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Sep 26, 2024
09/24
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BBCNEWS
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british telecom are currently trialling that same technology to improve cybersecurity, so that only authorisedrs have access to critical systems and data. there is a lot to consider. with me in the studio, as ever, the font of all ai knowledge priya lakhani, ceo at century tech. she has come back from new york this morning, so bear with her. i'm going to put you on the spot nonetheless. give us a quick explainer of how this technology works.- technology works. firstly, let's say _ technology works. firstly, let's say we _ technology works. firstly, let's say we want - technology works. firstly, let's say we want to - technology works. firstly, let's say we want to spot. technology works. firstly, i let's say we want to spot you in an image, and then, go off a bit but we want to match that to a wanted list, kristin. put an image of kristen here on the camera, in the background you will have him in the studio and there is lots of noise in that studio, tables, monitors. first we want to do what we call classification, detect the fact that we have got a face here. the way we do that is we use deep
british telecom are currently trialling that same technology to improve cybersecurity, so that only authorisedrs have access to critical systems and data. there is a lot to consider. with me in the studio, as ever, the font of all ai knowledge priya lakhani, ceo at century tech. she has come back from new york this morning, so bear with her. i'm going to put you on the spot nonetheless. give us a quick explainer of how this technology works.- technology works. firstly, let's say _ technology...
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7.0
Sep 27, 2024
09/24
by
GBN
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, proper job at british telecom, and i went into radio leeds to talk to them about upgrading the phoneso they could do more phone ins and stuff, and the station manager said, ooh, you seem like a lively kind of girl. do you know anything about p0p girl. do you know anything about pop music? i said, yes, i do, i'm in a band and i write a column for the yorkshire post. he said, oh, we'll do a voice test. and i thought, well, i'm sunk anyway. i got, i got the job a weekly music local music show, and then i went from there. but when i got to radio 1, yes, i was like the third woman after anne nightingale and janice long. oh yeah. and the station had been going nearly 20 years, and there were 25 blokes and three girls. >> and was it difficult? was there any barriers for a woman, do you think, at the time? >> yeah, there were definitely, expressed barriers. i mean , expressed barriers. i mean, first of all, you had to contend with working in a rugby club locker room atmosphere, but also it was expressed by the station manager, the controller, that women are the majority of the audience from
, proper job at british telecom, and i went into radio leeds to talk to them about upgrading the phoneso they could do more phone ins and stuff, and the station manager said, ooh, you seem like a lively kind of girl. do you know anything about p0p girl. do you know anything about pop music? i said, yes, i do, i'm in a band and i write a column for the yorkshire post. he said, oh, we'll do a voice test. and i thought, well, i'm sunk anyway. i got, i got the job a weekly music local music show,...
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not one of them, not british telecom, not the electricity board, not british gas, and not water.mously improved. the water quality reduced, the leaks. there are still failings, but that's been a huge benefit of privatisation. >> we might disagree on the history of whether there were well—run utilities. there are certainly better run utilities all around the world, and scottish water does better than most english water companies, and it is in privatised public ownership . so, you know, we can ownership. so, you know, we can see different ways forward. but i think that one thing that most people would agree upon is that we shouldn't be bailing out large banks. absolutely agree on that. with public money. and most importantly, most of the investment is coming from bill payers. and so they should have a stake in a democratically run pubuc a stake in a democratically run public service. >> if the capital collapses, then the return on capital reduces bill payers should get a cut, they should benefit. >> well, there's lots of details. >> we've got. sorry. we've got to end with my little
not one of them, not british telecom, not the electricity board, not british gas, and not water.mously improved. the water quality reduced, the leaks. there are still failings, but that's been a huge benefit of privatisation. >> we might disagree on the history of whether there were well—run utilities. there are certainly better run utilities all around the world, and scottish water does better than most english water companies, and it is in privatised public ownership . so, you know,...
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Sep 13, 2024
09/24
by
NTV
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hello, you are welcomed by the information telecom service, this is the program today, its hosts elmira effendieva and vladimir chernyshov, six employees of the british embassy in moscow were expelled from russia, before that all of them had been deprived of accreditation. according to the fsb, the people who... employees of the embassy of the foggy kingdom were deprived of accreditation by our mid, suspecting them of working for british intelligence, and this is a failure, yes, this is how classically british espionage is. the old men of different bridges actually understood the true goals of these sirs, there was no evidence, here are the russian counterintelligence agents managed to get hold of secret materials, these photos show several sections of the internal closed network of the british foreign ministry, although this is more reminiscent of data on a branch of the mi6 special service under the guise of a diplomatic department. in the upper right corner there is a note: confidential information not intended for distribution, a diagram of the structure of the so-called directorate of eastern europe and central asia, which... of british affairs,
hello, you are welcomed by the information telecom service, this is the program today, its hosts elmira effendieva and vladimir chernyshov, six employees of the british embassy in moscow were expelled from russia, before that all of them had been deprived of accreditation. according to the fsb, the people who... employees of the embassy of the foggy kingdom were deprived of accreditation by our mid, suspecting them of working for british intelligence, and this is a failure, yes, this is how...
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Sep 11, 2024
09/24
by
1TV
tv
eye 14
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russophobia, in this film the telecom was dedicated to this. is sold, it gives very good dividends, and our history proves it shows, and let's, for example, remember how the british, probably, one can say, one of the very first at the beginning of the 19th century, when there was a period of russo-turkish wars, how they denigrated russia, here is the beginning of the 19th century, the russo-turkish war, russia blocked, therefore, the passage to the dardanelles straits, such caricatures, yes, look, here is this beast in the form of a bear. a bear, yes, this is a beast, this is a russian beast, which means, here are the unfortunate turks, muslims, will simply crush, kill, here russia was depicted in the image of such an aggressor at the beginning of the 19th century, nothing changed in the middle of the 19th century, nor at the end of the 19th century, the crimean war, then the turkish war of seventy-seventh year also showed this, and let's see how just recently the italian press described the british campaign to denigrate our... century in british journalism anti-russian hysteria reached earlier unprecedented heights in europe, giving rise to an endless number of
russophobia, in this film the telecom was dedicated to this. is sold, it gives very good dividends, and our history proves it shows, and let's, for example, remember how the british, probably, one can say, one of the very first at the beginning of the 19th century, when there was a period of russo-turkish wars, how they denigrated russia, here is the beginning of the 19th century, the russo-turkish war, russia blocked, therefore, the passage to the dardanelles straits, such caricatures, yes,...
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british one. so carol wiseman saying my favourite buildings are the telecom tower in the uk and the empire state buildingin the usa, and other people saying big ben or the statue of liberty. that was darren prince . liberty. that was darren prince. a fair selection there. let us know what your first selection. >> let us know. keep those coming in and you're not going to see too many chemist shops about increasingly sick people could struggle to get medication a study shows one or more chemists have shut in 87% of council areas, and that's just over the past two years. so are you losing out on a chemist shop, or do you find it difficult to get prescriptions? thatis difficult to get prescriptions? that is no. so they're doing away with chemist shops. they're doing away with pubs as well . doing away with pubs as well. what else are they doing away with? all the high street in general. >> the pharmacists were supposed to be doing everything that the gp's couldn't do. so if they're shutting them down, how on earth what are we going to do, go to a&e? >> yeah that's true. >> yeah that's true. >> i mean they've
british one. so carol wiseman saying my favourite buildings are the telecom tower in the uk and the empire state buildingin the usa, and other people saying big ben or the statue of liberty. that was darren prince . liberty. that was darren prince. a fair selection there. let us know what your first selection. >> let us know. keep those coming in and you're not going to see too many chemist shops about increasingly sick people could struggle to get medication a study shows one or more...