Piece of an asset that we are given and use it to our great advantage. Mick so glad to meet you. Nice to met you. So im sure its too early, really, to answer this, but do you have any sense how much of voa audience and can you take a little bit about the implications of Digital First . Yeah, im afraid i cant give you a precise answer to the first question. I know its something thats being counted in our services around the building and needs to be counted much more robustly because its what we need to know. I think you can safe i will say if you look at the projections of the way people will be assessing not only news but information commerce, you know, all kinds of things, conversation around the world, it is going to be its going to skip over all the intermediate steps and go right to districtal, largely probably digital on future phones, not smart phones because thats the way the inexpensive way spreading throughout the less developed world. Its a thing that we absolutely need to be
We think a lot about animals as biomedical models. Its important to know how we are treating animals. So i want to talk a little bit of the history of fixing life and this is something with the new editing tools, these are new on the scene in the last three years, they are cheaper, theyre quicker and easier to use and a lot of people have wondered if we have the capacity to now modify a lot of organisms, should we do it with humans, should we do it before theyre born in maybe the same met metaphor before the cow . What hes basically saying, you know, as oppose the sterilizations, the way we segregated people that we didnt want away from society, now we are able to do this and now seemingly sterile mocular level. And hes also bringing the point that im going reiterate with another person, the idea that we sometimes assume that biotechnology is the most effective tool for social problems and i really want to interrogate the idea with you tonight because im not sure that it is. Another pe
Called, shaping San Francisco. Thanks. Yee, welcome to cspan. Welcome to the vast audience at cspan programing across the United States and across the world. Were happy to have you all with us tonight at our shaping San Francisco talks. This talk tonight is on Synthetic Biology, diy meets big capital is the title they gave it. It is really borne out of a long interest i have had, in some ways the roots of shaping San Francisco which is Community Participatory history project but rooted in ses lendings acritical relationship to technology. We started in the mid 90s during the big boom then of interactive multimedia and kind of way before there was even web 1. 0 really. We were already working on this project. Weve gone through quite a few iterations. We all lived through endless rounds of hysteria technology will save us and take us to the Promised Land and so on and so one of the interesting topics for me is to try to think about what is the moment in history that youre living through
The Republican Party has become a hollowed out shell of its former self. I gave a speech, as some of you remember, on this very subject. Now, trump is the nominee. He is the leader the Republican Party deserves. The Republican Party is trumps party. Be hearing from donald trump live at a rally in charleston, west virginia, coverage beginning at 7 00 p. M. Eastern time on cspan. Secretary, we probably give 72 of our delegate votes to the next president of the United States. [cheering] recently, our campaign 2016 bus made a visit to pennsylvania during its primary, stopping that grow city college, Slippery Rock university, washington and jefferson college, and Harrisburg Area Community college where students and officials learned about our road to the white house coverage and our interactive resources found at www. Cspan. Org. Visitors were able to share their thoughts with us about the upcoming election. Our trip ended in warrington, pennsylvania where we honored ninth graders for their