180
180
May 19, 2016
05/16
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KPIX
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we may come and feature your school on the show. >>> let's check traffic with georges. >> woodshop has come a long way since i was in school. no major incidents or hot spots now. here's the bay bridge. light traffic metering lights have not been activated yet. look for that in about in about another 14 to 15 minutes. here on highway 92 the san mateo bridge ride looks great. 14 to 15 minutes your trip time across the span. 15 minutes after the dublin interchange. the heaviest traffic is still trying to come out from tracy on 205. the carquinez bridge 20 minutes west down toward the macarthur maze. through the south bay, south bay freeways look great, don't they? we are not seeing any problems here for the ride on highway 101, 280 in the northbound direction here coming up from downtown, and heading out toward cupertino. a pretty light and easy ride. we are looking at good trip times. your northbound 101 drive time as you head up through the south bay right now is just 11 minutes from 85 as you head toward 237. this evening the yankees and a's tonight with the first pitch at 7:05. extra
we may come and feature your school on the show. >>> let's check traffic with georges. >> woodshop has come a long way since i was in school. no major incidents or hot spots now. here's the bay bridge. light traffic metering lights have not been activated yet. look for that in about in about another 14 to 15 minutes. here on highway 92 the san mateo bridge ride looks great. 14 to 15 minutes your trip time across the span. 15 minutes after the dublin interchange. the heaviest...
61
61
May 22, 2016
05/16
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 61
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he would hold classes like woodshop and metal shop.hen he retired, he still did that with us, my brother and i. building soapbox derby racers and fixing lawnmowers and bikes together. we learned from a very young age, like 3- and 4-years-old, how things work, how to use tools. i did not know what a computer was until i saw my first one in 1979 or so. emily: you want to the university of michigan, you studied computer engineering. then in 1991, you moved to silicon valley. tony: yes, i worked with another guy to build a startup in high school. emily: oh, really? tony: we were doing mail order for apple ii. we were designing software and writing it for apple ii. ultimately, i was so frustrated, because we did not have the internet then, right? i thought i had to get to silicon valley as fast as possible. i would read "macweek" magazine religiously every week on the back. what are the rumors, what's going on? emily: so even back then, you were obsessed with apple? tony: i absolutely was obsessed with all things computing in the 1980's. it
he would hold classes like woodshop and metal shop.hen he retired, he still did that with us, my brother and i. building soapbox derby racers and fixing lawnmowers and bikes together. we learned from a very young age, like 3- and 4-years-old, how things work, how to use tools. i did not know what a computer was until i saw my first one in 1979 or so. emily: you want to the university of michigan, you studied computer engineering. then in 1991, you moved to silicon valley. tony: yes, i worked...
107
107
May 24, 2016
05/16
by
KTVU
tv
eye 107
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when i grew up, hi woodshop in junior high and high school and those vocational schools pretty much impactedndergarteners and first graders from that guide, from that view point, how to make things from your hands and having your hand directly attached to your brain. everything you think is in 3d and you create things, whatever comes up in your mind, you create it. >> this is an experience that many kids don't get? >> not at all. bud yet cuts, taking that away from schools. it's come to this where we have to have something where adults and kids can come home. >> the specific types of wood working that comes here does not have to do with nails but schools. >> it's ultra digsal joint and techniques. i try to get cut to give awith a from nails and schools. it's not the strongest thing. >> what are you building here. >> i'm trying to make a dovetail joint. this is a very traditional technique that joins two pieces of wood in an interlocking fashion like. this almost like a puzzle piece. >> yeah. >> what i did right now is i just cut away a little channel so i could bring this coping saw in here.
when i grew up, hi woodshop in junior high and high school and those vocational schools pretty much impactedndergarteners and first graders from that guide, from that view point, how to make things from your hands and having your hand directly attached to your brain. everything you think is in 3d and you create things, whatever comes up in your mind, you create it. >> this is an experience that many kids don't get? >> not at all. bud yet cuts, taking that away from schools. it's...
218
218
May 9, 2016
05/16
by
WCAU
tv
eye 218
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. >> she had set him up in a woodshop, bought all his tools. >> reporter: and around town, they certainlyovebirds. still, two weeks after sabina vanished, the detectives asked bill to come in for another interview, and that's when he told them about the argument. >> we got in a verbal dispute and went -- she left. i mean, i don't know. honestly, i had no control over where she goes or what she does. >> right. but you guys were not in a physical altercation? >> no. we never had a physical altercation. >> reporter: but did they push him? did they challenge him? yes, they did. >> where did you dump her at? this woman you love so much. >> she left. i don't -- what do you mean dump her? i don't -- >> so you dumped her. >> i don't got nothing to do with what -- >> you beat her to a pulp. >> -- happened that night. no. >> you had nothing to do with what happened to her after she left? >> no. >> reporter: but, try as they might, bill cumber did not crack. so they sent him home. but kept an eye on him. what made you think that he was the guy who would have killed her? i mean, they were going out t
. >> she had set him up in a woodshop, bought all his tools. >> reporter: and around town, they certainlyovebirds. still, two weeks after sabina vanished, the detectives asked bill to come in for another interview, and that's when he told them about the argument. >> we got in a verbal dispute and went -- she left. i mean, i don't know. honestly, i had no control over where she goes or what she does. >> right. but you guys were not in a physical altercation? >> no....
177
177
May 19, 2016
05/16
by
KPIX
tv
eye 177
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thought it was really cool and also because it's for a good, like, cause and also, cuz i really like woodshop wanted to be more part of, um, engineering and learning and just having fun. >> introducing breakout edu. >> reporter: partnering up with the bay area startup that sells learning games that encourage team work and problem solve, the girls brokered a deal to get paid $10 per box. >> we learned some, like, entrepreneurial skills because we had to do video conferences and discuss how much money we were going to get paid and assign roles to each person. >> reporter: but making a profit wasn't their focus. instead, they donated $500 to the malala fund a worldwide charity to help underprivileged girls get an education. >> when we donate there we're helping other girls get a good education and i feel like if a girl gets an education, if anyone gets an education than can go so much farther in life. >> it's empowering girls to get an education so we felt it connected to our club. >> reporter: it ended up being a project that helped each girl break out. >> i want them to go into any field that
thought it was really cool and also because it's for a good, like, cause and also, cuz i really like woodshop wanted to be more part of, um, engineering and learning and just having fun. >> introducing breakout edu. >> reporter: partnering up with the bay area startup that sells learning games that encourage team work and problem solve, the girls brokered a deal to get paid $10 per box. >> we learned some, like, entrepreneurial skills because we had to do video conferences and...