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Dec 27, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 206
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the turks actually tried to get them from behind. so this is actually the world of june 27th. a world of warfare in southeastern europe. a world in which, in fact, the riding expectation, you know, a little bit like if you had woken up on the morning of 9/11, you wouldn't have been hearing about osama bin laden. if you were in new york like me you would have been hearing about shark attacks in florida and scandal involving a little league baseball pitcher who falsified this age documents. you wouldn't have been hearing about the naval race between britain and germany. you might have been hearing, however, about a naval race in the eastern mediterranean, basically a tripart hide naval race pitting greece, the ottoman empire and russia. because the ottomans had ordered state-of-the-art dread naughts from britain. russia was watching this with trepidation and terror but so were the greeks. in the course of the balkan wars, huge wave of refugees are pouring into the ottoman empire, mostly muslims coming from the balkans, a few christians fleeing in the other direction. greek chris
the turks actually tried to get them from behind. so this is actually the world of june 27th. a world of warfare in southeastern europe. a world in which, in fact, the riding expectation, you know, a little bit like if you had woken up on the morning of 9/11, you wouldn't have been hearing about osama bin laden. if you were in new york like me you would have been hearing about shark attacks in florida and scandal involving a little league baseball pitcher who falsified this age documents. you...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 27, 2014
12/14
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SFGTV
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eye 16
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first is actually at the grass roots level which is actually making it okay for people to actually talk about what they want with respect to their treatment preferences and understanding what the true options are that they can have informed conversations. that's at the grass roots level. the other is in the area of payers. it's assuring access to services and the overall spectrum of services they provide and quality of those services. i think both of those things are critically important and they also have the tools to understand what the value of proposition is. i would say both very much at the grass roots level and the payer level and there is a lot of energy right now in our community. there is the opportunity to actually improve communication across settings of care around services. right now oftentimes i may say exactly what's important to me in reference to treatment care but it's not communicated to next, so it's a full and powerful curriculum because what's being discussed is being honored. >> as you know on that last point there is incredible amount of energy within dph about
first is actually at the grass roots level which is actually making it okay for people to actually talk about what they want with respect to their treatment preferences and understanding what the true options are that they can have informed conversations. that's at the grass roots level. the other is in the area of payers. it's assuring access to services and the overall spectrum of services they provide and quality of those services. i think both of those things are critically important and...
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Dec 14, 2014
12/14
by
KCSM
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eye 35
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>> it's actually very funny. because, you know, if i go on msnbc to talk about comcast, i'm basically talking about the boss of msnbc, you know. this is, so, it's a very, very real issue. but i know how to start. i mean, gandhi's autobiography says, first, tell the truth. you know, start -- what happens if you tell the truth is really the question. and i feel like first trying in electoral life, you know, in running for office to tell the truth about what i see in the world and to ask that other people tell the truth, and what i see is this incredible concentration, i think extraordinary things can happen there. i see with -- and just in this last summer, the response to amazon, the response to comcast-time warner, there's a real chance the comcast-time warner merger will be stopped. and then, if you combine that with the number of americans who want to break up the big banks, you suddenly see this isn't about the individual sectors of amazon abusing its power, comcast abusing its power, and jpmorgan abusing its
>> it's actually very funny. because, you know, if i go on msnbc to talk about comcast, i'm basically talking about the boss of msnbc, you know. this is, so, it's a very, very real issue. but i know how to start. i mean, gandhi's autobiography says, first, tell the truth. you know, start -- what happens if you tell the truth is really the question. and i feel like first trying in electoral life, you know, in running for office to tell the truth about what i see in the world and to ask...
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Dec 5, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 51
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so what you actually want? the service provider in the middle actually provides this facility. you are the seller, you are the buyer, you have a combined interest here. he used his platform, he takes a cut. you want it any thought at mailman will deliver in the future. if you buy at now, because why should i go physically if i can send some sheen to deliver. so here we see that all normal crime moves in to this area. you will of course like i've said i cannot reveal who the buyer and seller is because it's on a chore server, then you can cheat each other. you want to buy five grams of cocaine. u.k., but she sent you five grams of weed. how do you then manage? you are actually assessing your service. you can have a five star service provider you can have it one star service provider and then you can go to the right ones and this is how it is structured. in the future, a lot of this normal commodity crime will actually move. the second thing is what we see is a shift in downloading games to streaming things as the criminals use bulletproof cloud providers, which will not be the i
so what you actually want? the service provider in the middle actually provides this facility. you are the seller, you are the buyer, you have a combined interest here. he used his platform, he takes a cut. you want it any thought at mailman will deliver in the future. if you buy at now, because why should i go physically if i can send some sheen to deliver. so here we see that all normal crime moves in to this area. you will of course like i've said i cannot reveal who the buyer and seller is...
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Dec 21, 2014
12/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 38
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it's not a secret lab at all actually. where er at harvard, they're building these wearable electronics that can actually monitor what's going on inside your body. >> all right. let's do it. >> welcome to the mc-10 clean room. >> thank you. this is really action he siting. i feel like i'm in a nasa facility. can you tell me exactly what is going on here. > if you think of the tremendous innovation and electronics space, things have gotten smaller, cheaper, and faster. they're still fundamentally boxy and rigid. c-10 is about taking the electronics and allowing them to conform to humans. >> what are you making here? >> we manufacture and pattern here.lectronics themselves >> so microchips? >> microchips. so the process is really about putting down different layers. > it's like a cooking show almost. you start with your dough, and then you -- >> more or less. nt 're adding differe ingredients. you're removing some ingredients. >> you can see some of those patterns beginning to form. island like blocks and then spring like in
it's not a secret lab at all actually. where er at harvard, they're building these wearable electronics that can actually monitor what's going on inside your body. >> all right. let's do it. >> welcome to the mc-10 clean room. >> thank you. this is really action he siting. i feel like i'm in a nasa facility. can you tell me exactly what is going on here. > if you think of the tremendous innovation and electronics space, things have gotten smaller, cheaper, and faster....
146
146
Dec 22, 2014
12/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 146
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the turks actually tried to get them from behind. so this is actually the world of june 27th. world of warfare in southeastern europe. a world in which, in fact, the riding expectation, you know, a little bit like if you had woken up on the morning of 9/11, you wouldn't have been hearing about osama bin laden. if you were in new york like me you would have been hearing about shark attacks in florida and scandal involving a little league baseball pitcher who falsified this age documents. you wouldn't have been hearing about the naval race between britain and germany. you might have been hearing, however, about a naval race in the eastern mediterranean, basically a tripartheid naval race pitting greece, the ottoman empire and russia. because the ottomans had ordered state-of-the-art dreadnaughts from britain. russia was watching this with trepidation and terror but so were the greeks. in the course of the balkan wars, huge wave of refugees are pouring into the ottoman empire, mostly muslims coming from the balkans, a few christians fleeing in the other direction. greek christian
the turks actually tried to get them from behind. so this is actually the world of june 27th. world of warfare in southeastern europe. a world in which, in fact, the riding expectation, you know, a little bit like if you had woken up on the morning of 9/11, you wouldn't have been hearing about osama bin laden. if you were in new york like me you would have been hearing about shark attacks in florida and scandal involving a little league baseball pitcher who falsified this age documents. you...
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68
Dec 8, 2014
12/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 68
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he actually -- of odd jobs. people would get in the taxi and say take me to where the wall used to be. he -- and i can just imagine that scene in the taxi. i can just imagine him saying, you know, i used to work there, and the person sitting in the back saying, yeah, sure he did. and he actually owned a newspaper store, and then he worked as a security guard, and now he's retired. he lives near the german/polish border in a small cottage that's moment to be a summer cottage, but he's winterized it. under the complicated provisions of german unification, he is able to receive some fraction of his pension from his time from the service, so he lives on his pension. and he is one of the few border guards who is willing to talk to scholars, so is i'm very grateful to him that he made the time to talk to me, and i think the world is grateful that he didn't decide to shoot. again, this is another one of those accidents. his direct colleague could have had night shift that night, was reportedly much more of a hard liner
he actually -- of odd jobs. people would get in the taxi and say take me to where the wall used to be. he -- and i can just imagine that scene in the taxi. i can just imagine him saying, you know, i used to work there, and the person sitting in the back saying, yeah, sure he did. and he actually owned a newspaper store, and then he worked as a security guard, and now he's retired. he lives near the german/polish border in a small cottage that's moment to be a summer cottage, but he's winterized...
86
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Dec 22, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 86
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and that this is actually true. and a lot of these ufos people had season was sun glinting off u-2s that couldn't be discussed at the time, for what that's worth. well, down to business. it's a real pleasure to be here. i'm flattered at the introduction and bit turnout today and thank you to the truman library institute and this wonderful library. today we'll talk about intelligence. american intelligence history has been dominated by the history of the cia. and i just did that, in fact. and the cia, of course, is an agency whose creation president truman oversaw. but the cia has dominated american intelligence history to the point where you would hear people who should know better say nothing important happened in american intelligence prior to the cia or at least its immediate pretty seser of the world war ii era. this is actually drivel, of course. in fact, many of the main components of american insolvents and many of these practices as it was manifested during world war ii, the cold war and even today, have the
and that this is actually true. and a lot of these ufos people had season was sun glinting off u-2s that couldn't be discussed at the time, for what that's worth. well, down to business. it's a real pleasure to be here. i'm flattered at the introduction and bit turnout today and thank you to the truman library institute and this wonderful library. today we'll talk about intelligence. american intelligence history has been dominated by the history of the cia. and i just did that, in fact. and...
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42
Dec 29, 2014
12/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 42
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>> no, actually, i was a pretty strange individual.ughter] so like, for example, i usually would have one or two friends in most of the different cliques. like i had a friend or two out of the jocks, a friend or two in the artists, or a friend or two -- it was all very individual. i did have, much younger -- i was part of a fantasy role-playing group. >> what is that? >> so, dungeons & dragons. >> ok. >> so, when i was -- and actually, the way i got into dungeons & dragons was my dad, when i was nine, hired a babysitter for me who introduced me to dungeons & dragons. and i was like, 'ooh, creating new worlds, and thinking of how stories come together' -- and kind of like an interactive novel. >> so you went to stanford. >> yes. >> you majored in symbolic systems. marissa mayer also majored in symbolic systems. what is that? >> so, symbolic systems -- it's a unique major to stanford. and, it's -- the simple explanation is cognitive science and artificial intelligence -- although most people will think, 'that isn't simple.' but really, i
>> no, actually, i was a pretty strange individual.ughter] so like, for example, i usually would have one or two friends in most of the different cliques. like i had a friend or two out of the jocks, a friend or two in the artists, or a friend or two -- it was all very individual. i did have, much younger -- i was part of a fantasy role-playing group. >> what is that? >> so, dungeons & dragons. >> ok. >> so, when i was -- and actually, the way i got into...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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36
Dec 17, 2014
12/14
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SFGTV
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eye 36
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i can actually understand, now with this website, and some of how some of the funding actually works. and i think that it is really beneficial to be able to have this information that the city provides on-line. that anyone can actually use, and then, i hope that it will continue to be available for people like us. or for people who are in journalism, and anyone who wants to be able to use this data, and then, i know steven will talk about what our future ideas are for making some of this data a little more consumable for just normal citizens like us, or for like i mentioned journalists too. and some of the things that like austin mentioned we had some challenges working through the data and for example, steve has helped us a lot with just some of the reporting in the data, was inconsistent and so there were some committees that when they made different filings and i am sure that this is familiar would have different variations of their name when they reported. so, for a human, looking through it, it is really easy, so, it is easy to see when a committee has just has a slight differenc
i can actually understand, now with this website, and some of how some of the funding actually works. and i think that it is really beneficial to be able to have this information that the city provides on-line. that anyone can actually use, and then, i hope that it will continue to be available for people like us. or for people who are in journalism, and anyone who wants to be able to use this data, and then, i know steven will talk about what our future ideas are for making some of this data a...
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132
Dec 22, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 132
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so he had actual experience. but being a constitutional monarchy, he took no part in anything and what he would do was go to france and see the troops and award medals and things like that. that was it. william was -- wilhelm, much more complicated, because he half believed he was the clink's heir. he hadn't understood they were bypassing him all the time. what they did was used the imperial train rather cleverly. nice train. they put him in there and told him to go east or west or -- they kept him away. he likewise didn't. bear in mind that before the war, their experience was to sort of -- or his was to go on maneuvers. but you didn't actually have to do anything. you had to be the kaiser taking the salute and so on. it was pageantry. there was no real experience. had he no idea about strategy. i think he was quite a problem actually for hindenberg and so on, so forth. and the czar did go to the front and that was -- and took command. that i hope someone may be talking about this properly because that's another
so he had actual experience. but being a constitutional monarchy, he took no part in anything and what he would do was go to france and see the troops and award medals and things like that. that was it. william was -- wilhelm, much more complicated, because he half believed he was the clink's heir. he hadn't understood they were bypassing him all the time. what they did was used the imperial train rather cleverly. nice train. they put him in there and told him to go east or west or -- they kept...
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193
Dec 18, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 193
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they actually don't solve the problem at all.ts coal with ccs is the cheap option. not everywhere, maybe not in california, maybe not in arizona, but in a whole bunch of markets, in a whole bunch of places in the country and around the world, ccs with coal is the cheapest option for deep abatement, and if you get rid of that cheapest option, you have to replace it with something more costly or less efficient. the good news is we've made a lot of progress on this. this slide is actually a little old, but basically the lower two bars are stuff that's built and operating or will be operating soon because it's being built. so right now we're here at 2015, we're putting about 50 million tons of carbon dioxide a year under ground. that has a decent volume. that's real abatement. that was co2 going into the atmosphere and is not anymore. by the end of the decade we should be at about 100 million tons roughly twice that. right now we have 20 large projects worldwide. we're on track to have another 20 or so by the end of this decade. that
they actually don't solve the problem at all.ts coal with ccs is the cheap option. not everywhere, maybe not in california, maybe not in arizona, but in a whole bunch of markets, in a whole bunch of places in the country and around the world, ccs with coal is the cheapest option for deep abatement, and if you get rid of that cheapest option, you have to replace it with something more costly or less efficient. the good news is we've made a lot of progress on this. this slide is actually a little...
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225
Dec 27, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN
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eye 225
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it's actually speeding up. what i'm going to show you here is this animation of that process of a flow coming in and the flow coming out. it's color-coded. color-codedin this kor fasteron basically means glacier flows that are happening. antarctica.western you see the inlets there and then the outlets of the glaciers. they are basically rivers of ice. what's happening here is that warmer water that's happening in the antarctic is coming underneath the ice shoals that you see here. as it comes under this ice, it puts up and reroads the eroadsng points of -- it the glacier. eroads this, the grounding point moves landward. and that unstabilizes. it's not as secure. the glacier begins to fall and surge forward and out into the ocean. the process of this complex interaction between a warming ocean and its ice that is basically cascading and ice into theutting water and eventually melting the ice. amount of sea level attributed to melting of the western an tire antarctic. so what does that mean? ten feet of sea level
it's actually speeding up. what i'm going to show you here is this animation of that process of a flow coming in and the flow coming out. it's color-coded. color-codedin this kor fasteron basically means glacier flows that are happening. antarctica.western you see the inlets there and then the outlets of the glaciers. they are basically rivers of ice. what's happening here is that warmer water that's happening in the antarctic is coming underneath the ice shoals that you see here. as it comes...
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Dec 8, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 75
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they can actually study their own system. in fact, they come to distrust any planning or any reformation activities when it comes to economy. so we see that there is no planned economy at all in north korea. merchants and private citizens are going to provide. if you relied on the leader to provide these things to you, you will die of hunger because there is none coming your way. people are getting smarter and smarter. because they've been exposed to the markt economy and because they have been exposed to the market capitalism that has been exposed to north korea by necessity. and this was, in order for people to survive. >> we see that a lot of people are engaged in trade activities. we see rather than old people. >> now we see more young people allows us to come to the border area. for some, you need to cross the border. we can see that these youchk people are dressed better. and they are much smarter. and they communicate with chinese people well. many of these young people actually were former students to china. they unde
they can actually study their own system. in fact, they come to distrust any planning or any reformation activities when it comes to economy. so we see that there is no planned economy at all in north korea. merchants and private citizens are going to provide. if you relied on the leader to provide these things to you, you will die of hunger because there is none coming your way. people are getting smarter and smarter. because they've been exposed to the markt economy and because they have been...
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Dec 24, 2014
12/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 43
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he is actually a good friend of mine. and yes his work on the eastern front published in the 1970s is something of a touchstone for my own work. i mean norman himself is actually quite fond of saying that by now, four decades later, someone should have come along and made his book obsolete. to date no one has really quite done that. on the eastern front, that is to say primarily the eastern european front, the sector of the war pitting germany and austria-hungary and their allies including bulgaria and the ottoman empire against russia is much less studied in the western front to this day the russians have not actually published an official mill trer history or chronicle. the only ironic thing in retrospect about this book if you look at norman stone and his career is he's actually been in turkey now since the mid 1990s, teaching mostly in ankara where i used to teach. however, turkey doesn't play much of a role in that book. and i think that's just because of the timing of the research and the writing of it. when norman
he is actually a good friend of mine. and yes his work on the eastern front published in the 1970s is something of a touchstone for my own work. i mean norman himself is actually quite fond of saying that by now, four decades later, someone should have come along and made his book obsolete. to date no one has really quite done that. on the eastern front, that is to say primarily the eastern european front, the sector of the war pitting germany and austria-hungary and their allies including...
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Dec 28, 2014
12/14
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KCSM
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eye 37
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and it's actually not hard to figure out. you can literally see a policy, you know, from the 17th century stretching up into, you know, we can say conservatively into the 1960s, into the 20th century, the mid-20th century here in america, designed to injure african americans. if you understand that and if you take that, it would not make sense that that would just sort of go away, that that injury would disappear within 50 years of half-halting, you know, reform and trying to make things better. it's not actually that hard to figure out. we have it at our core that a certain group of people, who are marked by ancestry, who are marked by melanin, must represent a bottom for us. and, you can see that in the era of enslavement. you can see that literally being written, as i've shown in the piece, into the laws. you can see that when we decide to in this period of enslavement and yet, we still can't get away from ha two-tiered society. you can see it, most depressingly, i have to say for me, when we go to erect our modern safety
and it's actually not hard to figure out. you can literally see a policy, you know, from the 17th century stretching up into, you know, we can say conservatively into the 1960s, into the 20th century, the mid-20th century here in america, designed to injure african americans. if you understand that and if you take that, it would not make sense that that would just sort of go away, that that injury would disappear within 50 years of half-halting, you know, reform and trying to make things...
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48
Dec 24, 2014
12/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 48
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actual, physical artifact. because every time we have to make an actual item available, we are risking a bit the conservation of the item. and so, that's why for the press, we have provided "b" roll video of the artifacts themselves, which we did prior to the 50th anniversary. so, here we are in one of our conservation labs with one of our conservators. and she is going to show us, which is fbi exhibit b-1, which is oswald's wallet, including the contents. i'm going to answer a question that a lot of people have, which is, what is the staining that is on portions of those items? that is from the fingerprint chemical that was used by the fbi to try to obtain fingerprints. it ended up staining the artifact itself. so, i know some people think it looks like blood. it is not blood. this would have been in oswald's possession when he was arrested but not in his possession when he was shot. and here she's laying out some of the items that were found, which we have encapsulated in mylar. the conservators here we have.
actual, physical artifact. because every time we have to make an actual item available, we are risking a bit the conservation of the item. and so, that's why for the press, we have provided "b" roll video of the artifacts themselves, which we did prior to the 50th anniversary. so, here we are in one of our conservation labs with one of our conservators. and she is going to show us, which is fbi exhibit b-1, which is oswald's wallet, including the contents. i'm going to answer a...
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34
Dec 4, 2014
12/14
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ALJAZAM
tv
eye 34
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so when he was actually killed, it was shocking. i wrote the song, and it was a bit like a calling card. then i got invited this, that, and the other and particularly the amnesty tours which in '86 and '88, the '881 went around the world, we suddenly started meeting people who were in the front line of these extraordinary experiences. >> but you had now crossed the threshold into the world of human rights activism and social justice and at that point, you were in. you couldn't walk away? in fact, you talk about bono hustling you into this as well? >> yeah. well, the first one was '86 and bono was the master husbandler for that on behalf of amnesty. and i also took over his role on the 88 but i think he had been influenced by the song, too, and it was they were life changers, i think, for all of the musicians who took in the '88 tour, we had springsteen, doors, tracy chapman and i think for all of us, it was unlike any other experiences we had had. >> what's your sense of artists and musicians getting involved in causing like this? t
so when he was actually killed, it was shocking. i wrote the song, and it was a bit like a calling card. then i got invited this, that, and the other and particularly the amnesty tours which in '86 and '88, the '881 went around the world, we suddenly started meeting people who were in the front line of these extraordinary experiences. >> but you had now crossed the threshold into the world of human rights activism and social justice and at that point, you were in. you couldn't walk away?...
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59
Dec 14, 2014
12/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
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in one case, for example, here -- actually, in three cases, we actually have fake inverts created by taking a relatively common stamp, carefully cutting out the central design, turning it upside down and pasting it back into place. sometimes additional markings are added to covers that make them more valuable to collectors. perforations are added or removed. so, fakes generally start out life as being genuine stamps but then someone has doctored them in a way to make them valuable to collectors. the greatest reward for me is the nose prints on the glass. i mean, we saw them in the gems gallery. i find them even occasionally on the pull-out frames in the national stamp salon. that to me is just the biggest reward because something that you selected and wrote up and had conserved and placed on display, somebody else came up to it and said, wow, and wanted to press their nose right up against it and get a good look at it. that's a good feeling, i think. it's one of the reasons we do what we do, to share these things with people and have other people be able to appreciate them the same w
in one case, for example, here -- actually, in three cases, we actually have fake inverts created by taking a relatively common stamp, carefully cutting out the central design, turning it upside down and pasting it back into place. sometimes additional markings are added to covers that make them more valuable to collectors. perforations are added or removed. so, fakes generally start out life as being genuine stamps but then someone has doctored them in a way to make them valuable to...
the proposed one, it's actually pretty dense. next to the proposed site there are already two close by.
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49
Dec 15, 2014
12/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 49
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it was a select few that actually did this. today it is virtually every single member of commerce has a weekend trip once or twice a year you can pay $5,000 go golf for three days or the racecourse for the opening weekend or go to san diego. that is the perks of being a fundraiser. there's a lot of ways that you spend to actually do that. i don't know why you wouldn't want to keep doing it if you didn't have principles. >> host: you got fired a couple of times, lost your your jobs but yet you kept even when you are taking a step backwards with take two forward. how did that happen and were you able to keep your career together and keep it called together in such a way that over the long-term you were getting promoted? >> guest: i think it was an awful fundraiser. i hated rich people and i hated calling them every day. and yet, you know, over a 15 year period i got to go from a deputy at the national finance director of the democratic national committee. i had no clue how it happened. i kept doing what i wanted to do. i think at
it was a select few that actually did this. today it is virtually every single member of commerce has a weekend trip once or twice a year you can pay $5,000 go golf for three days or the racecourse for the opening weekend or go to san diego. that is the perks of being a fundraiser. there's a lot of ways that you spend to actually do that. i don't know why you wouldn't want to keep doing it if you didn't have principles. >> host: you got fired a couple of times, lost your your jobs but yet...
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117
Dec 24, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 117
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he is actually a good friend of mine. and yes his work on the eastern front published in the 1970s is something of a touchstone for my own work. i mean norman himself is actually quite fond of saying that by now, four decades later, someone should have come along and made his book obsolete. to date no one has really quite done that. on the eastern front, that is to say primarily the eastern european front, the sector of the war pitting germany and austria-hungary and their allies including bulgaria and the ottoman empire against russia is much less studied in the western front to this day the russians have not actually published an official military history or chronicle. the only ironic thing in retrospect about this book if you look at norman stone and his career is he's actually been in turkey now since the mid 1990s, teaching mostly in ankara where i used to teach. however, turkey doesn't play much of a role in that book. and i think that's just because of the timing of the research and the writing of it. when norman s
he is actually a good friend of mine. and yes his work on the eastern front published in the 1970s is something of a touchstone for my own work. i mean norman himself is actually quite fond of saying that by now, four decades later, someone should have come along and made his book obsolete. to date no one has really quite done that. on the eastern front, that is to say primarily the eastern european front, the sector of the war pitting germany and austria-hungary and their allies including...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 9, 2014
12/14
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SFGTV
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actually the best rock on this sandstone. stops being a mine tunnel when we run out of rock at the other end, beyond folsom street, halfway to howard street. also at that stage, the 3-track tunnel starts to widen out to 6 track s to get into the station. so it more than doubles in width and no tunnel machine would touch that. the transbay terminal is presently under construction and the train box in the orange section is, in fact, almost finished and we're now coming up out of the ground. there is a green section at the end, which i will talk about later, but that is the extension to, in fact, accommodate double-length high-speed rail trains. that is two sets of 220-meter trains to make a 400-plus meter train. now the downtown 4th and townsend station, we have done recent maneuvering to improve the land and to build it with a single platform in the middle and bypass track on the south side. this station is only for caltrain trains to stop and start, not for high-speed rail. so it has the ability for high-speed rail to bypass,
actually the best rock on this sandstone. stops being a mine tunnel when we run out of rock at the other end, beyond folsom street, halfway to howard street. also at that stage, the 3-track tunnel starts to widen out to 6 track s to get into the station. so it more than doubles in width and no tunnel machine would touch that. the transbay terminal is presently under construction and the train box in the orange section is, in fact, almost finished and we're now coming up out of the ground. there...
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Dec 25, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN2
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he actually -- of odd jobs. people would get in the taxi and say take me to where the wall used to be. he -- and i can just imagine that scene in the taxi. i can just imagine him saying, you know, i used to work there, and the person sitting in the back saying, yeah, sure he did. and he actually owned a newspaper store, and then he worked as a security guard, and now he's retired. he lives near the german/polish border in a small cottage that's moment to be a summer cottage, but he's winterized it. under the complicated provisions of german unification, he is able to receive some fraction of his pension from his time from the service, so he lives on his pension. and he is one of the few border guards who is willing to talk to scholars, so is i'm very grateful to him that he made the time to talk to me, and i think the world is grateful that he didn't decide to shoot. again, this is another one of those accidents. his direct colleague could have had night shift that night, was reportedly much more of a hard liner
he actually -- of odd jobs. people would get in the taxi and say take me to where the wall used to be. he -- and i can just imagine that scene in the taxi. i can just imagine him saying, you know, i used to work there, and the person sitting in the back saying, yeah, sure he did. and he actually owned a newspaper store, and then he worked as a security guard, and now he's retired. he lives near the german/polish border in a small cottage that's moment to be a summer cottage, but he's winterized...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 14, 2014
12/14
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SFGTV
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actually my backyard is connected with the proposed establishment. i would like to let everyone know that behind the proposed cannabis club, there are three child-care facilities. and if and when these children are exposed to cannabis on a long-term basis, what kind of impact will it have on their health and well-being? please consider this judiciously and with discretion. secondly, our community -- in our community, is there truly this need to have this many cannabis establishments? most of the cannabis users are from other neighborhoods. and the purveyor of cannabis know well these buyers where they are from. why do they -- why do they not open up the establishments closer or where the user resides instead of opening up the establishment in our backyards? >> thank you, sir, your time is up. >> translator: i do oppose. thank you. >> >> translator: my name is mae chen. i just want to say that in our neighborhood there is already excessive amount of cannabis shops. there are two on mission street. i live in the street behind those shops. many of us, w
actually my backyard is connected with the proposed establishment. i would like to let everyone know that behind the proposed cannabis club, there are three child-care facilities. and if and when these children are exposed to cannabis on a long-term basis, what kind of impact will it have on their health and well-being? please consider this judiciously and with discretion. secondly, our community -- in our community, is there truly this need to have this many cannabis establishments? most of...
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Dec 31, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN2
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>> it was actually started out at the university of arizona. there is a major absurd and the university of delaware, gop down in oak ridge and some work we are becoming far more successful with this. the entrepreneurs that actually started the major seawater operation in the horn of africa and is working now with the united arab emirates came out of arizona. >> in you wanted to address john's question. >> yes, very quickly. i spent many years working diligently with politicians. and i woke up after a while and i was getting nowhere. they are actually very smart people. they have an agenda in their agenda is driven by two things. it's driven by the people in this room and they are also driven by who actually gives the money to be elected. you have to just simply understand that. you can do all of the arguments you like. you're running against the political reality. a few years ago we decided not to do that and that is where the rising voices and engineering for climate extremes came out of. two examples where that's no effect in the political pr
>> it was actually started out at the university of arizona. there is a major absurd and the university of delaware, gop down in oak ridge and some work we are becoming far more successful with this. the entrepreneurs that actually started the major seawater operation in the horn of africa and is working now with the united arab emirates came out of arizona. >> in you wanted to address john's question. >> yes, very quickly. i spent many years working diligently with...
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Dec 23, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 169
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what prompted it was actually a message from st. petersburg, din from the foreign minister there to his ambassador in paris, saying that owing to our inability, that is russia's inability to accede to germany'o desire that we cease mobilizingo we must now regard war as imminent. if she had dated this correctly she would have had an entirely h different interpretation of thet outbreak of the war. complicated to an extreme degre. the argument that she's bette essentially trying to present l about german militarism, war guilt and so on and so forth. what is ironic about this, and again i say this with respect yo because barbara tuchman is r someone whose work i admire in the whole, elsewhere she actually wrote very, very, i think, eloquently about the importance of chronology and getting the facts straight. unfortunately in this case, she did not. but in some of her other books i think she did a much better job. it's still a great read, though. but one should read it with caution.en the guns of august. >> hood river, oregon is next.p j
what prompted it was actually a message from st. petersburg, din from the foreign minister there to his ambassador in paris, saying that owing to our inability, that is russia's inability to accede to germany'o desire that we cease mobilizingo we must now regard war as imminent. if she had dated this correctly she would have had an entirely h different interpretation of thet outbreak of the war. complicated to an extreme degre. the argument that she's bette essentially trying to present l about...
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Dec 1, 2014
12/14
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ALJAZAM
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that actually happened in a fictional episode of homelands. rosemary as a nurse says: >> now, billy, unleash your cyber geek. guide us through the loopholes here, the security loopholes that would allow a hack tore bypass the security passwords and actually, you know, perhaps, if you will, change x-rays, medical records or drug infusion pumps. >> i actually brought in some equipment here. this is an infusion pump if i were to look for vulnerabilities in a devicsin a device like thid just buy one, go to ebay, have it sent to your home. >> how much does it do some of cost? >> a few hundred dollars. >> totally legal. >> totally legal. nothing wrong with it. the most important piece here if you look in the back there is a network connection. >> show that at that to dave. >> it's meant to be on the network. there is a network connection there. what you can't see is also on top is a wireless connective at this. it connects to a wireless network. the first thing i would do is take it away they are just really computers it's the same as a laptop or de
that actually happened in a fictional episode of homelands. rosemary as a nurse says: >> now, billy, unleash your cyber geek. guide us through the loopholes here, the security loopholes that would allow a hack tore bypass the security passwords and actually, you know, perhaps, if you will, change x-rays, medical records or drug infusion pumps. >> i actually brought in some equipment here. this is an infusion pump if i were to look for vulnerabilities in a devicsin a device like thid...
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Dec 4, 2014
12/14
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ALJAZAM
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eye 54
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so being a refugee is actually a leg up on the others. the importance of course i think in your distinction between pallettes and cards is it's a little easier domestically to sell to iowa farmers the idea of getting rid of surplus the u.s. government particularly in this congress in ponying up additional resources to put on debit cards in the middle east. >> do the debit cards work better, more efficiently, with the native populations? you know these countries that we're talking about have had a rough 21st century. they took hundreds of thousands of iraqi refugees, now millions of syrian refugees, there must be some domestic disruption that comes from that kind of pace and that kind of burden. is someone with a card more compatible with the local economy than someone getting free food from somewhere else that they may divert into the local economy? >> absolutely. i think almost everyone united in the humanitarian or development business would prefer cards for couple of reasons. as has already been said, you put the matter of choice in th
so being a refugee is actually a leg up on the others. the importance of course i think in your distinction between pallettes and cards is it's a little easier domestically to sell to iowa farmers the idea of getting rid of surplus the u.s. government particularly in this congress in ponying up additional resources to put on debit cards in the middle east. >> do the debit cards work better, more efficiently, with the native populations? you know these countries that we're talking about...
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Dec 15, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN3
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but i would note that when it comes to looking at actual social security plans, when people actually do them, they do them based on the actuary's 75-year projection, including the diamond-orszag saving social security plan. this would suggest people do target the 75-year solvency. and if we're targeting it when we're actually legislating the question would be, why don't we target it when we're actually doing automatic adjustments? with that said i think that we are doing automatic adjustments. i think that steps in this direction would be an improvement however we did it. when it came to individual parameters that makes sense, as well. one thing is we index the benefit side and revenue side. now, to be clear the goal of such an automatic mechanism would not be solvency. our current system will probably be made solvent. congress will get around to it later and focus changes on later generations. the idea is to spread the adjustment appropriately. i don't mean to suggest that this is the way we get to solvency from where we are today. right now congress and the president do need to agr
but i would note that when it comes to looking at actual social security plans, when people actually do them, they do them based on the actuary's 75-year projection, including the diamond-orszag saving social security plan. this would suggest people do target the 75-year solvency. and if we're targeting it when we're actually legislating the question would be, why don't we target it when we're actually doing automatic adjustments? with that said i think that we are doing automatic adjustments....
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Dec 30, 2014
12/14
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FBC
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it's actually two cameras up there. gets a tight shot of your license plate, the other a wide shot of the intersection to show if you've gone through it or not. take a look at the numbers. tribune hired experts to study them and found that, yes, there was a reduction in the t-bone accidents, cars running through and getting sort of hit on the side, but rear end crashes, they were on the increase. why? well, a lot of people slamming on their brakes. take a look at this other thing up here. this is another light that actually will flash on so that they're sure they get a good picture of you. this has caused a backlash not only here in chicago, but elsewhere against red light cameras. new jersey just allowed a five-year experiment with red light cameras in different cities around new jersey to expire. and, you know, when it started back in 2007, 77% of people surveyed thought it was a good idea. now that's been cut by a third, and if you've got a ticket, you definitely don't think it was a good idea. one other thing i want
it's actually two cameras up there. gets a tight shot of your license plate, the other a wide shot of the intersection to show if you've gone through it or not. take a look at the numbers. tribune hired experts to study them and found that, yes, there was a reduction in the t-bone accidents, cars running through and getting sort of hit on the side, but rear end crashes, they were on the increase. why? well, a lot of people slamming on their brakes. take a look at this other thing up here. this...
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Dec 31, 2014
12/14
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CNNW
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actually don't totally fit that scenario.ut it's an extraordinary turn and should actually eventually turn up in all the places where it could have done so with a typical scenario which had followed. >> alastair rosenschein, thank you for that. one of the family members said she feels sad for relatives of 8501 but a little jealous, too, because they're still waiting. thank you so much. >>> we're covering recovery efforts all morning long. >>> but first, the fbi said north korea hacked sony in retribution for the controversial film "the interview" but could they be wrong? why some investigators say it may have been an inside job, next. >>> we are following breaking news this morning. search crews using sonar may have found the wreckage of airasia 8501 on the bottom of the java sea. grief-stricken families were informed of the news by indonesian officials. overnight, the body of a seventh victim was retrieved from the water. it's still not known if the plane was in one piece or broke up where it crashed. right now the search an
actually don't totally fit that scenario.ut it's an extraordinary turn and should actually eventually turn up in all the places where it could have done so with a typical scenario which had followed. >> alastair rosenschein, thank you for that. one of the family members said she feels sad for relatives of 8501 but a little jealous, too, because they're still waiting. thank you so much. >>> we're covering recovery efforts all morning long. >>> but first, the fbi said...
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Dec 8, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN2
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i'm no art expert actually.ack when i was in college i spent 90 minutes standing in front of the painting at the museum in boston taking notes on a yellow legal pad. as i stood there taking notes, other museum visitors started asking me questions about the painting as if i were some kind of expert. first i laughed it off, but then i started talking to people about the painting to them but i noticed in the interesting discussions and what they thought. on the other hand, if i had been at the science museum and we were looking at the demonstration of a pendulum, i wouldn't be having a discussion about our opinions about whether the pendulum worked. how interesting. okay. where do we go next? you go to the impression of some it's one of my favorites, he says. it's in the same in circa 34. he used a technique instead of strokes of paint, he built up the image by adding the colors dot i. dot. kind of went away like the way that the digital images do it years later they expect i know my painting. wasn't that on paris
i'm no art expert actually.ack when i was in college i spent 90 minutes standing in front of the painting at the museum in boston taking notes on a yellow legal pad. as i stood there taking notes, other museum visitors started asking me questions about the painting as if i were some kind of expert. first i laughed it off, but then i started talking to people about the painting to them but i noticed in the interesting discussions and what they thought. on the other hand, if i had been at the...
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Dec 23, 2014
12/14
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WHYY
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probably the spring of 2013 >>okay >>and i actually had not formally met mike before that and we goto talking and mike said that there may be an opportunity for united water to help out with the situation in haiti. >>but he was... you were thinking about the water problem? >>yes >>okay go ahead >>and then subsequent to that we had further conversations we signed a partnership agreement in the summer of 2013 and then went on our first mission in october of 2013 >>to do what? >>well initially the mission was to make an assessment of the water supply the water treatment waste water system if you could call it that and sanitation needs primarily for the hospital sacÉ coeur and then also to look at the water supply for the water supply for the town of milot our interest in this is that we're in the business of providing safe clean drinking water and also providing waste water services that's our only business that our employees are very dedicated to that and we know how critical clean safe water is to medical treatment and prevention so we had a high interest in doing that and our parent
probably the spring of 2013 >>okay >>and i actually had not formally met mike before that and we goto talking and mike said that there may be an opportunity for united water to help out with the situation in haiti. >>but he was... you were thinking about the water problem? >>yes >>okay go ahead >>and then subsequent to that we had further conversations we signed a partnership agreement in the summer of 2013 and then went on our first mission in october of...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 1, 2014
12/14
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SFGTV
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do we know actually that work is being performed? >> mr. chairman, supervisor wiener, supervisor avalos, there are reporting requirements and actually the department of planning has stated we have in our report that although they will be reporting later on in the year in terms of enforcement it's up to the departments involved to do the enforcement. i know of no follow-up in terms that that comes back to the board of supervisors, but i think that there are procedures in place to enforce the requirements of both the rehabilitation and the on-going maintenance. again, we have not, we are not involved in that so it's up to the departments to enforce that. >> can we get a response from departments? >> committee members, tim fry again. the department -- first of all because all the properties are landmarked the work outline i still requires a permit from central permit bureau, so that is one way that we track that the work is occurring according to the plan. the second is, as mr. rose mentioned, there are reporting requirements within the mills
do we know actually that work is being performed? >> mr. chairman, supervisor wiener, supervisor avalos, there are reporting requirements and actually the department of planning has stated we have in our report that although they will be reporting later on in the year in terms of enforcement it's up to the departments involved to do the enforcement. i know of no follow-up in terms that that comes back to the board of supervisors, but i think that there are procedures in place to enforce...
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Dec 22, 2014
12/14
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MSNBCW
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but about halfway through, i realized it was actually much more work to actually sit there and count99,796, 99,797, 99,798, 99,799, 99,800 -- >> john's torture doesn't stop with the counting. his simple concept hits a technical road block when it comes to get his video to go viral. >> youtube has a 20-gigabyte limit, so it's tricky getting 70 hours of video down to 20 gigabytes. most video in any programs actually have a timeline limit. most of them are 12 hours, so i had to do a bunch of research to find a program that was able to do it. >> so, there it is, his pride and joy, his claim to more than 500,000 views and still counting. >> that's sort of the magic of the internet that it can be something you do that nobody else did. it might be counting to 100,000 and maybe nobody else wants to do it, but it's his forever now. >> 99,998. 99,999. 100,000. >> i have had lots of complements when people tell me i missed a number. >> coming up, two kids from germany run into trouble with a magic trick. and then it gets worse. >> holy crap. is that kid okay? >> you're about to find out. when "
but about halfway through, i realized it was actually much more work to actually sit there and count99,796, 99,797, 99,798, 99,799, 99,800 -- >> john's torture doesn't stop with the counting. his simple concept hits a technical road block when it comes to get his video to go viral. >> youtube has a 20-gigabyte limit, so it's tricky getting 70 hours of video down to 20 gigabytes. most video in any programs actually have a timeline limit. most of them are 12 hours, so i had to do a...
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Dec 15, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN
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in this matter, was burke actually correct >> the -- was actually correct? the french revolution was much more radical than the american revolution. was not anrevolution argument between two different kinds of liberalism. it was an attempt to put into place in a real-time and a real place a very radical version of the liberal idea. saw in this the death of liberalism. he thought radicalism would make it impossible for liberal society to function and develop and the french revolutionaries by breaking with the past, by throwing away all of their inheritance and really trying to start from scratch on principle alone would end up a disaster, and there is a famous passage in predictswhere burke what will happen. and what he predicts is essentially -- because it is impossible for these principles to actually function in practice, the french will turn on themselves and create an opportunity for a military over and thiske radical revolution will and with the end of liberalism. , thes easy to see it arrival of napoleon at the end asthe revolutionary period, burke bei
in this matter, was burke actually correct >> the -- was actually correct? the french revolution was much more radical than the american revolution. was not anrevolution argument between two different kinds of liberalism. it was an attempt to put into place in a real-time and a real place a very radical version of the liberal idea. saw in this the death of liberalism. he thought radicalism would make it impossible for liberal society to function and develop and the french revolutionaries...
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Dec 29, 2014
12/14
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BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 42
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it was pretty disgusting, actually.laughter] if you really want to know, it is probably more akin to a sweatshop. but this is how you build companies. >> you tweeted a picture of that garage. saying box's first office 8 years ago where we slept, worked, fought, pivoted, and built. when it came to each of your co-founders, what was each of your roles? >> we got really lucky, i think, collectively, because we each bring a different kind of skill to the table. so we had sort of the software skill, the hardware and networking skill. we had the finance, administration, legal, business operations skill. that was dylan. and i focused really on the product side. >> so when you say you fought, i'm just curious. in those early days, what did you fight about? what were the issues that came up? >> we had all the sort of fighting and all of the bickering as founders. but the nice thing is that it all fell back on, again, that trusted relationship that let us kind of work through that. we did not have the same kind of early founding
it was pretty disgusting, actually.laughter] if you really want to know, it is probably more akin to a sweatshop. but this is how you build companies. >> you tweeted a picture of that garage. saying box's first office 8 years ago where we slept, worked, fought, pivoted, and built. when it came to each of your co-founders, what was each of your roles? >> we got really lucky, i think, collectively, because we each bring a different kind of skill to the table. so we had sort of the...
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69
Dec 20, 2014
12/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 69
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they must get so excited when an actual natural fire happens when the rest of us are actually quite terrified. >> you know, its a mixed back but safety is the priority. research? >> one thing i am dying to know is how on earth do you design a device, an instrument that can withstand that kind of heat? >> they showed me examples much things that didn't quite make the cut they had melted i hope instruments. they had aluminum tripods that melted and they had to go with steel. tried and true at the end of the fire, can withstand 3,000 degrees. what they have apparently can. >> they seem like the black box of fire fighting. >> an interesting analogy. they can see what's happening on basis. >> on "techknow" we did a show on the yosemite fires and i saw how difficult it is to study a fire and what drove home to me was with the potentially life-threatening setting, it's imports to have these remote eyes on the situation. no case, they had eyes in the sky through drones. i am wondering: how important is it to have those eyes on the ground for these scientists? >> that's a great point because asked wha
they must get so excited when an actual natural fire happens when the rest of us are actually quite terrified. >> you know, its a mixed back but safety is the priority. research? >> one thing i am dying to know is how on earth do you design a device, an instrument that can withstand that kind of heat? >> they showed me examples much things that didn't quite make the cut they had melted i hope instruments. they had aluminum tripods that melted and they had to go with steel....
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180
Dec 13, 2014
12/14
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FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 180
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actually, the omnibus spending bill, bill, actually paid for this. so it's great. it's allluq? season is in thisúg1ç bill. >> all right. but yet elizabeth warren who is very far left and then you had the tea party guys, far right. and nobody liked it. who liked this. him a duck session. this is why we call a lame duck session because lame things happen. if this is such a good deal for the american people, right? they would have done this before the midterm election cycle because it would drive people to the polls. but what they do is they wait until the lame duck and boehner would much ratherdxb have this whole spending thing for the next nine months done with with. so they don't have to go back and debate how much h.h.s. gets or whether, you know, obamacare is funded or whether planned parenthood gets anything. they just want all that icky stuff of governing and budgeting off the table. which is what they basically which is what they basically did last night. and elizabeth warren, i think, was actually quite smart in the way she framed it.7+pjÑ now, i don't agree with all her
actually, the omnibus spending bill, bill, actually paid for this. so it's great. it's allluq? season is in thisúg1ç bill. >> all right. but yet elizabeth warren who is very far left and then you had the tea party guys, far right. and nobody liked it. who liked this. him a duck session. this is why we call a lame duck session because lame things happen. if this is such a good deal for the american people, right? they would have done this before the midterm election cycle because it...
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61
Dec 21, 2014
12/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 61
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here they are actually inside each cell.ise, there is one area here that offers the kind of privacy that we had never seen in the states. >> let me show you the bathroom. this is the standard bathroom for "n" unit. >> in an american prison, all the toilets are out in the open. in this prison, people could actually walk into their bathroom and shut a door and have privacy. >> translator: that's the law. >> one "n" block inmate, a 24-year-old, agreed to speak with us. he is serving a life sentence for murder and says his problems began after borrowing money from a friend to buy drugs. >> translator: i did not have money to pay my debt. he said he would help me to pay my debt but i have to go somewhere with him. i was stupid enough to pay my debt this way. the two men attempted to burglarize a home. >> translator: my job was to search the house and not to hurt anyone. nobody was supposed to beat this man. we were supposed to search the house and it just happened. and a man is dead. the prosecution claims that i participated. th
here they are actually inside each cell.ise, there is one area here that offers the kind of privacy that we had never seen in the states. >> let me show you the bathroom. this is the standard bathroom for "n" unit. >> in an american prison, all the toilets are out in the open. in this prison, people could actually walk into their bathroom and shut a door and have privacy. >> translator: that's the law. >> one "n" block inmate, a 24-year-old, agreed to...
1,023
1.0K
Dec 19, 2014
12/14
by
COM
tv
eye 1,023
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>> ( translated ): it actually was very funny. that would often take us to the side and say "why do you have to do this pub n public?" >> stephen: oh, so they were down with it, just on the d.l.? listen, i'd like to hear more about that. we've got to go to a commercial break which-- do they have commercial breaks in russia? >> ( translated ): we only have commercials for putin the great. (laughter) >> stephen: all right, hopefully we'll have one of those right now. we'll be right back with more pussy riot. stick around. (cheers and applause) julia: who's ready for their favorite present from their favorite aunt? boy: is she here? julia: yeah. i am. girl: mom says you give fancy gifts because you don't have a boyfriend. julia: i don't have a boyfriend. i have lots of boyfriends. ask around. presenting estaban! girl: he's allergic to hay. julia: then don't eat the hay. jenny: ok why don't you guys look under the tree, there's one more present for everyone. julia: wait what's happening? but what about... kids: wow. thanks, mom! julia
>> ( translated ): it actually was very funny. that would often take us to the side and say "why do you have to do this pub n public?" >> stephen: oh, so they were down with it, just on the d.l.? listen, i'd like to hear more about that. we've got to go to a commercial break which-- do they have commercial breaks in russia? >> ( translated ): we only have commercials for putin the great. (laughter) >> stephen: all right, hopefully we'll have one of those right...