263
263
Sep 5, 2016
09/16
by
WTMJ
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her creations always blossom into out of this world kodak moments. too pretty to drink. too delicious not to."mmm, very good. is this what they mean by the hair of dog? "hair that, it's a little abstract now.""that's why it's perfect that it's just temporary because it takes the pressure off of me. if it doesn't come out it's great because customer pretty much drinks it right away." that's why making art out of coffee is mel's cup of tea. coming up... a final check of the weather. plus-- out of line. how a sideline at a high school football game ended up like dan krebbiel: i'm dan krehbiel -- a vietnam combat veteran. we don't need politicians playing games with attack ads. there's a better way. i've read russ feingold's plan. he goes after the terrorists' oil money and arms supplies. he combines targeted military force with eastern states to take on the terrorists in their own backyard. russ feingold offers a tough, realistic plan to protect america. russ vo: i'm russ feingold and i approve this message. at at&t, we believe in access. the opportunity for everyone to exp
her creations always blossom into out of this world kodak moments. too pretty to drink. too delicious not to."mmm, very good. is this what they mean by the hair of dog? "hair that, it's a little abstract now.""that's why it's perfect that it's just temporary because it takes the pressure off of me. if it doesn't come out it's great because customer pretty much drinks it right away." that's why making art out of coffee is mel's cup of tea. coming up... a final check of...
44
44
Sep 26, 2016
09/16
by
CSPAN2
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eye 44
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know that you are background is by nancy and piat end journalism's so what was your experience with kodak into history? >> and as someone who has a background in business will was the experience i begin to history? this so many of these are separate from science or humanities and it is all different kind. but i thought of myself as somebody as a torture producer and -- an odd to produce or ended is so fascinating. i love to make gold is paper articles -- newspaper articles and even read the writing skills. that certainly helped me want i've loved every minute of it. i don't think this is old but give us the story of john glenn. would please? [laughter] >> is a request to recounting of the most well-known anecdote to this particular history in this end the book but and over the last 50 years and the catherine johnson with the orbital mission of the john clad flight would dash john glenn fight and it as you know, way a computer we've the cab as electronic hardware. so in the advent of the dermis electronic calculating machines a computer was somebody that computed enactment somebody that wo
know that you are background is by nancy and piat end journalism's so what was your experience with kodak into history? >> and as someone who has a background in business will was the experience i begin to history? this so many of these are separate from science or humanities and it is all different kind. but i thought of myself as somebody as a torture producer and -- an odd to produce or ended is so fascinating. i love to make gold is paper articles -- newspaper articles and even read...
126
126
Sep 5, 2016
09/16
by
CNNW
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kodak supplied the film. and the film was about 6.6 inches wide. weighed approximately 1,200 pounds. there were 30 miles of film. that's incredible, for each camera. and the film had to travel extremely fast in order to get the resolution the cia wanted. at 200 inches per second, like that. we also had to make sure all the equipment after being subjected to launch, you know, high gs and vibration, stayed in alignment and stayed in focus. people really don't understand what it takes to build something like this. >> because the hexagon camera was the largest and most complex ever put in space, a very large launch vehicle was required. >> the size of the hexagon vehicle itself was about the size of a school bus, yes. >> the hexagon used an adaptation of the titan missile upgraded with solid fuel boosters like the space shuttle had to get this whole system up there, 100 miles into orbit. >> yeah, it was a huge vehicle. absolutely. >> the first launch of the hexagon was june 15th, 1971. that was a nail-biter. sometimes those rockets exploded above the p
kodak supplied the film. and the film was about 6.6 inches wide. weighed approximately 1,200 pounds. there were 30 miles of film. that's incredible, for each camera. and the film had to travel extremely fast in order to get the resolution the cia wanted. at 200 inches per second, like that. we also had to make sure all the equipment after being subjected to launch, you know, high gs and vibration, stayed in alignment and stayed in focus. people really don't understand what it takes to build...
890
890
Sep 11, 2016
09/16
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MSNBCW
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eye 890
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. >> big houses, lots of executives from kodak and kpeerks and lawyers. >> charlie was the younger ofoys. his parents born in china, lived in canada before moving charlie and his brother to upstate new york. his dad ran a tech business that thrived. the home just radiated upper middle class comfort. his friend anna had been there on occasion. >> i went over to his house. i didn't know his parents very well. i talked to his mom a couple times but i didn't have much conversation with them when we were there. >> little was known about his parents, and charlie didn't offer any details if someone asked. if he had secrets, sorrows, they weren't for the outside world to know about. >> he's very good at keeping his emotions in. >> i have no idea what the home situation is like. i didn't know before, and i don't know now. >> other than a new 911 dispatchers and you few town officers, the wider community, the friends of charlie tan certainly, knew nothing about the whispers of domestic violence on placid coachside lane. >> he's a very stoic individual. it's a tough part of his life. >> the reco
. >> big houses, lots of executives from kodak and kpeerks and lawyers. >> charlie was the younger ofoys. his parents born in china, lived in canada before moving charlie and his brother to upstate new york. his dad ran a tech business that thrived. the home just radiated upper middle class comfort. his friend anna had been there on occasion. >> i went over to his house. i didn't know his parents very well. i talked to his mom a couple times but i didn't have much conversation...
25
25
Sep 5, 2016
09/16
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WTMJ
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eye 25
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. >> big house, lots of executives from kodak and xerox and >> charlie's parents lived in canada before moving charlie and his brother to upstate new york. his dad ran a tech business that thrived. the home just radiated upper middle-class comfort. his friends anna had been there on occasion. >> i went over to his house. i didn't know his parents very well. i talked to his mom a couple times but i didn't have much conversation with them when we were there. >> little was known about his parents and charlie didn't offer details if someone asked. if he had secrets, sorrows, they know about. >> he's very good about keeping his emotions in. >> i didn't know what the home situation was like. i didn't know then and i don't know now. >> other than a few 911 dispatchers and a few town officers, the wider community, the friends of charlie tan, certainly, knew nothing about the whispers of domestic violence on placid coachside lane. >> he's a very stoic individual. it's a tough part of his life. house was known to authorities. go back to cornell. it's the winter of 2015 and charlie is now a sophom
. >> big house, lots of executives from kodak and xerox and >> charlie's parents lived in canada before moving charlie and his brother to upstate new york. his dad ran a tech business that thrived. the home just radiated upper middle-class comfort. his friends anna had been there on occasion. >> i went over to his house. i didn't know his parents very well. i talked to his mom a couple times but i didn't have much conversation with them when we were there. >> little was...
216
216
Sep 16, 2016
09/16
by
FOXNEWSW
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eye 216
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see that kodak moment for yourself next.ve moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, and you're talking to your doctor about your medication... this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira helping me go further. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. humira has been clinically studied for over 18 years. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ready for a new chapter? talk to your rhe
see that kodak moment for yourself next.ve moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, and you're talking to your doctor about your medication... this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira helping me go further. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. humira has been clinically studied for over 18 years. humira can lower your ability to...
338
338
Sep 15, 2016
09/16
by
KQED
tv
eye 338
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steel, eastman kodak and i could go ono and on, what have we got? >> the big corporations today don't really have that manys employees. they're not providing careere ladders, they're not creating middle-class jobs. blockbuster had 80,000 employees and 9,000 stores across the country, netflix does the same thing with fewer than 4,000 people. if anybody tells you they workto at facebook, probably they mean they are a contractor because only about 12,000 people00 actually work at facebook. they are worth $300 billion but very few people actually work there.30 >> reporter: in a new book davis calls it "the vanishing american corporation" and poses a pivotao question: what will rise from the wreckage? mega-firms that hire relatively few workers? made-anywhere product peddlers like nike? >> they're the biggest sneaker and sporting goods company in the world but they don't actually make most of the stuff with their name brand on it. they design it, they market it from oregon but the productionon is done by contractors all around the world. and that model i
steel, eastman kodak and i could go ono and on, what have we got? >> the big corporations today don't really have that manys employees. they're not providing careere ladders, they're not creating middle-class jobs. blockbuster had 80,000 employees and 9,000 stores across the country, netflix does the same thing with fewer than 4,000 people. if anybody tells you they workto at facebook, probably they mean they are a contractor because only about 12,000 people00 actually work at facebook....
118
118
Sep 6, 2016
09/16
by
CSPAN2
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eye 118
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1890s he run famous article about the right to privacy complaining that new0s technologies like the kodak camera in the instant press that are insuring that gossip that used to be whispered in the closets are now shouted from the rooftop. but a scholar called richard in a book called intellectual privacy that i want you to read as well, it says that brandeis changed his mind because he came to the that protections for honor or dignity that allowed public figures like hulk hogan,e for example to sue the press were truthful but embarrassing invasions of privacy clash with the first amendment. he came came to believe that when free speech and privacy clash privacy should trump. he travesty was not a right of of aristocrats and celebrities to protect their honor against an invasive tabloid press but instead the right of all citizens to protect their intellectual privacy of cognitive liberty of a trying government. i found richards account to be persuasive. now to you. >> what do you think about this evolution? it's a huge question of how the author of the right to privacy ever in future years
1890s he run famous article about the right to privacy complaining that new0s technologies like the kodak camera in the instant press that are insuring that gossip that used to be whispered in the closets are now shouted from the rooftop. but a scholar called richard in a book called intellectual privacy that i want you to read as well, it says that brandeis changed his mind because he came to the that protections for honor or dignity that allowed public figures like hulk hogan,e for example to...