. then, came chaos. the sound of automatic weapon fire mixed with pandemonium. -- held on a police officer for
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life. some people ran and others talk cover behind walls and date. others, throws in the open. everyone was laying on top of each other trying to get out of the way. the shots just cap coming. >> we just need to get people over to the hospital. >> meanwhile, the police searched for the gunman. fire fromre taking mandalay bay on the boulevard side. asthe shooter, identified
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stephen paddock was firing from four football fields away. >> we need to pop this and see if there is a response from this guy. -- where he had been a guest since last thursday they found weapons. himself. killed we will have to go through our camera and video to see whether we engaged in at the same approximate time. scaredve never been that
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in my life ever. >> even when people managed to get out of the post talked to you and were running down the streets, there were still running in fear with the sound of gunfire coming off the .uildings >> we're just beginning to end the identities of the victims. carter evans is following that part of the story. what it mustagine have been like. inferences arriving one half. in all, more than 500 patients were transferred to local hospitals. not all that were wounded arrived in ahead of its. anyonfuse public in direction they could come over walls, on top of each other and hotel lobbies trying to get out of the line of fire.
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>> gail davis was at the concert. >> bistro have been standing right beside me and she had fallen in the first she stood there and she grabbed her stomach and her hands were bloody and she said that. tom mcintosh was shot in the leg when a stranger broke into the emergency room in the back of the truck. more than 100 gunshot victims poured into diversity medical center. >> these patients were some in a coming in so fast, we did what was called damage control which was stopping the process of
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dying and we did that all night. >> by morning, more than 50 people were dead. melton --ar-old sonny survived and was hospitals running short on resources, they put out a plea for blood. >> you look outside, there's all kinds of people that want to donate blood. >> this is university medical center. it is the only level one trauma center in the state. last night, they took in one of your patients heard for them died and 40 have been treated and released. with twor, i spoke brothers who were watching the concert just steps away from the
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band. >> to people realize what was happening? >> no. they look at her time with the and you could see something had punctured. you could hear the first round off. >> how long was the shooting? minutes.st 10 to 15 >> as this was happening, what did you see? >> seen people come from all different angles, trying to find safety. >> i saw people littered everywhere. it was just noise. we were waiting for the shots and they finally stopped. orthere is a gate cap open
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temples. no one knew what to do. there were people everywhere. physically, we are thankful but as residents, it is mental trauma. he never won anything like this to happen. >> justice and homeland security correspondent heaven working his law enforcement sources and here is what he thought about. >> after he checked into the mandalay bay hotel last thursday, investigators say he next two days gambling in the 19ino called a cash of weapons. two of the guns were on tripods. police and fbi are trying to
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determine a motive. >> shock and dumbfounded about this. >> investigators said he was interviewed by investigators for four hours. >> the fact he had those kinds of weapons -- where did he get automatic weapons? religious, political affiliation. >> stephen paddock he -- was in andmment -- was accountant gambler. he sold multiple properties over the state the last four decades. his father was on the fbi's most wanted list.
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until last night's mass shooting, stephen paddock's only law enforcement and was this 2009 parking ticket. >> it was well planned out and it took a lot of strategic planning. >> he had a view of the concert and he probably had taught -- gone to other rooms. >> a search of his home turned up 18 additional weapons, explosives, and thousands of rounds of ammunition. but claimed responsibility, investors have found no link. >> people who encounter paddock recently are also having a tough time believing he could have committed mass murder. name,soon as he saw the it was instant recognition.
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from thechased the gun shop owner since february. quest if something doesn't feel right, we will do everything we can to stop the sale and none the alarms went up. >> today, more force in church his mesquite, nevada home. >> we have not had any run-ins with him in the past. >> he was and is god. he was kind of quirky, but a nice guy. >> it is unbelievable to think someone in our community could go into something like this. it is unbelievable. under.as a licensed he lived here with his
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with this one of them? >> absolutely. present -- president bush's term we had a shooter virginia tech. human in, obtained a gun and killed students at virginia tech. i was there with president bush after the shooting when he went to meet the families. it is horrific. the scar this leaves on a one life lasen vegas can be understated. the white house response. >> service all the time. first reports are always wrong. you can imagine people in the white house. this is a white male, retiree, if she four-year-old. the first reports of injuries
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and death, that number has been climbing all morning. i suspect it will continue to increase. what you are trying to motiveand is what is the . was it someone with a mental or weething driving him that need to understand. . to talk to everyone, especially in the last 72 hours. all of that will paint a picture. guns.d he get the well was he doing with automatic weapons? >> there was a first response on the scene and first response and we saw the present state earlier. >> the president, what we expect
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in that first statement is to unify the country. to comfort those who are grieving and inspired law-enforcement to continuing tough task. remember, law-enforcement loss andhese one colleague another injured. the president has to be a comforter and i think that is the tone the president struck. >> week keep hearing about the profile. what is that profile and what is farrom we would hurt so that surprises you the most? >> i think the age of the quite surprising. the expect this to be someone someone -- iter, may turn out this was a disinfected loner, and older person.
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all we know is he spoke to his family after hurricane irma halfing -- asking if you had power back. earlierlt compelled announcedocal police so far they see no international connection to terrorism. this is after isis tweeted saying they served as an inspiration for the attack and that stephen paddock had converted to islam. what did they do the question mark -- wanted to do that? distributed this on a channel called telegram and on and the fbi wanted to be
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clear there's no evidence to support that. winning and so they are looking for positive publicity. that is all this was. the right that it was thing. if there's any connection, certainly of now there is no connection. -- then moves to las vegas. at this point, that is the plan. >> the first and most important
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thing is you do not disrupt the investigation. localwants to encourage competitions. remember, as of this morning, there were still recovering bodies from the scene. what the president will likely the strip, front of the way that he does not disrupt the recovery efforts going on. >> the present remarks were not at all descriptive. he talked about finding life in the darkness. what do you expect to hear from him moving forward? >> i think you'll hear similar wednesday whenge
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he is in las vegas. the conversation will turn to the weapons ban, gun control. all that is coming. to 72 hours, you want to keep the focus on the recovery efforts. hotels in africa, europe, began -- it is quite common outside the united states. that does not lend itself to this. mandalay bay is connected to them all. there's no way you can imagine trying to screen people and their luggage. it is too big. quest it is not just hotels, it is restaurants sometimes.
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there are a lot of places where you go through a security screening to get in. >> it is easier when you have a .ard target like in airport something like this is very difficult. i think you will have to see. imagine if you are able to screen luggage, they might have been able to see the weapons or ammunition, but i think we are going to have a conversation about how we do screenings for hotels. >> where were lone wolves on your list of security concerns in 2006 to 2008 versus now? were so worried about
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al qaeda and iraq. it is not we did not fear lone -- were notey are high on the list. an increaseave seen in lone wolf's. how is the coordination -- how does the court a short between the police and the feds? >> they will have a joint terrorist task force. what it does is courtney all the local and state efforts. for example, the fbi brazen the atf. they all help with any international leads. they help with forensics. that's all sorts of ways
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under his readership, the company spoke of increasingly towards the cloud. he's also generated more than $250 billion, making microsoft most viable company in the world. pleased to have him at the table for the first time. >> thank you. how did the book come about? did you realize you had a challenge?
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it was what led to its greatness . quite the idea of writing the book -- i >> the idea of writing the book -- when was thinking , itt the journey i was on is hard to find business books that are written next post. most of the books are grand successes or grand failures. him are you going to write a book the said no. that whaten it hit me we as a company and me are a seat -- ofng through this process .enewal, let me reflect on it
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it is not a destination that we reached, but the unanswered me.tions is what caused the thing you brought up, is due companies have a soul? microsoft exists? >> that is where i have to go all the way back to the formation of the company and reflect on the product. >> what were the needs question -- operationlways everything that is our identity.
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when i think about that in today's context, in fact justice monday, i was talking about how we are taking tools in bringing to the quantum. what comes naturally to microsoft is creating tools, crating technology so that others can create more technology. that to me is more the reality. what bill, paul, and steve all recognized was the most viable of resources that humankind has found that can be applied to any challenge and you see it. today's world, it is probably 19 95 whennt than
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microsoft found it. charlie: gotten those microsoft has a lot of money. there was a sense that it or it had become complacent or lost hadway or other companies run past it. the world of technology, it had leapt forward. can you look at the company that , we had for and say become complacent? we were were were because we had lost one? >> some of these comparisons are interesting. you could say the distance
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between us and our competition through which we do it in the late 90's community in the early 2000's, there was daylight. >> now, there is for five competing everyday and i like that. having more competition is a good thing. i don't think we should measure ourselves between us and the competition. similarave capabilities. >> what comes more naturally to us is others can use technology. that is what i want us to be good at. to rediscover the things that are innate enough.
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>> this is being driven by orers in a different context identities. create: but you have to cash you think an environment similar to them to the better than they have ever been. simulates them to be their highest potential and makes them not want to disappoint, not only themselves but the place they exist. >> one of the things i've realized is when you are a start your looking for success. in theu get traction hit, you have this beautiful thing that happens.
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aroundability built up the project. your growing every quarter, every year. your culture is being reinforced and then the real challenge starts because everything that growth at some point stopped going and then declines. the -- charlie: sometimes companies are hard to lead and they tried to add to what brought them the relevant thinking clearly with a blank sheet in canvas so they can't really create things fresh because some part of them is connected to what has been successful.
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-- we caught some waves and missed some waves. on that measure, if you look at 1985, we haveo competed against an existential threat. >> everyone knows that ai is here and it is powerful. and you are it willsoft's connection that enable microsoft to achieve its potential. another not just feature. it is a fundamental technology
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significanto have technology. check swing to multiple what ai means to you. >> to me, it is the technology that will empower us more so than any piece of software we have created. i will give you an example. we have the capability to have software that can recognize objects. any feed and say this is a book, say that is charlie, he is smiling. being able to recognize options.
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it basically gives anyone this .utting-edge capability she can tell me for the first , she can check out the ingredients. she says i can now walk into a rightence and that is the one. her, ai is really empowering. one of the other things, a group of passionate people did was it brought technology together which allows kids with dyslexia --
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i look at that and i said well, that is empowerment. technology is going to have unintended consequences or even create displacements. let us not be afraid of it and what good it can do. charlie: the power of ai, not a laser supercomputers a lot of things done, but because the power to look at things. your face into differences that are relevant to medical diagnosis. of the things i was talking -- when you doas
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radiotherapy, the radiologist spends quite a bit of time planning by looking at images and they have to make sure they get the tumor and the healthy organs. replacingtalk about radiologist, let's talk about how we empower them so they can .pend more time that to me, are the kinds of things. there are machines now that can make analysis that are as accurate as human beings by looking ahead -- at images. >> that is correct. .n certain narrow fields yes, if you train a machine to do a very specific task, it can
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do it very well using the learning. one of the things that is amazing about human beings is still not replicate double at scale is you can learn one thing and you can get better at something that is not directly related. that is -- charlie: whereas machines -- > >> are much more narrower. places withirst service in cap translate. we brought these three strands intechnologies, speech machine technology. we gave it skype data. you could be speaking in chinese
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and we can have a real-time conversation without interpreters. once you teach it chinese and english, it will get better between german and english. that chapter learning -- ability to transcend one domain. kids can learn something in math and apply in physics. that ability is something we in ourch more innately species. we are getting there, but not yet. -- it is one of these techniques that in the 80's -- narrow networks was a way for people to using anition
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technique. it went out of fashion, but some researchers who are into it going. then, around for five years ago, we had enough data, enough to give power and also new algorithm checks and techniques that people in academia were building and they all brought up together. now we have the ability to do , objectecognition recognition and it is amazing. one of the things we talked about this we have to ability speak -- speech recognition better than humans can. we figured out that having a deep narrow network is like brain some part of our tuned for perception.
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downould say if you break all the things we do with our perceive, of them is and then we act -- planning. one could say we are very good at some perception tasks. i think we have a long way to go in general cognition. planning some of the things it is fascinating to see. when you put all these things together, we have arrived at what people call artificial general intelligence. i personally believe we are a ways off from that, but the right road this time.
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can you talk about quantum computing? started microsoft research in 1995. this speech recognition thing is important. let's start now. it is 2017 where it is not possible for us to do better speech recognition. i think these are long-term projects. we have been at this project for already a decade. it is amazing. fundamentalhe physics that are required to create the physical accentuation of the cubit and then underway for computer
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science. the reality, but we needed come up for the abundance that we have been someone is telling me the first super curator -- xpercomputers -- the xbox one is going to have 7 billion transistors. you can say that is amazing, but yet when i think of all the weer we have in the cloud, can still find the catalyst that in absorb the world's carbon solve the problem of global warming. iscan't find material that super conducting. we can't even model the enzymes that produce food so in some sense -- charlie: we are working on all
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those projects. >> they all require more computing power. if he said what is this quantum -- essentially, you will trace the path, retrace, start a new path, on and on yugo. these are such heart problem second on. except, for the quantum computer patheach every simultaneously. of all the things we said, what would you like -- what question would you like to see answered most? >> i think the real challenge -- one of the things that
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most nejra about this country, it is never in human history was toossible for some people live with so much surplus and wealth being created. things talked about is, how canestion -- actively create economic surplus and how can economic surplus translate into equitable growth? growth -- we'll have the worst of all
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worlds and frankly we will not have increased equity. if we can come up with new technology and new technology is .reating a surplus that is a challenge of our time. charlie: since the time you acame ceo, there has been $250 billion appreciation in microsoft market via. >> that is what the stock price is saying. i don't think stock markets are indicators of leading success. great work happened before i became ceo. but is delivered on your watch.
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>> that is correct but that is how i look at it. primarilyas it been in creating new markets? things, rather than -- the cloud, other things, rather than expanding from windows? >> i think that's true. in fact, still windows is a big part because people do need large screens. they need to create and that is where we want to innovate. we now have a very big business and our productivity that spans all devices. charlie: what did you want from linkedin?
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>> we have been users of office, windows. what is a commonality? they are all professionals. linkedin is a professional network so we wanted to bring the world's professional cloud along with a professional network so we can help people all of the world who are professional get more done. charlie: when you look at, what do you see her on the corner by 2035?ly as
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-- we talked about ai, but we did not talk about mixed reality. this is the other area we are excited about. when i walked into my office and put on my holdings, i see all these screens which i have set up. i have an infinite number of screens. this is the first medium where we found the ability to mix what is real with what is artificial. -- we were talking about medicine and surgery. doctors at the cleveland clinic are being taught anatomy using the holland because they don't need a cadaver. they can have a hologram that can be resized. charlie: so we are talking
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about virtual reality? >> already reality is seeing the real world and augmented world. that is why we call it makes reality. it is your choice whether you want to be in the virtual reality or augmented reality. you dial the amount of immersion you want for the application. made cars.ays now they are using hollow lens lolens --being able to see built.el as it is being
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design of anything is not going to be the same because you can these programs and see the output right next to you as a hologram and it will be game changing. charlie: one of the things he did-- one of the things you .s bring bill back you wanted him to do what? >> one of the things that founders have is is these magical power to be able to bring the best out of people. one some at says go meet with bill and talk about artificial .ntelligence
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one, they will bring their a veryand bill will be honest in giving feedback of what he thought about of their work. wanted what we really and that is what it does. it is ok if you miss a thing or two about let's make sure we are going to the future with the admission. thank you so much. santander della -- sorry in th
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♪ 7:00 a.m. here in hong kong, we are live from bloomberg's asian headquarters. i am yvonne man, welcome to "daybreak asia." uber at a crossroads, the board approves three new board members in 2019. toyota leads the pack as u.s. automakers shifted gears. markets grew for the first time this year in september. betty: from bloomberg's global headquarters i am betty liu here in new york. it is after 7:00 p.m. tuesday. larry fink talking taxes. the blackrock boss says president trump's plan will not pass without changes to it. g
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