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Sep 1, 2018
09/18
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ALJAZ
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i. i. clicked on. it and it will be. about the yeah i want. it. to that's a. little tightened up. in the final part of a six part series filmed of the five year olds. the people who can still fight for their land. the village chief is imprisonment. and forced underground the filmmaker has become part of the saga. crackdown the concluding part of one can china's democracy experiment on al-jazeera. september on al-jazeera the fourth eastern economic forum is to be held in the city of london for stock as russia looks to expand its influence in the asia pacific region on television and online the stream continues to talk into the extraordinary potential of social media to disseminate news the presidents of russia turkey and iran will meet in teheran for another summit seeking an end to the war in syria we'll have extensive coverage people in power continues to examine the use and abuse of power around the world the united nations general assembly holds a seventy third session what action will it take on atrocities in me and maher and yemen we'll bring you all the news september on al-
i. i. clicked on. it and it will be. about the yeah i want. it. to that's a. little tightened up. in the final part of a six part series filmed of the five year olds. the people who can still fight for their land. the village chief is imprisonment. and forced underground the filmmaker has become part of the saga. crackdown the concluding part of one can china's democracy experiment on al-jazeera. september on al-jazeera the fourth eastern economic forum is to be held in the city of london for...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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50
Sep 25, 2018
09/18
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SFGTV
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eye 50
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i existed in the world. i didn't like to talk to people really, and then, when i did, i overshared. i was very difficult to be around. but the friends that i have are very close. i click with our atypical kiddos than other people do. in experience, i remember when i was five years old and not wanting people to touch me because it hurt. i remember throwing chairs because i could not regulate my own emotions, and it did not mean that i was a bad kid, it meant that i couldn't cope. i grew up in a family of behavioral psychologists, and i got development cal -- developmental psychology from all sides. i recognize that my experience is just a very small picture of that, and not everybody's in a position to have a family that's as supportive, but there's also a community that's incredible helpful and wonderful and open and there for you in your moments of need. it was like two or three years of conversations before i was like you know what? i'm just going to do this, and i went out and got my prescription for hormones and started transitioning medically, even though i had already been living as a male. i have a two-year-old. the person who i'm now married to is my husband f
i existed in the world. i didn't like to talk to people really, and then, when i did, i overshared. i was very difficult to be around. but the friends that i have are very close. i click with our atypical kiddos than other people do. in experience, i remember when i was five years old and not wanting people to touch me because it hurt. i remember throwing chairs because i could not regulate my own emotions, and it did not mean that i was a bad kid, it meant that i couldn't cope. i grew up in a...
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204
Sep 29, 2018
09/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 204
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>> well, it makes me cautious about what i do on there, what i put on there, what i respond to, what i click on, you know. you got to be real careful. >> reporter: facebook officials said that they are still very early in this investigation. there's still a lot more work to do to find out exactly where this may be coming from, but they also said that they have notified law enforcement officials. live in menlo park, len ramirez, kpix5. >>> 10 suspects accused of being part of an apple store robbery ring appeared in court today. each is charged with conspiracy to commit grand theft in multiple grab and run rip-offs across the bay area. detectives say a total of 17 suspects targeted apple stores in 19 counties. for weeks suspects allegedly rushed into apple stores in large groups and snatched merchandise from their displays. it's unclear if these 10 suspects are connected to all of them. the investigation is ongoing. >>> a live look from the top of the salesforce tower, our cameras up there this evening. what began as a gloomy friday in san francisco finally brightened up a bit late this aftern
>> well, it makes me cautious about what i do on there, what i put on there, what i respond to, what i click on, you know. you got to be real careful. >> reporter: facebook officials said that they are still very early in this investigation. there's still a lot more work to do to find out exactly where this may be coming from, but they also said that they have notified law enforcement officials. live in menlo park, len ramirez, kpix5. >>> 10 suspects accused of being part...
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49
Sep 9, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 49
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you know, as we became more digital -- i mean, i'm not a click counter and my peers will vouch for that. i haven't looked at the clicks on one of my stories. iwasn't taught how until this spring. and for about a week i kind of looked at a few stories and i haven't looked since. but i hear from the people who count the clicks that, you know, you write an informed, exclusive, interesting story about syria, you get almost no traffic. right? i mean, newspapers, i think, should serve you your vegetables. so i don't really care about the traffic. but i know we have to care at some level. it can't be all vegetables. we have to have other stuff there to survive. but the war coverage is, in part, market driven. and you the market -- no personally you. you're hear to pay some respect to a war book or you wouldn't be in the room. but the larger public doesn't give a damn, right? i hear we can see it in the data, you know, the entertainment stories will get way more attention than the stories about the wars. so the state of war journalism i think is pretty grim. it's also especially morally frightening. because as we've cut back staffs, there still exis
you know, as we became more digital -- i mean, i'm not a click counter and my peers will vouch for that. i haven't looked at the clicks on one of my stories. iwasn't taught how until this spring. and for about a week i kind of looked at a few stories and i haven't looked since. but i hear from the people who count the clicks that, you know, you write an informed, exclusive, interesting story about syria, you get almost no traffic. right? i mean, newspapers, i think, should serve you your...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 19, 2018
09/18
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SFGTV
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eye 53
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i will be preferred. >> thank you. i tend to be verbose but since i got clicked on the most i figured i have license. >> we had shared concerns of the first hearing about the certificate of appropriateness and it's conformity with the secretary of interior standards. when the rehearing request came through, we realize that we did not have sufficient information. i was very satisfied with the information. i thought it was very well put together and i feel that how'd we had that the first time around, we probably would not be sitting here tonight. so, i appreciate the work that went into the demo, it was clear to me how it was all supposed to fit together. so i have reached my decision based on that. >> i have no comments. >> i like to reiterate a little bit of what my fellow commissioners have said, not passing the buck, but this hearing was much more informative. it was much more thoughtful than the original. i do want to thank all the people on both sides that gave very thoughtful, heartfelt and mostly respectful comments considering how passionate they are in regards to this particular topic. after the hearing tonight, i le
i will be preferred. >> thank you. i tend to be verbose but since i got clicked on the most i figured i have license. >> we had shared concerns of the first hearing about the certificate of appropriateness and it's conformity with the secretary of interior standards. when the rehearing request came through, we realize that we did not have sufficient information. i was very satisfied with the information. i thought it was very well put together and i feel that how'd we had that the...
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Sep 29, 2018
09/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 209
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>> well, it makes me cautious about what i do on there, what i put on there, what i respond to, what i click on, you know. you got to be real careful. >> right now my security trust in facebook is at an all time low. >> reporter: some facebook users say it will be hard to get their trust back. >> facebook needs to definitely upgrade their technology and build the trust back up with their customers because as of now, the trust is very dim. >> reporter: facebook officials say they were tipped off by an unusually high all of traffic on their view as app. even though they were able to move quickly and shut it down within two days, it was still fast enough to spread all the way around the world. in menlo park, len ramirez, kpix5. >>> california stands its ground on strict car standards, their demands in the face of a possible federal rollback. >> and google buys a church, a san jose land grab adding to the tech giant's expanding footprint. this is customizable streaming tv for your family. ...whatever size. it's saving money with flexible channel packs. live tv and the latest shows to stream. and
>> well, it makes me cautious about what i do on there, what i put on there, what i respond to, what i click on, you know. you got to be real careful. >> right now my security trust in facebook is at an all time low. >> reporter: some facebook users say it will be hard to get their trust back. >> facebook needs to definitely upgrade their technology and build the trust back up with their customers because as of now, the trust is very dim. >> reporter: facebook...
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as we can i clicked when i had children i began making clothes for them. and then little by little they turned into a collection. a piece from her children's line costs from fifty to two hundred euros for. the children's wear is especially popular in south korea but she has clients in twenty eight countries. she says and twelve years her ideal humpbacks. as an example because you know not with his very international and i've always loved cities with a port because that gives them a special flat the mugs on the fly used to live in hamburg and i really liked that too also because it has a port that even under two of his also in a good location for my profession because i'm often in paris and italy and neither one is far from here with the five. today has an appointment you know twelve restaurant while ago the designer began designing interiors as well. isn't it so yes this is the new restaurant. if i get the interior design for it do you think a problem. in the nineteenth century the building was a coach house on your is almost finished with the interior it
as we can i clicked when i had children i began making clothes for them. and then little by little they turned into a collection. a piece from her children's line costs from fifty to two hundred euros for. the children's wear is especially popular in south korea but she has clients in twenty eight countries. she says and twelve years her ideal humpbacks. as an example because you know not with his very international and i've always loved cities with a port because that gives them a special flat...
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willing to sell your info to me have you info terrible times i knew something was up last night when i saw an error has occurred and when i clicked on to up now been logged out of my accountant i can't remember my password time to change it again if they refuse to protect those dimona tice consumers clients should quit in possibly the should be put out of business. now it's been a tough year for facebook they've come in for huge amounts of criticism that their platform has been used to disseminate fake news and they've brought in the atlantic council to get rid of so-called fake news that's controversial because it's seen as being censorship on free speech and closing accounts which don't follow the government line in certain places also earlier this year facebook coming under fire over the cambridge analytical scoundrel where millions of facebook users had their accounts accessed and used for. political reasons by the company and so what came out of all of that is facebook founder mark zuckerberg really apologizing and promising that his company would try to do better. we have a responsibility to protect your data and if we can'
willing to sell your info to me have you info terrible times i knew something was up last night when i saw an error has occurred and when i clicked on to up now been logged out of my accountant i can't remember my password time to change it again if they refuse to protect those dimona tice consumers clients should quit in possibly the should be put out of business. now it's been a tough year for facebook they've come in for huge amounts of criticism that their platform has been used to...
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119
Sep 7, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 119
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great book which i didn't know cindy does haven't given you books, , i would've given you a number of them. >> i will. i welcome -- >> a new jim crow by michelle alexander. >> i clicked with michelle alexander. >> you're doing a good job of getting me, allowing me not to get to my question and i got a very, very diligent chapman that is going to cut me off in minute and ten seconds. so you know right now that we have a system that seems to be shifting away white ensign people plead guilty is another reason this book is worth reading because criminal defendants and the power shifting, sofe that's what raisd that question to me about the rights of criminal defendants it seems to be you are indicating that you are in favor of what rehnquist said, , the rights of the school defendants got out of control, that they're making more workable. the question i have is workable for who? it seems when i look at a lot of these issues, as a crack of you and i both have talking you talked about your city of violence. i was the mayor of big city. every single day working to try to keep my city safer so i know that public safety, as you do, and i believe in the systems, these laws are
great book which i didn't know cindy does haven't given you books, , i would've given you a number of them. >> i will. i welcome -- >> a new jim crow by michelle alexander. >> i clicked with michelle alexander. >> you're doing a good job of getting me, allowing me not to get to my question and i got a very, very diligent chapman that is going to cut me off in minute and ten seconds. so you know right now that we have a system that seems to be shifting away white ensign...
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as we have it's from well i already have better point on my phone in the form of it's now i have almost a whole point on it and i click on send. it's already there it's already there that the banks play absolutely no role zero in this transaction i just made a bank for repayment. until now money transfers have usually involved several banks that costs both time and money because one doesn't need a bank anymore extend i reckon through blocked chain technology and is encrypted that could even make central banks a fair fillets. the blotching network regulates itself because all transactions are stored on numerous computers. scammony have no chance at all say bitcoin supported. jerk plots the fifty year old restauranteur lost all trust in the financial system long ago he's disillusioned with the global finance structure. i believe that our economic and financial system is facing very serious problems and these are getting increasingly extreme. and also increasingly damaging to our society. they are widening the gap between rich and poor. and we've also created a system we have a class of bankers who answer to nobody. uses
as we have it's from well i already have better point on my phone in the form of it's now i have almost a whole point on it and i click on send. it's already there it's already there that the banks play absolutely no role zero in this transaction i just made a bank for repayment. until now money transfers have usually involved several banks that costs both time and money because one doesn't need a bank anymore extend i reckon through blocked chain technology and is encrypted that could even...
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72
Sep 15, 2018
09/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 72
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i just click send? yes, and i should get a tick here when it goes through. and it's done. done. over 30 businesses in this small beach community accept crypto. so during my stay imy wallet, i've got american dollars, i've got japanese yen, and i've got australian dollars. and even more annoying is these coins. what do you do with them when you get home? travelling with crypto, ijust have a couple of apps on my phone. so, i'm going to pay by cryptocurrency today. absolutely. i am going to pay by bitcoin. i'm going to pay in litecoin. in litecoin? ok, so i slide to send here... payment is relatively straightforward. i open an app, type in my pin number, scan in the retailer's qr code, and we are done. it is even possible to add a tip and pay for a tip in cryptocurrency. who knew? but as with any emerging technology, there is the occasional hiccup. it is taking a while. it is. it always helps to charge your ipad. maybe it is a wi—fi issue? there we go. done. all right, you got it? yes, all approved, thank you very much. thank you. amazing, that was so fast. i feel kind of weird not having signed anything. tick, done. here, almost everybody in the tourist business,
i just click send? yes, and i should get a tick here when it goes through. and it's done. done. over 30 businesses in this small beach community accept crypto. so during my stay imy wallet, i've got american dollars, i've got japanese yen, and i've got australian dollars. and even more annoying is these coins. what do you do with them when you get home? travelling with crypto, ijust have a couple of apps on my phone. so, i'm going to pay by cryptocurrency today. absolutely. i am going to pay by...
203
203
Sep 2, 2018
09/18
by
KNTV
tv
eye 203
favorite 0
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. >> i looked on my laptop, and it kind of clicked with me. i said what am i doing? i know how to code. i went to school for this. my dad doesn't even know exactly what i do. there's going to be a good chance for him to see what i can do. and, you know, i'll be building an app for him. so this is the start screen. >> reporter: and so he did. joseph spending hundreds of hours creating a spanish-english translation app. >> i am ready to work. >> reporter: tailored specifically for his dad's needs. joseph says his say what app is a streamlined simple way for his dad and anyone like him to communicate. joseph says his father sacrificed a lot so that he could have the opportunities he did. no one else in his family has ever gone to college. and now to use what he's been given to give back, well, that's almost too good to be true. >> also to be able to help your dad and teach him something new that's an important skill, it's one of the most beautiful things in the world for me. absolutely. i love it. >> reporter: one of the things joseph worked with his dad to develop the
. >> i looked on my laptop, and it kind of clicked with me. i said what am i doing? i know how to code. i went to school for this. my dad doesn't even know exactly what i do. there's going to be a good chance for him to see what i can do. and, you know, i'll be building an app for him. so this is the start screen. >> reporter: and so he did. joseph spending hundreds of hours creating a spanish-english translation app. >> i am ready to work. >> reporter: tailored...
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114
Sep 18, 2018
09/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 114
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i just click send? yes, and i should get a tick here when it goes through. and it's done. done. when you arrive here, you can pay for your hotel stay, any of the tours you want to take in town, yourdinner, your breakfast, coffee, lunch, drinks, whatever it is. so pretty much everything that you could do on a normal travel trip, you can pay in cryptocurrency. gordon is the man pushing agnes water's digital revolution. for the merchant, nothing changes. so the australian merchant puts in $100 for a service that is provided, the customer simply chooses the digital currency they want to use, and that is converted at the point of sale into australian dollars, the same. so the merchant gets $100. over 30 businesses in this small beach community accept crypto. so during my stay imy digital apps. so, looking in my wallet, i've got american dollars, i've got japanese yen, and i've got australian dollars. and even more annoying is these coins. what do you do with them when you get home? travelling with crypto, ijust have a couple of apps on my phone. so, i'm going to pay by cryptocurrency today. absolutely. i am going to pay by bitcoin. i'm going to pay in litecoin. in litecoin? ok, so i slide to send here... payment is relatively straightforward. i open an app, type in my pin, scan in the retailer's qr code, and we are done. it is even possible to add a tip and pay for a tip in cryptocurrency. who knew? but as with any emerging technology, there is the occasional hiccup. it is taking a while. it is. it always helps to charge your ipad. maybe it is a wi—fi issue? there we go. done. all right, you got it? yes, all approved, thank you very much. thank you. amazing, that was so fast. i feel kind of weird not having signed anything. tick, done. here, almost everybody
i just click send? yes, and i should get a tick here when it goes through. and it's done. done. when you arrive here, you can pay for your hotel stay, any of the tours you want to take in town, yourdinner, your breakfast, coffee, lunch, drinks, whatever it is. so pretty much everything that you could do on a normal travel trip, you can pay in cryptocurrency. gordon is the man pushing agnes water's digital revolution. for the merchant, nothing changes. so the australian merchant puts in $100 for...
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134
Sep 4, 2018
09/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 134
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i don't have to think a lot, i don't have to actually work out who is involved or why they are involved, i clickto see. the serious fraud office hardly ever allows cameras in here. the crimes it investigates are sensitive and complex. there are tens of millions of documents to read in each case. some material has to be screened out by barristers. they work through 300 documents a day. so how many can the computer do? the computer was going through 600,000 a day. you can find the hot documents faster, and the system, because of the machine learning and ai capabilities of it, can learn from that. so you tell what is relevant and not and it will help you find things on the same lines. in the same way that amazon might suggest something you might like to buy based on what other people have bought who have similar tastes to you. the serious fraud office is one of the first law enforcement agencies to use artificial intelligence to examine computer files and documents. but ai is being used in other ways as well to help solve crimes. among the cases was that of corrie mckeague, an airmen who went missi
i don't have to think a lot, i don't have to actually work out who is involved or why they are involved, i clickto see. the serious fraud office hardly ever allows cameras in here. the crimes it investigates are sensitive and complex. there are tens of millions of documents to read in each case. some material has to be screened out by barristers. they work through 300 documents a day. so how many can the computer do? the computer was going through 600,000 a day. you can find the hot documents...
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151
Sep 4, 2018
09/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 151
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i don't have to think a lot. i don't have to work out who is involved, why they are involved. i just clicke serious fraud office hardly ever allows cameras in here. the crimes it investigates are sensitive and complex. there are tens of millions of documents to read in each case. some material has to be screened out by barristers. they work through 300 documents a day. so how many can the computer do? the computer was going through 600,000 a day. you can find the hot documents faster and the system, because of the machine learning and ai capabilities of it, can learn from that. so you tell it what is relevant, what isn't relevant, and it will help you to find things which are along the same lines. in the same way that amazon might suggest something that you might like to buy based on what other people have bought, who have similar tastes to you. the serious fraud office is one of the first law enforcement agencies to use artificial intelligence to examine computer files and documents. but ai is being used in other ways as well to help solve crimes. among the cases was that of corrie mckeag
i don't have to think a lot. i don't have to work out who is involved, why they are involved. i just clicke serious fraud office hardly ever allows cameras in here. the crimes it investigates are sensitive and complex. there are tens of millions of documents to read in each case. some material has to be screened out by barristers. they work through 300 documents a day. so how many can the computer do? the computer was going through 600,000 a day. you can find the hot documents faster and the...
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willing to sell your info to me have you in food herbal time i knew something was up last night when i saw in there has occurred you know when i clicked on to now get logged out of my account of their country member right password time to change it again if they refuse to protect those dimona tice consumers clients should quit in possibly the should be put out of business it's been a tough year for facebook to come in for huge amounts of criticism that their platform has been used to disseminate fake news and they've brought in the atlantic council to get rid of so-called fake news that's controversial because it's seen as being censorship on free speech and closing accounts which don't follow the government line in certain places also earlier this year facebook coming under fire over the cambridge analytical scandal where millions of facebook users had their accounts accessed and used for political reasons by the company and so what came out of all of that is facebook founder mark zuckerberg really apologizing and promising . that his company would try to do better we have a responsibility to protect your data and if we can't then we
willing to sell your info to me have you in food herbal time i knew something was up last night when i saw in there has occurred you know when i clicked on to now get logged out of my account of their country member right password time to change it again if they refuse to protect those dimona tice consumers clients should quit in possibly the should be put out of business it's been a tough year for facebook to come in for huge amounts of criticism that their platform has been used to...
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44
Sep 9, 2018
09/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 44
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i didn't quite phrase that correctly is there a concern that it could be viewed as trump versus obama by the by the electorate by the media. perhaps i mean i think that certainly will get people clicking on headlines and watching given cable news networks the spike in the elections but i would say that this is about democracy you know what happens in america cast a really wide net of influence across the globe and i think that was president obama's point when people keep asking him what are you doing for midterms i think it was the right question asked no what are you doing we can't make this about two individuals but i think the voters and the people of america have to make this about something bigger i think when we see the current administration slowly tipping away at the record and democratic principles that americans hold so dear that that's really cause for concern that's the flashing red light it's not so much down old chum but you also have people in congress who support his agenda you have people across the country a small minority unfortunately but you do have a small minority of people who support his agenda so you really have to elevate the discourse in the country and hav
i didn't quite phrase that correctly is there a concern that it could be viewed as trump versus obama by the by the electorate by the media. perhaps i mean i think that certainly will get people clicking on headlines and watching given cable news networks the spike in the elections but i would say that this is about democracy you know what happens in america cast a really wide net of influence across the globe and i think that was president obama's point when people keep asking him what are you...
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53
Sep 21, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 53
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[applause] >> i can do this appeared to stick with a casual approach im from virgin space. thank you to the wilson center. so i just want to click through. i cannot barely run this. [laughter] so to talk about what we are doing i promised i could get done with this in a couple of minutes to focus on dialogue but i want to point out first of course about ten years ago branson got very excited about human spaceflight as a result we created virgin galactic and these beautiful flying machines carrier after one - - aircraft it is cleverly called spaceship and the airplane goes up at 50000 feet drops it then the engine burns for about one minute and goes 80 or 100 kilometers to provide about four minutes of microgravity for people who want to become astronauts or researchers. we are excited about this project we have a launch coming up shortly with this vehicle for the fourth time and we hope to be in operation early next year. so here is a picture of spaceship at altitude its own self he it has a camera so looking down to give you the approximate view of what passengers will see when they fly in space. second, getting into the launch business i
[applause] >> i can do this appeared to stick with a casual approach im from virgin space. thank you to the wilson center. so i just want to click through. i cannot barely run this. [laughter] so to talk about what we are doing i promised i could get done with this in a couple of minutes to focus on dialogue but i want to point out first of course about ten years ago branson got very excited about human spaceflight as a result we created virgin galactic and these beautiful flying machines...
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i. look. to for the look i. don't want the money i don't want to go about. such as it really is not mr need just. don't click on the i don't want to a shuffle stemming we have been down. in the world there and you'll get a little warmth and you know what. i want and set up a wall and. shot ideas so i don't fall for this at all of the. walls already on the table which. that's discrimination and large in the ways of the ukraine in most of those churches one such cool if acceptance will presuppose that the ukrainian norse of the church should change its name and that it should be a name to the russian of course the church in the ukraine it is something like put singly of. halo. on the jewel at the ends of the infield just so it george. welcome back well the impact of the great recession upon the crash that was huge in the u.s. the g.d.p. began retracting during the third quarter of two thousand and eight and ended up negative point one percent for the year followed in two thousand and nine by a negative two point five percent rate unemployment for two thousand and eight was seven point three percent but went up
i. look. to for the look i. don't want the money i don't want to go about. such as it really is not mr need just. don't click on the i don't want to a shuffle stemming we have been down. in the world there and you'll get a little warmth and you know what. i want and set up a wall and. shot ideas so i don't fall for this at all of the. walls already on the table which. that's discrimination and large in the ways of the ukraine in most of those churches one such cool if acceptance will presuppose...
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136
Sep 19, 2018
09/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 136
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i will take an example of the assessment that is given to primary 1 pupils on this computer here. this one's asking me... choose the dog. to choose the dog. so i click on the dog. if ig, but it deliberately moves me on to an easier question for the next one. drag all the pictures of birds. the diagnostic information that comes from these assessments is really very high quality. what i want to make sure is that teachers are able to plan the future learning stages for young people as effective as they can, based on that information, to make sure that every child has the opportunity to fulfil their potential. all the opposition parties in scotland want the tests scrapped. stop and think, halt the tests so that we can reconsider the facts before us and the whole approach to evaluating pupil progress in primary 1. the snp minority government lost the vote on the matter in the scottish parliament this evening. yes, 63, no, 61. there were no abstentions. the motion is therefore agreed. but theo will still face an assessment this year as the government does not now have to change its policy. sarah smith, bbc news, edinburgh. the tv host and comedy writer denis norden has di
i will take an example of the assessment that is given to primary 1 pupils on this computer here. this one's asking me... choose the dog. to choose the dog. so i click on the dog. if ig, but it deliberately moves me on to an easier question for the next one. drag all the pictures of birds. the diagnostic information that comes from these assessments is really very high quality. what i want to make sure is that teachers are able to plan the future learning stages for young people as effective as...
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Sep 21, 2018
09/18
by
BBCNEWS
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another view, i miss the old days when you paid for a ticket that included everything, checked in luggage, hand luggage and a meal. 0ne price all in. now i end up cutting and clicking to see what iin our day! but i'm slightly older than you. tom stevensonjoins us again to discuss. what's your hand luggage story? do you believe hand luggage is a privilege or a right? it certainly extremely annoying when you get on a low—cost flight and if you are not the first person on the plane, because everyone now carries cases with the wheels, they are frankly too big for the available space, so if you're not first on come you can't get your bag in. i don't think anyone should be particularly surprised by this. this is the low—cost airline model. they charged a thing for the flights but make their money from charging for other stuff, for the meals, for being able to get on first, whatever it is. let's not be surprised when they charge for bags as well. the italians think it's an anti—trust issue. do they have a case? welcomer it is an anti—trust issue in as much... ina it is an anti—trust issue in as much... in a different sense of the word trust. it's a trust in the airlines. the service fr
another view, i miss the old days when you paid for a ticket that included everything, checked in luggage, hand luggage and a meal. 0ne price all in. now i end up cutting and clicking to see what iin our day! but i'm slightly older than you. tom stevensonjoins us again to discuss. what's your hand luggage story? do you believe hand luggage is a privilege or a right? it certainly extremely annoying when you get on a low—cost flight and if you are not the first person on the plane, because...
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174
Sep 3, 2018
09/18
by
FOXNEWSW
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i kept at it. i made it two months, from october to december, and something clicked and i thought, "hey, i'm gonna have a career. i need a career. i need to do something," 'cause i didn't want to go back to trinity university. but i did make a living for a while as a dancer. harvey: where'd you dance? well, i danced in central park. well, anybody can do that. i know, that sounded sad, didn't it? no, i did summer stock, okay? - ( laughing ) - yeah. i did-- i got "west side story" with richard chamberlain. - wow. - but i turned it down and did a show called "peg o' my heart" with eartha kitt. - so, you were pretty good. - oh, i was good. - ( laughs ) - you don't have to be modest. yeah, no, i was cut out to be a dancer. i just-- you know, i wish i had just kept up my dancing a little longer. your parents supported you when you were in new york. they sure did. did you experience rejection or failure when you started out? i think we all experience some rejection. but in new york, it was sort of, again, like a-- it's different, when i started out. you walk down the street and somebody'd give you a card.
i kept at it. i made it two months, from october to december, and something clicked and i thought, "hey, i'm gonna have a career. i need a career. i need to do something," 'cause i didn't want to go back to trinity university. but i did make a living for a while as a dancer. harvey: where'd you dance? well, i danced in central park. well, anybody can do that. i know, that sounded sad, didn't it? no, i did summer stock, okay? - ( laughing ) - yeah. i did-- i got "west side...
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178
Sep 28, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN
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i have been in the public arena and under extreme public scrutiny for decades. office, i worked for the of solicitor general of the department of justice. in 1993, i clicked on the supreme court for justice -- clerked on the supreme court for justice anthony kennedy. i spent four years during the 1990's at an office of enormous scrutiny from the media and the public. the year of the impeachment of president clinton, our office generally, and i personally were in the middle of an intense national media and political spotlight. members wereeading opposition researched from head to toe, from birth to the present day. werel the people who exposed that your of 1998 as having engaged in some sexual wrongdoing or indiscretion -- year of 1988 as having engaged in some sexual wrongdoing or indiscretion. one person on the left even paid a million dollars for people to report evidence of sexual wrongdoing and it worked. it exposed some prominent people. nothing about me. to 2006, i worked for president george w. bush in the white house. as staff secretary, i was by president bush's side for three years. i was entrusted with the nation's most sensitive secrets. i tra
i have been in the public arena and under extreme public scrutiny for decades. office, i worked for the of solicitor general of the department of justice. in 1993, i clicked on the supreme court for justice -- clerked on the supreme court for justice anthony kennedy. i spent four years during the 1990's at an office of enormous scrutiny from the media and the public. the year of the impeachment of president clinton, our office generally, and i personally were in the middle of an intense...
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125
Sep 19, 2018
09/18
by
FOXNEWSW
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eye 125
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but i don't understand why i as a citizen, not a click cable news, that's a big deal. why idn't know that the u.s. government was spying on american citizens. that's a big deal. why shouldn't i know that? >> what we are talking about here is a releasing the declassification of documents that contain sensitive information about not only individuals but also about the tactics that are used by going after spies and terrorists. so you have a president who is worried about saving his own u rear end and the way he wants to do that. >> tucker: i'm not talking about the president, i'm talking about me and the other 325 million people that live here. we know that our government spied on american citizens. one administration spied on arrival presidential campaign. maybe they had reason to that, but shouldn't they assure us that they did, that it wasn't political? >> you are incorrect. there was no surveillance of the term campaign. there was not surveillance of the term campaign. carter page had already left the campaign -- >> tucker: he was involved with the cane. the whole pretext f
but i don't understand why i as a citizen, not a click cable news, that's a big deal. why idn't know that the u.s. government was spying on american citizens. that's a big deal. why shouldn't i know that? >> what we are talking about here is a releasing the declassification of documents that contain sensitive information about not only individuals but also about the tactics that are used by going after spies and terrorists. so you have a president who is worried about saving his own u...
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55
Sep 25, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN3
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eye 55
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i just wanted to click through -- i just wanted to talk a little bit about what we are doing. i promised chris i could get done with this in a couple of minutes so we can focus on a dialogue with the audience. i just wanted to point out a few things we are doing. the first thing is about 10 years ago richard branson got very excited about the concept of human space flight and as a result of that we created virgin galactic and we created beautiful flying machines. that airplane takes the spaceship up to about 50,000 feet, drops it and the engine burns for about a minute and it goes up between 80 and hundred kilometers to provide about four minutes of microgravity for people who want to become astronauts and for global researchers. we are super excited about this product -- project, we will have a launch coming up shortly and we do hope to be in commercial operation early next year. so this is a beautiful picture of the spaceship at altitude it has a camera so it is looking down at the earth and giving you an approximate view of what passengers will see when they fly to space. the
i just wanted to click through -- i just wanted to talk a little bit about what we are doing. i promised chris i could get done with this in a couple of minutes so we can focus on a dialogue with the audience. i just wanted to point out a few things we are doing. the first thing is about 10 years ago richard branson got very excited about the concept of human space flight and as a result of that we created virgin galactic and we created beautiful flying machines. that airplane takes the...