these days, start up companies are a dime a dozen. in 2014, they spent $48.3 billion investing in innovative technologies. thank you. they are pouring record breaking sums into start ups, hoping to strike gold on the next facebook, snap chat or uber. one mote is something called an accelerator, a program that nurtures start ups in exchange for a stake in their future business. jackson was collected into an accelerator called boost. it s an opportunity that could change the course of his life and he is showing me where it s all going down. this is the boost basement. here young innovators are honing ideas that could change the world and earn them
these days, startup companies are a dime a dozen. in 2014, they spent $48.3 billion investing in innovative technologies. hi. hello. thank you. they are pouring record breaking sums into startups, hoping to strike gold on the next facebook, snap chat or uber. one mode is something called an accelerator, a program that nurtures start ups in exchange for a stake in their future business. jackson was accepted into an accelerator called boost. it s an opportunity that could change the course of his life and he is showing me where it s all going down. this is the boost basement. here young innovators are honing ideas that could change the world and earn them millions.
we re asking this hours away from that deadline. iran nuclear deal and that topic is any deal better than no deal. since we said on it 32% of you saying yes to that. 68% of our viewers saying no. this is how those of you at home have been voting in realtime as we were talking to steve. look at people saying no or neutral in the last alone in realtime as we take that pulse and that continues on as you see, this is moving down. again, staying towards the neutral and no. no in the past five minutes voting yes to that. pulse.msnbc.com. especially if your veets change or views change based on the conversation that we re having here. keep them coming. . thanks so much. want to give everybody an update out of greece and the bailout. the european central bank is deciding against letting greek bank draw. at least for now. refuse aal to increase the emergency credit above the current $98.3 billion forced
the building blocks for the next decade and beyond are all around us. i m cnn s rachel crane. over the next half-hour we ll take you around the globe to cities that are preparing for the future using technologies that change how we live and force us to ask the question. is the city of tomorrow already here? the high cost of energy, crime, choking air pollution. around the globe these 21st century challenges are being met with real innovation. in england, wind energy from the atlantic is powering homes. police in los angeles are crunching big data to solve every day crime. and in seattle, one building is redefining what it means to be green. real solutions. but the challenges only grow bigger. according to the u.n., the world population will reach 8.3 billion by 2030. in the same time, greenhouse gases are expected to increase
we re taking a closer look at how surveillance is transforming the way we look and the way we live. is the city of tomorrow already here? the high cost of energy, crime, pollution, around the globe, these 21st century challenges are being met with real innovation. in england, wind energy from the atlantic is powering london homes. police in los angeles are crunching big data to solve every day home. real solutions and the challenges and old population will reach 8.3 billion by 2030. in that same time, greenhouse gases are expected to increase and the world s trash nearly