72
72
Sep 22, 2018
09/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
but it's at a pixel level. so it's dense pixel segmentation.e a few toes onto the crosswalk. how do you know whether that belongs to a cat, to a small child? there's a wad of paper on the street, do you know if it's a rock or a wad of paper? so when we do this pixel segmentation, it's very complex and you can have up to 50—70 different things you're marking. just to be clear then, you're training the ai, this is a person, this is a car, and then it goes away and learns from that? so when the car looks at the street scene, we have trained the ai algorithms so that the computer can learn from it. for the first time, we have technologies in al that can be used for crucial societal applications, particularly like healthcare. there are, in the amount of data, healthcare is about a third of the data. and the ability that we have, as you can see there, this is our work, where you can actually go in and look at cancer cells, and we actually annotate them in these images and use this to train the ai algorithms. and if you think about this in a broad soc
but it's at a pixel level. so it's dense pixel segmentation.e a few toes onto the crosswalk. how do you know whether that belongs to a cat, to a small child? there's a wad of paper on the street, do you know if it's a rock or a wad of paper? so when we do this pixel segmentation, it's very complex and you can have up to 50—70 different things you're marking. just to be clear then, you're training the ai, this is a person, this is a car, and then it goes away and learns from that? so when the...
58
58
Sep 23, 2018
09/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
but it's at a pixel level. so it's dense pixel segmentation.e a few toes onto the crosswalk. how do you know whether that belongs to a cat, to a small child? there's a wad of paper on the street, do you know if it's a rock or a wad of paper? so when we do this pixel segmentation, it's very complex and you can have up to 50—70 different things you're marking. just to be clear then, you're training the ai, this is a person, this is a car, and then it goes away and learns from that? so when the car looks at the street scene, we have trained the ai algorithms so that the computer can learn from it. for the first time, we have technologies in al that can be used for crucial societal applications, particularly like healthcare. there are... in the amount of data, healthcare is about a third of the data. and the ability that we have, as you can see there, this is our work, where you can actually go in and look at cancer cells, and we actually annotate them in these images and use this to train the ai algorithms. and if you think about this in a broad s
but it's at a pixel level. so it's dense pixel segmentation.e a few toes onto the crosswalk. how do you know whether that belongs to a cat, to a small child? there's a wad of paper on the street, do you know if it's a rock or a wad of paper? so when we do this pixel segmentation, it's very complex and you can have up to 50—70 different things you're marking. just to be clear then, you're training the ai, this is a person, this is a car, and then it goes away and learns from that? so when the...
83
83
Sep 22, 2018
09/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
but it's at a pixel level. so it's dense pixel segmentation. onto the crosswalk.longs to a cat, to a small child? if it is a rock or a wad of paper? and you can have up to 50—70 different things you are marking. and learns from that? algorithms so that their computer can learn from it. for crucial societal applications, particularly like healthcare. is about a third of the data. to train the ai algorithms. to this kind of care and you can do pre—screening for cancer cells. what is really important is the type of person that you employee. contribution of imerit. people per quarter. so ai is creating jobs. wow. 50% of the workforce are women. yes. applause. and 80% of the workforce are coming from low income backgrounds. they could be young muslim women. we have a centre called the centre of excellence for computer vision. that's for image processing. and that centre is all young muslim women in a very poor community. from the beginning is inclusive of the workforce. it has diversity. and it has a lot of moral ethics that go with it. of the 20th century as india's c
but it's at a pixel level. so it's dense pixel segmentation. onto the crosswalk.longs to a cat, to a small child? if it is a rock or a wad of paper? and you can have up to 50—70 different things you are marking. and learns from that? algorithms so that their computer can learn from it. for crucial societal applications, particularly like healthcare. is about a third of the data. to train the ai algorithms. to this kind of care and you can do pre—screening for cancer cells. what is really...
112
112
Sep 22, 2018
09/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
but it's at a pixel level. so it's dense pixel segmentation.k or a wad of paper? so when we do this pixel segmentation, it's very complex and you can have up to 50—70 different things you're marking. just to be clear then, you're training the ai, this is a person, this is a car, and then it goes away and learns from that? so when the car looks at the street scene, we have trained the ai algorithms so that the computer can learn from it. for the first time, we have technologies in a! that can be used for crucial societal applications, particularly like healthcare. there are... in the amount of data, healthcare is about a third of the data. and the ability that we have, as you can see there, this is our work, where you can actually go in and look at cancer cells, and we actually annotate them in these images and use this to train the ai algorithms. and if you think about this in a broad societal sense, this can be taken to a large number of people who do not have access to this kind of care, and you can do pre—screening for cancer cells. what's r
but it's at a pixel level. so it's dense pixel segmentation.k or a wad of paper? so when we do this pixel segmentation, it's very complex and you can have up to 50—70 different things you're marking. just to be clear then, you're training the ai, this is a person, this is a car, and then it goes away and learns from that? so when the car looks at the street scene, we have trained the ai algorithms so that the computer can learn from it. for the first time, we have technologies in a! that can...
66
66
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
losing a sort of especially in our field other than a pixel to the work a little. but now it has become a real struggle to survive and i don't know if we'll be able to make it here. many turks complain about the rising cost of living due to the currency crash and they worry about the future some are hoping germany and the e.u. might step in. but they should help us on others what we don't have a problem with germany over the germans. and waves in germany is our oldest friend this leaves them to say yeah i could get it to teach him turkish shouldn't have gotten into the situation in the first place i hope everything improves the show a lot you're going to show john j. domo you turks and germans depend on each other but last year relations between turkey and germany hit an all time low pro-government turkish newspapers repeatedly ran front pages criticizing and even personally insulting chancellor merkel accusing her of nazi practices. now it seems the turkish government is looking for a fresh start and look at the mission of turkey's former e.u. affairs minister in
losing a sort of especially in our field other than a pixel to the work a little. but now it has become a real struggle to survive and i don't know if we'll be able to make it here. many turks complain about the rising cost of living due to the currency crash and they worry about the future some are hoping germany and the e.u. might step in. but they should help us on others what we don't have a problem with germany over the germans. and waves in germany is our oldest friend this leaves them to...
108
108
Sep 25, 2018
09/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 108
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: popular and the devices get cheaper, pixels to plate could improve nutrition and fight waste by transforming unappealing food to works of art. what's your dream dish you would like to make with a pripter? . >> -- printer? >> the face of the guests in a nice flavor and make a dish at the end of the night. >> reporter: your face as deserted. >> yeah. >> reporter: if you mix a dash of inspiration and a touch of technology, anything is possible. cbs news, the neglecter lands. -- netherlands. >>> and fbi is infiltrating cbs prime time starting tonight. >> it's that or find the bomb. >> the show takes viewers into the inner workers of the new york office of the fbi. dick wolf and the team behind law and order are behind the new series on cbs. i talked to the stars this morning about the episode. >> it's a super fast paced episode. pulling out all the stops. tgs very exciting. you get introduced to the characters and the cast. and be intrigued enough to follow along dpr the season. -- for the season. >> it premiers after ncis right here on kpix5. >>> today's tip of the day is
. >> reporter: popular and the devices get cheaper, pixels to plate could improve nutrition and fight waste by transforming unappealing food to works of art. what's your dream dish you would like to make with a pripter? . >> -- printer? >> the face of the guests in a nice flavor and make a dish at the end of the night. >> reporter: your face as deserted. >> yeah. >> reporter: if you mix a dash of inspiration and a touch of technology, anything is possible....
79
79
Sep 12, 2018
09/18
by
FBC
tv
eye 79
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> this is the biggest display ever on an iphone. 3.3 million pixels, 458 pixels per inch, you get. a lot of our customers have loved the plus-sized iphones. let's put that side by side. you can see the same size phone with a much larger display. reporter: it also has a full terabyte. you can score 200,000 photos on your phone, launches apps at 30% faster speed. the x max has an hour and a half longer battery life. i want to get to the iphone x, the budget friendly version they are really pushing. cook especially at the end. it comes in tons of colors we have not seen on an iphone before. you have black, blue, coral, yellow, red. they also have the edge to edge display, the facial recognition. this is to deliver the iphone x experience on a budget. the apple watch series iv, lot of major health updates. the biggest one, fda approved, it can now conduct an electrocardiogram. the data has been fda approved. you can send it to your doctor in a pdf file. it can detect when someone falls down and will immediately make an emergency call to emergency services, send them your gps location.
. >> this is the biggest display ever on an iphone. 3.3 million pixels, 458 pixels per inch, you get. a lot of our customers have loved the plus-sized iphones. let's put that side by side. you can see the same size phone with a much larger display. reporter: it also has a full terabyte. you can score 200,000 photos on your phone, launches apps at 30% faster speed. the x max has an hour and a half longer battery life. i want to get to the iphone x, the budget friendly version they are...
301
301
Sep 25, 2018
09/18
by
KQED
tv
eye 301
favorite 0
quote 0
it creates products like pixel. it doesn't want to be defined by goog which is a successful search engine so strategically they're trying to build a reputation around alphab. it's particularly an investor brand like google. >> very interesting. thanks for joining us, dean. >>> coming up, is golf on the rge of a major comebac >> squo. americans' credit scores are higher than ever before. theg credit rat firm fico said the national credit rating standst 704 which they consider, quote, solidly good. they determine the interest rate a consumer will pay for aredit rd, a car loan or a mortgage. the rise in the average score was due in part to changes in how rating firms deal with negative credit >>> you may have heard that tiger woods earned his 80th career victory on sunday in atlanta. it was his fir win in more than five years, and it could have a big impact on the golf dominic chu has more. >>> golf's biggest superstar h come roaring back. tiger woods has completed his comeback with a tour championship win on sunday in
it creates products like pixel. it doesn't want to be defined by goog which is a successful search engine so strategically they're trying to build a reputation around alphab. it's particularly an investor brand like google. >> very interesting. thanks for joining us, dean. >>> coming up, is golf on the rge of a major comebac >> squo. americans' credit scores are higher than ever before. theg credit rat firm fico said the national credit rating standst 704 which they...
72
72
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
fourteen projectors and what's called pixel mapping created the three d. lighting a fact. the site and by doing this is a three dimensional image with the photos i took it was here we see the front of the building which was scanned with a laser scanner should i did not miss it that means we have a real three d. data and we know from every point what distance it is from here. because of this and with this information we can build content with other special software that is adapted to the building in the office what i'm going. to get the drilling in is a structure that represents hundreds of years of history the palatine chapel is the oldest part dating back to the eighth century charlemagne largely considered the father of europe had a medieval chapel built as part of his palace it's the only remaining component of his residence. his remains are also kept here. this is true in and of all this when you have world heritage status it's a big responsibility to make sure the building remains preserved. or and. if it's all. the city must also ensure that there are protections own
fourteen projectors and what's called pixel mapping created the three d. lighting a fact. the site and by doing this is a three dimensional image with the photos i took it was here we see the front of the building which was scanned with a laser scanner should i did not miss it that means we have a real three d. data and we know from every point what distance it is from here. because of this and with this information we can build content with other special software that is adapted to the...
56
56
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
fourteen projectors and what's called pixel mapping create the three d. lighting effect. decide and by doing this is a three dimensional image with you for those items here we see the front of the building which was scanned with a laser scanner which i did up with this and that means we have a real three d. data and we know from every point what distance it is from here. because of this and with this information we can go content with other special software that is adapted to the building you can notice what under. the cathedral enough in is a structure that represents hundreds of years of history the palatine chapel is the oldest part dating back to the eighth century. shahnameh largely considered the father of europe had a medieval chapel built as part of his palace it's the only remaining components of his residence. these remains are also kept here. this is true in and of also when you have world heritage status it's a big responsibility to make sure the building remains preserved. or and. has all this. city must also ensure that there are protections owns around the
fourteen projectors and what's called pixel mapping create the three d. lighting effect. decide and by doing this is a three dimensional image with you for those items here we see the front of the building which was scanned with a laser scanner which i did up with this and that means we have a real three d. data and we know from every point what distance it is from here. because of this and with this information we can go content with other special software that is adapted to the building you...
53
53
tv
eye 53
favorite 0
quote 0
business especially in our field other than a pixel says oh look at the letter. but now it has become a real struggle to survive and i don't know if we'll be able to make it. many turks complain about the rising cost of living due to the currency crash and they worry about the future some are hoping germany and the e.u. might step in. but then should help us all mothers of all we don't have a problem with germany or the germans. in germany is our oldest friend michelin's them to say yeah i could go to tricky too much turkish shouldn't have gotten into the situation in the first place i hope everything improves you michelle a lot you're going to show john trick you know more you turks than germans depend on each other will shine in the last year relations between turkey and germany it's an all time low pro-government turkish newspapers repeatedly run front pages criticizing and even personally insulting chancellor merkel accusing her of nazi practices. now it seems the turkish government is looking for a fresh start and academicians turkey's film a e.u. affairs mi
business especially in our field other than a pixel says oh look at the letter. but now it has become a real struggle to survive and i don't know if we'll be able to make it. many turks complain about the rising cost of living due to the currency crash and they worry about the future some are hoping germany and the e.u. might step in. but then should help us all mothers of all we don't have a problem with germany or the germans. in germany is our oldest friend michelin's them to say yeah i...
35
35
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 0
do a biopic leg because you said it'll be better than the human leg will we then you know feeling pixel have biopic olympics i mean there's so many options for the future tie what are we going to do i mean the n.f.l. in baseball can barely handle the steroid era do you think they're going to be able to handle the bye i don't care i'm in this is ridiculous but you know we like i said we have a society we have got to be prepared for this because it's coming and and no one's really going to stop it like there's not really big that's good at least i knew we don't want to help people at the end of the day so we just have to be prepared to be mechanisms in place so it's not abused absolutely thank you so much for joining us from the ventura compound in minnesota thank you so much for joining us today. seventy five percent of the earth is covered in water one third of the earth's arable land is his for livestock but with the world population growing by over eighty million people annually will need to figure out ways to produce food without taking up more land which is where the dutch company c
do a biopic leg because you said it'll be better than the human leg will we then you know feeling pixel have biopic olympics i mean there's so many options for the future tie what are we going to do i mean the n.f.l. in baseball can barely handle the steroid era do you think they're going to be able to handle the bye i don't care i'm in this is ridiculous but you know we like i said we have a society we have got to be prepared for this because it's coming and and no one's really going to stop...
97
97
Sep 13, 2018
09/18
by
WRC
tv
eye 97
favorite 0
quote 0
they have upgraded ycameras, t start one pixel shy of $1,000. >> one more iphone. >> the big buzz comes from a goldie locks phone. >> iphone 1 r will allow us to deliver the future of the smarte phone to e more people. it has acr largern than last year's oginal 10. but the main pulled off
they have upgraded ycameras, t start one pixel shy of $1,000. >> one more iphone. >> the big buzz comes from a goldie locks phone. >> iphone 1 r will allow us to deliver the future of the smarte phone to e more people. it has acr largern than last year's oginal 10. but the main pulled off
154
154
Sep 26, 2018
09/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 154
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: if dishes like these prove popular and the device, each nearly $4,000 get cheaper, pixelsuld improve nutrition and fight waste by transforming unappealing food into tasty works of art, plus it'sfun. what is your dream dish you would like to make using one of these printers? that. >> we print the face of the guests, eatable like a nice flavor and make a dish of it at the end of the night. >> reporter: eat your face as dessert? >> yeah, yeah, yeah. >> reporter: 3-d-printed face. >> and if someone don't like his own face, someone is looking. >> reporter: he says if you mix a dash of inspiration with a touch of technology, anything's possiblele. >>> it's wednesday, september 26th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." the senate showdown. new details about tomorrow's hearing for supreme court nominee brett kavanaugh and his accuser. a female prosecutor will be brought in. >>> the president at the u.n. again today after getting a laugh while touting his achievements. >> didn't expect that reaction, but that's okay. >>> and the man once hailed as america's dad, bill cosby, is
. >> reporter: if dishes like these prove popular and the device, each nearly $4,000 get cheaper, pixelsuld improve nutrition and fight waste by transforming unappealing food into tasty works of art, plus it'sfun. what is your dream dish you would like to make using one of these printers? that. >> we print the face of the guests, eatable like a nice flavor and make a dish of it at the end of the night. >> reporter: eat your face as dessert? >> yeah, yeah, yeah. >>...
374
374
Sep 25, 2018
09/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 374
favorite 0
quote 0
>> reporter: if dishes like these prove popular, then the devices each nearly $4,000 get cheaper, pixelsuld improve nutrition and fight waste by transforming unappealing food into tasty works of art. plus, it's fun. what is your dream dish that you'd like to make using one of these printers? >> that we print the face of the guests. eatable, like nice flavor, and -- make a dish of it at the end of the night. >> reporter: eat your face as dessert? >> yeah. yeah, yeah, yeah. >> reporter: 3d-printed face. >> if someone don't like his face, we can print someone who's looking nice. >> reporter: he says if you mix a dash of inspiration with a touch of technology, anything's possible. for "cbs this morning," roxana saberi, the netherlands. >> nice touch. but it seems like it would be slow to do. what do you think? you guys cook -- >> no, i went to the makers fair and was around the 3d printers. they take a while. i wonder if it works -- i like any kind of innovation. >> i wonder if the taste of toner would get in the meal -- >> we don't want that. >> no. we're not quite at the replicator yet. ge
>> reporter: if dishes like these prove popular, then the devices each nearly $4,000 get cheaper, pixelsuld improve nutrition and fight waste by transforming unappealing food into tasty works of art. plus, it's fun. what is your dream dish that you'd like to make using one of these printers? >> that we print the face of the guests. eatable, like nice flavor, and -- make a dish of it at the end of the night. >> reporter: eat your face as dessert? >> yeah. yeah, yeah,...
151
151
Sep 14, 2018
09/18
by
KGO
tv
eye 151
favorite 0
quote 0
there are fewer pixels and lower quality camera. >>> a dedication center for a giant polar bear outsidefor the global climate action summit. it is made from salvaged car hoods. the public dedication is set for 2:30. >> it looks like the coca-cola bear. >> i said, mike, did you see the huge bear on the embarcadero? i guess it was still dark. how could he miss it? >> sometimes you see things at that hour that aren't there. it was good of you to do a check. >> yeah. was it just me or was it really there. >> did you think it was a real bear? >> yeah. that's why i was speeding downed embarcader embarcadero. in all seriousness, no, losing the ice cap in the arctic is serious. >> oh, yeah, the message behind it. >> exactly. if you get a chance, do some research. it is fascinating how it is affecting the entire global weather system. and the polar bears, they will have to live. i'm glad they put it up to start thinking about that. but it reminded me of coca-cola too. we are tracking a dangerous situation. a look at radar. this storm itself is about 285 miles wide. but then you look at the effec
there are fewer pixels and lower quality camera. >>> a dedication center for a giant polar bear outsidefor the global climate action summit. it is made from salvaged car hoods. the public dedication is set for 2:30. >> it looks like the coca-cola bear. >> i said, mike, did you see the huge bear on the embarcadero? i guess it was still dark. how could he miss it? >> sometimes you see things at that hour that aren't there. it was good of you to do a check. >>...
332
332
Sep 30, 2018
09/18
by
CNNW
tv
eye 332
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> dan: it's the third generation south pole telescope camera. 16,000 pixels, it weighs about 2,500 up into the telescope and try and see if we can hit the sky with it. >> anthony: very cool, it's like a bond villain stuff. >> dan: yeah, i know, that's right. >> anthony: astrophysicists like dan marrone will be looking through those telescopes at, get this, sagittarius a, the freakin' black hole at the center of the milky way. >> dan: we think we know what black holes look like, but no one's ever actually looked at one and if you can build a telescope the size of the entire earth, you can actually see with enough resolution to watch things just swirling around disappearing into the black hole. we're basically taking every sublinear telescope in the world to synthesize one telescope that's 11,000 kilometers across, basically the size of the entire earth. >> anthony: really? >> dan: so that we can take the picture of the black hole at the center of our galaxy. >> anthony: wow. south pole is particularly useful because -- >> dan: there's no other site like this. the atmosphere is extre
. >> dan: it's the third generation south pole telescope camera. 16,000 pixels, it weighs about 2,500 up into the telescope and try and see if we can hit the sky with it. >> anthony: very cool, it's like a bond villain stuff. >> dan: yeah, i know, that's right. >> anthony: astrophysicists like dan marrone will be looking through those telescopes at, get this, sagittarius a, the freakin' black hole at the center of the milky way. >> dan: we think we know what black...
198
198
Sep 9, 2018
09/18
by
CNNW
tv
eye 198
favorite 0
quote 0
tens of thousands of north koreans like human pixels flipping colorful cards, revealing the new agendasocialist propaganda blitz does more than dazzle, it reveals the new message north korea wants to send to the world. the last time they did this five years ago the focus was nuclear power. now, it's economic power and diplomacy with a history-making nod to south korean president moon jae-in due to visit with kim jong-un in a summit next week. they call this the summit games. this is my first time seeing this in person, and i have never seen anything like it. it's mind blowing. sort of like the opening games of the olympics. there's a huge torch, but it is all about the north korean history and the economy. they say around 100,000 people are participating, mostly students. earlier sunday, a military parade through pyongyang's square featuring thousands of goose-stepping soldiers. but unlike past parades when the nuclear this time they didn't have a single intercontinental ballistic missile on display. just because north korea is not parading nuclear weapons doesn't mean it's getting rid
tens of thousands of north koreans like human pixels flipping colorful cards, revealing the new agendasocialist propaganda blitz does more than dazzle, it reveals the new message north korea wants to send to the world. the last time they did this five years ago the focus was nuclear power. now, it's economic power and diplomacy with a history-making nod to south korean president moon jae-in due to visit with kim jong-un in a summit next week. they call this the summit games. this is my first...
90
90
Sep 29, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 90
favorite 0
quote 0
whether it is pixels of light or bone that you can hold your paleontologist.that is erect evidence. you want to know what is going on. can i address a scientific question about that? with whales, four legged whales living on land, why did they ever go back to the water in the first place? that is your first question. potentially a lot of different reasons why. they are not all mutually exclusive. there are a lot of predators on lands. maybe there is a lot of resources available in the water that are not accessible to your competitors on lands. these evolutionary arm races explain a lot about how evolution works. those alternatives are not usually exclusive and not really testable at the current moment. we do a lot better when we asked how questions. how did whales transform from living on land to going back to the ocean. you can walk into the ocean hall right now and you can see great examples of these early fossil whales. whales that have forelimbs. you can see that evidence from the early evolutionary has of whales where they had weight-bearing behind limbs.
whether it is pixels of light or bone that you can hold your paleontologist.that is erect evidence. you want to know what is going on. can i address a scientific question about that? with whales, four legged whales living on land, why did they ever go back to the water in the first place? that is your first question. potentially a lot of different reasons why. they are not all mutually exclusive. there are a lot of predators on lands. maybe there is a lot of resources available in the water...
174
174
Sep 18, 2018
09/18
by
KGO
tv
eye 174
favorite 0
quote 0
google, by the way, is testing similar screen time controls on its pixel branded android phones. >> that>> facebook is being accused of violating state and federal discrimination laws by excluding women from job ads. the aclu and communications workers of america filed a complaint with the equal employment oppisst fk tenth employers. the complaint filed on behalf of three women claims ad filtering kept women from seeing job postings in male dominated fields, including construction and software. one bay area lawmaker called the allegations serious. >> i remember only too well when a want ad sections, which was what we used to use to get a job were oriented towards men wanted versus women wanted. and you know, that was stopped and legitimately stopped. i can basically do any job i'm qualified for. >> facebook says there's no place for discrimination and looks forward to defending its practices. >>> the california department of insurance suing advi oifr what it says is the largest health insurance fraud case in its history. >> michael finney is here with more on this. michael? >> hugh mer a
google, by the way, is testing similar screen time controls on its pixel branded android phones. >> that>> facebook is being accused of violating state and federal discrimination laws by excluding women from job ads. the aclu and communications workers of america filed a complaint with the equal employment oppisst fk tenth employers. the complaint filed on behalf of three women claims ad filtering kept women from seeing job postings in male dominated fields, including construction...
573
573
Sep 17, 2018
09/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 573
favorite 0
quote 0
i said, "that piece of glass will be six feet in diagonal with millions of pixels in full color." >> 1997, the lab also gave birth to the grandfather of siri and alexa. >> nomadic, wake up. >> okay, i am listening. >> go to my email. >> where do you want to go? >> pelley: and in 1989, it created turn-by-turn navigation that it called "back seat driver." >> bear right at the stop sign. >> negroponte: and the m.i.t. patent lawyers looked at it and said, "this will never happen, never be done, because the insurance companies won't allow it. so we're not going to patent it." >> pelley: look through the glass-walled labs today, and you will witness 400 projects in the making. the lab is developing pacemaker batteries recharged by the beating of the heart, self- driving taxi tricycles that you summon with your phone, phones that do retinal eye exams. and teaching robots. >> pattie maes: so we think that the devices of tomorrow have an opportunity to do so much more, and to fit better in our lives. >> pelley: professor pattie maes ran the graduate program's student admissions for more than
i said, "that piece of glass will be six feet in diagonal with millions of pixels in full color." >> 1997, the lab also gave birth to the grandfather of siri and alexa. >> nomadic, wake up. >> okay, i am listening. >> go to my email. >> where do you want to go? >> pelley: and in 1989, it created turn-by-turn navigation that it called "back seat driver." >> bear right at the stop sign. >> negroponte: and the m.i.t. patent...
236
236
Sep 13, 2018
09/18
by
WRC
tv
eye 236
favorite 0
quote 1
pricestart one pixel shy of $1,000. but the big buzz comes from a ldilocks phone. device the tech company hopes is just right. >> iphone xr will al to deliver the future of the smartphone to even more people. >> reporter: the iphone xr has a larger screen than last year's original x, but the main feature is a smaller price tag, $749. >> apple pulled off a trick here, making us feel like a 749 phone is actually cheap. >> reporter: it has a different camera but the same face i.d. as the other phones and comes dressed in a more colorful wardrobe. >> it's striking. it's beautiful. it comes in all these colors. at 749, i think that's the new mainstream product. >> reporter: also released a bigger screen apple watch with technology on board to record your heart's rhythm. over the years, it seems they have focused in on health as the real core use for the apple watch. part of an array of products designed to pull at any techie's heart strings. >>> thursday morning, we are closely monitoring hurricane florence. locally, though, we don't have to worry about it just yet. we'
pricestart one pixel shy of $1,000. but the big buzz comes from a ldilocks phone. device the tech company hopes is just right. >> iphone xr will al to deliver the future of the smartphone to even more people. >> reporter: the iphone xr has a larger screen than last year's original x, but the main feature is a smaller price tag, $749. >> apple pulled off a trick here, making us feel like a 749 phone is actually cheap. >> reporter: it has a different camera but the same...
316
316
Sep 10, 2018
09/18
by
CNNW
tv
eye 316
favorite 0
quote 0
tens of thousands of north koreans, like human pixels flipping colorful cards, revealing the new agenda of their supreme leader kim jong-un. it reveals the new message north korea wants to send to the world. the last time they did this five years ago, the focus was nuclear power. now it's economic power and diplomacy, with a history-making nod to south korean president moon jae-in due to visit pyongyang for a summit with kim jong-un next week. >> they call these the mass games. this is actually my first time seeing it in person, and i've never seen anything like it. it's mind blowing. sort of like the opening ceremonies of the olympics. they even have a huge torch, but it's all about north korean history and their economy. they say around 100,000 people are participating, mostly students. >>> earlier sunday, a military parade through pyongyang's square. it featured thousands of goose-stepping soldiers. unlike past parades when the nuclear program was featured prominently, this time they didn't have a single inter-continental ballistic missile on display. just because north korea is not
tens of thousands of north koreans, like human pixels flipping colorful cards, revealing the new agenda of their supreme leader kim jong-un. it reveals the new message north korea wants to send to the world. the last time they did this five years ago, the focus was nuclear power. now it's economic power and diplomacy, with a history-making nod to south korean president moon jae-in due to visit pyongyang for a summit with kim jong-un next week. >> they call these the mass games. this is...
103
103
Sep 5, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
that's what changed pixel after september 11 i thought very deeply about the presidency, and i thought very deeply about the independent counsel experience and i thought very deeply about how those things interact. and i thought very deeply about seeing president bush when he came into the oval office on september 12, 2001, the morning. president bush said this will not happen again. this will not happen again. and he was a single-minded focus come every morning for the next seven years for president bush, september 12, 2001. f single-minded focus. and then thinking back to the independent counsel experience in august of 1998. so i propose some ideas for coax to consider. here's the bottom line. the ideas for congress to consider. they were not my constitutional views. the case came up where someone was trying to say this is a constitutional principle, i would have completely open mind on that because i have never taken a position on the constitution on that question. i fully put out proposals for you all to study come to think about the balance of oppressiont fighting the war, leading
that's what changed pixel after september 11 i thought very deeply about the presidency, and i thought very deeply about the independent counsel experience and i thought very deeply about how those things interact. and i thought very deeply about seeing president bush when he came into the oval office on september 12, 2001, the morning. president bush said this will not happen again. this will not happen again. and he was a single-minded focus come every morning for the next seven years for...
116
116
Sep 2, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 116
favorite 0
quote 0
whether pixels of lighter bones its direct evidence. you want to know what's going on. can i address a scientific question about that. when we had four-legged whales, why did they go back to the water? there is potentially a lot of reasons why. one reason could be that there are predators on land. going back to the water you escape the predators. were there could be resources in the water not accessible to competitors on land. this explains a lot about how evolution works. the alternatives are not mutually exclusive. we do a lot better when we ask how questions. how did whales transform. you can walk into the ocean hall right now and see great examples of the early fossil whales. you can see that evidence for the early evolutionary of wheels when they had weight-bearing hind limbs and then years later a whale skeleton that doesn't have hind limbs. it's a great example of evolution over geologic time. we don't have many examples of it for transformations in the history of life, that's what makes whales a textbook example. your second question was about. >> how unusual wa
whether pixels of lighter bones its direct evidence. you want to know what's going on. can i address a scientific question about that. when we had four-legged whales, why did they go back to the water? there is potentially a lot of reasons why. one reason could be that there are predators on land. going back to the water you escape the predators. were there could be resources in the water not accessible to competitors on land. this explains a lot about how evolution works. the alternatives are...
76
76
Sep 4, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 76
favorite 0
quote 0
wade very much pixel healthcare reform to immigration same-sex marriage, a lot of things the court does but they hear about it through filters since the court doesn't allow us to see other operate directly. >> i want to come back to that but i'm what the public gets engaged on, do you think that's what the public will be looking for from these confirmation hearings? what do you think what americans will be watching for when the senators look to question brett kavanaugh? >> so i think what we are to see unfortunately on sort of all sides a sharp polarization from the voters and how they respond and at the senators vote for or against the nomination. we saw very strong partisan support among the republicans for capital, and strong opposition among the democrats. folks the most part will be breaking at a party lines and there's not a lot of moderate, independent senator or even with rules ditching with simple majority for confirming the nominee it seems somewhat likely barring any big surprise he would get confirmed even though the gap is significantly tighter compared to what we saw with
wade very much pixel healthcare reform to immigration same-sex marriage, a lot of things the court does but they hear about it through filters since the court doesn't allow us to see other operate directly. >> i want to come back to that but i'm what the public gets engaged on, do you think that's what the public will be looking for from these confirmation hearings? what do you think what americans will be watching for when the senators look to question brett kavanaugh? >> so i...
83
83
Sep 30, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
and it's not surprising if you look at a map, if you look ata colormap , red and blue, itis not pixelated . it is a clump, because people tend to go to places where people are like them. and it's interesting, but it's important that i think we've done a good job in california with our commission, to be on the commission, to draw districts you have to know almost nothing about politics. that's actually a good thing because you're not trying to influence one partyor the other but it's improved our situation a little bit but it's not as good and the rest of the country. we may have itright here in california but we only have 50 greasy . you need to have 218 to pass something so we need the rest of the country to cooperate and do something more like we are doing . how do you feel about big data and healthcare? and is optimizing data efficiency the right thing we should be doing or should we have concerns about an unauthorized breach and commercialization of our private data? >> this is an area where there are pluses and minuses. there are things that can be done in healthcare with remote abil
and it's not surprising if you look at a map, if you look ata colormap , red and blue, itis not pixelated . it is a clump, because people tend to go to places where people are like them. and it's interesting, but it's important that i think we've done a good job in california with our commission, to be on the commission, to draw districts you have to know almost nothing about politics. that's actually a good thing because you're not trying to influence one partyor the other but it's improved...
145
145
Sep 18, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 145
favorite 0
quote 0
that occurs when there is food insecurity can never be reclaimed so there is that critical window pixelfor the record i gave rogers book to him. made a strong appeal to him to work obvious with his own government but also to work with us. because usaid has a very robust program on this led so ably by beth dunford at usaid on the first 1000 days. while we work on the political side and i know you all do this, continue to emphasize the humanitarian and health side as well. we would do an additional hearing on this in the near future but a just want to get that on the record. the prime minister seemed very empathetic to those goals, obviously. so first 1000 days is transmission. i've never seen in my entire career one program that can do so much. the pepfar program, almost a enormous good in mortality morbidity, you know, really stopping the death attribute to aids and the like. but this one, the kids are stronger. the mothers are stronger and the next 25 or 30,000 days thousand days of their lives are that much improved when you get the first 1000 correct. i'd like to yield to mr. coffman
that occurs when there is food insecurity can never be reclaimed so there is that critical window pixelfor the record i gave rogers book to him. made a strong appeal to him to work obvious with his own government but also to work with us. because usaid has a very robust program on this led so ably by beth dunford at usaid on the first 1000 days. while we work on the political side and i know you all do this, continue to emphasize the humanitarian and health side as well. we would do an...
151
151
Sep 12, 2018
09/18
by
CNBC
tv
eye 151
favorite 0
quote 0
along with silver and space gray which is close to black, that it will be available in so 3.3 million pixelslarger size phone, it is about the size of say the 8 plus but all screen back to you. >> very interesting stuff. >> ice gray? >> yeah, almost black. got it thank you very much. we'll be back to you soon. but other breaking news. out to julia boorstin. >> cbs news announcing that jeff fager from "60 minutes" is leaving effective immediately, this announced by david rhodes who is president of cbs news rhodes sending an e-mail to cbs news employees saying that bill owens will manage the "60 minutes" team as they search for a new executive producer of the program. he goes on to say that this action today is not directly related to the allegations surfaced in recent press reports about rhodes he says those continue to be investigated independently rhodes goes on to say however he violated company policy and it is our commitment to up hold these policies at every level. joe enew ceo is involved in the decision and so that is the e-mail that was sent to cbs employees. or course this just days
along with silver and space gray which is close to black, that it will be available in so 3.3 million pixelslarger size phone, it is about the size of say the 8 plus but all screen back to you. >> very interesting stuff. >> ice gray? >> yeah, almost black. got it thank you very much. we'll be back to you soon. but other breaking news. out to julia boorstin. >> cbs news announcing that jeff fager from "60 minutes" is leaving effective immediately, this announced...
71
71
Sep 20, 2018
09/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
so idean calls this a loving people to vote with their feet in favor of coming to the united states pixel to the panel, how do you think that this has impacted the areas of the world that they are leaving, like the ussr and its proxies? and what you think is the potential gain for the united states if we were to allow this to happen more frequently? >> i would love to take that went on. the first thing i think to recognize is the number of refugees that resettle is miniscule in comparison to the problem. the most recent united nations report notes that are 16 the displaced people, 22 million of which are refugees dash of 60 million. if we were to resettle 100,000 refugees in america which is three times what the administration is asking to resettle, that's almost statistically insignificant. now, most refugees will return to their home countries and that's important to understand. however, the narrative behind that and i mentioned my old friend, the narrative that what america is doing is so counter to what those other countries are doing, something that catches on. it's no mistake that h
so idean calls this a loving people to vote with their feet in favor of coming to the united states pixel to the panel, how do you think that this has impacted the areas of the world that they are leaving, like the ussr and its proxies? and what you think is the potential gain for the united states if we were to allow this to happen more frequently? >> i would love to take that went on. the first thing i think to recognize is the number of refugees that resettle is miniscule in comparison...