CNN Fareed Zakaria GPS May 17, 2015 17:35:15 archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
innovation here on gps, but i m fascinated by innovation in action. so while in seattle, i went to visit a man with whom i love to talk about everything. nathan herville got his ph.d. in physics, studied with stephen hawking and then for years was the chief technology officer at microsoft. he now runs a company called intellectual ventures. there he gets to indulge his passions. he spent time, money and brain power on such diverse subjects as bread baking nuclear power, and dinosaurs. his company is working on all three plus much more. one of his latest projects was spurred by a challenge from bill gates who asked him to help solve a tough problem. how to keep fragile medicines cold in hot climates in developing countries where constant electricity is far from a guarantee. the team tinkered and tinkered until they found a solution. reporter: nathan a pleasure
compete and remain viable. in a moment, i ll talk to the new president of florida agricultural and mechanical university, better known as famu. first, though, we continue our series on hbcus at a look at how famu and other schools are turning to two strategies specifically, specialization and internationalization. almost this entire room is made up of the laser. you have your pump system here. this is our oscillator. when stacy brown talks about science, you can almost hear the excitement in her voice, see it in her eyes. i work in the laser remote sensing laboratory here at the center for plasma science and technology at florida a&m university. it s always been my passion to get my ph.d. in physics. brown is close. she s a fifth-year student at florida a&m university. i ve been exposed to a lot of
like a jigsaw puzzle. the conclusion, a wiring issue sparked an explosion near an empty fuel tank but tom, working on his ph.d. in physics is unconvinced. he spent the last 17 years interviewing witnesses and whistle blowers, saying the government is lying about the crash. i think what s most important is to open this investigation again, get an honest look at it from an unbiased group of investigators. i saw the beginning of a fuel explosion, petrochemical explosion, and that was the big fireball that so many people observed. but that was the fourth explosion. i think they re preposterous. i think it s pure fiction. he spoke to the lead fbi investigator of the crash. the plane is still in a hangar down in virginia and has been there for 17 years. you know, if there s some dastardly thing that was not
like a jigsaw puzzle. the conclusion, a wiring issue sparked an explosion near an empty fuel tank but tom, working on his ph.d. in physics is unconvinced. he spent the last 17 years interviewing witnesses and whistle blowers, saying the government is lying about the crash. i think what s most important is to open this investigation again, get an honest look at it from an unbiased group of investigators. i saw the beginning of a fuel explosion, petrochemical explosion, and that was the big fireball that so many people observed. but that was the fourth explosion. i think they re preposterous. i think it s pure fiction. he spoke to the lead fbi investigator of the crash. the plane is still in a hangar down in virginia and has been there for 17 years. you know, if there s some dastardly thing that was not