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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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wikipedia is the encyclopedia of the internet. we want to be the library of internet, go deeper, go to published works of humankind television, books, journalism, literature, music recordings, that kind of thing. >> what kind of law department do you have to have at the internet archives to handle that? >> we operate like a library. the idea is to just not offend people or make them feel like they've been taking advantage of so we don't make any money. we're awe try to link music to spotify so we have all the album art. they're wacky and fun. we make those downloadable and you can listen to them, but they sound like 78's, you know, the era, the first half of the 20th century is largely forgotten because it wasn't moved on to long-playing records. then c.d.'s, then spotify. some do, but most not. >> how are you funded? >> the same kind of way that wikipedia or npr is funded. at the end of the year, we get grants. about a third of our income comes from libraries, so you collect the webpages for them. we collect the web collection fo
wikipedia is the encyclopedia of the internet. we want to be the library of internet, go deeper, go to published works of humankind television, books, journalism, literature, music recordings, that kind of thing. >> what kind of law department do you have to have at the internet archives to handle that? >> we operate like a library. the idea is to just not offend people or make them feel like they've been taking advantage of so we don't make any money. we're awe try to link music to...
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Apr 6, 2020
04/20
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wikipedia, that's not good enough. you have to go and follow through and if i could just click on it and open the book of i could do my homework in the middle of the night. she's like, that's good, right? that's what we want. we want people to be able to go deeper and naked so that publishers still sell books, they may sell even more books, we get information out the books, music, video, journal literature, old periodicals that they know where it came from and what they can trust. >> host: you have nine months for your 40-year-old goal. are you going to make it? >> guest: we are trying to get -- as a same silicon valley, the minimum viable product. can we have enough to do this? so phillips andover, else the academy andover, they went and had their full library, they lent it to us so we could digitize it, and we now have the full library of one of the best prep schools in the country is now a high school library for anybody that wants to access. isn't that great? mary grove college, which is a university, college that
wikipedia, that's not good enough. you have to go and follow through and if i could just click on it and open the book of i could do my homework in the middle of the night. she's like, that's good, right? that's what we want. we want people to be able to go deeper and naked so that publishers still sell books, they may sell even more books, we get information out the books, music, video, journal literature, old periodicals that they know where it came from and what they can trust. >>...
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Apr 7, 2020
04/20
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we even went and fixed the broken links in wikipedia for wikipedia, catherine the executive director was worried the truth might fracture that if we are not really work on trying to make wikipedia stronger and cited by better sources that people would start citing sources that were available but not good. those citation words that happen behind the scenes on wikipedia are based on how good those citations are and whether you can click and see them. we committed to going and fixing all the broken links and filling in all the books in the journal or literature linked to wikipedia. we fixed 11 million broken links in wikipedia in the last couple of years and now we are going to all the books finding them and replacing those black texts with a blue link so you can click on it and go to it. if the books are missing and we try to find those books, digitize them, put them on. >> host: how did you come up with this idea? >> guest: it was the vision of the internet that a bunch of us but certainly i had of what i wanted the internet to be. it was 1980 and it was like why don't we go and make
we even went and fixed the broken links in wikipedia for wikipedia, catherine the executive director was worried the truth might fracture that if we are not really work on trying to make wikipedia stronger and cited by better sources that people would start citing sources that were available but not good. those citation words that happen behind the scenes on wikipedia are based on how good those citations are and whether you can click and see them. we committed to going and fixing all the...
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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we even went and fixed the broken links in wikipedia, so wikipedia, the executive director of wikipedia was afraid that the truth might fracture if we didn't work on trying to make wikipedia stronger, cited by better sources that people would be citing sources that are available, but not good, and though citation words behind the scene on articles are based on how good those articles are and if you can see them. we committed to going and fixing all the broken links and filling in all the books and the journal literature that is linked to from wikipedia. we fixed 11 million broken links in wikipedia in the last couple of years and now, we are going through all of the books, finding them and replacing those with a blue link so you can click on it and go to it. if the books are missing, we try to find those books, digitize them, put them up. peter: how did you come up with this idea? brewster: came was a vision of the internet that a bunch of us, certainly i had, of what i wanted the internet to be. 1980, why don't we go and make the library of alexandria for the digital age? we had to bui
we even went and fixed the broken links in wikipedia, so wikipedia, the executive director of wikipedia was afraid that the truth might fracture if we didn't work on trying to make wikipedia stronger, cited by better sources that people would be citing sources that are available, but not good, and though citation words behind the scene on articles are based on how good those articles are and if you can see them. we committed to going and fixing all the broken links and filling in all the books...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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, i love wikipedia.she pointed out that wikipedia is not setting the rules it's representing what society thinks is important. >> sometimes we want to say wikipedia is causing this problem when really i think what she said is it's a reflection of what's in all of us. i think that's the easy game we play. let's put wikipedia out of business. really that's not gonna solve everything because everyone thinks the same after it's gone. >> it's absolutely good point these are reflections. in the times or wikipedia or whatever else is reflecting what we all think and what we all expect or what we expect at the time. times start to change and we expect some things.>> let's talk about the brain. there have been people who said there is a difference you talk a lot in the book about people have written about the difference between women and men and some people made a lot of money thinking they can describe this and i think it's lee elliott and she study this and what did she find about the difference between men and
, i love wikipedia.she pointed out that wikipedia is not setting the rules it's representing what society thinks is important. >> sometimes we want to say wikipedia is causing this problem when really i think what she said is it's a reflection of what's in all of us. i think that's the easy game we play. let's put wikipedia out of business. really that's not gonna solve everything because everyone thinks the same after it's gone. >> it's absolutely good point these are reflections....
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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i love wikipedia. she pointed out that wikipedia is not setting the rules, is just representing what the society think is important. >> what's important isti that sometimes we want to say wikipedia is causing the problem when really what she said it's s reflection at all of us and i think that is the easy game that we play, let's put wikipedia out of business, really that's not going to solve anything because everyone still thinks is same even after it's gone. >> it's a good point that these are reflections and that the times they are reflecting what we think and what we expect or time.e expect at the in times do change and we expect different things. >> let's talk about the brain. i think there have been people that said there is a difference, you talk a lot in the book about people who written the difference between women and man and lots of people made money thinking they could describe this. why did she find about the difference between men and wom women. >> she's a neurologist, neuroscientist in c
i love wikipedia. she pointed out that wikipedia is not setting the rules, is just representing what the society think is important. >> what's important isti that sometimes we want to say wikipedia is causing the problem when really what she said it's s reflection at all of us and i think that is the easy game that we play, let's put wikipedia out of business, really that's not going to solve anything because everyone still thinks is same even after it's gone. >> it's a good point...
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Apr 19, 2020
04/20
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and i think wikipedia is run by a woman. kelley: and she explains, i love wikipedia. janice: she pointed out the wikipedia is not setting the rules, it's what the society thinks is important. kelley: sometimes we want to say the wikipedia is causing the problem and really, is a reflection and what is in all of us and i think that is the easy game we play. but wikipedia out of business. butt really, that will solve anything. janice: these are reflections in the times or whatever else is reflecting what we allll think d expect or whatt we expect at the time. in time to start a change. kelley: let's talk about the brain. there is a difference. you talk a lot in the book about people of written about the difference between women and men. and some people have made a lot of money thinking that they p cn describein this. what did she find about the difference between men and women's brains. janice: she is neurologist and neurosciences in chicago and she told me she started out wanting to do about about the difference between men and women because there's always been headline
and i think wikipedia is run by a woman. kelley: and she explains, i love wikipedia. janice: she pointed out the wikipedia is not setting the rules, it's what the society thinks is important. kelley: sometimes we want to say the wikipedia is causing the problem and really, is a reflection and what is in all of us and i think that is the easy game we play. but wikipedia out of business. butt really, that will solve anything. janice: these are reflections in the times or whatever else is...
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Apr 1, 2020
04/20
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let's put wikipedia out of business. that will really not solve anything.verybody thinks the same even after it is gone. these are reflections. kelley: they are reflecting what we all think and expect. in the time. the times, they do change. kelley: plus talk about thehe s brain. there've been people say that there is a difference. it's 11 the book about people have written about the difference between women and men and some people have made a lot of money. i think it is elliott and she has studied this and what a cheap fight of difference between men and women's brains. janice: was using the urologist neuroscientist in chicago and she told me that she had started out wanting to do a book about the difference between men and women because there are differences in the headlines. but she's a scientist and a researcher so she started to look at all of the data and looking at the data samples. she said to me, she realized, i got nothing. basically many come down to it, the differences between the brains are many school. and here over and over again people alway
let's put wikipedia out of business. that will really not solve anything.verybody thinks the same even after it is gone. these are reflections. kelley: they are reflecting what we all think and expect. in the time. the times, they do change. kelley: plus talk about thehe s brain. there've been people say that there is a difference. it's 11 the book about people have written about the difference between women and men and some people have made a lot of money. i think it is elliott and she has...
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Apr 3, 2020
04/20
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that talks about links, something living as opposed -- wikipedia is great but doesn't say when you dothis it causes this and that connection between things the cause of the things which cause other things is what we have been systematically missing for years. that is where bias gets helped. what is happening with ai is we are getting unintended consequences because we are not modeling the context in which the ai happens. when i start a new ai project the first thing i say, they say we have the data. we are closing the data, i say put the data aside. tell me what the decision is this ai will be used for. and as we understand the context of the decision that will be to some outcomes, i might build a long ai system that we can do without data, data might help but if you have software engineering, if you don't understand the requirements you will just build things that break and some research says 9 of 10 ai projects fail. >> i like your point about the car. >> one topic, strong correlation, access to birth control, a very simple link for intelligence all over the world for family plannin
that talks about links, something living as opposed -- wikipedia is great but doesn't say when you dothis it causes this and that connection between things the cause of the things which cause other things is what we have been systematically missing for years. that is where bias gets helped. what is happening with ai is we are getting unintended consequences because we are not modeling the context in which the ai happens. when i start a new ai project the first thing i say, they say we have the...
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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it started leaking wikipedia articles with a name talk to wikipedia which is a nonprofit et cetera nonprofit and youtube is using it as the resource that youtube sent people to with this information. same thing goes for journalists. google news for the longest time gives snippets of articles among people started researching it, you couldn't click through to the actual article you'll had snippets. we click the actual article, or the research showed that no one actually read the full article. no one actually clicked through they just read the little piece until the journalists put all the work into during this investigation, writing the whole article, google post the article, snippet, nobody actually reads it. and we wonder why the news industry is failing, whites having a hard time worried maybe failing a death wrong word. what i think as we can reinvigorate journalism and not let the cat out of the bag too much amidst exactly my argument is. the argument is that the technology firms around the country, should have to put i don't know 10 billion or 20 billion into it public trust in the unite
it started leaking wikipedia articles with a name talk to wikipedia which is a nonprofit et cetera nonprofit and youtube is using it as the resource that youtube sent people to with this information. same thing goes for journalists. google news for the longest time gives snippets of articles among people started researching it, you couldn't click through to the actual article you'll had snippets. we click the actual article, or the research showed that no one actually read the full article. no...
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Apr 17, 2020
04/20
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commitment wikipedia criminals from the pilgrims until 1970. i went through it, on page 100. i will never say the name of the book but i don't want anyone to do that. it is my book and for every book i ever write a book about a that but. >> go downstairs and see if book people has that. >> i want to say one important thing which is for those people who want to write letters about bread pit's relevancy, send them to me. this book is wonderful, i hope you all will pick up a copy. we have multiple copies. i could talk to you all day about this but thank you for letting me be part of this and give kate winkler dawson a big round of applause. and now you're going to sign books. >> this is my big book launch event. i really appreciate -- >> they put up with all this research. [applause] >>entertaining courts want to you what you're reading, send your list via social media at @ booktv good evening and thank you all for coming to politics and prose. my name is alan walkie, i'm a bookseller here where we host close to a thousand authors a year. for a fu
commitment wikipedia criminals from the pilgrims until 1970. i went through it, on page 100. i will never say the name of the book but i don't want anyone to do that. it is my book and for every book i ever write a book about a that but. >> go downstairs and see if book people has that. >> i want to say one important thing which is for those people who want to write letters about bread pit's relevancy, send them to me. this book is wonderful, i hope you all will pick up a copy. we...
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Apr 26, 2020
04/20
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the same can be said for organizations like wikipedia. when you to face the crisis of disinformation what did it do quick it started linking wikipedia articles. wikipedia is not profit one of the five most access site on the web but a nonprofit and youtube is using it as the resource that you get some people to when you thought there was this information. same thing for travelers. google news for the longest time take snippets of articles and with people start researching it you could click through to the actual article. when you click the actual article, sorry, the research showed that when actually read the full article. no one clicked through. they just read the little piece and so the journalism put all the work and doing this investigation, why did the article, google post an article, the statement and no one reads it. you wonder why the news industry is fairly, why it's having a hard time. maybe not failing. maybe that's the wrong word. what i think is we can reinvigorate journalism. i'm working on an op-ed right now. the argument i
the same can be said for organizations like wikipedia. when you to face the crisis of disinformation what did it do quick it started linking wikipedia articles. wikipedia is not profit one of the five most access site on the web but a nonprofit and youtube is using it as the resource that you get some people to when you thought there was this information. same thing for travelers. google news for the longest time take snippets of articles and with people start researching it you could click...
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of political nature on wikipedia and you know if it's no longer an open system then the question is who have who has access to the system and do they have you know the truth and honesty and integrity. you know in mind when they're editing articles are they really just trying to score political points something else it always comes up when the internet royalty or dragged before congress is google a platform or is it a publisher. right well you know section 230 of the communications decency act carved out liability protections as long as the. big tech companies didn't. censor political content and now it appears that everything that is passing through their platform is now rearing to according to a political agenda and so the question is should those companies still maintain their liability shield or are they violating the spirit of you know section 230 of the communications decency act well they're trying to sway a lot of other people. right they're trying to have the protections of a platform yet act with the discretion as a publisher yet merriam her name told us how google downplays al
of political nature on wikipedia and you know if it's no longer an open system then the question is who have who has access to the system and do they have you know the truth and honesty and integrity. you know in mind when they're editing articles are they really just trying to score political points something else it always comes up when the internet royalty or dragged before congress is google a platform or is it a publisher. right well you know section 230 of the communications decency act...
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drives many of those i know in this field to see a few days can do indeed but i see sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment even the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. with our super hero. my mission is clear. and to me closely explore germany. take down easy and. everything else there's a lot going on in. germany try. then tested checking the. beethoven piece for me. beethoven is free. as for hell. beethoven is for her. beethoven is for the. beethoven is for cause. beethoven is for grandma flo beethoven 202250th anniversary here on depo you.
drives many of those i know in this field to see a few days can do indeed but i see sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment even the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. with our...
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that drives many of those i know in this field so if you these can indeed pricey sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment even the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. fair trade coffee well brewed. 3 term an entrepreneur is want to show you how it can be done better. their coffee is produced fine and if you can win in school creative. roasted on the spot. transport it with wind power. surge 100 percent environment. friendly. guilt free proof. t.w. . once the secret service classic. music the sound. or the story behind the music was a hit before the age of greatest. cause. he told friends night symphony for the world. in 45 minutes on d w. w's crime fighters are back with the africa's most successful radio drama series continues from the only busloads are available online cours
that drives many of those i know in this field so if you these can indeed pricey sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment even the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. fair trade...
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many of those i know in this field so if you these can indeed but i see sure tom and do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know and you chip our facebook by and see you soon. enter the conflict zone year after you the war in yemen goes on with no end in sight but who's really trying to stop it my guess is we here in munich is the country's foreign minister mohammad abdullah and the germans after thousands of civilian casualties can be enormous human suffering being done nothing. in the conflict zone. next on d.w.i. . fair trade coffee well brewed. 3 german entrepreneurs' want to show how it can all be done to better. their coffee is produced by an african women's corporative. roasted on the spot to. transport it with wind power. surge 100 percent environmentally friendly. guilt free proo
many of those i know in this field so if you these can indeed but i see sure tom and do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know and you chip our facebook by and see you soon. enter the...
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drives many of those i know in this field to say a few days can indeed but i see sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system named the linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. legend celebrates its 70th birthday. b w but. it can handle any kind of job takes families on vacation. and travels around the. we salute this iconic vehicle with a trip through 7 decades of automotive. history read. next on t.w. . his legacy the establishment of one of the most brutal dictatorships was. robert mugabe the dictator of zimbabwe. he could have gone down in history as a freedom fighter. instead of his grateful power and increasing paranoia created such corruption terror. in 45 minutes on d w. the global corona crisis you can find more information on the mindset e.w. dot com and on t.w. social media
drives many of those i know in this field to say a few days can indeed but i see sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system named the linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. legend...
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combination that drives many of those i know in this field to see a few days can i see sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. the show must go on. the 77 percent right from the streets of africa everybody is talking about a close up by. our people coping with the threat of the 19 those guys who don't have offices to go to can't work from home. and how is the corona pandemic impacting africans at home and abroad. fight against cornell prior to 76 percent. ready for liftoff. through our solar system. and taking the universe's measurement. can all be done with the space telescope rosita. and researchers are working on a map of all the galaxies suddenly the universe doesn't seem so big after all tomorrow today. 60 minutes w. w's crime fighter
combination that drives many of those i know in this field to see a few days can i see sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. the show...
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many of those i know in this field to see if you these can indeed but i see sure tom and do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's $500.00 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know and you chip our facebook by and see you soon. reducing the risk to flooding and erosion by creating hillside terraces. land where sonisphere losing their harvest and the initiative users now take needs to create new solutions to. things successful. gave them 3000. noticed on g.w. . or. they were abducted by the nazis until it into germany to be raised as citizens of the. during world war 2 thousands of polish children suffer this way. even today many of them don't know who their real parents were. they lived with this trauma for decades. in children with kidnapping campaign of nazi germany starts april 28th w. . welcome to global 3000. today we had to the p
many of those i know in this field to see if you these can indeed but i see sure tom and do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's $500.00 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know and you chip our facebook by and see you soon. reducing...
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combination that drives many of those i know in this field to see if you can be sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system named the linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. the show must go on. the 77 percent right from the streets of africa everybody's talking about a crude. how are people coping with the threat of good 19. guys who don't have offices to go to can't work from home. and how is the corona pandemic impacting africans at home and abroad. by calling up piracy this is a decent the 1st. next on. legend celebrates its 70th birthday b.t.w. but. it can't handle any kind of job takes families on vacation and travels around the world. we salute this iconic vehicle with a trip for 7 decades of automotive history read. in 60 minutes on d w. w's crime fighters are back with afri
combination that drives many of those i know in this field to see if you can be sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system named the linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. the show must...
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that drives many of those i know in this field so if you these can indeed but i see sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's $500.00 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. legend celebrates its 70th birthday v.w. bus. you can handle any kind of job takes families on vacation. and travels around the world. we salute this iconic vehicle with a trip through 7 decades of automotive history read. on d.w. . william had a big gun because others were lions how do you know if i had known that the boat would be that small i never would have gone on a trip but i would not have put myself and my parents in my danger to the bottom of the dream of the davis leader would. love one son to live but that one little bit of the give him i had serious problems on a personal level and i was unable to
that drives many of those i know in this field so if you these can indeed but i see sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's $500.00 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. legend...
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that drives many of those i know in this field to see if you can indeed but i see sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon. sustainability. environmental. globalization things biodiversity species conservation exploitation. right displacement. of the global and current of local actually. global 3000. next d.w. . eco india. the world has a bit less plastic when tableware is edible. and afghan women refugees have jobs. this is what the drama is doing. it's a project started by students in new delhi and you saw a lot of potential in that idea. for swing votes in india. in 60 minutes on d w. in a way discover the bauhaus school who helped world start my own w. . welcome to global 3000 this week we meet a south african entrepreneur who's usi
that drives many of those i know in this field to see if you can indeed but i see sure do you use wikipedia or firefox both are open source projects i do use them and if you ask me open source is an incredible accomplishment in the world's 500 fast the super computers run on a free operating system namely linux what does the future look like now that tech giants are buying important open source projects what do you think let us know on you tube or facebook i buy and see you soon....
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Apr 17, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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i found him just wikipedia in this picture from the cover.e bought a book that was a criminal is wikipedia from 1970. i looked through it was on page 100. any bookk i ever write is going to come out of that but i know it. an we will go downstairs and see if the people have the book. [laughter]at >> this book is wonderful and i hope you all will pick out a copy or multiple copies and i can talk to you truly all day about this. but thank you for letting me be a part of this. can we give kate a big round of applause. [applause] and now you are going to sign books. t. this is like my big book launch event. they have to put up with all of this research. >> thank you. >> you're welcome. >>> good evening and thank you all for coming to politics and prose. my namis
i found him just wikipedia in this picture from the cover.e bought a book that was a criminal is wikipedia from 1970. i looked through it was on page 100. any bookk i ever write is going to come out of that but i know it. an we will go downstairs and see if the people have the book. [laughter]at >> this book is wonderful and i hope you all will pick out a copy or multiple copies and i can talk to you truly all day about this. but thank you for letting me be a part of this. can we give...
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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jumping down a rabbit hole but i think it's hard when you ask where you find ideas, i founded a wikipedia that the incredible picture, so this i bought p a book that was the criminal encyclopedia of criminals from the programs from the 1970s. [laughter] >> i looked through it and he was on page 100 and i'll never see the name of the book because i don't want anybody else to do that, it is my book. >> for every book all of her right that will come out of that book i know it. >> you guys go downstairs and see if they have that book. [laughter] >> i want to say one very important thing and for those people who want to write letters about brad pitt's relevancy -- [laughter] this book is wonderful and i hopepe you all will pick up a copy, multiple copies and i could talk to you truly all day about this but thank you so much for letting me be a part of this, can we give kate a big round of applause. [applause] now you're going to sign books. >> thank you guys a for coming, i'm from austin, this is my book bibook launch event. >> give them a round of apostasy have to put up with all this researc
jumping down a rabbit hole but i think it's hard when you ask where you find ideas, i founded a wikipedia that the incredible picture, so this i bought p a book that was the criminal encyclopedia of criminals from the programs from the 1970s. [laughter] >> i looked through it and he was on page 100 and i'll never see the name of the book because i don't want anybody else to do that, it is my book. >> for every book all of her right that will come out of that book i know it. >>...
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Apr 11, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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the people if you going famous forensic scientists look at their wikipedia page, experts in would hill ticks and paul kirk and solved the sam shepherd case, they were auto all writing to each other and figuring it out together. this is the wild west of forensics because anybody could call themselves an expert and it is just who is a better talker. >> he had other few experts he felt competitive with. >> right. to me you can't write a really good book without having a guy who is jerk and adversaries and he had a lot of adversaries and they're compete for the same money and prosecutors and defense attorneys. >> so i love the way you set the book up. because you book-end it with one particular case and then each chapter is a different case. right? >> right. >> you have the quotes from sher hock holmes. can you tell us which of these cases was the most interesting for you or that you felt you learned the most about oscar from reading? just curious if you have a favorite in this book. >> i think -- my favorite in general is i call -- it's a little tacky but call bits and pieces about a woma
the people if you going famous forensic scientists look at their wikipedia page, experts in would hill ticks and paul kirk and solved the sam shepherd case, they were auto all writing to each other and figuring it out together. this is the wild west of forensics because anybody could call themselves an expert and it is just who is a better talker. >> he had other few experts he felt competitive with. >> right. to me you can't write a really good book without having a guy who is jerk...
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Apr 25, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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their model for how buying trees leads to outcomes can help us and that's like wikipedia, a site that is curated and we canny to understand the situation. this sort of looks like a business intelligence dashboard. sort of looks like stuff we have been building for a long time. it's not. we're not looking at a data set here. we're looking at the future. we're only summarizing it in the bar chart so you can understand it. the background, depending on choice's have a sis fixes engine generating implications of the choices. a lot of investment. a lot of forests and then as i change my investment or use linda richie i can see how my decisions interact with the situation as they characterize it in order to impact the outcomes care about. this is a universal pattern. this example here is an example of something that you do in your head 500 time as day. and that large organizations really struggle with, understanding the impact of today's decision tomorrow. i'll give yaw couple of examples. these are machine learning models here. these little blue triangle and we might have bit a machine lear
their model for how buying trees leads to outcomes can help us and that's like wikipedia, a site that is curated and we canny to understand the situation. this sort of looks like a business intelligence dashboard. sort of looks like stuff we have been building for a long time. it's not. we're not looking at a data set here. we're looking at the future. we're only summarizing it in the bar chart so you can understand it. the background, depending on choice's have a sis fixes engine generating...
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Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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it's great when you read sources like wikipedia. for that particular leader i would have to look it up or ask a descend enteant. yes, sir? >> what did washington die from? >> he had gone out on his horse on his plantation of virginia. it was a cold, rainy day, and he got sick from the wet clothing and, of course, what do you do in 1799 when you get cold and get sick and have a doctor? they bring in leeches and do blood letting. that's not going to make you better. it's going to make you worse. it exacerbated what probably would have been a preventable cold with something simple. tragic. how symbolic he dies at the end of that century. i have an ancestor from deerfield, mass, who wrote in his memoirs the day that the news arrived of washington's death, he said my goodness, i'm paraphrasing here, what shock we're all in. we all loved our beloved founder of this country, brings tears to my eyes. historians will do justice, which i cannot. it's wonderful, as a descendant, 200 years later, to be able to try to do that as an historian. we
it's great when you read sources like wikipedia. for that particular leader i would have to look it up or ask a descend enteant. yes, sir? >> what did washington die from? >> he had gone out on his horse on his plantation of virginia. it was a cold, rainy day, and he got sick from the wet clothing and, of course, what do you do in 1799 when you get cold and get sick and have a doctor? they bring in leeches and do blood letting. that's not going to make you better. it's going to make...
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Apr 21, 2020
04/20
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. >> i'm like a human wikipedia and about that accurate. [laughter] he may be president next.to have your presidential library on comedy and the presidency so he invites welfare over and lorn michaels to come backstage and he's as i've made this pretty easy for you all. i gave you a strategery. they look at each other and say should we tell them. he said we made that up. he thought he said it. they said but you didn't make up miss-underestimated. [laughter] >> what i was trying to say in my louisiana language. the song live like you are dieting is one of those songs i feel like i'm very privileged ande blessed to be the vessel fr that song. i don't feel like it's my phone. my song. i feel like it's aea song for everyone and everyone finds a way to relate to that and that is what great music does. to move people and bring people together in a way they may not have been brought together without a song or a message like that. >> do you ever think about the difference between a political song and a cultural one? >> i don't. i think about good songs. i don't think i would necessari
. >> i'm like a human wikipedia and about that accurate. [laughter] he may be president next.to have your presidential library on comedy and the presidency so he invites welfare over and lorn michaels to come backstage and he's as i've made this pretty easy for you all. i gave you a strategery. they look at each other and say should we tell them. he said we made that up. he thought he said it. they said but you didn't make up miss-underestimated. [laughter] >> what i was trying to...
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Apr 21, 2020
04/20
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FOXNEWSW
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thank you, wikipedia. and she has a child of privilege, not some kid from the streets. someone who actually grew up in the bronx would be far too embarrassed to drone on about herself on instagram. suddenly people seem to have a lot more power than they did before this pandemic arrived from china. that's at least as scary as the virus itself and its effects will last much, much longer. you have a right to lawfully push back against that and you should. we are joined now by fox news senior judicial analyst, thank you so much for coming on. so when politicians start arresting people who disagree with them and the media applauds, what sort of moment is that? >> it's a very depressing and fearful moment, tucker. the media could not exist in this country without the first amendment and they are applauding it being used and crushed because they disagree with the message of those who are being crushed. stated differently, the constitution applies in good times and in bad. there is no pandemic exception to the constitution. there is no emergency provision or trigger in the cons
thank you, wikipedia. and she has a child of privilege, not some kid from the streets. someone who actually grew up in the bronx would be far too embarrassed to drone on about herself on instagram. suddenly people seem to have a lot more power than they did before this pandemic arrived from china. that's at least as scary as the virus itself and its effects will last much, much longer. you have a right to lawfully push back against that and you should. we are joined now by fox news senior...
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Apr 3, 2020
04/20
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that this will happen over the beginning of the next year or so which there will be a new kind of wikipediathat house roles that maximizes how to get reasonably accurate information from the crowd sourced critiquing. it when you do this that causes this. when you give money to this charity, they will buy ten trees and they will have someone that owns the link and will curate that and say here's all the reasons i think when you spend $10 you will get one into someone else will have an opinion we spend $10 on this charity if someone else does the next link. i think what is critical is we create what she would call the warm version that talks about the link as opposed to it is great but it doesn't say when you do this that causes this, and that connection between things that caused other things is what we have been symptomatically missing for years. >> so that is what it helps. one of the things happening as we are getting these unintended consequences because we are not modeling the context in which that happens. so when i start a new project for the first thing they want to say is we have be
that this will happen over the beginning of the next year or so which there will be a new kind of wikipediathat house roles that maximizes how to get reasonably accurate information from the crowd sourced critiquing. it when you do this that causes this. when you give money to this charity, they will buy ten trees and they will have someone that owns the link and will curate that and say here's all the reasons i think when you spend $10 you will get one into someone else will have an opinion we...
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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back before the days of wikipedia, she did what any kind of motivated informed citizen would do. she calls up a reference library at rutgers to ask who should have talked of a want to talk to somebody about this? is anybody working at the law school? this is what historians called contingency, the idea if one little thing could've been different maybe history as a whole would've been different. it just so happened the contingent event, that a law professor, by the name of alfred bloom rosen was on faculty. he was teaching at rutgers law. and he had spent the previous decade serving in the equal employment opportunity commission which was the federal agency created to enforce the civil rights act at work. so he thought a lot about the responsibility of employers to not discriminate on various axes, his teaching a class in law and he was eager to take up her case pro bono and use it as a teaching tool for his students. to me that's just amazing because the rosen was the kind of -- blumrosen was a kind of figured that thought a lot about the relationship between agencies and employe
back before the days of wikipedia, she did what any kind of motivated informed citizen would do. she calls up a reference library at rutgers to ask who should have talked of a want to talk to somebody about this? is anybody working at the law school? this is what historians called contingency, the idea if one little thing could've been different maybe history as a whole would've been different. it just so happened the contingent event, that a law professor, by the name of alfred bloom rosen was...
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Apr 20, 2020
04/20
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. >> i glanced at your wikipedia bio before i came here i think it said you went to university was that before or after twitter quick so how could you avoid the students in the academic life prior to that? unless it was online. >> washburn was before twitter and it was definitely is not you will look for or find intellectual freedom because it's a mile and a half from my house and we protested there every week at least it was one of the earlier targets. we spent as little time there as possible. and we went to public school also before that. so people wonder how could you be exposed? we read secular books and listened to secular music there were very few restrictions on what we could consume. people would say how did those things not influence you? the best analogy i have come up with is before you are ever exposed to any ungodly ideas or portrayal, you understand , you are taught in detail why they are wrong. it's like being inoculated against those ideas before you are ever exposed so you memorize those chapters and verses why they are wrong and take you to hell so when you see them a
. >> i glanced at your wikipedia bio before i came here i think it said you went to university was that before or after twitter quick so how could you avoid the students in the academic life prior to that? unless it was online. >> washburn was before twitter and it was definitely is not you will look for or find intellectual freedom because it's a mile and a half from my house and we protested there every week at least it was one of the earlier targets. we spent as little time there...
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Apr 28, 2020
04/20
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KNTV
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eat ♪ ♪ got undressed and took another shower ♪ ♪ cleaned my floors until they sparkle read the wikipedia ♪ ♪ then i looked at tik to for seven hours ♪ ♪ i'm starting to crack i'm starting to crac will i ever ge my old life back ♪ ♪ feels like i' going to sna i'm just startin to crack ♪ ♪ i can't figure out my daughter's mat spent three hour taking a bath ♪ ♪ looked at the clock it's 4:00 p.m. i'm on my third glas of wine by then ♪ ♪ rearranged my living roo called all my thir cousins on the zoom ♪ ♪ laughed too hard that m background's a beach the president's telling me to shoot up bleach ♪ >> jimmy: whew ♪ stare at the wall like i'm in a trance put on a t-shirt and i wor it like pants ♪ ♪ it totally works you've gotta believe me ♪ ♪ if you just stick your legs through th t-shirt sleeves ♪ ♪ i'm starting to crack starting to flip for breakfast i ha a bowl of chips ♪ ♪ with peps instead of mil i'm starting to crack ♪ ♪ i just though milk rhymed with crack and that pepsi rhyme with milk ♪ ♪ milk milk milk milk quack i'm starting to crac milk milk milk milk quac i'm starting to crack ♪ ♪ >>
eat ♪ ♪ got undressed and took another shower ♪ ♪ cleaned my floors until they sparkle read the wikipedia ♪ ♪ then i looked at tik to for seven hours ♪ ♪ i'm starting to crack i'm starting to crac will i ever ge my old life back ♪ ♪ feels like i' going to sna i'm just startin to crack ♪ ♪ i can't figure out my daughter's mat spent three hour taking a bath ♪ ♪ looked at the clock it's 4:00 p.m. i'm on my third glas of wine by then ♪ ♪ rearranged my living roo...
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Apr 12, 2020
04/20
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ALJAZ
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are intensively yet mistakenly adopted by many media outlets as well as governments according to wikipedia and i quote eliot haggans in 2012 when he began blogging the syrian situation was an unemployed finance and admin worker who spends his days taking care of his child at home. hagan's analysis of syrian weapons began as a hobby out of his home in his spare time haggans has no background or training in weapons and is entirely self-taught and he said before the arab spring i knew no more about weapons than the average x. box owner i had no knowledge beyond what i had learned from and which was a nigger and ramble never been to syria doesn't speak a word as arab there and he conducts its press and reset from the concept of his. and his. when i 1st saw the idea for the website of the star to thousands are searching for the club and. i base it fails just like i was still open source investigation a lot of crap names and they're all taking anyway so in a way frank got. they were picked one so i was stuck and i confess my friend he's a playwright. so i'll ask him and quite quickly he said wha
are intensively yet mistakenly adopted by many media outlets as well as governments according to wikipedia and i quote eliot haggans in 2012 when he began blogging the syrian situation was an unemployed finance and admin worker who spends his days taking care of his child at home. hagan's analysis of syrian weapons began as a hobby out of his home in his spare time haggans has no background or training in weapons and is entirely self-taught and he said before the arab spring i knew no more...
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Apr 18, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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one of the first was project which we have been working on since 2005 and this is like wikipedia, this is your project. anybody can participate, anybody can see the data. it's not siloed and i think this is really the moment for that kind of project. we need to have diagnostics that are not just custom for the moment where we have to struggle to like -- we lost a month in the united states shuffling around, but even in other countries it's not clear that that they have a enough sensitivity. in any case, we need something where we can be looking in advance at all the things that are causing us respiratory distress and drug resistant and so forth. in addition to the custom, we need a more general one. that's my list of what we can do and what we are doing in projects all over the world. it's wonderful to see it all being shared. one last thing which is further off but it is getting some attention and i need to mention it is that we have a way to make any organism resistant virus by creating genome and it is not going to solve our problem in the next couple of weeks but it is a very inter
one of the first was project which we have been working on since 2005 and this is like wikipedia, this is your project. anybody can participate, anybody can see the data. it's not siloed and i think this is really the moment for that kind of project. we need to have diagnostics that are not just custom for the moment where we have to struggle to like -- we lost a month in the united states shuffling around, but even in other countries it's not clear that that they have a enough sensitivity. in...
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Apr 28, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN3
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some of you may notice formatting, this comes from the old faithful wikipedia.don't suggest you always trust them. they're sources of information. they are useful for getting charts and graphs. this is a summary of vetoes from george washington through andrew johnson. here is the number of vetoes, the total number of all vetoes and the number of vetoes overridden. what do you notice? >> johnson is double the next man. 29. >> johnson is equal of even the next two. he is more than the next two. >> most of them are overridden. >> most of johnson's get overwritten. it is constitutional for the president to veto congressional legislation. but johnson is acting in a way no previous president had done with regard to that power in the constitution. he is acting in a rather radical, revolutionary way compared to all previous presidents. what he does is consistently vetoing congressional attempts at reconstruction. first the freedmen's bureau bill, civil rights bill, trying to guarantee civil rights for african americans and other people in the united states, and eventual
some of you may notice formatting, this comes from the old faithful wikipedia.don't suggest you always trust them. they're sources of information. they are useful for getting charts and graphs. this is a summary of vetoes from george washington through andrew johnson. here is the number of vetoes, the total number of all vetoes and the number of vetoes overridden. what do you notice? >> johnson is double the next man. 29. >> johnson is equal of even the next two. he is more than the...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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. >> i saw your wikipedia page and it's in your ranking captain at nasa. >> i did not have that rank at nasa but i had that rank in the navy. >> the captain sullivan, what was one of your most favorite moments when traveling to the lord's orbit using the spatial? >> my favorite moment with every moment between when it started and when it ended. [laughter] >> thank you so much for sharing your story tonight. i'm interested in your vision of where we should go in the space now, the future of space for us. >> my answer is mars and my rationale is a parallel argument what apollo did for technology in the country. you set a very big bold gold elaborately beyond what you know you can do at the moment, don't blink, actually pursue it with vigor. if i look at apollo i see a cascade of benefits, the range of problems that had to be solved from human health, physiology, like support systems to how you monitor human health from 250,000 miles away. computers, a lot of people don't appreciate the apollo program marks the changeover from the era when people brag about how big their computers were
. >> i saw your wikipedia page and it's in your ranking captain at nasa. >> i did not have that rank at nasa but i had that rank in the navy. >> the captain sullivan, what was one of your most favorite moments when traveling to the lord's orbit using the spatial? >> my favorite moment with every moment between when it started and when it ended. [laughter] >> thank you so much for sharing your story tonight. i'm interested in your vision of where we should go in the...
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Apr 28, 2020
04/20
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this comes from the old faithful wikipedia. i don't suggest you always trust them. sources of information. they are useful though for getting some charts and graphs. and this is a summary of vetoes from george washington through andrew johnson. here's the number of vetoes, the total number of all vetoes, and the number of vetoes overridden. what do you notice? johnson is equal of even of the next two. >> most were overridden. >> right. a lot of johnson's ones get overridden. now it certainly is constitutional for the president to veto congressional legislation. that's the constitution. but johnson is acting in a way that no previous president had done with regard to that power and the constitution. he's acting in a rather radical revolutionary way compared to all previous presidents. what he does is consistently vetoing congressional attempts at reconstruction. first the freedment's bureau bill, civil rights bill, trying to guarantee civil rights for african-americans and all other people in the united states. and eventually congress decides it needs be more aggress
this comes from the old faithful wikipedia. i don't suggest you always trust them. sources of information. they are useful though for getting some charts and graphs. and this is a summary of vetoes from george washington through andrew johnson. here's the number of vetoes, the total number of all vetoes, and the number of vetoes overridden. what do you notice? johnson is equal of even of the next two. >> most were overridden. >> right. a lot of johnson's ones get overridden. now it...
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265
Apr 1, 2020
04/20
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KNTV
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what is this yo, okay clearly right before bloomberg met this dog, he was on wikipedia like, "how tog are like, "yo, canines camels hello. hello. >> man's best friend >> "hello, fighters. >> "hello, rex hello. would you like to ingest my hand?" >> seth: i also want to mention real quick i'm so excited "god-level knowledge darts: life lessons from the bronx." >> boom. >> seth: that's coming up. >> that's right. >> seth: april 14th i believe, and so excited to read what you guys have to say >> yeah. it's going to be great >> seth: always a delight to have you here. >> always great, seth. [ cheers and applause >> seth: thank you so much desus nice, the kid mero second season "desus & mero. ♪ because you can't get to the theater, we're bringing the theater home to you with xfinity movie premiere. such news. i know what this is. this is a real thing. our brand new service that lets you watch movies at home, while they're still in the theater. oh, mister elton. ahh! he has figured out a way to be invisible. they picked the wrong woman. just say "xfinity movie premiere" into your voice remo
what is this yo, okay clearly right before bloomberg met this dog, he was on wikipedia like, "how tog are like, "yo, canines camels hello. hello. >> man's best friend >> "hello, fighters. >> "hello, rex hello. would you like to ingest my hand?" >> seth: i also want to mention real quick i'm so excited "god-level knowledge darts: life lessons from the bronx." >> boom. >> seth: that's coming up. >> that's right. >>...
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Apr 17, 2020
04/20
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KNTV
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you said it was like someone reading a wikipedia page about john f. favorite dylan moves is like when he puts dialogue in songs again, i don't know if this is actually true. it seems true to me that he always like -- >> "hello, i'm gonna go live in hyannis port." >> seth: yeah, yeah. >> "oh, boy, we're going down to dallas now." it's a lot of like -- it's a lot of sort of facts >> seth: yeah. >> things that are technically true >> seth: but also that in order to present the facts and dialogue, somebody walks in the room and tells a bunch of people >> yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. >> seth: yeah. >> yeah. "on the day that it happened, a man ran in and said, he lives in hyannis port, but now he is dead." yeah, that kind of stuff [ laughter ] that's -- i mean, that was as off the cuff as cuff gets. and that's - >> seth: ah, it was great and it was what we needed in this time. some off the cuff. >> i think it was, super early in the quarantine. but, you know. >> seth: yeah. [ laughter ] he should do the extended version now. >> i know. he release it. he goes, "a
you said it was like someone reading a wikipedia page about john f. favorite dylan moves is like when he puts dialogue in songs again, i don't know if this is actually true. it seems true to me that he always like -- >> "hello, i'm gonna go live in hyannis port." >> seth: yeah, yeah. >> "oh, boy, we're going down to dallas now." it's a lot of like -- it's a lot of sort of facts >> seth: yeah. >> things that are technically true >> seth:...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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it's a -- i don't know it's a germ, something like that it looks like it's called wikipedia.nyhow, quiet down we'rgonna spend the re of the class wahing 'bull durham' on laser dis and then he claimed that because his uncle was smart -- his uncle was smart -- he personally kw a lot about coronavirus. >> and i like this stuff you know my uncle is a great person he was at m.i.t. he taught at m.i.t. for, i think for a like a record number of years. he was a great super-genius. dr. john trump i like this stuff. i really get it. >> seth: no, you don't you looked like you wandered into the middle of a press conference from a tour he should be holding a map with a nikon camera around his neck asking scientists for directions "you guys know how to get to times square i wanna buy some swabs i hear it's the real deal. second, you don't even know what your uncle taught, or how many years he taught, but you know he was a great super genius was your uncle wile e. coyote? "taught at m.i.t. for a record number of years. but he could never catch the roadrunner you know he's the one that told
it's a -- i don't know it's a germ, something like that it looks like it's called wikipedia.nyhow, quiet down we'rgonna spend the re of the class wahing 'bull durham' on laser dis and then he claimed that because his uncle was smart -- his uncle was smart -- he personally kw a lot about coronavirus. >> and i like this stuff you know my uncle is a great person he was at m.i.t. he taught at m.i.t. for, i think for a like a record number of years. he was a great super-genius. dr. john trump...