You turn coal into gas, it goes through fewer cells before so you get three generations here. That is the promising technology. Having in mind this understanding, this is our technology that we are working hard. Commercially speaking, the best agency that is achieved today is 43. But the plan is to achieve up to 65 by 2050. We are working very hard to achieve this by 2050. However, the point is while we are working very hard for technology on the future, the plans are standing up today and that is why we have to talk about using what is available today. So, now moving on to that, they use what is available today. So first of all how does it look this is a picture from the best plant in japan and also in the world. This is another picture from the plant shown in the Previous Panel that there isnt a preferred picture. The plant was beautiful in the picture but the difference is you see the residential houses on the bottom. You will see that its so close to the coal power plants it just m
When we are doing automatic adjustments . With that said i think it would be an improvement however we did it so if we to indexing when it came to when it came to individual parameters that would make sense as well. One thing i would notice we should be sure to index both the benefit side and the revenue side as in fact Peter Diamond suggests. To be critical of such an automatic mechanism would not simply be solvency. Our Current System would probably be made solvent. Congress will just get around to it later and focus changes on later generations. So the idea here is to spread the adjustment of properly and especially to share risk across generations but i also dont mean to suggest this is the way we will get to solvency from where we are today. Right now congress and the president do need to agree eventually a compromise. The point is we can build on these kinds of mechanisms and to compromise legislation so as to preserve the dealer has made an spread risks across generations rather
Panels from the 2014 ideas festival in new york. Well start with the discussion on technology and social media. Then well hear from a nasa scientist, working on mars exploration. Later cancer biologist, andrew z hestle looks at cancer research. And thin well look at virtual currency. This weekend on the cspan networks, friday night at 10 00 eastern on cspan, a conversation with retired Justice John Paul stevens, the founder and former chair of microsoft bill gates on the Ebola Outbreak in west africa. And the director of the museum of african art, and friday night on cspan 2, authors talk about war and the constitution. Saturday night at 10 00 on become tvs afterwards, author heather cox richardson, and live at noon, on book tvs, Legal Affairs and editor in charge at reuters and Supreme Court biographer. Friday at 8 00, on American History the on cspan 3, historians and authors talk about world war i, 1 one years 4r5er9. And former fbi director on catching the 100th anniversary of the
I dont know what she drinks along with that but i want some of it. Your outstanding leader nancy pelosi. [applause] [applause] joe also went on that trip and it looks perfectly coiffed. [laughter] but give joe a big round of applause also. [applause] i want to thanks danny for the gracious introduction. How javier who helped obviously make this happen and is providing outstanding leadership all the time. Jim clyburn one of my favorite people, just an Extraordinary Gentlemen and leader greatly loved him and Debbie Wasserman shultz, our chairwoman of the dnc, thank you so much. [applause] and then the guy who i had a chance to see before it came out just to let him know that he should not feel overly disappointed when his hair gets gray because in this job it will. The dccc chair. [applause] i used to be youthful and attractive like him. [laughter] we will see how long that lasts, brother. Hes going to have hair like steve israel. [laughter] you know i am not going to give a long speech
Well, great. Couple things. No one person ever invents anything. Its always a Great Team Effort and actually thats one of the beauties of engineering its a collaborative art. The ideas for many, many people combined to make these great things that look breakthrough and look crazy but are fantastic come out of the minds of many folks. So what ive been doing lately is working with a new group of a Different Group of great people, which is fantastic to me because i always love the interaction with new groups of bright talent. And weve been working on developing a system to sample the surface of mars and containerize it very safely for potential return to earth at a later date. So, for our investigations to date on mars, we have packed the science instruments into miniaturized form and taken a lot of effort to get them on to the surface of mars. We think, or certainly the Science Community believes, that to answer the final questions of mars well probably have to do it backwards, which is