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May 1, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN2
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wikipedia is fascinating. i did an analysis of the growth of encyclopedias, why they came to be in the first place. basically it was this explosion of, quote, knowledge of things we knew about in western europe and the 16th and 17th 17th century and people couldn't read everything so they started building encyclopedias, and then some wanted the common man to be able to read the enencyclopedia. wells hat a terrific idea. wikipedia has been very, very helpful. i use it? why? because when i put in a search term, thanks to collaboration between wells and google, wikipedia is the first hit. didn't used to be. if gives me ideas, what to do research on. the question is, with any kind of research do you stop there? do you say, done? or do you say, i've learned something but now i need to learn it in department, and the problem is the lack of in-depth learning and lack of motivation for the in-depth learning. the lack of saying i could read a book -- yeah, we had libraries -- and so many libraries are now getting rid o
wikipedia is fascinating. i did an analysis of the growth of encyclopedias, why they came to be in the first place. basically it was this explosion of, quote, knowledge of things we knew about in western europe and the 16th and 17th 17th century and people couldn't read everything so they started building encyclopedias, and then some wanted the common man to be able to read the enencyclopedia. wells hat a terrific idea. wikipedia has been very, very helpful. i use it? why? because when i put in...
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May 28, 2013
05/13
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COM
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to so many people so quickly, defense distributed is even calling it a wiki-weapon because like wikipedia it will also be used to settle bar bets. well, sad to say, no surprise, uncle sam goosestepped in last week and boot stomped our online freedoms ordering defense distributed to remove the file that provide instructions for the 3d printed gun until it examines them for legality. folks, this is chilling. the fed has pulled our worldwide weapons and we all know, once something has been deleted from the internet, it is as gone as anthony weiner's crotch. ( cheers and applause ). i certainly hope that was not loaded. ( laughter ) well, nation, i'm not going to stand for this. you may not be able to print out a gun, but if you head over to colbernation.com right now, you can download instructions on how to turn your printer into a gun. it shoots 8 1/2 x 11 bullets that give intruders a nasty papercut and then you're going to want to squeeze a lemon on them. we'll be right back. >> stephen: welcome back, everybody. my guest is a professor and advocate of long distance running. nigh nipples w
to so many people so quickly, defense distributed is even calling it a wiki-weapon because like wikipedia it will also be used to settle bar bets. well, sad to say, no surprise, uncle sam goosestepped in last week and boot stomped our online freedoms ordering defense distributed to remove the file that provide instructions for the 3d printed gun until it examines them for legality. folks, this is chilling. the fed has pulled our worldwide weapons and we all know, once something has been deleted...
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May 3, 2013
05/13
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KRON
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got on wikipedia this week.
got on wikipedia this week.
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May 31, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN
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your parents never had access to google and wikipedia in school.are beginning to understand how the code of a virus is written, how the coat of a bacteria is written, how the code of the plant is written, how the code of an animal is written, how the coat of a human being is written, even how the coat of a politician is written. as you begin to think about that stuff, what is interesting and important is very small changes could leave -- lead to a big difference. the difference between a chihuahua and a great dane is a single gene out of 20,000 genes. the difference between a tree a fewrows at this size is genes. if you think about life at those terms, how long a human being lives, what the quality of our life is, what diseases we die of, how we feed ourselves, what medicines we take, how we clothe ourselves and create energy, all of that will change in a fundamental way as we begin righterstand, read, and life code. >> we have a lot of callers and comments waiting. joining us from newton massachusetts. caller is in new york city. thank you for tak
your parents never had access to google and wikipedia in school.are beginning to understand how the code of a virus is written, how the coat of a bacteria is written, how the code of the plant is written, how the code of an animal is written, how the coat of a human being is written, even how the coat of a politician is written. as you begin to think about that stuff, what is interesting and important is very small changes could leave -- lead to a big difference. the difference between a...
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May 1, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 112
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wikipedia is fascinating. i did an analysis of the growth of encyclopedias, why they came to be in the first place. basically it was this explosion of, quote, knowledge of things we knew about in western europe and the 16th and 17th 17th century and people couldn't read everything so they started building encyclopedias, and then some wanted the common man to be able to read the enencyclopedia. wells hat a terrific idea. wikipedia has been very, very helpful. i use it? why? because when i put in a search term, thanks to collaboration between wells and google, wikipedia is the first hit. didn't used to be. if gives me ideas, what to do research on. the question is, with any kind of research do you stop there? do you say, done? or do you say, i've learned something but now i need to learn it in department, and the problem is the lack of in-depth learning and lack of motivation for the in-depth learning. the lack of saying i could read a book -- yeah, we had libraries -- and so many libraries are now getting rid o
wikipedia is fascinating. i did an analysis of the growth of encyclopedias, why they came to be in the first place. basically it was this explosion of, quote, knowledge of things we knew about in western europe and the 16th and 17th 17th century and people couldn't read everything so they started building encyclopedias, and then some wanted the common man to be able to read the enencyclopedia. wells hat a terrific idea. wikipedia has been very, very helpful. i use it? why? because when i put in...
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May 1, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 113
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wikipedia is fascinating. i did an analysis of the growth of encyclopedias, why they came to be in the first place. basically it was this explosion of, quote, knowledge of things we knew about in western europe and the 16th and 17th 17th century and people couldn't read everything so they started building encyclopedias, and then some wanted the common man to be able to read the enencyclopedia. wells hat a terrific idea. wikipedia has been very, very helpful. i use it? why? because when i put in a search term, thanks to collaboration between wells and google, wikipedia is the first hit. didn't used to be. if gives me ideas, what to do research on. the question is, with any kind of research do you stop there? do you say, done? or do you say, i've learned something but now i need to learn it in department, and the problem is the lack of in-depth learning and lack of motivation for the in-depth learning. the lack of saying i could read a book -- yeah, we had libraries -- and so many libraries are now getting rid o
wikipedia is fascinating. i did an analysis of the growth of encyclopedias, why they came to be in the first place. basically it was this explosion of, quote, knowledge of things we knew about in western europe and the 16th and 17th 17th century and people couldn't read everything so they started building encyclopedias, and then some wanted the common man to be able to read the enencyclopedia. wells hat a terrific idea. wikipedia has been very, very helpful. i use it? why? because when i put in...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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May 25, 2013
05/13
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SFGTV2
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i was experiencing what i later learned on wikipedia was the phenomenon known as shock. and we know as a community that when the next disaster hits us, not if, but when, our community will go into shock. in fact, we market this in our local efforts as the 72 hours. the 72 hours that hits any community, when we know that disaster responders are still getting together their infrastructure. and what i want all of you to tell us is what are those best practices that you have been studying and you have been talking about that can help us not just in that first hour, but in that first 72 hours, what is it that i need to be educating our community on during that time period? the second thing i want to ask you is, how our military can better work with our first responders and our civilians. again, not just in that 72 hours, but in the weeks and the months ahead. i participate in many drills with our civilians, with our volunteers and our police and fire departments and our department of emergency management in how to be prepared. but obviously because of the work that the milita
i was experiencing what i later learned on wikipedia was the phenomenon known as shock. and we know as a community that when the next disaster hits us, not if, but when, our community will go into shock. in fact, we market this in our local efforts as the 72 hours. the 72 hours that hits any community, when we know that disaster responders are still getting together their infrastructure. and what i want all of you to tell us is what are those best practices that you have been studying and you...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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May 19, 2013
05/13
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SFGTV2
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i would find it in wikipedia. we stumbled into the sf data website and started looking. it was unbelievable, actually. so, some of the data sets we really needed were already there in very, very good format. and random things that i would never think of like movie set locations in the city of san francisco or every piece of civic art that was there, just really interesting things all with, you know, latitude-longitude, tags and information about them. it was really interesting. and then in my first meeting, in our first meeting with the innovation group, the city i heard of 10 other things that i clearly should have been using and didn't even know existed, literally within the first 15 minutes of the meeting. ss things like street safety, sidewalk safety scores and quality scores so we could wrap people around places. * route people around places. really unbelievable. we availed ourselves of resources going forward. we had the same -- like any data set, you find great things about it. then there's missing values or is thisxtion that got auto populated. we fixed a lot of
i would find it in wikipedia. we stumbled into the sf data website and started looking. it was unbelievable, actually. so, some of the data sets we really needed were already there in very, very good format. and random things that i would never think of like movie set locations in the city of san francisco or every piece of civic art that was there, just really interesting things all with, you know, latitude-longitude, tags and information about them. it was really interesting. and then in my...
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then again i mean you tell me anything that secure you talk about you know earlier me or talk about wikipedia i mean there are hackers there are things you know we had a situation i guess about a year or two ago about you know someone hack even knowing this was not secure. it's a good concept but it's just not going to happen right now ok dan you want to stay in now and it's working even if you are you know you well know evolved and you know go ahead they saw danielle she's going to have people you know you know i mean if you don't agree with me ok even if you don't agree with bitcoin as a currency is certainly a successful commodity lots of people have invested money in it and that some people have been successful some people lost money but it holds value anything that can hold value is a useful commodity it can be traded right now and so even if you don't accept it as something that's a long term currency it's definitely something that's being used right now the store value with people right now don't trust her and ultimately when you look at currencies it's about whether or not people are
then again i mean you tell me anything that secure you talk about you know earlier me or talk about wikipedia i mean there are hackers there are things you know we had a situation i guess about a year or two ago about you know someone hack even knowing this was not secure. it's a good concept but it's just not going to happen right now ok dan you want to stay in now and it's working even if you are you know you well know evolved and you know go ahead they saw danielle she's going to have people...
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May 5, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN2
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>> fair use is done students everywhere when they quote a scholar or encyclopedia wikipedia a ready source of the paper. they get this as a result of fair use. journalists do it every day when they see the report at this. variable to use material copyrighted. >> because they source their? >> now, the first thing that's not to do is fair use although it's always a polite to do to give credit to people. as many examples where you would never need to give credit to be within the copyright law. so you would make people upset if he didn't frequently. any kind of collage that an artist makes uses materials from lots of different places and doesn't necessarily friday. documentarians use copyrighted material inevitably all the way through their work because the world we live in is largely copyrighted at this point, due to the fact since 1976 copyright is default. did she make any notes for this interview? >> sure. >> air copyrighted 70 years after your death. >> wide click >> copyright default. terms of the next senator manically. fair use is so important these days precisely because our little wo
>> fair use is done students everywhere when they quote a scholar or encyclopedia wikipedia a ready source of the paper. they get this as a result of fair use. journalists do it every day when they see the report at this. variable to use material copyrighted. >> because they source their? >> now, the first thing that's not to do is fair use although it's always a polite to do to give credit to people. as many examples where you would never need to give credit to be within the...
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May 14, 2013
05/13
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. >> he is like a wikipedia. >> this is the ultimate williamsburg specialty. >> bill, you spent the first 17 years of your life under ground covered in dirt. not really a question. coming up -- actually i have to close things out. if you don't have anything to say it is easy to move on. we will close things out with a post game wrap up. to see clips of recent shows fox newses -- fox news.com/red eye. >>> tv's andy levy, post game wrap up. >> joel, what did you use -- what do jews and pentecostas have in common? >> this tuesday, wednesday and thursday. if you are looking for the week of on, terrible. celebrate pentecost and stay up all night eating ice cream. >> the orthodox iewn qlen says they are not kosher. >> michelle, what you got? >> what do i got? >> yes. >> so i have an interview with space x founder and tesla motor founder which you can check out. >> very cool. joe, upcoming gigs? >> thursday night at stress factory and friday and saturday at the brew huh huh in -- brew ha-ha. >> is that b-r-e-w? jay yes. why not? >> is it really good beer? >> it is excellent beer. it is a brewery
. >> he is like a wikipedia. >> this is the ultimate williamsburg specialty. >> bill, you spent the first 17 years of your life under ground covered in dirt. not really a question. coming up -- actually i have to close things out. if you don't have anything to say it is easy to move on. we will close things out with a post game wrap up. to see clips of recent shows fox newses -- fox news.com/red eye. >>> tv's andy levy, post game wrap up. >> joel, what did you...
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May 15, 2013
05/13
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MSNBCW
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if you can get wikipedia, that's not a cell phone. think about it. this device is something new and different. i've been calling it a hand held computer. >> no, this is not some clever joke. the man who ran for the nation's highest office, the man who said he would challenge president obama to seven lincoln douglas style debates can't figure out what to call this device because it does so many other things. >> now, we've been here before. when we first developed it, it was called the horse less carriage and took a little while to get a new word for it. >> yes, newt, we've figured out a new word for it. the automobile. just as we have for years now called those things smart phones. for the man who seemed so tech savvy as speaker, is acknowledging smart phone in his nearly three minute por ten spiel. >> please leave a comment. what would you call this so that we could explain to people -- >> please stop it. you're killing me. also, you can use it to take pictures of your feet, fyi. twitter fan florida d.o.t. shortens yellow light time and doubles reven
if you can get wikipedia, that's not a cell phone. think about it. this device is something new and different. i've been calling it a hand held computer. >> no, this is not some clever joke. the man who ran for the nation's highest office, the man who said he would challenge president obama to seven lincoln douglas style debates can't figure out what to call this device because it does so many other things. >> now, we've been here before. when we first developed it, it was called...
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May 17, 2013
05/13
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FOXNEWSW
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how much more annoying is it versus she is on her wikipedia thing. >> nobody in the theater would be on their phone. being on e-mail or texting in a theater or in a live theater is the equivalent of talking on a phone in a movie theater. does that make sense? >> i long called for the death penalty for those people who use cell phones in movie theaters. you know where i stand on this. >> he was just googling. >> i am saying that's enough. >> i think corporal punishment is better. >> i'm fine with that. tara, you agreed that what kevin did wasn' right move and he should gotten security. he said his date talked to theater management and she was assured they would take care of the situation and they didn't. >> maybe they didn't get to it yet. kevin doesn't seem like the type that will wait for things to happen. >> but to be fair again, by his account, he didn't just do this. this is going on all through the first act and then during the intermission his date spoke to management. it is not like he sat down and within two minutes picked up her phone and threw it against a wall. this had be
how much more annoying is it versus she is on her wikipedia thing. >> nobody in the theater would be on their phone. being on e-mail or texting in a theater or in a live theater is the equivalent of talking on a phone in a movie theater. does that make sense? >> i long called for the death penalty for those people who use cell phones in movie theaters. you know where i stand on this. >> he was just googling. >> i am saying that's enough. >> i think corporal...
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May 31, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN
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just the fact that is on the wikipedia does not mean it is right. to> i would really like weigh in for just a moment on this really profound question. if i know where the information is, why do i need to remember it or memorize it? i remember coming through medical school and we had these big books. i remember looking kind of bewildered and people said you don't really have to remember all that stuff and memorize it, you just need to know where it is so you can look it up. thought, number one, i have a 15-minute appointment with a patient, so that is not going to work. something you really have in your brain for several reasons. one is that you are constantly synthesizing other information with what you have already got. if all the information is not here, so that when you add additional information -- my dad used to say i will give you the skeleton upon which to add all the information you are going to get from now on. and that skeleton needs to be added to. one thing i've noticed in children of adolescence and other adults is that a lot of times w
just the fact that is on the wikipedia does not mean it is right. to> i would really like weigh in for just a moment on this really profound question. if i know where the information is, why do i need to remember it or memorize it? i remember coming through medical school and we had these big books. i remember looking kind of bewildered and people said you don't really have to remember all that stuff and memorize it, you just need to know where it is so you can look it up. thought, number...
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May 31, 2013
05/13
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it is access to things like wikipedia. is this changing our ability to remember things and memorize? again it's always been the constant media driven change. so in the societies that didn't have writing, the ability to memorize long text was of value because there is no way to write down knowledge so it is a tremendously valued skill of ancestors going all the way back when. in some cultures is a tradition to memorize the book. so that is a sign of mental progress and spiritual dedication. but as you say we live in a time of instant access to fact so memorizing stuff is no longer that important. now the jeopardy is an instant example of that. it is all about the ability to memorize useless facts and spit them out on command one. now what does this mean? one and it doesn't mean we're losing the ability to remember stuff. it allows us to develop new kinds of tools and again this is what technology has always done. it's always changed the landscape and which we live and there would be loaned a loss of old skills. we develop n
it is access to things like wikipedia. is this changing our ability to remember things and memorize? again it's always been the constant media driven change. so in the societies that didn't have writing, the ability to memorize long text was of value because there is no way to write down knowledge so it is a tremendously valued skill of ancestors going all the way back when. in some cultures is a tradition to memorize the book. so that is a sign of mental progress and spiritual dedication. but...
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May 7, 2013
05/13
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KPIX
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what this group wants to do is release the drawings on what they call a wiki, like wikimedia or wikipediaple can contribute information and download it. they want to contribute plans. so these complex design plans are much more the key than the availability of printers for desirable or undesirable products. the printer doesn't know what it's doing. it's legal to sell at least printers in any way, shape or form and to distribute the fans but lawmakers may want to ban certain kinds of plans or undetestable guns but that's already the law -- undetectable guns. but that's already the law. >> how does the law stay in front of this technology? >> reporter: in all the years that i have been covering tech, lawmakers do best when they look at broad outcomes as opposed to specific tech processes. you could write a law that says you could ban something with a plastic handle with a tube 2.2" in diameter, sounds like a pistol but you may have also blocked the next great design with a sippy cup. they do better when they're broad. ask the music industry. >> one problem is that the printer is not very ex
what this group wants to do is release the drawings on what they call a wiki, like wikimedia or wikipediaple can contribute information and download it. they want to contribute plans. so these complex design plans are much more the key than the availability of printers for desirable or undesirable products. the printer doesn't know what it's doing. it's legal to sell at least printers in any way, shape or form and to distribute the fans but lawmakers may want to ban certain kinds of plans or...
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May 16, 2013
05/13
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CNNW
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we started with a search for vladimir putin, which returned perfectly a wikipedia page and various articlesnd then we tried to search for prince harry that returned a bunch of gossip stories about his love life and recent trip to the u.s. pretty fair, right? and finally we searched for prince albert and it did a lot better than google. >>> so it sounds like an old joke, right? a neurosurgeon and two ex israeli officers walk into a coffee shop. but what happens next is no punch line. it was a chance encounter that has turned an old idea developed to prepare fighter pilots for battle into an innovative new idea that could save lives. engage, outmaneuver, and eliminate enemy aircraft. the mission of a fighter pilot is often deadly. training vital. to prepare pilots, flight simulators were developed to they could practice before a critical mission. now this 100-year-old technology has inspired an entirely new idea that could save lives. it's called surgical theater. in 2010, dr. warren sellman, neurosurgeon in chief in university hospitals in cleveland overheard retired israeli soldiers talking
we started with a search for vladimir putin, which returned perfectly a wikipedia page and various articlesnd then we tried to search for prince harry that returned a bunch of gossip stories about his love life and recent trip to the u.s. pretty fair, right? and finally we searched for prince albert and it did a lot better than google. >>> so it sounds like an old joke, right? a neurosurgeon and two ex israeli officers walk into a coffee shop. but what happens next is no punch line. it...
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May 11, 2013
05/13
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KNTV
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>> jimmy: i saw it on wikipedia. i don't know. i could be wrong.ead that? >> jimmy: i did see this on the internet. i saw this picture. it was on yahoo! they post -- yahoo! does good stuff. they posted a story online about dallas cowboys quarterback tony romo and how he loves golf and it's a great story. and they included a picture. take a look at the picture, there. there he is. and the caption -- look at -- underneath says, "tony romo and unidentified friend." [ laughter ] can you zoom in on that guy? that's tiger woods! [ laughter ] probably the most famous -- golfer -- >> steve: oops! >> jimmy: hey, guys, this is not good. a new poll found that 54% of americans are tired of justin bieber -- [ cheers and applause ] -- which gets even worse when you hear they only polled 54% of americans. so, i -- i saw that manti te'o's fake girlfriend actually came in at number 69 on "maxim's" hot 100 list. >> steve: really? >> jimmy: so, congratulations to numbers 70 through 100, on being almost as hot as nothing. [ laughter ] and finally, a couple that met on
>> jimmy: i saw it on wikipedia. i don't know. i could be wrong.ead that? >> jimmy: i did see this on the internet. i saw this picture. it was on yahoo! they post -- yahoo! does good stuff. they posted a story online about dallas cowboys quarterback tony romo and how he loves golf and it's a great story. and they included a picture. take a look at the picture, there. there he is. and the caption -- look at -- underneath says, "tony romo and unidentified friend." [ laughter...
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May 29, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN2
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but it was sort of you know, the wikipedia revolution to everyone contributed content to this. it was not a single established opposition movement that led the charge, say, like the sp splm or the northern alliance. this is truly bottom up. you get the sense from people that the sacrifices of the martyr should not be in vain, that people should vote. you have a relatively high turnout in voting. i mean, 60%. and i think is really informed this idea of civic responsibility. and you really see this and a lot of the protest that we see against the militias that are besieging the ministries, that obviously in the wake of the tragic attack on our outpost in benghazi. this idea of civic action is used very strong in society. >> okay, let's open it up, please. we will take three questions at a time. if you can identify yourself, lease, where you come from, and asked a question spent i came from the other building. the question is this. i understand that the problem is not so much between religious people and sacred, but it's also inside islam. for instance, just to give you an example
but it was sort of you know, the wikipedia revolution to everyone contributed content to this. it was not a single established opposition movement that led the charge, say, like the sp splm or the northern alliance. this is truly bottom up. you get the sense from people that the sacrifices of the martyr should not be in vain, that people should vote. you have a relatively high turnout in voting. i mean, 60%. and i think is really informed this idea of civic responsibility. and you really see...
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147
May 13, 2013
05/13
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CURRENT
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if you can get wikipedia or go to google, that's not a cell phone. if you can watch u tune tube or net flicks. think about it. >> how excited are you to learn newt gingrich has a mcdonald's appear on his iphone? >> the first one he goes to. it's not a phone because i have a mcdonald's app. >> he goes on this is like a 3 and a half minute video. >> i am sure. who else is going to pay attention to him? it's so great. about his phone. he sounds like chuck grassley on twitter all the time complain can, the history channel doesn't show history any more. he sounds like newt. newt, i've got a phone but it's not really a phone because he has a mcdonald's appear on it. >> it's pretty tremendous. >> funny. >> 10 minutes past the hour. very excited to talk to garden and gun magazines editor-in-chief, dave debenedeto. we will talk to him in a few minutes but first. >> this is the full court press. >> a quick check of other headlines making news, prince harry was in colorado yesterday to cheer on the british team at the warrior games. >> did he make it? >> he did
if you can get wikipedia or go to google, that's not a cell phone. if you can watch u tune tube or net flicks. think about it. >> how excited are you to learn newt gingrich has a mcdonald's appear on his iphone? >> the first one he goes to. it's not a phone because i have a mcdonald's app. >> he goes on this is like a 3 and a half minute video. >> i am sure. who else is going to pay attention to him? it's so great. about his phone. he sounds like chuck grassley on...
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May 20, 2013
05/13
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CURRENT
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i am vised the pentagon papers look at the wikipedia as far as i am concerned, on and on, bay of pigs. right? all hidden under the theme of national security. we should not have been doing. you can't just automatically say the other problem we have with the technology, all of these. figure out where they have gone. you know there's a point here where we have to pull back and say, you know, we have a right to privacy if there is a problem, let's go at the problem, which i don't think they did with the ap. now again, i don't have all of the facts and it's obviously secret and eric holder what he was trying to do was safe american lives but i think there were other ways to do it. if you do it with the press, you know there is goss to be blow back. every person out there who is a reporter is going to say next one is going to be me. >> absolutely. 866-55 might have press. the toll-free number. peter fenn. when we come back, there are some interesting political races, too. we will talk with larry sabato. governor's race in virginia in new jersey and then, of course all gearing up for 2014 h
i am vised the pentagon papers look at the wikipedia as far as i am concerned, on and on, bay of pigs. right? all hidden under the theme of national security. we should not have been doing. you can't just automatically say the other problem we have with the technology, all of these. figure out where they have gone. you know there's a point here where we have to pull back and say, you know, we have a right to privacy if there is a problem, let's go at the problem, which i don't think they did...
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May 31, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN
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your parents never had access to google and wikipedia in school.e are beginning to understand how the code of a virus is written, how the code of a bacterium is written, how the code of the plant is written, how the code of an animal is written, how the code of a human being is written, even how the code of a politician is written. as you begin to think about that stuff, what is interesting and important is very small changes could lead to a big difference. the difference between a chihuahua and a great dane is a single gene out of 20,000 genes. the difference between a tree that grows at this size and one that grows at a larger size is a few genes. if you think about life at those terms, how long a human being lives, what the quality of our life is, what diseases we die of, how we feed ourselves, what medicines we take, how we clothe ourselves and create energy, all of that will change in a fundamental way as we begin to understand, read, and right life code. >> we have a lot of callers and comments waiting. joining us from newton massachusetts. c
your parents never had access to google and wikipedia in school.e are beginning to understand how the code of a virus is written, how the code of a bacterium is written, how the code of the plant is written, how the code of an animal is written, how the code of a human being is written, even how the code of a politician is written. as you begin to think about that stuff, what is interesting and important is very small changes could lead to a big difference. the difference between a chihuahua...
115
115
May 4, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 115
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how many child molesters were in the area ask and was shocked at wikipedia, they had a list of something like 3,000 unsolved serial murder cases and any one of them could have trade into bolder, colorado, and hundreds of unregistered child molesters. so you can't exclude the intruder. we've all seen the fugitive on television where the guy tries to prove there's an intruder, but there are intruders. the manson case was a case of intruders breaking in, and the original police theory of the case, the original theory, was roman polanski did it. luckily he had an alibi. he was in london at the time. but the police loved that idea because polanski is -- much more than jeffrey macdonald, this drugged-up weirdo. then -- >> he was a drugged-up weirdo. >> i'm sure he was. then another case happened about the same time, the la bianca case, "pig" was wherein on the wall, everything. the police did not connect these two cases because they believed that one was drug-related case and the other was a hollywood case, and finally they arrested someone on a speeding ticket, one of the women involved in ma
how many child molesters were in the area ask and was shocked at wikipedia, they had a list of something like 3,000 unsolved serial murder cases and any one of them could have trade into bolder, colorado, and hundreds of unregistered child molesters. so you can't exclude the intruder. we've all seen the fugitive on television where the guy tries to prove there's an intruder, but there are intruders. the manson case was a case of intruders breaking in, and the original police theory of the case,...
60
60
May 29, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 60
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but it was one of the wikipedia of revolutions. everyone contributed. there is not a table is doubtless opposition. i mean, this was truly just on the bottoms up. and you get the sense from people that the sacrifices of the martyr should not be in vain. people should vote. that we have a very high turnout and voting. and i think this really informs the idea of civic responsibility. and you really see it and a in a lot of the protests that we've be against the militias that are besieging the ministry and the wake of the tragic attack on our outpost in benghazi, this includes civic actions and our civic society. >> let's open it up. >> we will take questions if you can identify yourself, please. where it comes from and ask the question. >> for instance, just as an example, there is a distraction against these individuals. >> and one of the charts, it shows intervention. this includes and how to work with that. we have any way to get closer to that? >> are there any other questions? would have happened as it continues to push through the discourses in this
but it was one of the wikipedia of revolutions. everyone contributed. there is not a table is doubtless opposition. i mean, this was truly just on the bottoms up. and you get the sense from people that the sacrifices of the martyr should not be in vain. people should vote. that we have a very high turnout and voting. and i think this really informs the idea of civic responsibility. and you really see it and a in a lot of the protests that we've be against the militias that are besieging the...
149
149
May 31, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 149
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your parents never had access to google and wikipedia in school.nning to understand how the code of a virus is written, how the code of a bacteria is written, how the code of the plant is written, how the code of an animal is written, how the code of a human being is written, even how the code of a politician is written. as you begin to think about that stuff, what is interesting and important is very small changes could lead to very big differences. the difference between a chihuahua and a great dane is a single gene out of 20,000 genes. the difference between a tree that grows at this size and one that grows at a larger size is a few genes. if you think about life at those terms, how long a human being lives, what the quality of our life is, what diseases we die of, how we feed ourselves, what medicines we take, how we clothe ourselves and create energy, all of that will change in a fundamental way as we begin to understand, read, and write life code. >> we have a lot of callers and comments waiting. joining us from newton massachusetts. caller i
your parents never had access to google and wikipedia in school.nning to understand how the code of a virus is written, how the code of a bacteria is written, how the code of the plant is written, how the code of an animal is written, how the code of a human being is written, even how the code of a politician is written. as you begin to think about that stuff, what is interesting and important is very small changes could lead to very big differences. the difference between a chihuahua and a...
1,765
1.8K
May 31, 2013
05/13
by
KDTV
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no estÁ en mi vocabulario, si quieres lo busco en wikipedÍa. ♪. ♪. ♪. ♪ ana dijo un chiste, vamos a reirnosllego anoche. >>> en coche? ya no manejo por los aÑos. >>> el baÑo? sÍ, los baÑos son al fondo a la derecha, pero apurese porque ya vienen los cumpleaÑos y van a dar dortorta. >>> sÍ, tu hermana estÁ gorda, la que estÁ bien flaca es la satcha pretto, la que da la noticia. >>> ah sÍ? es como una novicia. >>> quÉ buena estÁ verdad? quÉ viejo que viejo. >>> quiÉn? >>> esto abrazar a su esposo, lo primero que hizo la madre de estados unidos que saliÓ en libertad de una cÁrcel en mÉxico. yanira maldonado abandonÓ la cÁrcel en la que esautovo una semana, luego que autoridades revisaron videos de seguridad demostraron que ella y su esposo abandonaron el autobÚs con mantas, botellas de agua y un bolso, hallaron doce libras de marien Úana abajo del asiento en el bus, optaron por regresar a arizona en ese transporte por considerarlo mÁs seguro que en carro privado. empezÓ como marcha y termino en trifulca una manifestaciÓn de empleados pÚblicos peruanos que se enfrentaron a la policÍa cuando tra
no estÁ en mi vocabulario, si quieres lo busco en wikipedÍa. ♪. ♪. ♪. ♪ ana dijo un chiste, vamos a reirnosllego anoche. >>> en coche? ya no manejo por los aÑos. >>> el baÑo? sÍ, los baÑos son al fondo a la derecha, pero apurese porque ya vienen los cumpleaÑos y van a dar dortorta. >>> sÍ, tu hermana estÁ gorda, la que estÁ bien flaca es la satcha pretto, la que da la noticia. >>> ah sÍ? es como una novicia. >>> quÉ buena estÁ...
188
188
May 24, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 188
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. >> think about wikipedia, the way they built an encyclopedia, which has every possible piece of informations why we can build a map that's global. the map is global, but we can do it on a reasonable budget. we believe if you look five years out, there are going to be two maps of the world. google and waze. we think it's going to be the two of us. you tell me if i'm going to be the second map out there to google, shouldn't i go public? >> i love it. i love that interview. we all talk about mobile being the future. and the mobile maps are almost the single most important map. >> and tapping crowd. it's such a smart thing to do. let people generate the maps themselves. two may become one now that goolg h google has joined that race. straight ahead, "star trek" in real life. find out how it can help you live long and prosper. we'll be right back. ♪ [ agent smith ] i've found software that intrigues me. it appears it's an agent of good. ♪ [ agent smith ] ge software connects patients to nurses to the right machines while dramatically reducing waiting time. [ telephone ringing ] now a waiting roo
. >> think about wikipedia, the way they built an encyclopedia, which has every possible piece of informations why we can build a map that's global. the map is global, but we can do it on a reasonable budget. we believe if you look five years out, there are going to be two maps of the world. google and waze. we think it's going to be the two of us. you tell me if i'm going to be the second map out there to google, shouldn't i go public? >> i love it. i love that interview. we all...
76
76
May 31, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
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eye 76
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just the fact that is on the wikipedia does not mean it is right. [applause] >> i would really like to weigh in for just a moment on this really profound question. if i know where the information is, why do i need to remember it or memorize it? i remember coming through medical school and we had these big books. i remember looking kind of bewildered and people said you don't really have to remember all that stuff and memorize it, you just need to know where it is so you can look it up. >> i always thought, number one, i have a 15-minute appointment with a patient, so that is not going to work. information is something you really have in your brain for several reasons. one is that you are constantly synthesizing other information with what you have already got. if all the information is not here, so that when you add additional information -- my dad used to say i will give you the skeleton upon which to add all the information you are going to get from now on. and that skeleton needs to be added to. one thing i've noticed in children of adolescence a
just the fact that is on the wikipedia does not mean it is right. [applause] >> i would really like to weigh in for just a moment on this really profound question. if i know where the information is, why do i need to remember it or memorize it? i remember coming through medical school and we had these big books. i remember looking kind of bewildered and people said you don't really have to remember all that stuff and memorize it, you just need to know where it is so you can look it up....
98
98
May 29, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 98
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for those of you interested in the wikipedia-level of research, tweeting actually starts in 2006 in amore formal manner, and it is the founding of twitter by jack emcee who was a college student at the time. -- jack dempsey who was a college student at the time. was a shorton of it burst of inconsequential information or chirping. i thought that would work as a pretty good name for what we are doing. has tipped mightily since its early days, as you know. , the conference in austin, used it. google was there and twitter was there. they had a huge interactive piece where they put up 60 screens and tweeted all the messages coming out of all of the sessions to further enrich that conference activity. in 2010, 40.1% of the tweets happening out there are pointless babble still. some of the stuff our students were tweeting back in 2008. 37.6%, conversations, people actually having a back-and- forth. 5.9%, self-promotion. passed along value, things being tweeted and retreated. things become news, 3.6%. then there is spam here you the spam users have figured it out. one of the best quotes i fo
for those of you interested in the wikipedia-level of research, tweeting actually starts in 2006 in amore formal manner, and it is the founding of twitter by jack emcee who was a college student at the time. -- jack dempsey who was a college student at the time. was a shorton of it burst of inconsequential information or chirping. i thought that would work as a pretty good name for what we are doing. has tipped mightily since its early days, as you know. , the conference in austin, used it....
113
113
May 28, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 113
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quote 0
revolution that everybody participated, perhaps for their own motive but it was sort of, you know, the wikipedia the charge like the splm or the northern alliance. this is truly bottom up. you get the sense from people that the sacrifices of the martyr should not be in vain, that people should vote. you had a relatively high turnout and voting. 60%. and i think this really forms this idea of civic responsibility. and you really have seen this and a lot of the protests that you see against the militias that are besieging the ministries, that in the wake of the tragic attack on our outpost in benghazi. this idea of civic action is very strong in society. >> okay, let's open it up. we will take three questions at the time. if you can identify yourself, please, where you come from, ask your question. >> i came from the other building. the question is this one, i understand that the problem is that so much between religious people and sacred but is also inside islam. for instance, just to give an example, the attack, the destruction against -- can you elaborate a bit? >> okay. please. >> i am from as
revolution that everybody participated, perhaps for their own motive but it was sort of, you know, the wikipedia the charge like the splm or the northern alliance. this is truly bottom up. you get the sense from people that the sacrifices of the martyr should not be in vain, that people should vote. you had a relatively high turnout and voting. 60%. and i think this really forms this idea of civic responsibility. and you really have seen this and a lot of the protests that you see against the...