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the mind says gutenberg museum also owns 2 of the $49.00 original gutenberg bibles still in existence in the demonstration workshop visitors can witness firsthand how gutenberg sped up the printing process through the use of movable type printing presses. so let's put this out. here if it's turned out wonderfully. to better understand the mind's way of life you need to get to know it's a wine culture which dates back to roman times. in the old town from the region have revived the minds tradition the wine tavern. along with the wine tasting the bit there can also teach you some poll that made idioms that like a good guest should also be served at good wine. back in the new synagogue. there are many jewish traces in the cities are they tourist attractions or are they places that are filled with jewish life does is very important for the world heritage application as well it's a very important and decisive factor the jewish life has returned to these places and lucky jewish life is evident in warms and mines thanks to immigration from the former soviet union. vom why do synagogues in ge
the mind says gutenberg museum also owns 2 of the $49.00 original gutenberg bibles still in existence in the demonstration workshop visitors can witness firsthand how gutenberg sped up the printing process through the use of movable type printing presses. so let's put this out. here if it's turned out wonderfully. to better understand the mind's way of life you need to get to know it's a wine culture which dates back to roman times. in the old town from the region have revived the minds...
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Apr 3, 2020
04/20
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this is of course the gutenberg bible. when i worked on the book i went around and talked to economists, two historians, technologists,, people, scientists and he said what should i put in the book. everybody said, the gutenberg printing press. few months but the gutenberg printing press in the book. i didn't put the gutenberg printing press in the book. so why not? let's have a look at the printing press again, the bible again. this is this remarkable object. you look at these dense black columns of text written in latin. the illustrations are hand drawn but are chiseled organic illustrations by monks. but the latin text, this is made by machine. this is a remarkable technology. when i look at it what do i see? i see paper. no one ever gets excited about the paper. but the thing is you can't have this without paper. strictly speaking you can. you can have parchment. parchment is made of sheepskin or cow skin. you can make parchment and print onto parchment and effect gutenberg did print some of his bibles onto parchment.
this is of course the gutenberg bible. when i worked on the book i went around and talked to economists, two historians, technologists,, people, scientists and he said what should i put in the book. everybody said, the gutenberg printing press. few months but the gutenberg printing press in the book. i didn't put the gutenberg printing press in the book. so why not? let's have a look at the printing press again, the bible again. this is this remarkable object. you look at these dense black...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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this is of course the gutenberg bible. when i worked on the book i went around and i talked to economist to historians the scientist and what should i put you in the book. everybody said that gutenberg printing press in the book. i didn't put the gutenberg printing press in the book. >> let's had a look at this again. this was the remarkable object. you look at the dense black columns. the illustrations are hand-drawn. the latin text. this is made by machine. this is remarkable technology. when i look at it what do i see. i see paper no one ever gets excited about the paper. you can't have this without paper. parchment is made of animal skin. you can make parchment. and you can print onto parchment. they did print some of the bibles onto parchment shortly before he went bankrupt. because the economics don't work on parchment. i'm a geek. i did the math. if you want to do a print run of a bible you need a quarter of a million sheep. you could say let's just print 50. if you just get a print 50 what is the point of having a
this is of course the gutenberg bible. when i worked on the book i went around and i talked to economist to historians the scientist and what should i put you in the book. everybody said that gutenberg printing press in the book. i didn't put the gutenberg printing press in the book. >> let's had a look at this again. this was the remarkable object. you look at the dense black columns. the illustrations are hand-drawn. the latin text. this is made by machine. this is remarkable...
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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gutenberg started in 1452. by 1610, we had a model that worked quite well, which was royalties. he paid one person, the bookseller, and a little bit of money went back upstream. not enough. there wasn't that ever, authors ever paid enough. don't let me say those wonderful days, no. you have a strict point of control, then you are in trouble. there were many readers, many booksellers on the many printers, many publishers, many authors and they didn't get all constricted. if there is ever a constriction point, someone can exploit that monopoly and go back upstream and cream everybody out. what is happening in book publishing is we are down to five major publishers and they are all under threat by another control soause they much of the marketing that they can go and set prices or content restrictions. they can do anything they want, so they control so much of the pipe that i'm really worried my model of how to make a successful industry work out of the internet, even books are under threat. royalty system would have been great. we didn't put it in place. we have some of the tools
gutenberg started in 1452. by 1610, we had a model that worked quite well, which was royalties. he paid one person, the bookseller, and a little bit of money went back upstream. not enough. there wasn't that ever, authors ever paid enough. don't let me say those wonderful days, no. you have a strict point of control, then you are in trouble. there were many readers, many booksellers on the many printers, many publishers, many authors and they didn't get all constricted. if there is ever a...
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Apr 7, 2020
04/20
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. >> host: gutenberg started in 1452, by 1610 we had a model that worked quite well. >> guest: you paid one person the bookseller and there's a little bit of money went back upstream, not enough, right? it wasn't that others were never paid enough and don't let me say well, those wonderful days but it didn't mean there was any point of control. if you have a strict point of control then you are in trouble. if there -- there were many readers, many booksellers, many printers and many publishers and many authors and they did not always get constructed. if there's ever a construction point then somebody can exploit that monopoly and then go back upstream and cream everybody out. what's happening in book publishing is were down to five major publishers and they are all in under threat by another which is amazon because they control so much of the marketing that they can go and set prices or contents restrictions and they can do anything they want. they control so much pipe that i'm really worried that books. my model of how to make accessible industry work out of the internet, even books, i
. >> host: gutenberg started in 1452, by 1610 we had a model that worked quite well. >> guest: you paid one person the bookseller and there's a little bit of money went back upstream, not enough, right? it wasn't that others were never paid enough and don't let me say well, those wonderful days but it didn't mean there was any point of control. if you have a strict point of control then you are in trouble. if there -- there were many readers, many booksellers, many printers and many...
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Apr 21, 2020
04/20
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case of our collections of 14 century hungarian manuscript of the bible, to the printing of the gutenberg bible in 1454, to the printing of the king james bible and 1611 and beyond, sacred text has always been in flux. however, is one aspect of the material that we showed you today which is a constant, it's true, and even as far back as a 15th century was real, and that is jerusalem. and so whether it comes from bryden box pilgrimage to jerusalem in the 1470s and '80s, or to this, the image of jerusalem from the nuremberg chronicles 1493 come jerusalem has remained as the center, an image of truth and reality while all the rest of the world was displayed in fiction and fantasy, jerusalem was always portrayed realistically. so as remembers a good time with us today i would like to give you jerusalem. >> thank you. [applause] .. >> so that's a thrill for us. we will now take questions. should we raise the house lights so that we can see one another? questions for dr. armstrong. we have microphones floating through the room and they will be happy to hand you a microphone and give you a voice
case of our collections of 14 century hungarian manuscript of the bible, to the printing of the gutenberg bible in 1454, to the printing of the king james bible and 1611 and beyond, sacred text has always been in flux. however, is one aspect of the material that we showed you today which is a constant, it's true, and even as far back as a 15th century was real, and that is jerusalem. and so whether it comes from bryden box pilgrimage to jerusalem in the 1470s and '80s, or to this, the image of...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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FBC
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joining me to talk about that is former defense and economic minister, kt gutenberg. for being here. that is a sharp contraction that we are all looking at in the second quarter. how do you see it? do you think we are going to see as jamie dimon put it a severe recession, likely? >> i do, maria. good morning from munich. i'm here to talk to you from germany. so even from our european perspective, we see it similarly. the numbers are very bleak and the german numbers are all in all a little better than others but if you take the european perspective, i think that the term recession is the right term, not close to depression but recession really is a fitting term. maria: so, i mean, one issue has been that the european leaders can't seem to unite on the covid-19 response. they can't seem to unite on economies reopening. is that one of the issues here, from where you sit in germany? >> it is certainly an issue, and it somehow describes where we are in europe. we don't have a fiscal union, there's a european union, there's never been this kind of political and fiscal unio
joining me to talk about that is former defense and economic minister, kt gutenberg. for being here. that is a sharp contraction that we are all looking at in the second quarter. how do you see it? do you think we are going to see as jamie dimon put it a severe recession, likely? >> i do, maria. good morning from munich. i'm here to talk to you from germany. so even from our european perspective, we see it similarly. the numbers are very bleak and the german numbers are all in all a...
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Apr 20, 2020
04/20
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we just spoke with kt gutenberg, germany is taking a step toward reopening its economy this morning,eginning with opening some stores today. meanwhile, the white house is allowing some companies to delay payments of import tariffs if they can demonstrate significant financial hardship. tariffs on chinese goods are not included in that exemption. in asia overnight markets were mostly lower except for china, shanghai composite was up half a percent as you can see. the others fractionally lower. china boosting its stimulus by lowering its one year loan prime rate by 20 basis points overnight, beijing selling another 141 billion in bonds to pay for that stimulus spending. all those stories coming up this morning. joining me to talk about is dagen mcdowell, lee carter and mitch roschelle. great to see everybody this morning. dagen: great to see you. maria: got to get to a lot of issue with the panel, got to get your advice on things coming up. first, the stop stories this morning. president trump welcoming signs of progress in the battle against the coronavirus. some businesses in texas a
we just spoke with kt gutenberg, germany is taking a step toward reopening its economy this morning,eginning with opening some stores today. meanwhile, the white house is allowing some companies to delay payments of import tariffs if they can demonstrate significant financial hardship. tariffs on chinese goods are not included in that exemption. in asia overnight markets were mostly lower except for china, shanghai composite was up half a percent as you can see. the others fractionally lower....
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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i am placed with lots of books, if you do not have books, check out the gutenberg project which has thousandsazing what you can latch onto. we have been asking our viewers what they have been up to. diane says she has taken part in a virtual tai chi session. you both share theirs.” find a hilarious man online who is called master wong. the accent makes we think he is from birmingham and mucking about. i chose tai chi because it will be very slow. so far all he has done is talk to me.” wa nted all he has done is talk to me.” wanted to see at least one tai chi move. what was that? that was my symbol you want to check out. i need adjunct to for you see that. we look forward to that. we love your fantastic garden shed. we will check out all the trivia you have found out. lovely to see you. sandi toksvig does tai chi with master wong. coming up in the next hour. we'll hear how strictly winner 0ti mabuse has swapped the studio for her front room — to give dance lessons to people stuck at home during the coronavirus outbreak. stay with us, headlines coming up. good morning welcome to breakfast with
i am placed with lots of books, if you do not have books, check out the gutenberg project which has thousandsazing what you can latch onto. we have been asking our viewers what they have been up to. diane says she has taken part in a virtual tai chi session. you both share theirs.” find a hilarious man online who is called master wong. the accent makes we think he is from birmingham and mucking about. i chose tai chi because it will be very slow. so far all he has done is talk to me.” wa...