where are those jobs? let me show you how it breaks down. of the 243,000 jobs that were created, 257,000 jobs were created in the private sector. that s where everybody wants them created. you subtract the jobs that were lost by the government, 14,000, and you end up with that number, 243,000. let s talk about this with diane swonk, a chief economist, and with will cain and my good friend richard quest. what a treat to have all three of you with me in the studio. diane, these numbers are very strong. there s a disconnect between what some of our economic numbers and forks say and what the american consumer has been feeling. the american consumer has been telling us they have been feeling a little more energized about this economy and nothing helps them more than jobs. absolutely. this number is good and i want to underscore any way you cut the data, there s noise in it. you can take away some of the noise. we had people playing golf in chicago in january. that just doesn t
they ve been working on this four years and four years ago this computer was asked what do grass hoppers eat and the computer answered koerb and answered 10 percent of questions accurately. it s now up to 87 percent. champions, big champions, get 80 percent right. would ibm, harris, have scheduled this contest? it starts tomorrow. if they thought they d lose? they insist they don t know the outcome. the champions, i think they re going to win. me, my money is on watson. it s a hunk of burning computing! harris: you know what, ego will get you everywhere i think in the computing world, if you believe it, you can make it happen. i understand though this is more than just a game, maybe real world applications we can see from this. there really is. you ve got naturally the processing, health line, service line, health care diagnostics, all kinds of stuff. look at what happens when you go for a google search and you search for could you goior and they don t know if you re talking about th