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Jul 29, 2013
07/13
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KPIX
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spends most of his time here at the bill and melinda gates foundationlinda, whom he credits with being a driving force behind the foundation. there are over 1,100 employees to help them decide which programs to fund, but gates still visits sites around the world to see what's working and what's not. >> i welcome bill gates to our school. the government of ghana and all school-age children are grateful for your support. >> bill: very well done. great to be here. >> rose: the grants here go towards school nutrition... >> this is spinach. >> rose: ...improving agriculture... >> jacob: we don't have enough water in the river. >> rose: ...and. most important to gates, lifesaving vaccines. ( applause ) >> bill: well, whenever you see a mother bringing a sick child into a facility, it's easy to relate to, "what if that was my child?" you realize how crazy it is that with the world being rich enough to afford all sorts of frivolous things, that those basic things still aren't... aren't being provided. >> rose: but providing vaccines throughout the developing wo
spends most of his time here at the bill and melinda gates foundationlinda, whom he credits with being a driving force behind the foundation. there are over 1,100 employees to help them decide which programs to fund, but gates still visits sites around the world to see what's working and what's not. >> i welcome bill gates to our school. the government of ghana and all school-age children are grateful for your support. >> bill: very well done. great to be here. >> rose: the...
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Jul 20, 2013
07/13
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MSNBCW
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are bill gates in your heart. and he wrote back and told me, no, i'm not bill gates, but i wish i had his money, i could give you a lot more. you know? and that was nice for him to say that. these are the letters that i get. feel this. feel this. >> that's what love feels like? >> that's what it feels like. one letter, i have some letters he writes 14 and 15 pages. if he write 14 pages i have to write 14 pages plus 7 more pages. that's why i like for him to write a lot. this is what i do. this is how i spend my time. >> from what i've observed, the monotony of prison is what creates a lot of problem for these inmates. by having this focus of writing letters and maintaining a correspondence with the man that he loved, this gave ernest a purpose, a meaning in life. >> this is my favorite one. >> read it. >> no. no. no, i'm not going to read that one. >> part of it? >> okay. okay. okay. it says, i just want to send you a card to let you know i love you and that you're on my mind. love always, daddy. he's my focus rig
are bill gates in your heart. and he wrote back and told me, no, i'm not bill gates, but i wish i had his money, i could give you a lot more. you know? and that was nice for him to say that. these are the letters that i get. feel this. feel this. >> that's what love feels like? >> that's what it feels like. one letter, i have some letters he writes 14 and 15 pages. if he write 14 pages i have to write 14 pages plus 7 more pages. that's why i like for him to write a lot. this is what...
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Jul 7, 2013
07/13
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CSPAN
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you want to take enough money away from bill gates so he doesn't have power?hat's like 53%% to 1 billion? even with a billion, i think billionaires have a lot of power. what are we trying to accomplish about the signals we send about the society we live in? now the primary reason the poorest people in america are trapped in poverty is because government fails them. the government schools fail them, the neighborhoods fail them, the opportunity to have jobs fails them. if you look at chicago with over 500 people killed. the public safety system fails them. i would like to see a politics that fome focuses on how radically we have to reform the experience of poor americans in order to break out and give them a chance to genuinely climb. i'm more interested in the next 1,000 people rising from poverty than i am from trying to go out and find someone who i can reach into their pocket and take money from. i would argue that at $4 trillion a year, the problem with the u.s. government is not absence of money, it is absence of competence. >> if we go to europe, you can
you want to take enough money away from bill gates so he doesn't have power?hat's like 53%% to 1 billion? even with a billion, i think billionaires have a lot of power. what are we trying to accomplish about the signals we send about the society we live in? now the primary reason the poorest people in america are trapped in poverty is because government fails them. the government schools fail them, the neighborhoods fail them, the opportunity to have jobs fails them. if you look at chicago with...
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wealth and great things that we know our society can be created by and you know not waiting on a bill gates for example to solve cancer but mobilizing the governmental power of the democratic power of people concentrated in the governmental state power to defeat cancer if we know we need to defeat cancer to build affordable housing if we know we need to build affordable housing and all these things it is a society we know we have consensus on in terms of you know a humane standard of living so socialism ultimately is a means of actualizing a humane standard of living but recognizing that both counterrevolutionary pressures the long history of class society does require sort of an organizational structure that can mitigate sort of the different varying realities of humanity to move towards that future that ultimately will be a classless society which is communism and let's take a look at some domestic issues going on right now right now forty six point two million people are living below the poverty line in this country on top of that twenty five cities surveyed twenty one have seen an incre
wealth and great things that we know our society can be created by and you know not waiting on a bill gates for example to solve cancer but mobilizing the governmental power of the democratic power of people concentrated in the governmental state power to defeat cancer if we know we need to defeat cancer to build affordable housing if we know we need to build affordable housing and all these things it is a society we know we have consensus on in terms of you know a humane standard of living so...
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to help more people so if i go out and i make a lot of money like bill gates then i have money to do things like invest in cancer research or in malaria research and to do more good things for the community so to me it's really about the idea that you should be allowed to have as much liberty as possible without harming someone else but you know really make and have this funny quote he says you know i believe in one thing liberty but i don't believe in it enough to force it on anyone else so if you don't believe that you have the right to force your beliefs on anyone else you might be a libertarian and eugene you represent the big scary so many people around the opposite direction one of probably the most misunderstood philosophies currently in this country explain socialism for the audience of course well in a nutshell socialism is essentially the mirror opposite of capitalism it's using the massive wealth and great things that we know our society can be created by and you know not waiting on a bill gates for example to solve cancer but mobilizing the governmental power of the democ
to help more people so if i go out and i make a lot of money like bill gates then i have money to do things like invest in cancer research or in malaria research and to do more good things for the community so to me it's really about the idea that you should be allowed to have as much liberty as possible without harming someone else but you know really make and have this funny quote he says you know i believe in one thing liberty but i don't believe in it enough to force it on anyone else so if...
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Jul 8, 2013
07/13
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you want to take enough money way from bill gates so he doesn't have power?hat's like $53 billion to $1 billion. a billion, billionaires have a lot of power. you get down to a question. about.re we talking what are we trying to accomplish n terms of the signals we send about the kind of society we're in. the primary reason the poorest trapped inmerica are poverty because government fails them. fail vernment schools them. the neighborhoods fail them. the opportunity to have jobs them. the public safety system fails them. i would like to see a politics how radically do we have to reform the experience to oor americans in order break out and give them a chance to genuinely climb. 'm more interested in the next 1,000 people rising from poverty than i am in trying to go out who i can mebody reach into their pocket and take money from. nd i would argue that $4 trillion a year, the problem with the u.s. government is not absence of money. it's absence of competence. [ applause ] >> if you go to europe. canada is pretty much in that sense a european country. seeing t
you want to take enough money way from bill gates so he doesn't have power?hat's like $53 billion to $1 billion. a billion, billionaires have a lot of power. you get down to a question. about.re we talking what are we trying to accomplish n terms of the signals we send about the kind of society we're in. the primary reason the poorest trapped inmerica are poverty because government fails them. fail vernment schools them. the neighborhoods fail them. the opportunity to have jobs them. the public...
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wealth and great things that we know our society can be created by and you know not waiting on a bill gates for example to solve cancer but mobilizing the governmental power of the democratic power of people concentrated in the governmental state power to defeat cancer if we know we need to defeat cancer to build affordable housing if we know we need to build affordable housing and all these things that is a society we know we have consensus on in terms of you know a humane standard of living so socialism ultimately is a means of actualizing a humane standard of living but recognizing that both counterrevolutionary pressures the long history of class society does require sort of an organizational structure that can mitigate sort of the different varying realities of humanity to move towards that future that ultimately will be a classless society which is communism and let's take a look at some domestic issues going on right now right now forty six point two million people are living below the poverty line in this country on top of that of twenty five cities surveyed twenty one have seen an
wealth and great things that we know our society can be created by and you know not waiting on a bill gates for example to solve cancer but mobilizing the governmental power of the democratic power of people concentrated in the governmental state power to defeat cancer if we know we need to defeat cancer to build affordable housing if we know we need to build affordable housing and all these things that is a society we know we have consensus on in terms of you know a humane standard of living...
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Jul 17, 2013
07/13
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COM
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. >> stephen: unlike bill gates or steve jobs you did not drop out of college but you dropped out ofh school. >> i dropped out the summer i turned 15 going into my sophomore year. >> stephen: why? you seem like a smart enough kid. >> this was 12 or 13 years ago. i was going to high school in new york. i knew i wanted to work with computers and write software. i was pretty sure i wanted to do stuff on the internet. rewind 12, 13 years. there wasn't a whole lot of computer science education in schools, in high schools in new york city at the time. i tell young people ought time who ask me what should they be doing, they're bored in school. you can get a great computer science education in grade school today. go for it. take advantage of it. it wasn't an opportunity i had when i was in school. >> stephen: do you want young kids to stay in school. >> absolutely. stephen: because you're pulling the ladder up behind you. yahoo is not the hippest outfit. did they buy you to buy your cool? >> no, look. i think... i hope not. i think yahoo is... i know yahoo is looking for a path forward. the
. >> stephen: unlike bill gates or steve jobs you did not drop out of college but you dropped out ofh school. >> i dropped out the summer i turned 15 going into my sophomore year. >> stephen: why? you seem like a smart enough kid. >> this was 12 or 13 years ago. i was going to high school in new york. i knew i wanted to work with computers and write software. i was pretty sure i wanted to do stuff on the internet. rewind 12, 13 years. there wasn't a whole lot of computer...
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Jul 30, 2013
07/13
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FBC
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bill gates, rihanna. you can afford something like that.on the pillows? david: good question. liz: i will be live tomorrow grand opening, jobs in america, dow chemical new research and development facility. this is in college iville, pennsylvania. we'll bring everybody exclusive interviews, ceo of dow chemical, andrew liveris and pennsylvania governor tom could be bert. what did he do do get the jobs? very cool demonstration like bendable paint. david: i bet they want the corporate tax rate to go lower. melissa: i'm melissa francis and here is what is "money" tonight. it may be the biggest energy game-changer through fracking you probably have never heard of it. it is buried in the bottom of the ocean with more energy than anything on the planet. we'll tell you all about in just seconds. >>> plus, who calls the financial shots in your house? oh, you think you do? your spouse probably thinks otherwise. a new study says that the divide between couples is wider than the grand canyon. we have details on how the power of money is impacting marri
bill gates, rihanna. you can afford something like that.on the pillows? david: good question. liz: i will be live tomorrow grand opening, jobs in america, dow chemical new research and development facility. this is in college iville, pennsylvania. we'll bring everybody exclusive interviews, ceo of dow chemical, andrew liveris and pennsylvania governor tom could be bert. what did he do do get the jobs? very cool demonstration like bendable paint. david: i bet they want the corporate tax rate to...
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Jul 8, 2013
07/13
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CSPAN
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you want to take enough money away from bill gates so he doesn't have power?'s like $53 billion to $1 billion. even at a billion, billionaires have a lot of power. you get down to a question. what are we talking about. what are we trying to accomplish in terms of the signals we send about the kind of society we're in. the primary reason the poorest people in america are trapped in poverty because government fails them. the government schools fail them. the neighborhoods fail them. the opportunity to have jobs fail them. the public safety system fails them. i would like to see a politics that focuses on how radically do we have to reform the experience of poor americans in order to break out and give them a chance to genuinely climb. i'm more interested in the next 1,000 people rising from poverty than i am in trying to go out and find somebody who i can reach into their pocket and take money from. and i would argue that $4 trillion a year, the problem with the u.s. government is not absence of money. it's absence of competence. [ applause ] >> if you go to eur
you want to take enough money away from bill gates so he doesn't have power?'s like $53 billion to $1 billion. even at a billion, billionaires have a lot of power. you get down to a question. what are we talking about. what are we trying to accomplish in terms of the signals we send about the kind of society we're in. the primary reason the poorest people in america are trapped in poverty because government fails them. the government schools fail them. the neighborhoods fail them. the...
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Jul 29, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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. >> microsoft corporation, bill gates. >> he revels in it because ellison becoming number one meant somebody else had to be number two. and that somebody was bill gates, whose microsoft towers over all the competition, including oracle. >> it's an exciting game that's going on right now, and it is to some degree a game. you know, microsoft's in first place, we're in second place. we're trying to catch them. they're not making it easy. they're an extraordinary company. they're the most important company on earth. >> they've got $50 billion on the bank, and you've got 5, 6 in the bank? >> [chuckling] yeah, we're-- we're far behind. they're three times bigger than we are. they have a monopoly. we don't. darn it. >> yeah. >> [laughs] [rowing machine zipping] >> ellison has the reputation of being a fun-loving playboy. he's been divorced three times, has two kids, and recently married a fourth time to a writer of romance novels, melanie craft. he admits personal relationships were never his highest priority growing up on chicago's south side. >> one time when i was a kid, my sister walke
. >> microsoft corporation, bill gates. >> he revels in it because ellison becoming number one meant somebody else had to be number two. and that somebody was bill gates, whose microsoft towers over all the competition, including oracle. >> it's an exciting game that's going on right now, and it is to some degree a game. you know, microsoft's in first place, we're in second place. we're trying to catch them. they're not making it easy. they're an extraordinary company. they're...
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Jul 26, 2013
07/13
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COM
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bill gates is worth $72 billion. he could enemy in there, wave a magic wand, you have guys thought about getting malaria? ( laughter ) it can't be that far off. it can't be that far off. ( cheers and applause ) >> i haven't talked to the mayor about that, but i will suggest it. >> stephen: okay. >> on the other hand, i think we're very deserving of some sort of help of some kind. this is-- >> stephen: but we already bailed out the auto industry. how much more bailout does detroit need? >> think about it this way. detroit was the arsenal of democracy in the 1940s during world war ii. we with the the tanks and planes that make sheer you don't speak with a german accent. >> stephen: and we thanked you for that by giving you motown. >> actually, i think-- i think we gave motown to the world. >> stephen: whatever. >> but whatever. details, right. >> stephen: yeah. what can detroit do to pull itself up by its own bootstraps before we give it a bailout? doesn't detroit have to make an effort? what about selling the art from
bill gates is worth $72 billion. he could enemy in there, wave a magic wand, you have guys thought about getting malaria? ( laughter ) it can't be that far off. it can't be that far off. ( cheers and applause ) >> i haven't talked to the mayor about that, but i will suggest it. >> stephen: okay. >> on the other hand, i think we're very deserving of some sort of help of some kind. this is-- >> stephen: but we already bailed out the auto industry. how much more bailout...
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Jul 27, 2013
07/13
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KRCB
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>> rose: bill gates among them. >> yeah, bill gates and mark zuckerberg and that generation so the fact that i get to do something more entrepreneurial, i feel like i had a lot of success in 2008 and twelve and now i get to build a team around me and i get to expand this approach into different areas and pursue different interests of mind and let something grow. it's more of a challenge than staying at the "times" would be. but i'm a guy who likes challenges. >> rose: we know you're a baseball fanatic going way back to when you fell in love with the detroit tigers. that was right about the time the yankees and tigers series? >> i was six years old in 1984 when the tigers won 108 games in the world series. so at that age, your peak age of baseball and the numbers inix in baseball, too. >> rose: what did you love about baseball? >> i mean, it's kind of the perfectly designed activity if you are analyzing numbers, right as a kid you like it because everyone. in michigan is a huge sports fan it's a sport state, i grew up in a college football town, michigan state university. but i can't thi
>> rose: bill gates among them. >> yeah, bill gates and mark zuckerberg and that generation so the fact that i get to do something more entrepreneurial, i feel like i had a lot of success in 2008 and twelve and now i get to build a team around me and i get to expand this approach into different areas and pursue different interests of mind and let something grow. it's more of a challenge than staying at the "times" would be. but i'm a guy who likes challenges. >>...
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Jul 2, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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i know you did a deal with bill gates. by the way, your highness, were you surprised at the shake-up in the qatari government? i know you know the sheik very well. is that going to be a problem in the relationship? >> oh, not really, i just spoke to him a few days ago, and they're very much in control. actually, i've called my friend bajum, and he was there during the handover of the new amir, and he left to europe. i talked to him. he's on board. he's very happy. and he said it's time for new leadership, new age to take over, and really applaud qatar for this dramatic move, that really it will be the trend in the arab world. >> your highness, whether the hotel assets, your investments in the u.s., kingdom holdings' value, your value in terms of what "forbes" magazine said it is was different than what you -- what you are actually fighting with "forbes," because they valued you at $20 billion, and you say it should be more than that. have you actually filed a defamation claim against "forbes" as some have reported? >> yeah
i know you did a deal with bill gates. by the way, your highness, were you surprised at the shake-up in the qatari government? i know you know the sheik very well. is that going to be a problem in the relationship? >> oh, not really, i just spoke to him a few days ago, and they're very much in control. actually, i've called my friend bajum, and he was there during the handover of the new amir, and he left to europe. i talked to him. he's on board. he's very happy. and he said it's time...
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Jul 19, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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bill gates' reading list, sue. >> i think it's fantastic, very eclect eclectic.ifferent things on there. something for everybody. >> bob pisani, down 32 points on the trading session. it's a summer friday and, you know, i think detroit's bankruptcy has everybody kind of sitting back and taking notice a little bit. >> that's definitely an issue, although we've been talking about it for quite some time. i think the important thing is that microsoft and google took a lot of oomph out of the tech sector and ge and ingersoll-rand and the industrials have helped the optimism, at least modest optimism back. take a look at those sectors. no surprise that the industrials are in the lead. that's because of what's been going on with some of the earnings reports this morning here. take a look at what i call the big four in terms of earnings that you want to look at. our former parent company, ge, terrific numbers there overall. that's a five-year high, ingersoll-rand had excellent numbers as well. these are big, big global industrials. honeywell at an historic high today and
bill gates' reading list, sue. >> i think it's fantastic, very eclect eclectic.ifferent things on there. something for everybody. >> bob pisani, down 32 points on the trading session. it's a summer friday and, you know, i think detroit's bankruptcy has everybody kind of sitting back and taking notice a little bit. >> that's definitely an issue, although we've been talking about it for quite some time. i think the important thing is that microsoft and google took a lot of oomph...
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Jul 14, 2013
07/13
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CSPAN2
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bill gates. i talked to him. i talked to him. and he just kept on saying there is this thing that i want to do. and in frustration, i said. let the dope go. you know. [laughter] . i fought a good argument. if you are smart. will you make it smarter. and make the idea better? surrounded by the brightest young people in the country. and a good faculty? that this is something that i want to do on my own. good luck. never hear from you again. >> rich. your thoughts on this? >> well, i don't know of any mark snyder might. have an empirical evidence. that is a hard question to answer. this is a world where there is risks associated with anything that you do. i do think that there is a class of people for whom with the entrepreneurial spirit and entrepreneurial drive and high levels cognitive abilities to begin with. that could thrive outside of the traditional college environment this. is not for everyone and it is for a few. and remember most entrepreneurs will not really succeed this. is a high risk venture. >> it is probably true he
bill gates. i talked to him. i talked to him. and he just kept on saying there is this thing that i want to do. and in frustration, i said. let the dope go. you know. [laughter] . i fought a good argument. if you are smart. will you make it smarter. and make the idea better? surrounded by the brightest young people in the country. and a good faculty? that this is something that i want to do on my own. good luck. never hear from you again. >> rich. your thoughts on this? >> well, i...
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Jul 28, 2013
07/13
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KNTV
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funded in part by microsoft's bill gates. >> josh, he is ceo of hampton creek foods, he is a teacher in kenya, and blogger who is now reinventing one of nature's most basic foods. in in my list things that you are good at, i do not see anything related to this. how do you feel you are qualified for this? >> i feel i'm smarter some -- >> so am i. one of the things we realized early on, this problem is not a food science problem, it's not a culinary problem, it's not a bio chemistry problem, it requires all the disciplines. we have biologyists, we have a chef that was on top chef season nine and all of them together will make it happen. the egg is spoken of as the perfect food, setting aside the cholesterol problem, it's a complete kind of food. so, chickens do a nice job laying them, why do you fwhenee change the system. how many eggs are layed in america and around the world? >> it's the system, not the egg that is really the issue. 1.8 trillion eggs are laid every year around the word. >> that means chickens are doing a fine job. >> but they are doing a dirty job. and it's a hard to
funded in part by microsoft's bill gates. >> josh, he is ceo of hampton creek foods, he is a teacher in kenya, and blogger who is now reinventing one of nature's most basic foods. in in my list things that you are good at, i do not see anything related to this. how do you feel you are qualified for this? >> i feel i'm smarter some -- >> so am i. one of the things we realized early on, this problem is not a food science problem, it's not a culinary problem, it's not a bio...
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Jul 14, 2013
07/13
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CSPAN2
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he asked me to talk to this segment gates, bill gates. that document document talk to him and he kept saying, i have this thing a lot to do. finally and frustration i told my friend, let him go. [laughter] i thought i had a pretty good argument. if you're smart, argue going to get smarter and make the idea better surrounded by some of the brightest and people in the country? he said, this is just something i want to do my own. i said, fine, good luck. i will never hear from you again. >> you have the thought. >> i don't know. mark snyder might have some evidence. that is a hard question to answer. april ballistic world. there are risks associated with anything you do. i do think that there is a class of people for whom the entrepreneur real spirit and the entrepreneurial drive and basically high levels of cognitive abilities to begin with, that could thrive outside of the traditional college environment. it is not for everyone. indeed, it is for a few, and most of returner top entrepreneurs do not release exceed. is a high-risk venture. >
he asked me to talk to this segment gates, bill gates. that document document talk to him and he kept saying, i have this thing a lot to do. finally and frustration i told my friend, let him go. [laughter] i thought i had a pretty good argument. if you're smart, argue going to get smarter and make the idea better surrounded by some of the brightest and people in the country? he said, this is just something i want to do my own. i said, fine, good luck. i will never hear from you again. >>...
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we're talking about the big brother reality of the surveillance state so i gather steve jobs and bill gates aren't exactly your heroes but good knowledge their contribution in bringing so many people together creating this global community when they were embraced and nurtured innovation huge progress malicious technology can't be excused if it has some good effects now we've got to realize that first of all microsoft's and apple software are proprietary that means users don't control the program rather the program controls the users well that's an injustice and that's the existence of proprietary software although it wasn't for microsoft or apple back then is why i started the free software movement in addition to setting things up so that they control the program and the program controls the users then they started putting in malicious functionalities that spy on users intentionally restrict users and they're even back doors in that software so literally speaking apple software and microsoft software are malware and windows eight point one we're calling windows prism edition because it's d
we're talking about the big brother reality of the surveillance state so i gather steve jobs and bill gates aren't exactly your heroes but good knowledge their contribution in bringing so many people together creating this global community when they were embraced and nurtured innovation huge progress malicious technology can't be excused if it has some good effects now we've got to realize that first of all microsoft's and apple software are proprietary that means users don't control the...
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we're talking about the big brother reality of the surveillance state so i gather steve jobs and bill gates aren't exactly your heroes but good knowledge their contribution in bringing so many people together creating this global community when they were embraced and nurtured innovation huge progress malicious technology can't be excused if it has some good effects now we've got to realize that first of all microsoft's and apple software are proprietary that means users don't control the program rather the program controls the users well that's an injustice and that's the existence of proprietary software although it wasn't for microsoft or apple back then is why i started the free software movement in addition to setting things up so that they control the program and the program controls the users then they started putting in malicious functionalities that spy on users intentionally restrict users and they're even back doors in that software so literally speaking apple software and microsoft software are malware and windows eight point one we're calling windows prism edition because it's d
we're talking about the big brother reality of the surveillance state so i gather steve jobs and bill gates aren't exactly your heroes but good knowledge their contribution in bringing so many people together creating this global community when they were embraced and nurtured innovation huge progress malicious technology can't be excused if it has some good effects now we've got to realize that first of all microsoft's and apple software are proprietary that means users don't control the...
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Jul 11, 2013
07/13
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FBC
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bill gates walking tour at a time where microsoft is in the middle of that.iller and his wife. i first interviewed him in 1987. he did talk to us. i asked him about apple's big loss. >> i do not know enough about it to tell you truthfully. if you feel strong about stuff, you go to court and take chances. dennis: his network that sued in boston yesterday. we will know what he has to say about that case. back to you. connell: the management shakeup that microsoft. >> to me it is very bullish. these companies are in the business of making other companies efficient. now they will work on making each other in efficient. it will definitely make them more competitive. connell: thank you, jason. we will get back to that. appreciate it, as always. dagen: look at who is here. darius rucker. connell: hey there, darius. we are very excited to have him in the studio. we will talk about his music and a little bit about his new business as well. ♪ ♪ connell: it is either nascar or country music that makes dagen excited. dagen: that song was on someone's boombox and they car
bill gates walking tour at a time where microsoft is in the middle of that.iller and his wife. i first interviewed him in 1987. he did talk to us. i asked him about apple's big loss. >> i do not know enough about it to tell you truthfully. if you feel strong about stuff, you go to court and take chances. dennis: his network that sued in boston yesterday. we will know what he has to say about that case. back to you. connell: the management shakeup that microsoft. >> to me it is very...
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he's second in wealth behind bill gates. dagen: to you use it? connell: no. do you?it's annoying. it's all integrated with television shows and movies so if you do a song in a movie, it's an ad and tries to push you into buying it, it's annoying. connell: thank you. it's annoying even to hear you say. dagen: undoubtedly. a russian official says venezuela is snowden's last chance at asylum. we'll have the latest. connell: oh, snowden. mark farber, dr. doom, as well, says at the rate we are going, the feds will need many more rounds of stimulus. don't worry about tapering yet. s&p winners today, markets doing well to start off the week, and here's individual stocks leading the way. ♪ dagen: bottom of the hour, here's what's coming up on "markets now," and dr. doom is with us a that at the rate we're going, the federal reserve will have to deliver more rounds of stimulus. edward snowden is urged to accept venezuela's offer of political asylum before time runs out. the disgraced former sheriff of wall street, spitzer, throwing the hat in the political ring ready to run f
he's second in wealth behind bill gates. dagen: to you use it? connell: no. do you?it's annoying. it's all integrated with television shows and movies so if you do a song in a movie, it's an ad and tries to push you into buying it, it's annoying. connell: thank you. it's annoying even to hear you say. dagen: undoubtedly. a russian official says venezuela is snowden's last chance at asylum. we'll have the latest. connell: oh, snowden. mark farber, dr. doom, as well, says at the rate we are...
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Jul 15, 2013
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. >> there is this notion of bill gates has mentioned that success is a lousy teacher. it empowers the lucky to feel that they are actually smart. but it sounds like you have seen on. >> yes, even though i would say we realized later that there was a sequence in it. tell us a little bit about how we have learned from mistakes and science and what was the biggest blunder of the blunders are identified in your book. >> it was one of the great philosophers of science that basically said you can never prove a theory correct, you can only prove it wrong. basically it is part of the possibility and is one of the hallmarks of a true scientific theory. if it is a real theory, we should be able to make predictions about other things that have not been done. and if they turn out not to agree, it means that there is something wrong with this. this is how the scientific method really works. so finding the mistakes are part and parcel of these kind of processes. it is not that we should do these things by being careless. we should be very careful and we hope to agree with all the fa
. >> there is this notion of bill gates has mentioned that success is a lousy teacher. it empowers the lucky to feel that they are actually smart. but it sounds like you have seen on. >> yes, even though i would say we realized later that there was a sequence in it. tell us a little bit about how we have learned from mistakes and science and what was the biggest blunder of the blunders are identified in your book. >> it was one of the great philosophers of science that...
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bob eiger shows up, a former fox chief who is a major player in the business, bill gates who is bill ithin and the major league baseball commissioner then the most fearsome executive of all barry diller hannibal the cannibal form for bypass tim about the smart phone tv service the dissipated networks anything and i said the you just want to hurt the network business that you used to work for? >> that is absurd all of this has been overblown because it is nice job of. that is not the case at all. if you are interested in the audience that anybody who thinks in makes programming should be interested in, all we are is a benefit. >> some of the executives like glassman says dore brian roberts to controls comcast nbc and barry diller is here with some of those have sued them and a lawsuit was filed yesterday so of must get awkward we will see how that lawsuit turns out. ashley: it certainly is a convention of egos. tracy: there is no room for the convention. [laughter] eight you. ashley: liz claman will talk to you that top forecasters. what will the big call the? is a fox business exclusi
bob eiger shows up, a former fox chief who is a major player in the business, bill gates who is bill ithin and the major league baseball commissioner then the most fearsome executive of all barry diller hannibal the cannibal form for bypass tim about the smart phone tv service the dissipated networks anything and i said the you just want to hurt the network business that you used to work for? >> that is absurd all of this has been overblown because it is nice job of. that is not the case...
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of all my interviews with bill gates, the one you're abou% to see is most controversial because he saysthe good we do as a country is threatened by paralyzed washington that wi do no good for this country. the primary target, foreign aid. the other target, people who want to block it. house of replicans who criticized this the equivalent of good money after bad. today, gates firing back. >> it
of all my interviews with bill gates, the one you're abou% to see is most controversial because he saysthe good we do as a country is threatened by paralyzed washington that wi do no good for this country. the primary target, foreign aid. the other target, people who want to block it. house of replicans who criticized this the equivalent of good money after bad. today, gates firing back. >> it
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. >> host: bill gates mentioned that success is a lousy teacher. it sounds like you have seen before. >> guest: yes, i would say that. >> host: tell us about how we learn from mistakes and science. we have really advanced the field. i think of how we have made some tragic mistakes in medicine over the years. we gave the vaccine almost all the children of the world and realize later that certain animals, it can cause lymphoma in certain animals. but luckily it didn't in human beings. can you tell us a little bit about about how we have learned from the state of science and maybe your thoughts on the biggest blunder of the blunders you identified in your book. >> guest: i think science mistakes part of the scientific method. he basically says you can only prove a theory correct. you can never prove it wrong. the possibility is one of the hallmarks of this theory. the fact that it can be falsified. you have certain facts from experimental observations and you construct a theory based on those things and then this is a really scientific theory, you sho
. >> host: bill gates mentioned that success is a lousy teacher. it sounds like you have seen before. >> guest: yes, i would say that. >> host: tell us about how we learn from mistakes and science. we have really advanced the field. i think of how we have made some tragic mistakes in medicine over the years. we gave the vaccine almost all the children of the world and realize later that certain animals, it can cause lymphoma in certain animals. but luckily it didn't in human...
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of all my interviews with bill gates, the one you're abou% to see is most controversial because he says a lot of the good we do as a country is threatened by paralyzed washington that wi do no good for this country. the primary target, foreign aid. the other target, people who want to block it. house of replicans who criticized this the equivalent of good money after bad. today, gates firing back. >> it had gold for example keeping friends in the cold war. sending money to people who are on our side versus their de. that is what it was about. now it has become very metric. n you literally save lives for well under 1% of what we spend to save lives here. by saving those lives you avoid the population growth and instability that leads to huge national security issues, countries like nigeria, yemen. if we let them triple in population, we are going to have huge cost and instability. humanitarian argument really point to this as the more clear parts of the entire budget. il: so you would draw a line between that kind of aid in the money recently committed, 250 million or so to the muslim br
of all my interviews with bill gates, the one you're abou% to see is most controversial because he says a lot of the good we do as a country is threatened by paralyzed washington that wi do no good for this country. the primary target, foreign aid. the other target, people who want to block it. house of replicans who criticized this the equivalent of good money after bad. today, gates firing back. >> it had gold for example keeping friends in the cold war. sending money to people who are...
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signing bill gates giving pledge to one day give away more than half of his fortune, which is growinght along with facebook's share price. the comeback accelebrated last yeerk after it exceeded all expectation. making them more mobile friendly. that's what's gotten a lot of great responses. >> how effective the ads are are based on -- a years old facebook was getting -- today it's 41%. enough to turn one of the biggest nay sayers into a facebook --. however, as the company changed as they move to making mobile off mobile ads, it -- facebook stores charts he is the company's largest shareholder. over the past week alone. jake? >> thanks so much. >>> most americans get two pressure weeks off, but with congress about to skip town for a five-week vacation leaving behind a massive to-do list when they go. this just in. george zimmerman is back in the news. again we'll tell you why he was stopped by police. stay with us. ♪ (announcer) flavors this delicious are worth searching for. friskies. feed the senses. ( bell rings ) they remind me so much of my grandkids. wish i saw mine more often b
signing bill gates giving pledge to one day give away more than half of his fortune, which is growinght along with facebook's share price. the comeback accelebrated last yeerk after it exceeded all expectation. making them more mobile friendly. that's what's gotten a lot of great responses. >> how effective the ads are are based on -- a years old facebook was getting -- today it's 41%. enough to turn one of the biggest nay sayers into a facebook --. however, as the company changed as they...
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how about washington is one of the founding fathers like bill gates of our day? >> of course, washington married into all that many but franklin was extremely successful and it is interesting. the main source there are many biographies a and franklin is a challenge for the cultural commentator because he left behind the unfinished in voluminous work of the autobiography it was written'' in three or four distinct stages a scholarly edition was edited at yale university and even they say it is not accurate he had different motivations but yet it is the basis of almost all biographies and it is a real problem from what he wants you to and you can see he had different motivations in mind and wrote to over 20 or 30 years and it seems he was riding in for his son as a guide to living well and the moral thing but over time he is a world figure and they like to tell their story so it ships to become one of success however also leaves out very uncomfortable facts about franklin but my answer to your question is he was an extremely astute businessman it did not pat and his
how about washington is one of the founding fathers like bill gates of our day? >> of course, washington married into all that many but franklin was extremely successful and it is interesting. the main source there are many biographies a and franklin is a challenge for the cultural commentator because he left behind the unfinished in voluminous work of the autobiography it was written'' in three or four distinct stages a scholarly edition was edited at yale university and even they say it...
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today, that's bill gates. stock with the worst day in four years with a huge miss on second quarter earnings, hammered more than 11% as a result. gates is still microsoft's biggest individual shareholder with about 401 # million shares meaning, wait for it, he lost $1 .6 billion today. that's rough. making money today, anyone who owns chipolte, it never tasted so good, seeing strong growth, and consumer traffic and sales. the news sharing leaping more than 8%, very nice. hoping to make money, six current football players, first active players to join in a lawsu against the ncaa, seeking compensation from ncaa and ea sports using theirames andlikenesses, huge implications for sports. we'll watch that, yo can bet. forget buying or selling, but flipping homes is whre it's at. prices up 19% since this time last year. there's bi money to be made, so is now the time to get in on the action? ining me now is john heeick, ceo of gorilla capital, and real estate expert, michael corbit who wrote "find it, fix it, blip it
today, that's bill gates. stock with the worst day in four years with a huge miss on second quarter earnings, hammered more than 11% as a result. gates is still microsoft's biggest individual shareholder with about 401 # million shares meaning, wait for it, he lost $1 .6 billion today. that's rough. making money today, anyone who owns chipolte, it never tasted so good, seeing strong growth, and consumer traffic and sales. the news sharing leaping more than 8%, very nice. hoping to make money,...
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. >> snowden and man being, they look like they're at a bill gates party. >> if they bring back the russian>> anna chapman. >> she was hot. >> i don't foresee government workers snooping on her. >> you know what else is annoying at this, the government paid money to deloit consulting. you have to watch out for the 20-year-old gen wires. >> that's an interesting point. do you think that's true? >> no. >> you know what i'm thinking and i will leave the last word to bill on this one. the reason why the high risk behavior is because you can get blackmailed by high risk behavior if you're engaging in all sorts of sex and affairs and you can get black mail and have secrets. we have to make partying a laudable thing and you can't get blackmailed. >> or let it happen. >> having sex is a great thing. >> have it done underhill ri clinton's watch from what i heard they had everything at d.o.j. anyways. >> she answered your question. >> just don't black mail my crack mail. >> all right. coming up, half of the officials in the federal reserve's policy making meeting in june wanted to end the fed's asset
. >> snowden and man being, they look like they're at a bill gates party. >> if they bring back the russian>> anna chapman. >> she was hot. >> i don't foresee government workers snooping on her. >> you know what else is annoying at this, the government paid money to deloit consulting. you have to watch out for the 20-year-old gen wires. >> that's an interesting point. do you think that's true? >> no. >> you know what i'm thinking and i will...
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. >> host: bill gates had mentioned that success is a lousy teacher and it empowers sometimes the lucky that they are actually smart and can create a sense of confidence. >> i would say that he was truly smart as well. >> host: please tell us about the common thread of how we learn from our mistakes and science when this is evaluated. i think of and medicine, that we have made some tragic mistakes over the years. we gave the vaccine to almost all of the children of the world and then realized that there was a sequence in it and certain animals can have them, and luckily it did not in human beings. please tell us about how we have learned from the mistakes of science. maybe her thoughts on what was the biggest blunder out of the blunders you have identified in your book. >> so i think that science mistakes are part of the scientific method. karl popper was basically saying that you can never prove a theory correct. you can only prove it wrong. so basically it is the possibility that is one of the hallmarks of a true scientific theory. the fact that you can falsify and the way that it wor
. >> host: bill gates had mentioned that success is a lousy teacher and it empowers sometimes the lucky that they are actually smart and can create a sense of confidence. >> i would say that he was truly smart as well. >> host: please tell us about the common thread of how we learn from our mistakes and science when this is evaluated. i think of and medicine, that we have made some tragic mistakes over the years. we gave the vaccine to almost all of the children of the world...