23,766
24K
Nov 9, 2015
11/15
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KCAU
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well, kwazii's gonna be the first to explore the unexplored tonig. [yawns] it's a bit late to start exploring now, kwazii. we can wait till morning. morning? a pirate never its till morning, not t en there's an adventure to be had at n nht. you're not just a little bit scared of what might be out there? scared? this pirate isn't afraid of anything. not even sharks? hah. i laugh at them. how about poisonous jellyfish? not scary to me. vampire uids? rahr. let me at 'em. snakes? nope. bats? no. scorpions? yah hah. no match for kwazii. uh, how 'bout spiders? spuh--uhh--spiders? [swallows] luckily, there ararno spiders in thehecean, matey. um, there aren't, are there, captain? don't worry. spiders only live land. good. well, then, as i was saying, this pirate is afraid of nothing. all right, but be careful out there. yo ho, yo ho. it's out to sea i go. hmm. [sighs] vampire squids and sharks. [chuckles] i'm not scared of-- oh, , at's strange. [thunk] what? who's there? [thunk] [gasps] and what's this? if it's a sea plant, it's a funny-looking one. [grunts]
well, kwazii's gonna be the first to explore the unexplored tonig. [yawns] it's a bit late to start exploring now, kwazii. we can wait till morning. morning? a pirate never its till morning, not t en there's an adventure to be had at n nht. you're not just a little bit scared of what might be out there? scared? this pirate isn't afraid of anything. not even sharks? hah. i laugh at them. how about poisonous jellyfish? not scary to me. vampire uids? rahr. let me at 'em. snakes? nope. bats? no....
50
50
Nov 28, 2015
11/15
by
WTXF
tv
eye 50
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so much unexplored territory. >> exploration takes you back to 1998 when this 120-complex was for sale. during the late 1800's and early 1900's the building housed mentally ill patients and today the undercrowding and funding that many institutions that the 20th century institution stood for. it became closed in 2007. some of the buildings demolished but others have taken a new role all together attracting younger kids eager to find a fun place. >> so we know so many young adults that are 17, 18, 19 year's old, they are going to have a criminal record because they are walking through an abandoned building, it's not fair for cops to be wasting their time here. >> now the buildings are anything but a secret. not to long ago we saw a teenager following to his death inside the stane island hospital. >> i would have a boring life if i didn't do this stuff. >> people say i'm taking a risk by yourself, no you're not, you're risking the first responders that are going to try to save you. >> fair enough, isn't there a story of overdevelopment here. there's a lot of great properties that for som
so much unexplored territory. >> exploration takes you back to 1998 when this 120-complex was for sale. during the late 1800's and early 1900's the building housed mentally ill patients and today the undercrowding and funding that many institutions that the 20th century institution stood for. it became closed in 2007. some of the buildings demolished but others have taken a new role all together attracting younger kids eager to find a fun place. >> so we know so many young adults...
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64
Nov 13, 2015
11/15
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 64
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european map makers, the pacific north-west, was a great unknown, undiscovered, unchartered and unexplored. to learn about the legend and hear the stories, we travelled into the heart of vancouver island, british columbia, down to an acqer, village of the first people. >> we have our big meetings here >>> where we met with tribal leaderer. he has histories recorded from more than 50 years ago. >> the people that had gone to bed at night had felt the ground shake. shortly after that, that's when they noticed the big wave coming in. then it's that wave that wiped out the village down there. >> i will go to my favourite spot >>> dennis took me down to the place where the village once stood in the tsunam i's path. on the water's edge an inlet facing the pacific >>> what did the community look like? where were people living? >> it would look like the most obvious thing that they would be living along the beach and the river >>> so when the wave came, it came right up the inlet? >> yeah. we're talking something huge coming in here because of how shallow it is there. i've been taught that events
european map makers, the pacific north-west, was a great unknown, undiscovered, unchartered and unexplored. to learn about the legend and hear the stories, we travelled into the heart of vancouver island, british columbia, down to an acqer, village of the first people. >> we have our big meetings here >>> where we met with tribal leaderer. he has histories recorded from more than 50 years ago. >> the people that had gone to bed at night had felt the ground shake. shortly...
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42
Nov 1, 2015
11/15
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 42
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there is basically an entirely new and completely uninstall or -- completely unexplored galaxy of optionsere. emily: google doesn't make money off of android. it isn't doing well in terms of advertising. xiaomi have built business is off the back of android pre-do -- do you think making android open was the right call for google? hugo: it was the only call google could have made on this. it would have been impossible to make the level of adoption would have seen from a close operating system. it just wouldn't go anywhere. plus, you would never be able to build such an amazing developer story. android is the best decision google ever made years ago. the fruit of that will be around for many decades. emily: how does google make money off of it? they pay apple billions of dollars. hugo: think of what would have happened if android wasn't opened. if the apps that were loaded on phones running some alternative version of android were mandated by someone. think about what that would mean for google. it means that people would not necessarily make a choice of what browser to use, which search en
there is basically an entirely new and completely uninstall or -- completely unexplored galaxy of optionsere. emily: google doesn't make money off of android. it isn't doing well in terms of advertising. xiaomi have built business is off the back of android pre-do -- do you think making android open was the right call for google? hugo: it was the only call google could have made on this. it would have been impossible to make the level of adoption would have seen from a close operating system....
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55
Nov 26, 2015
11/15
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 55
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quote 0
that there is basically an entirely new and completely unexplored galaxy of possibilities here.mily: google does not really make money off of android. and it is not doing well when it comes to mobile advertising. and companies like xiaomi have built huge businesses off the back of android. do you think that making android open was the right call for google? hugo: i think android as an open platform was the only call google could have made on this. it would be impossible to get the level of adoption that we have seen from a closed operating system. it just wouldn't go anywhere. plus, you would never be able to build such an amazing developer story. android is probably the best decision google ever made, years ago. of course, the fruit of that will be around for very, very many decades. emily: how does google make money off of it? they pay apple billions of dollars to have google on the iphone. hugo: think about what would have happened if android wasn't open. if, for example, the apps that were loaded on phones running some alternative, closed version of android were mandated by
that there is basically an entirely new and completely unexplored galaxy of possibilities here.mily: google does not really make money off of android. and it is not doing well when it comes to mobile advertising. and companies like xiaomi have built huge businesses off the back of android. do you think that making android open was the right call for google? hugo: i think android as an open platform was the only call google could have made on this. it would be impossible to get the level of...
74
74
Nov 9, 2015
11/15
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 74
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quote 0
each one of them gets a little bit of pause, just like one unexplored area that has not gotten enoughttention is this manna tech thing. he said he had no involvement thisthe company but nutritional supplement that claimed it could cure autism and cancer, he was seen on the website doing what looked like ads for it. truth is notthe what you want in a presidential candidate. collectively it is more problematic than any individual story. john: the negative information makes up a larger percentage. if you go through everyone in the race and try to come up with cases where they've had trouble with the truth on serious policy , most of the criticism of carson for the stuff of carson for this stuff amounts to carelessness, not lying. .e needs to be clear on issues that is where his undoing is going to be. the one thing i think he has done that is unforgivable is this yale psychology thing. who would blame a co-author? me, i ever did that to would firebomb your apartment. unearthed his mother being quoted regarding the question of his violent past. he is coming back on this stuff, i think. up
each one of them gets a little bit of pause, just like one unexplored area that has not gotten enoughttention is this manna tech thing. he said he had no involvement thisthe company but nutritional supplement that claimed it could cure autism and cancer, he was seen on the website doing what looked like ads for it. truth is notthe what you want in a presidential candidate. collectively it is more problematic than any individual story. john: the negative information makes up a larger percentage....
141
141
Nov 13, 2015
11/15
by
KTVU
tv
eye 141
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quote 0
we are officially into unexplored warriors territory. straight victories. and when can you remember watching a team after the first few minutes? you just snow there is absolutely no way a team like minnesota is going to beat them. and yet, everybody follow it is warriors officially spoil them. yeah, timberwolves could have drafted steph in 2009. they had the five and six picks. curry was number seven. here he comes. he is not going to shoot from way out there is he? he does. 21 in the first quarter. eight threes all hold. curry will get it this time to draymond green who is all around sensational. leave it up top. a strong finish. really filling in well in the middle. up 13 at half. draymond, 23 points. eight rebounds, 12 assists. coast to coast. and there you go. he had eight out of ten shots. very solid. and then curry will put the lid on the timberwolves. he had 46 points. curry has more threes this year than the entire timberwolves team. they are 10-0. brooklyn in oakland at the oracle saturday night. next up. >>> there is only one t
we are officially into unexplored warriors territory. straight victories. and when can you remember watching a team after the first few minutes? you just snow there is absolutely no way a team like minnesota is going to beat them. and yet, everybody follow it is warriors officially spoil them. yeah, timberwolves could have drafted steph in 2009. they had the five and six picks. curry was number seven. here he comes. he is not going to shoot from way out there is he? he does. 21 in the first...