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Jan 29, 2017
01/17
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CNNW
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one was the telephone answering machine. you would be driving home and you would say i can't wait to check my messages. you know, it becomes part of the day. honey, i'm checking my messages. >> from the noisy streets of new york to the laid-back tranquility of california, americans are tuning out and tuning in. >> when i think of technology in the 1980s, i think of the walkman. the walkman was huge. >> it's the latest fad. tiny stereo cassette players with featherweight head phones. >> it's like carrying your stereo with you on your head. >> the walkman, you listened to music from a fixed location in your home to mobile. >> you are witnessing the ultimate miniaturization of the cassette player. never has so much genius been coaxed into so little space. >> in all the great bursts of innovation, there is always some kind of scientific breakthrough that has to happen first. and none of this stuff could have happened in the 1980s without the transistor being invented in the late 1940s. japan and sony in particular really underst
one was the telephone answering machine. you would be driving home and you would say i can't wait to check my messages. you know, it becomes part of the day. honey, i'm checking my messages. >> from the noisy streets of new york to the laid-back tranquility of california, americans are tuning out and tuning in. >> when i think of technology in the 1980s, i think of the walkman. the walkman was huge. >> it's the latest fad. tiny stereo cassette players with featherweight head...
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Jan 28, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN
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we have a telephone company running wires and a cable company, and the radio. you have alternative pathways trying to reach the customer. i know you are here at the state of the net conference. by recently went to a speech the commerce chair. did he say anything that caught your ear? >> he talked about we need to modernize the fcc. i think he's exactly right. way to modernize the law under which it operates. when you talk about subsidies for broadband, and that is a difficult issue. difficult, because if you do that outside of an agency that has to stand apart and be independent of the political pressures, then you can have favors.ith political we have seen that happen in the past. through thent out department of commerce or agriculture. you will find that oftentimes they go to political allies or -- to political allies. ther: greg walden, chairing commerce committee. what do you know about him? >> not very much. i met him a few times. staff ofo be on the senator brownback, now governor of kansas. i talked to him about him. peter: what are you doing this year?
we have a telephone company running wires and a cable company, and the radio. you have alternative pathways trying to reach the customer. i know you are here at the state of the net conference. by recently went to a speech the commerce chair. did he say anything that caught your ear? >> he talked about we need to modernize the fcc. i think he's exactly right. way to modernize the law under which it operates. when you talk about subsidies for broadband, and that is a difficult issue....
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Jan 23, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN2
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we have had open networks in our country since back to the railroad, the telegraph, telephone. you know peter, we wouldn't have the internet today of the telephone network hadn't been open so that the early efforts to get online didn't have to go through any gatekeeper. you just got on and you tried things, and that's how we became leaders and the internet. we don't want to go backwards. we don't want to go to where there are gatekeepers deciding where it would happen. >> thank you. chairman wheeler, following up on that, you warned about empty promises were falsely.when it comes to net neutrality legislation. what are some of the concerns you have about a law that would only ensure those three rule. >> so what the industry has been saying, look, no blocking, no throttling, no privatization and that's enough. that's not the scope and scale that you need to be sensitive to and aware of to have an open network. if we define the net neutrality or open internet, then we are ignoring everything else. we are also ignoring what we know for certain is the absolute certainty that is hap
we have had open networks in our country since back to the railroad, the telegraph, telephone. you know peter, we wouldn't have the internet today of the telephone network hadn't been open so that the early efforts to get online didn't have to go through any gatekeeper. you just got on and you tried things, and that's how we became leaders and the internet. we don't want to go backwards. we don't want to go to where there are gatekeepers deciding where it would happen. >> thank you....
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Jan 30, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN2
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but those kinds of regulations were put in place in a day when the telephone companies were a monopoly. so there's that correspondence between these regulations make sense when you have a monopoly structure. i think we need to clearfy that and how the -- clarify that. >> host: what about no fcc? >> guest: if you had no fcc, then you would have her political involvement in determining how radio spectrum is allocated, in how telecommunications subsidies would go. both of those things, i think, would not be a good thing. i really would like to see an independent agency in those places. >> host: dr. jamison, what is the center -- the public utility research center? >> guest: the research center started back in the early 970s focusing on -- 1970s focusing on making sure we have good techniques when we analyze regulatory issues. it started primarily on florida and was a florida-based, a florida-focused center until i arrived in 1996. i was brought in specifically to help expand the center internationally. so now we work all over the world trying to help people who are involved in regulation
but those kinds of regulations were put in place in a day when the telephone companies were a monopoly. so there's that correspondence between these regulations make sense when you have a monopoly structure. i think we need to clearfy that and how the -- clarify that. >> host: what about no fcc? >> guest: if you had no fcc, then you would have her political involvement in determining how radio spectrum is allocated, in how telecommunications subsidies would go. both of those things,...
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Jan 21, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN
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the telegraph, the telephone. you know, peter, we wouldn't have the internet today if the telephone network hadn't been opened, so that the early efforts to get online didn't have to go through any gate keeper. you just got on. and you tried things, and that's how we game leaders in the internet. and we don't want to go backwards to a point where there are gatekeepers deciding what will happen. peter: joining our conversation today is margaret harding miguel of politico. she covers technology. >> thank you. following up on that you warned about empty promises or false labeling it comes to net neutrality legislation. what are some concerns you have about a law that would only enshrine those three bright line rules? >> so what the industry has been saying is that, look, just no blocking no throttling, no privatization, and that's enough. but that's not the scope and scale that you need to be sensitive to and aware of to have open network. and if we define net neutrality or open internet by only those three tests we'
the telegraph, the telephone. you know, peter, we wouldn't have the internet today if the telephone network hadn't been opened, so that the early efforts to get online didn't have to go through any gate keeper. you just got on. and you tried things, and that's how we game leaders in the internet. and we don't want to go backwards to a point where there are gatekeepers deciding what will happen. peter: joining our conversation today is margaret harding miguel of politico. she covers technology....
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Jan 14, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN
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for decades the telephone users knew that fcc rules protected their information. not just the contents of their call, but the information transmitted to set up the call. thanks to new technology, we found ourselves in the strange situation where the privacy protections of a smart phone's voice call didn't extend to the use of the same device and the same network for accessing the net. and finally, networks have always been attack vectors. during the civil war, union troops would take up the planks on chain bridge every night for fear that john mosby's confederate rangers would use the road network to steal into the capital. and clearly, we can't pull up the planks on the internet, but we can, must, and have taken collective actions to protect our network security. my service on the president's intelligence advisory board prior to joining the fcc alerted me to the ever growing importance of protecting our critical network infrastructure from cyber intrusions of all kind. it led to my determination to make cyber matters a leading priority at the fcc. so while our po
for decades the telephone users knew that fcc rules protected their information. not just the contents of their call, but the information transmitted to set up the call. thanks to new technology, we found ourselves in the strange situation where the privacy protections of a smart phone's voice call didn't extend to the use of the same device and the same network for accessing the net. and finally, networks have always been attack vectors. during the civil war, union troops would take up the...
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Jan 8, 2017
01/17
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BBCNEWS
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most people understand that if i do this with my fingers it means give me a call on the telephone., if i am wearing this strap when i make that gesture my hand becomes part of the telephone itself and can send and receive calls. the strap has a little body conducting unit in here which sends vibrations down my hand and when i stick my finger in my ear, they become amplified sound. there is a microphone just in the strap there, so i can talk into it. let's just see if that works. and it does. so this is the prototype. the finished thing looks like a normal watch strap and can be fitted to any old watch. now, when you want to hang up, that's simplicity itself. all you've got to do is take your hand away from your ear. health is once again a big theme here at ces. and, whilst more people than ever are following gluten—free, dairy—free or other sorts of specialist diets, they don't necessarily need to be unless they've had a proper medical diagnosis. and that's something that this device aims to overcome by helping people create the perfect diet for their own personal digestive system.
most people understand that if i do this with my fingers it means give me a call on the telephone., if i am wearing this strap when i make that gesture my hand becomes part of the telephone itself and can send and receive calls. the strap has a little body conducting unit in here which sends vibrations down my hand and when i stick my finger in my ear, they become amplified sound. there is a microphone just in the strap there, so i can talk into it. let's just see if that works. and it does. so...
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Jan 7, 2017
01/17
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 42
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most people understand that if i do this with my fingers it means give me a call on the telephone.if i am wearing this strap when i make that gesture my hand becomes part of the telephone itself and can send and receive calls. the strap has a little body conducting unit in here which sends vibrations down my hand and when i stick my finger in my ear, they become amplified sound. there is a microphone just in the strap there, so i can talk into it. let's just see if that works. and it does. so this is the prototype. the finished thing looks like a normal watch strap and can be fitted to any old watch. now, when you want to hang up, that's simplicity itself. all you've got to do is take your hand away from your ear. health is once again a big theme here at ces. and, whilst more people than ever are following gluten—free, dairy—free or other sorts of specialist diets, they don't necessarily need to be unless they've had a proper medical diagnosis. and that's something that this device aims to overcome by helping people create the perfect diet for their own personal digestive system. a
most people understand that if i do this with my fingers it means give me a call on the telephone.if i am wearing this strap when i make that gesture my hand becomes part of the telephone itself and can send and receive calls. the strap has a little body conducting unit in here which sends vibrations down my hand and when i stick my finger in my ear, they become amplified sound. there is a microphone just in the strap there, so i can talk into it. let's just see if that works. and it does. so...
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Jan 21, 2017
01/17
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BBCNEWS
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mr trump broke with decades of precedent last month by taking a telephone call from a telephone callve that has angered beijing which regards taiwan as part of china. state media said china would "take off the gloves" if such provocations continue. asjohn sudworth reports, in china, mr trump has gone from a figure of fun to someone who‘s provoking a loft anger. not everyone in china is taking donald trump too seriously. his inauguration this week comes just ahead of the chinese new year of the rooster. and this factory is making, well, giant trump lookalike chicken balloons. "the orders are flowing in, we can barely cope", the boss tells me. but increasingly, mr trump is becoming a target of anger, rather than a figure of fun. mock—ups of taiwanese ships provide shooting practice at this chinese military museum, just across the taiwan strait. while us presidents have long avoided challenging beijing‘s claim to sovereignty, the so—called one china policy, mr trump says he might. "china‘s military, especially our navy, is growing stronger." "we don‘t fear us provocation", this man tell
mr trump broke with decades of precedent last month by taking a telephone call from a telephone callve that has angered beijing which regards taiwan as part of china. state media said china would "take off the gloves" if such provocations continue. asjohn sudworth reports, in china, mr trump has gone from a figure of fun to someone who‘s provoking a loft anger. not everyone in china is taking donald trump too seriously. his inauguration this week comes just ahead of the chinese new...
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Jan 13, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN3
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to reflect changes in technology, we modernized telephone era programs for the internet age. the new connect america fund is supporting wired and wireless broadband deployment to h millions of previously unserved rural americans. a revie a tallized erate is delivering broadband and a new wi-fi program is helping low income americans afford broadband while rooting out waste, fraud, abuse. we also made sure that new technology was applied to help address the old problems of individuals with disabilities. we have taken a series of world leading actions to repurpose spectrum of broadband and the expanding need for wireless connectivity. the auction made 385 megahertz available for broadband while netting a record $41 billion for the treasury. and our spectrum frontiers order made the u.s. the first country in the world to open up highband spectrum for 5g networks and applications. and we are nearingle completion of the world's first incentive auction. we also worryied about the competition and to preserve competition in key markets, we discouraged the comcast time warner cable, a
to reflect changes in technology, we modernized telephone era programs for the internet age. the new connect america fund is supporting wired and wireless broadband deployment to h millions of previously unserved rural americans. a revie a tallized erate is delivering broadband and a new wi-fi program is helping low income americans afford broadband while rooting out waste, fraud, abuse. we also made sure that new technology was applied to help address the old problems of individuals with...
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Jan 24, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN2
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you know the telegraph, the telephone Ãthey were all, you know peter, we would not have the internetday if the telephone network hadn't been opened so that the early efforts to get online didn't have to go through any gatekeeper. you just got on! and you tried things and that is how we became leaders in the internet. and we don't want to go backwards. to a point where there are gatekeepers deciding what will happen. >> joining our conversation today is margaret harding mcgill of politico. >> thank you. following up on that you want about empty promises or false labeling it comes to the net neutrality legislation. what are some concerns you have about a law that would only enshrine those three bright line rules? >> with the industry has been saying his love, no blocking, no throttling, no privatization. that is enough. but that is not the scope and scale. that you need to be sensitive to and aware of to have an open network. and if we define net neutrality or open internet by only those three tests, then we are ignoring everything else. and we are also ignoring what we know for certai
you know the telegraph, the telephone Ãthey were all, you know peter, we would not have the internetday if the telephone network hadn't been opened so that the early efforts to get online didn't have to go through any gatekeeper. you just got on! and you tried things and that is how we became leaders in the internet. and we don't want to go backwards. to a point where there are gatekeepers deciding what will happen. >> joining our conversation today is margaret harding mcgill of...
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Jan 23, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 23
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you know, the telegraph, the telephone. they were all -- you know, peter, we wouldn't have the internet today if the telephone network hadn't been open so that the early efforts to get online didn't have to go through any gatekeeper. you just got on and you tried things. and that's how we became leaders in the internet. and we don't want to go backwards to a point where there are gatekeepers deciding what'll happen. >> host: well, joining our conversation today is margaret harding healthcare gill of politico. -- mcgill, she covers technology. >> thank you. chairman wheeler, following up on that, you with warned about empty promises or false labeling when it comes to net neutrality legislation. what are some of the concerns you have about a law that would only enshrine those three bright line rules? >> guest: well, so the -- what the industry has been saying has, is that, look, just no blocking, no throttling, no paid prioritization, and that's enough. but that's not the scope and scale that you need to be seasonstive to and
you know, the telegraph, the telephone. they were all -- you know, peter, we wouldn't have the internet today if the telephone network hadn't been open so that the early efforts to get online didn't have to go through any gatekeeper. you just got on and you tried things. and that's how we became leaders in the internet. and we don't want to go backwards to a point where there are gatekeepers deciding what'll happen. >> host: well, joining our conversation today is margaret harding...
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Jan 20, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN3
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>> well, the telephone, before there was a telephone you couldn't talk to someone 100 miles away. so there is that -- >> well -- >> before there was facebook you co couldn't immediately share pictures of people from high school. >> there was this thing called e-mail. there was e-mail. they organize people a little bit. just doesn't -- >> how do you find them? >> how do you find them, yeah. but doesn't fully compute to me like the service, like the telephone, maybe this is just -- i like seeing my friends' kids. i just think the deal is a little weird. i think we didn't think through it. we gave up all of our personal information. like, i remember i signed up for facebook, who are your favorite bands? okay, i'll tell you. i think we were more naive and i'll tell them more and everything will be better and didn't quite have the idea that i was just sort of filling out a giant marketing survey at the time. i was naive as everyone else. but to get back to the message, i think we had a big consolidation into these two. they go through life cycles. good periods, the real danger i think
>> well, the telephone, before there was a telephone you couldn't talk to someone 100 miles away. so there is that -- >> well -- >> before there was facebook you co couldn't immediately share pictures of people from high school. >> there was this thing called e-mail. there was e-mail. they organize people a little bit. just doesn't -- >> how do you find them? >> how do you find them, yeah. but doesn't fully compute to me like the service, like the telephone,...
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alex: the national center for missing and exploited children has this telephone hotline for tips and information about missing individuals. don't go away. "missing" returns right after this brief break. so far, more than 725 individuals we have featured on our show have been found. (male #1) it's a little something i've done every night since i was a kid, empty my pocket change into this old jar. it's never much, just what's left after i break a dollar. and i never thought i could get quality life insurance with my spare change. neither did i. until i saw a commercial for the colonial penn program. imagine people our age getting life insurance at such an affordable rate. it's true. if you're 50 to 85, you can get guaranteed acceptance life insurance through the colonial penn program for less than 35 cents a day, just $9.95 a month. there's no medical exam and no health questions. you know, the average cost of a funeral is over $8,300. now that's a big burden to leave your loved ones. as long as you're 50 to 85, you cannot be turned down because of your health. your premium never goes
alex: the national center for missing and exploited children has this telephone hotline for tips and information about missing individuals. don't go away. "missing" returns right after this brief break. so far, more than 725 individuals we have featured on our show have been found. (male #1) it's a little something i've done every night since i was a kid, empty my pocket change into this old jar. it's never much, just what's left after i break a dollar. and i never thought i could get...
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Jan 27, 2017
01/17
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BLOOMBERG
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perhaps following reports of a telephone call between donald trump and pena nieto.uld also be for other reasons. at the world look with abigail doolittle. abigail: major averages are unchanged, small gains and losses, but to them your earnings winners are trying to help these indexes, microsoft and intel. point boost for the dow, s&p 500, and nasdaq. microsoft is up more than 2%, beating earning estimates by 7%, $.83 per share. there was strength across the board. legacy server and pcs trotted -- products were strong. analysts intelligence say that the results may suggest that i.t. spending is strong. as for intel, they beat a nice quarter, solid. an upgrade from morgan stanley to outperform despite the fact that the guidance could be somewhat disappointing. as for the big percentage performer on earnings, wynn resorts. we see a nice pop higher, up about 7% on the day. according to bloomberg ielligence, analysts say what investors like is the fact that revenues and ebitda did beat estimates from the new wynn palace in macau. the key going forward is strength continu
perhaps following reports of a telephone call between donald trump and pena nieto.uld also be for other reasons. at the world look with abigail doolittle. abigail: major averages are unchanged, small gains and losses, but to them your earnings winners are trying to help these indexes, microsoft and intel. point boost for the dow, s&p 500, and nasdaq. microsoft is up more than 2%, beating earning estimates by 7%, $.83 per share. there was strength across the board. legacy server and pcs...
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Jan 30, 2017
01/17
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MSNBCW
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lewd and lascivious exhibition, telephone violations.n has also seen his share of trouble. >> i came here for a ride, the whole, it was a big ride and they emergency transfer everybody to this unit. the officers kept on just bugging us about oh, you won't do this. you won't do that. y'all scared. y'all kids. and they just always mess with us. so everybody got tired of it and we just tore up the dorm. >> in confinement, the men have little to do when they're not working on the labor squad. but young hopes his new book will open a door to his future. >> i just wanted -- one of the first books i ever read right here on the stock market. about investing. investment. i started doing things like that and i don't think i never would have did that if i wasn't in a cell by myself and didn't have no distractions around me. >> while young hopes to improve his finances, alvin mchellon and scott hope their time in confinement will improve their vocabularies. >> coagulate. i don't even know what that means. >> he loves doing puzzles. we work on those
lewd and lascivious exhibition, telephone violations.n has also seen his share of trouble. >> i came here for a ride, the whole, it was a big ride and they emergency transfer everybody to this unit. the officers kept on just bugging us about oh, you won't do this. you won't do that. y'all scared. y'all kids. and they just always mess with us. so everybody got tired of it and we just tore up the dorm. >> in confinement, the men have little to do when they're not working on the labor...
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Jan 2, 2017
01/17
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KPIX
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. >> we all got used to telephone polls and telephone wires in our views, and they're not beautiful. >> a view of the future, powering the future. jericka duncan, cbs news, off the coast of block island. >> quijano: up next, it's a happy new year for a man who beat a rare form of cancer. his story when we come back. >> quijano: a man from arizona has special reason to celebrate this new year. he was diagnosed with a rare cancer last year and told his chances of survival were less than five percent. marlie hall has more on his remarkable recovery. >> hecker camacho was not sure he would be around to celebrate the holidays with his family this year. the 55 year old retired new york city police sergeant has been battling a rare cancer that had spread to his lungs. >> i started coughing, really feeling bad, a lot of pain, couldn't sleep at night, the pain was brutal. brutal. >> last year hector was diagnosed with cancer of the urethra, the tube that carries urine from the bladder. >> the majority of men with this type of cancer don't live longer than a year. >> dr. arjun balar recommende
. >> we all got used to telephone polls and telephone wires in our views, and they're not beautiful. >> a view of the future, powering the future. jericka duncan, cbs news, off the coast of block island. >> quijano: up next, it's a happy new year for a man who beat a rare form of cancer. his story when we come back. >> quijano: a man from arizona has special reason to celebrate this new year. he was diagnosed with a rare cancer last year and told his chances of survival...
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100
Jan 18, 2017
01/17
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MSNBCW
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so we're falling back on the telephone. hugh, thank you for being with us. you've never been a trump apologist. you've been an honest broker throughout much of this crazy season. does the russia talk bother you as deeply as i think it might? >> well, i am very satisfied -- thank you, by the way, for putting up with the clunky camera tonight in my studio. i was satisfied with general mattis's testimony as representative of the administration's overall arching position towards russia. and i was reassured by rex tillerson's commentary. i've been reassured by the entire transition and the quality of president-elect trump's appointees. i think his sense of humor is going to take some getting used to, as were his remarks tonight about rex tillerson. but i find it disappointing the professor would encourage people not to watch. i note, with interest, brian, there's not one democratic senator who is boycotting the inauguration, that's because they have to run at large in a state that is rural and urban, both cosmopolitan, poor and rich, all this in colors. senators
so we're falling back on the telephone. hugh, thank you for being with us. you've never been a trump apologist. you've been an honest broker throughout much of this crazy season. does the russia talk bother you as deeply as i think it might? >> well, i am very satisfied -- thank you, by the way, for putting up with the clunky camera tonight in my studio. i was satisfied with general mattis's testimony as representative of the administration's overall arching position towards russia. and i...
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Jan 24, 2017
01/17
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KYW
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then downed wire here, marlton new jersey actually snapped telephone pole with the wires across the road. route 70 westbound near cropwell road all lanes are blocked. take a look at this alternate. i'll be tweeting this out as well your best bet. already see so much activity. leave extra time today. >> also, a lot every clean up today after heavy rain and strong winds rip through our region. >> "eyewitness news" reporter trang do live along route 70 in cherry hill where some downed wires have closed part of the road. good morning, trang. >> reporter: well good morning, jim, rahel. yes, lots of activity here. not because of the morning rush. take a look. this is route 70 westbound, you can see that it has been completely taken over by the pse&g work trucks. these crews are working to fix some downed power polls as well as wires that went down around 3:00 p.m. yesterday. this area just one of several that saw storm damage in our region yesterday. the impact of strong storms felt across the region monday. in hunting park, it turned tragic. a 59 year old man died after strong winds ripped a
then downed wire here, marlton new jersey actually snapped telephone pole with the wires across the road. route 70 westbound near cropwell road all lanes are blocked. take a look at this alternate. i'll be tweeting this out as well your best bet. already see so much activity. leave extra time today. >> also, a lot every clean up today after heavy rain and strong winds rip through our region. >> "eyewitness news" reporter trang do live along route 70 in cherry hill where...
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Jan 6, 2017
01/17
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CSPAN3
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eye 48
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>> yes, looking for a telephone number or the e-mail address, and that is not the limits of what the government calls selectors, but those are examples of them. and so it is looking through the full content of communications in the first instance in order the determine which communications it wants to retain for the long term. our claim in the standing issues in the case turn on the breadth of that initial search. we don't think it is relevant for the standing purposes here that the government may discard some of the communications after looking through them, just as if the government searched every home in richmond for a particular let e or piece of evidence, and only found that evidence in a handful of homes, one would never deskrcribe that search as targeted in the way that the government trying to describe surveillance targeted here. just because the government retains only some of the communications at the end of the search process does not mean that the initial search and the one on which the standingi inte is not far, far broader. so that is something different than the other
>> yes, looking for a telephone number or the e-mail address, and that is not the limits of what the government calls selectors, but those are examples of them. and so it is looking through the full content of communications in the first instance in order the determine which communications it wants to retain for the long term. our claim in the standing issues in the case turn on the breadth of that initial search. we don't think it is relevant for the standing purposes here that the...
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Jan 23, 2017
01/17
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BBCNEWS
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president trump spoke to the israeli prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, by telephone on sunday evening to washington next month. israel sees the whole ofjerusalem as its capital — the palestinians want eastjerusalem as the capital of their future state. earlier, israel approved the construction of 560 homes for settlers in occupied eastjerusalem. david willis reports from washington. as his senior staff were sworn in in the east room of the white house, donald trump put aside his differences with the media and turned his attention to foreign policy. one of the most controversial pledges of his campaign was to relocate the us embassy in israel from tel aviv to jerusalem. and while donald trump may not be the first presidential candidate to propose such a move, he mayjust be the first to follow through. a statement from the white house said the united states was in the early stages of talks on the subject. in a telephone conversation with the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu on sunday, mr trump affirmed a desire to strengthen what the white house called, "the special relationshi
president trump spoke to the israeli prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, by telephone on sunday evening to washington next month. israel sees the whole ofjerusalem as its capital — the palestinians want eastjerusalem as the capital of their future state. earlier, israel approved the construction of 560 homes for settlers in occupied eastjerusalem. david willis reports from washington. as his senior staff were sworn in in the east room of the white house, donald trump put aside his differences...
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Jan 13, 2017
01/17
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WRC
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you can see the damage it left behind there, that snapped telephone pole, those wires still hanging underneath here. let's take you to some video here from the ground. reports of this crash did come in after 3:00 this morning. a big rig truck here somehow losing control and crash intoog that pole here. we have debris on the roadway. we also had a fuel spill here on the ground. montgomery county fire rescue responding here to that, getting that cleaned up and also the state department of the environment here responding, as well. they remain on scene here at so route 108 between new hampshire avenue and mink hollow road has remained closed as a result of this crash. giving you now a wider look at this collision here as you can see, we have a lot of roadway here that is closed. you can see the response here on the ground. it's still very much active here and back to what's here on the ground. you can expect for some time, at least for the next half hour to an hour, perhaps longer, to have some congestion here and blockages along route 108. back to you. >> thank you, justin. >>> developing this mo
you can see the damage it left behind there, that snapped telephone pole, those wires still hanging underneath here. let's take you to some video here from the ground. reports of this crash did come in after 3:00 this morning. a big rig truck here somehow losing control and crash intoog that pole here. we have debris on the roadway. we also had a fuel spill here on the ground. montgomery county fire rescue responding here to that, getting that cleaned up and also the state department of the...
137
137
Jan 31, 2017
01/17
by
MSNBCW
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eye 137
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kristen, thank you for joining us by telephone. also with us, live by telephone, is akeel reid omar, a law professor and constitutional scholar at yale university. his experience includes clerking for supreme court justice breyer and professor, i've heard it proffered tonight that the acting attorney general needlessly left out legal underpinnings from her opinion in saying the justice department wouldn't enforce this refugee ban. is there anything else she could have said in that document or was she destined for dismissal? >> well, the constitution in the end vests the executive power of the united states in the president. if people within the executive branch feel that in good faith they can't defend the president's policies, they have a freedom of speech, they can articulate their view and at the end of the day, they serve at the president's pleasure and he can fire them. and she chose to very dramatically express her disagreement. there are, i think, probably other elements within the justice department that may be more willing
kristen, thank you for joining us by telephone. also with us, live by telephone, is akeel reid omar, a law professor and constitutional scholar at yale university. his experience includes clerking for supreme court justice breyer and professor, i've heard it proffered tonight that the acting attorney general needlessly left out legal underpinnings from her opinion in saying the justice department wouldn't enforce this refugee ban. is there anything else she could have said in that document or...
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118
Jan 28, 2017
01/17
by
MSNBCW
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eye 118
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president trump is engaged in a full day of telephone diplomacy. president trump today calling the leaders of japan and germany earlier this morning. and within the last hour, mr. trump spoke to russian president vladmir putin. he's expected to put in a call to french president hollande at the top of the hour. and then prime minister of australia, malcolm turnbull later this afternoon. a new report that iran will ban u.s. citizens from its country after president trump signed an executive order banning immigrants from iraq and six other muslim majority countries. joining me now to talk about it is a spokesperson for attorney general candidate jeff sessions. good day to you. >> good afternoon. >> depending on where you live. i know you've seen the pictures, we're just learning frankly of some of the consequences of the temporary immigration ban as news released now of one of two iraqis detained at jfk airport. does this illustrate how difficult the president's order will be to execute? obviously there is serious wrinkles here. >> i don't think this
president trump is engaged in a full day of telephone diplomacy. president trump today calling the leaders of japan and germany earlier this morning. and within the last hour, mr. trump spoke to russian president vladmir putin. he's expected to put in a call to french president hollande at the top of the hour. and then prime minister of australia, malcolm turnbull later this afternoon. a new report that iran will ban u.s. citizens from its country after president trump signed an executive order...
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119
Jan 31, 2017
01/17
by
MSNBCW
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eye 119
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kristen, thank you for joining us by telephone. also live with us by telephone is a law professor and constitutional scholar at yale university. his experience includes clerking for supreme court justice briar. and, professor, i've heard it proffered tonight that the acting attorney general needlessly left out legal underpinnings from her opinion in saying the justice department wouldn't enforce this refugee ban. is there anything else she could have said in that document, or was she destined for dismissal? >> well, the constitution, the end vests the executive power of the united states in the president. if people within the executive branch feel that in good faith they can't defend the president's policies, they have a freedom of speech. they can articulate their view. and at the end of the day, they serve at the president's pleasure and he can fire them. and she chose to very dramatically express the disagreement. there i think are probably other elements in the justice department that may be more willing to try to defend the le
kristen, thank you for joining us by telephone. also live with us by telephone is a law professor and constitutional scholar at yale university. his experience includes clerking for supreme court justice briar. and, professor, i've heard it proffered tonight that the acting attorney general needlessly left out legal underpinnings from her opinion in saying the justice department wouldn't enforce this refugee ban. is there anything else she could have said in that document, or was she destined...
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133
Jan 23, 2017
01/17
by
WTXF
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eye 133
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look at that telephone pole. just stand there and watch this, look at this thing rocking back and forth. the light keeps going on and off it will really go off while filming it but that gives you a sense of the win gusts here. right on the bay here. there are plenty of people. there it goes the light went out as i redick. look at the waves, they are hitting the sea wall, in the raining here but feels like rain because so much of the sea water is blowing over the sea wall like a wave crashing against it. that carries getting hit. they probably didn't have wipers on and now they have salt water. look the at the water in the curb here. this is where the road isn't flooding. can you get a sense of how fast that water is moving down the street. good thing it is not a flooded street just yet. it is trash day in atlantic city. look at the trash men behind us. i can't believe anybody's trash can would even withstand this kind of wind but whatever trash is available to be pick up the trash men are out here doing their job
look at that telephone pole. just stand there and watch this, look at this thing rocking back and forth. the light keeps going on and off it will really go off while filming it but that gives you a sense of the win gusts here. right on the bay here. there are plenty of people. there it goes the light went out as i redick. look at the waves, they are hitting the sea wall, in the raining here but feels like rain because so much of the sea water is blowing over the sea wall like a wave crashing...
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Jan 6, 2017
01/17
by
CSPAN3
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eye 53
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it is only that telephone call that will -- they will be so glad to hear from a muslim. they will be so glad to include you in whatever commissions, whatever boards you wish to join. that is the grassroots activity that you can start at your own when you feel so overwhelmed that i am afraid that my faith, my identity faith of other immigrants is being challenged. what can i do at my level? besides contributing to organizations like this. second thing is volunteer. become member of the boards that i mentioned. member of the commissions that each county has. become members, and it only takes, i've been told by the mayors, by their offices that muslims shy away from that activity. they should be participating in such an activity. more important is that we need to have these conversations not only once a year or twice a year, more often. next few years, we should have these gatherings more often, fund raising, more often. getting together, speaking, having an agenda more often, not once a year. it could be at smaller scale but this conversation must continue. you do not know
it is only that telephone call that will -- they will be so glad to hear from a muslim. they will be so glad to include you in whatever commissions, whatever boards you wish to join. that is the grassroots activity that you can start at your own when you feel so overwhelmed that i am afraid that my faith, my identity faith of other immigrants is being challenged. what can i do at my level? besides contributing to organizations like this. second thing is volunteer. become member of the boards...
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49
Jan 22, 2017
01/17
by
FBC
tv
eye 49
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girlfriend about his spying on her e-mails. >> analyzing metadata. >> no one is listening to your telephonels. john: both are true. they are just gathering, looking for patterns, and may be able find a will find a terrorist that way. >> but that reveals a lot about you. >> maybe they will find someone who wants to kill us >> but this program has been wholly ineffective at doing that. it does not keep us safe. john: congress has kind of taking your side at least saying that the phone companies have to hold the data. >> exactly true, and and i was on the right side of history here. john: why is it less problematic? >> the phone company has records of certain customers they don't have everyone's record in one database. they are not going to look up her records, but someone who may be on their radar, and the political party not favor by the government, they can learn a lot. it is who has the information that matters, and the government is powerful. john: this is expensive. good for you for fighting what you believe in. coming up, where you work? are there notices like these posted? they are not
girlfriend about his spying on her e-mails. >> analyzing metadata. >> no one is listening to your telephonels. john: both are true. they are just gathering, looking for patterns, and may be able find a will find a terrorist that way. >> but that reveals a lot about you. >> maybe they will find someone who wants to kill us >> but this program has been wholly ineffective at doing that. it does not keep us safe. john: congress has kind of taking your side at least...
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Jan 29, 2017
01/17
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 81
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street is saying that both the foreign secretary borisjohnson and the home secretary amber rudd to telephonedican counterparts and you make what is called representations about the us travel ban. diplomatic term that is upping the ante, if two members of the british cabinet are wringing their american opposite numbers, presumably it is less likely given what the official line now is on the government is to say it is fully supporting this, it is more likely to express the reservations that had been provided, boris johnson to express the reservations that had been provided, borisjohnson saying that it been provided, borisjohnson saying thatitis been provided, borisjohnson saying that it is divisive and wrong. we will see what us reaction is as the day progresses. at 35 years old, roger federer has become a champion for the 18th time. he got victory against rafa nadal. we turn out to the bbc sports centre and he is back! he's back in style! he is committed he? nobody saw this coming, not least roger federate himself. he said at the start of the tournament at the start of the final, in fact he wa
street is saying that both the foreign secretary borisjohnson and the home secretary amber rudd to telephonedican counterparts and you make what is called representations about the us travel ban. diplomatic term that is upping the ante, if two members of the british cabinet are wringing their american opposite numbers, presumably it is less likely given what the official line now is on the government is to say it is fully supporting this, it is more likely to express the reservations that had...
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115
Jan 16, 2017
01/17
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 115
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mr trump broke with decades of precedent last month by taking a telephone call from the taiwanese presidentregards taiwan as part of china. our correspondentjohn sudworth reports from beijing. not everyone in china is taking donald trump too seriously. his inauguration this week comes just ahead of the chinese new year of the rooster. and this factory is making, well, giant trump lookalike chicken balloons. the orders are flowing in, we can barely cope, the boss tells me. but increasingly mr trump is becoming a target of anger. rather than a figure of fun. mock—ups of taiwanese ships provide shooting practice at this chinese military museum. just across the taiwan strait. while us presidents have long avoided challenging beijing's claim to sovereignty, the so—called one china policy, mr trump says he might. "china's military, especially our navy, is growing stronger, we don't fear us provocation", this man tells me. "we want peace, but if they cross our red line we have to take measures," this woman agrees. last week, in a move seen by some as intended to make that very point, china sent it
mr trump broke with decades of precedent last month by taking a telephone call from the taiwanese presidentregards taiwan as part of china. our correspondentjohn sudworth reports from beijing. not everyone in china is taking donald trump too seriously. his inauguration this week comes just ahead of the chinese new year of the rooster. and this factory is making, well, giant trump lookalike chicken balloons. the orders are flowing in, we can barely cope, the boss tells me. but increasingly mr...
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48
Jan 27, 2017
01/17
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 48
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we believe he is going to talk to the russian president tomorrow on the telephone.too early to be talking about lifting sanctions on russia over the behaviour in ukraine?” about lifting sanctions on russia over the behaviour in ukraine? i do not know if it is too early. what would be the reason? what would be the thinking behind it? is it some sort of carrot? you can guarantee that donald trump does not do anything without thinking it through and working out what the reaction is likely to be. the prime minister talked about russia, she talked about the agreement which russia has to live up to. the president did not seem as familiar with the diplomatic language as the prime minister. will that come in time? for someone who 80 months ago was not a politician at all, has told our entire political system upside down, who took 3000 counties. give a chance. he isa took 3000 counties. give a chance. he is a fast learner and it has been impressive at what he has mastered in this short time. thank you very much for us. we can heara we can hear a little of that press conferen
we believe he is going to talk to the russian president tomorrow on the telephone.too early to be talking about lifting sanctions on russia over the behaviour in ukraine?” about lifting sanctions on russia over the behaviour in ukraine? i do not know if it is too early. what would be the reason? what would be the thinking behind it? is it some sort of carrot? you can guarantee that donald trump does not do anything without thinking it through and working out what the reaction is likely to be....
153
153
Jan 31, 2017
01/17
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 153
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kristen, thank you for joining us by telephone. also with us, live by telephone, is akeel reid omar, a law professor and constitutional scholar at yale university. his experience includes clerking for supreme court justice breyer and professor, i've heard it proffered tonight that the acting attorney general needlessly left out legal underpinnings from her opinion in saying the justice department wouldn't enforce this refugee ban. is there anything else she could have said in that document or was she destined for dismissal? >> well, the constitution in the end vests the executive power of the united states in the president. if people within the executive branch feel that in good faith they can't defend the president's policies, they have a freedom of speech, they can articulate their view and at the end of the day, they serve at the president's pleasure and he can fire them. and she chose to very dramatically express her disagreement. there are, i think, probably other elements within the justice department that may be more willing
kristen, thank you for joining us by telephone. also with us, live by telephone, is akeel reid omar, a law professor and constitutional scholar at yale university. his experience includes clerking for supreme court justice breyer and professor, i've heard it proffered tonight that the acting attorney general needlessly left out legal underpinnings from her opinion in saying the justice department wouldn't enforce this refugee ban. is there anything else she could have said in that document or...
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93
Jan 27, 2017
01/17
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 93
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a game of telephone. a game of telephone that is driving decisions by a man that ishe most powerful man in the world. that are poised to actively undermine the basic confidence in the most fundamental part of our american democratic institutions. joins me now, senator cory booker, democrat from new jersey. are you confident, senator, that the president is making his decisions based on sound information. >> i don't know what his s motivating him i know there are many things troubling. we have the president of the united states only seven days in office has provened himself to be a repeated liar and prop bannist about facts. number two, he's dangerously attacking some of the fundamental institutions that make us a great democracy and number three we're having a conversation about crowd size when really some of the most powerful people on the planet earth, secretary of state, attorney general, head of the epa are being pushed through a process that they're going to send to seats where they're going to have a
a game of telephone. a game of telephone that is driving decisions by a man that ishe most powerful man in the world. that are poised to actively undermine the basic confidence in the most fundamental part of our american democratic institutions. joins me now, senator cory booker, democrat from new jersey. are you confident, senator, that the president is making his decisions based on sound information. >> i don't know what his s motivating him i know there are many things troubling. we...