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tv   [untitled]    November 20, 2013 11:30am-12:01pm PST

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5, 4, 3, 2, 1. yeah. (clapping) go bullseye.
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(barking) >> the public wants to access particular information about your house or neighborhood we point them to gis. gis is a combination of maps and data. not a graphic you see on a screen. you get the traffic for the streets the number of crimes for a police district in a period of time. if the idea of combining the different layerce of information
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and stacking them on top of each other to present to the public. >> other types of gis are web based mapping systems. like google earth, yahoo maps. microsoft. those are examples of on line mapping systems that can be used to find businesses or get driving directions or check on traffic conditions. all digital maps. >> gis is used in the city of san francisco to better support what departments do. >> you imagine all the various elements of a city including parcels and the critical infrastructure where the storm drains are. the city access like the traffic lights and fire hydrants. anything you is represent in a
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geo graphic space with be stored for retrieval and analysis. >> the department of public works they maintain what goes on in the right-of-way, looking to dig up the streets to put in a pipe. with the permit. with mapping you click on the map, click on the street and up will come up the nchgz that will help them make a decision. currently available is sf parcel the assessor's application. you can go to the assessor's website and bring up a map of san francisco you can search by address and get information about any place in san francisco. you can search by address and find incidents of crime in san
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francisco in the last 90 days. we have [inaudible] which allows you to click on a map and get nchldz like your supervisor or who your supervisor is. the nearest public facility. and through the sf applications we support from the mayor's office of neighborhood services. you can drill down in the neighborhood and get where the newest hospital or police or fire station. >> we are positive about gis not only people access it in the office but from home because we use the internet. what we used to do was carry the large maps and it took a long time to find the information. >> it saves the city time and money. you are not taking up the time of a particular employee at the assessor's office. you might be doing things more
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efficient. >> they have it ready to go and say, this is what i want. >> they are finding the same things happening on the phone where people call in and ask, how do i find this information? we say, go to this website and they go and get the information easily. >> a picture tells a thousand stories. some say a map equal good after everybody and thank you for being here to witness and a celebrate the signing of dues process for all ordinance in san francisco. and first, i'd like to commend supervisor avalos for your work supervisor in bringing this
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important legislation to this body before the board and public. i want to thank all the other supervisors as a role wholly know they spent a lot of time on this to think about the changes we're macro and i especially want to give a particular things to tang and kim for oh, amendments it strengthened the ordinance itself. i also want to give a very strong thank you it the numerous agencies about public safety but the cabinet rights ease the cabinet advocates many are in the room today including the groups that xhiepsz is rights committee i had the opportunity to hear the stories of victim who were getting tangled up with
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icing detainers for trying to cooperate with our police department. i'm also glad to have our police chief and he also is the first chief in the state of california to support assemblyman trust act which all of you has been signed by governor brown. thousands of our members of our limited english and immigrant community, in fact, all our commensurate's live in fear of did he portion and they've mistrusted the system. so this is a message i want to send by the signing of this ordinance and i'm speaking to our immigrant communities that's it's safe absolutely save to call the police if you're a
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victim or witness to a crime. everyone knows we need to stand against s come we also retain some local flexibility to deal with violent felons and while we compromised on that aspect of it and understood how complicated that was that perhaps we had points of view on we never lost sight of getting rid of s came. so we do what i think other government's should do we found the common ground and that's why i'm proud to be signing this ordinance. i'd like to take p the opportunity to invite supervisor avalos what it's meant to him
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but basing also to the rest of the city. thank you, mr. mayor. and i want to thank you for your work on this legislation. we met in early august to discuss this item and i was very impressed with how much you thought about the issue and what the city is facing and the immigrant in inform and around this country is facing with the s come system. your well, with our staff. i want to thank law enforcement as well as for your input in contrast this legislation and thank you sheriff and the police departments who helped craft this legislation. i most of all, i didn't bring this legislation forward as the
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defense economy did interest i represent a district about 50 percent of usor foreign-born so some people on the street have experience with immigration that are really unfair to the contributions they're making in san francisco but the organizing that was good morning and the conversation was very, very strong and actually passing this legislation and doing the advocacy puts you tell u us at a higher level to protect immigrants. and the relationship we build between government and community will strengthen our police efforts to make us safer. and most of all, i want to thank people like nellie who got entangled as a victim and later spent 8 months facing
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deportation procedures. no one should have to have fear of calling the police wondering if they're going to get deported. people should be able to come forward as witnesses or victims and this legislation helps that happen. as the mayor said no one here should have any fear again if you're immigrant call the police whether you're a victim or witness. i want to thank the colleagues. i do want to thank supervisor kim for helping to bring forward amendments we worked all agree on to move forward this legislation. everyone are regardless of our citizenship status should have due process and it's a constitutional right and it's
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the fifth amendment of our constitution and we here in san francisco uphold that and we say that our values should drive our values. thank you, mr. mayor. look forward to your signing this legislation (clapping) there it is, done (clapping)
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>> hello everyone welcome to tech shop. there's a few seats up here if someone wants to join us in the front rows. for those of you don't know it's a yup we over a classroom for making equipment were we think this is a great panel so i'll let them into through their introductions. this is a great place to talk about is manufacturing moechtd. we have seen what happened when you give people the skills for design technology. we've having had typing machines
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and some of the member projects in the back feel free to take a look at those after but i want to tick e kick things off if you want to take a tour of the stop next door feel free but peer open 7 days a week so take a look at the technology you'll hear about that and we welcome you to the community. i'd like to a turn it it over to mayor ed lee to kickoff the session and i forgot to mention we consider the mayor an official maker he took his first class here he can come back in and make i believe that he can think of (clapping) >> well kuar in little rocky
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thank you very much. first of all, keri thank you and a staff again for inviting us back to tech shop. i was here last week and i have proof. what's happening in san francisco and the bay area is incredible. we have a 5.6 point unemployment rate and over 16 hundred technology companies that employ over 46 thousand people and we're on the verge of dlovr relationships we've never had before which recent public-private perspiring i partnership that are exciting and innovative. when you look at what is happening with incubators to the large companies like sales force you'll realize that people want to stay in the european setting particularly in the bay area and
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have the rich culture but they want to create the next generation of talent. those companies started here because there was extreme transplant that called themselves platform engineers and others that would help great companies like twitter start up and now fits our job to use this innovative talent it to make sure we i yeast generations of that talent and for any to having is the best give to have ingrown talent. and that's why i want to begin because this little model it's the first of an elaborate propriety but it's my first sample. i have to tell you the story 4
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kids middle age kids in 6 and 7 and 8th grade taught me how to make that. and in 15 to 20 minutes i went on the xhurpz and they helped me to drag down the icons i had to create some with dimensional talent and they taught me we designed it and a 3-ds eed on it on the computer i had four students teach me then we put it to the 3-d printers. and it began to print out. if you don't see it from where you're sitting it says go to state warriors mayor ed lee. talk about the future.
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this is simply an example of where technology and innovation is taking what we described as the maker manufacturing movement in san francisco that when designed property typing and all innovations matched together that's itself question we put forgot how do we sustain that flat line and grow it and innovate just to sit on our laurldz twitter is a great company let's just watch them grow but he want to create the talent and then take it to the next generation of those companies. they'll be like the second or third generation there will be thousands of employees here and
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they see the education institution and local government and policies supporting them and they in turn use their fluoroscopic genus and get involved like we've annuity other companies that introduced the ipads and training. this is that wonderful circle that i think innovations is going to bring us so we're back here really to ask companies how do we create the talent pool and sustain this employment rate to down further whether their returning veterans or new kids from our public schools how do we get them involved involved.
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this is a job of the supervisors and mayor and i suggest to you, we can't sit on our laurels. this is the time week to week we're going to prevent night time ever in the future we talk about a bubble burst if we do the right things will will be clear opportunity to work hard and get those things done. with that, i want to introduce to you, chris anderson has been historically editor and the owner of wire magazine so he knows what's going on in the world of technology but recently he's the ceo of robotics and he's helping us to understand the manufacturing where it take
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places no longer in the big steel miles by manufacturing is going to take a completely different road and how good policies not only tax breaks by where zoning is and to find space to match where people are. we're lucky to be in the city we have to do it right things to keep this momentum going. it's critical this time period but we must have those meeting with our technology leader so with that i'd like to introduce chris anderson 3-d robotics (clapping) >> terrific thank you. and thank you for coming. a so as the mayor said this is
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part of a listening tour that's part of the forum is to help with the policies and the mayor staff about what they should be doing to advance what we know it is a growing movement. the manufacturing is cool again. things have changed this is not the 1970s or the sort of grinding san mateo task miles. it's digital manufacturing made it to the desktop. and it looks like software but it's in it's innovations side looked like hardware.
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we're fortunate to have a number of panel itself but it's important to talk about what the future looks like in the bay area to get our questions and the mayor's staff is going to hopefully take notes. so from the left the founder of other labs and talk about your number one topic for discussion tonight >> the microphones is in front of you. >> my voice is not enough. we're a lab in san francisco we have - we're spinning out a new robotics company using machines and rob both the macro both the.
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we're doing the awkward projects of bike products. why are we doing it in san francisco it's notes easy. the reason we're here is for the talent we're not here because of the city wages on schools and children human resources our talent as soon as they have children moves out of the city. but we also i believe strongly that there are two types of things that has the revolution in manufacturing. precision is incredibly cheap to the manufacturing processes look
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like software. their smokestacks are wrerg so the opportunity is taking the software controls and producing products in the city. that's a huge opportunity and i'm interested in that as a general manufactures. >> next is the director of the association or organization that represents the growing class of san francisco-based measures. i think >> we started with the existing manufacturers who were in the city were low terence and fast-forward it we have 5 hundred farthest in the city and it's an e go system like many
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that were sitting at the panel who are younger having the manufacturing adams into their process. we have traditionally what feels like debar time merchandising and food and beverage manufacturing. i'm interested in two things that are related to new and old school manufacturing. how do we help some of the old manufacturing companies but small personally listed production but their lagging in accepting the newer manufacturing technologies. this doesn't mean we have this markers and hackers and people developing things and the next step how by the we take the
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commercial viable to the scale whether here or in the u.s. how do we make the entrepreneurs design a way to economically make things better >> before i get to the next one this is a conversation. your questions can come by raising our hand or submitting it through the twitter. this is hash innovation month someone will follow it and bring those questions. so the panel will bring the audited questions as well. next up. katz is about indigo go. one of the important catalytic which the basically, the web generation in addition to the desktop digital processing katz
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with indigo go. this is recognition there's a way to bring consumers into the financial model of innovation and manufacturing at the grinning i beginning of the process which is as important as the digital process as well. and they've got a historical amount of entrepreneurship >> things why that was a great introduction. hi, i'm kate and i work at indigo go which is as chris mentioned it's a leading platform that's based in san francisco. we were off and on here in january 2008 and we've seen so much innovations in companies to come to life through our platform. any week at any given time you
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can see we're describing million dollars every week. i'm a small business owner and we started in san francisco and move forward to belmount we have a craft brewery canning line. and we go around the area for our clients. we got our start on ingo-go which is how i learned about the company so we're doing here in san francisco is empowering people to what matters to them. our fournldz set out to make sure that anybody who had a great idea what we was able to kick with a audience that that should be the thing that empowers and funds and gets great ideas off the ground and
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not have gatekeepers it should be up to the people to make it happen. i'm so persuade u proud to see - when i started i started 15 months ago and i was employee 22 and now we're around 60. so that's the demonstration of our growth to show that it is astronomical when you give the people the tools to make things happen to see what can happen. we had a caption recently raise $13 million for a platform for a smart phone. we had a caption raised $23 million for a maiming home security devise depress people are making real money and i'm proud possible part of it and part of the community >> thank you kate. one other announcement i want to ment