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Erin Burnett OutFront-20150506-23:48:00

he didn't notice the plane go down in any way. it wasn't noticeable in terms of altitude changes. i guess my question to you is if someone's in there setting it from 100 feet to 49,000 feet back to 100 feet that doesn't register anywhere? with anybody? >> the plane was already in a cleared descent from about 39,000 feet to 21,000 feet. and so for him to spin the knob below the assigned altitude of 21,000 feet wouldn't change what the plane would do. if he'd gotten to 21,000 feet and hadn't changed it would have kept descending but there wouldn't be wild gyrations based on knob turns. because the plane was already in a descent. nobody would have noticed, including the captain. >> you feel everything's automated. what mary was saying there's no reporting back. there's no okay this guy tried to set to it 100 feet. if you saw someone try to do that you'd know you had a problem. >> well here's the thing that's kind of interesting.

Question , Way , Feet , Someone , Doesn-t , Altitude-changes , Terms , Plane-go , It-wasn-t , Anywhere , Anybody , 49000

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20150106:20:47:00

could make your jobs completely -- oh, not totally obsolete. there is obsolete, which is total, so it should make your job obsolete. if it's obsolete it's gone it's totally obsolete like completely, like totally, like eventually obsolete. that's according to the reporting of "the washington post" newspaper and others. they cite a recent australian study that found -- you may have seen this in the "the new york times" over the weekend -- that companies could get rid of more than 500,000 jobs in that country alone, replacing them with robots and computers which would be very boring. jerry willis is host of "the willis report," 5:00 eastern time on the fox business network. a lot of jobs at risk? >> a lot of jobs at risk, if you're in one of the jobs that you think could be taken over by a computer. >> totally. >> totally. or some kind of automated, you need to watch out. let me show you who's really at risk here. >> all right. >> take a look. accountants, bank tellers, supermarket cashiers, of course. we're already replacing them, right? >> swipe and scan. >> yeah. i can never figure that machine out. >> no, it's hard. >> typists.

Jobs , Job , Country , Robots , Newspaper , Computers , Others , Study , Companies , Reporting , Weekend , The-new-york-times

Wolf-20141229-18:45:00

arkansas american airlines crash, june 1, 1999. after that, it was a big push. in some cultures that is not welcome. we have a very pilot in command with a huge amount of hours and a co-pilot with lesser hours and we have three carriers now, all from malaysia for example, flying over a war zone. mh-19 that was shot done. that's a serious question in judgment. same thing here entering a thunderstorm. it's a serious question of judgment. >> what do you think, david? >> well i think the question of overconfidence is a very good question but i might rephrase it and call it an over reliance on the automation systems. peter goelz has been talking about this as well, the fact that the pilots are relying on the equipment and technology. the more you make it safer and automated, the less you rely on your own instinctive abilities in managing the aircraft in difficult situations such as this. >> i want to go to another

Pilot , Crash , Amount , Cultures , Command , Co-pilot , American-airlines , Arkansas , Big-push , 1 , June-1-1999 , 1999

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20140402:11:25:00

buildings, right? >> the entire market in the last decade has been automated. it doesn't move in human time anymore, it moves in computer time. the how new york stock exchange is essentially a backdrop for financial networks. >> the market's rigged. talk about it. >> there are 13 public stock exchanges in this country. they sell special access to a handful of traders to put their trading machines right next to the exchange. so they get advance -- they see price changes before everybody else. it's milliseconds but that's all that matters when you're dealing with computers and it will respond. essentially the trading public is trading on old prices and every order that goes in to the stock market, someone who knows where prices are going has the opportunity, the option, to trade again. >> let's say i'm making a huge investment -- i say i.

Joe-doesn-t , Market , Backdrop , Move , Human-time , Automated , New-york-stock-exchange , Buildings , Country , Exchange , Traders , Stock

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20140327:14:31:00

who knows? just click the box, right? >> that's exactly right. bill: but with that end web site issue, if that has yet to be fixed, what does that mean? >> well, that that's a terrific problem potentially for patients who actually could sign up for coverage, pay their premium and then expect a subsidy from the government, but because there's no direct interface between the exchanges and the insurance companies, they could arrive at a provider, and the insurance companies have actually not received payment from hhs, the subsidy payment, and find out, in fact, they are not covered. bill: so from a patient's perspective, how does it impact them? i've got a sense that the price is going to go higher, is that right? >> well, absolutely. and the second half is that when insurance companies are required to do everything manually rather than automated, the additional overhead expense is terrific. and remember, as part of the affordable care act there was this thing called medical loss ratio which limits the amount of overhead and profit that the

Bill , Problem , Patients , Box , Web-site-issue , Insurance-companies , Government , Coverage , Exchanges , Provider , Subsidy , Interface

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20140201:12:18:00

for minimum wage. >> when you raise the cost and train entry level employees, leaving employers with one of two tough choices, either find a way to raise prices or or provide the same service at a lower cost. i mean people even like bill gates gave a very telling interview recently where he warned people who wanted to raise the minimum wage it could force employers to auto mate things. i think we are surrounded by evidence of the consequences of past increases. >> we have certainly seen a lot of jobs eliminated by automation. some things can't be automated, however, there are conservatives arguing, ron ums we pay already for people's living expenses through welfare programs like the earned income tax credit, food stamps, housing subsidies, and so the public already picks up the tab for poverty, wouldn't this be a way to get the private sector to pick up some of that cost? >> well, i think the thing is that you either sort of subis subsidize partially through

People , One , Way , Minimum-wage , Cost , Employers , Level , Service , Employees , Prices , Choices , Train

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20130823:16:28:00

it looks like. if that happens, we could be seeing a good area here across parts of southern california into nevada, maybe all the way eventually up towards idaho where we see an inch or two of rain. if we could get a widespread be rainfall, that would be great news, and at this point it looks at least the southern tier of the southwest gets that, but hopefully, we can get some of that in towards parts of california and idaho as well. the good news is at least the moisture content in the air goes up, and that helps matters a bit as well. jon: yeah. looks like it would miss that yosemite fire, huh? >> certainly not in the area, but moisture in the air helps firefighters. jon: rick, thank you. heather: a scary reminder of the automated, computerized world we live in. nasdaq shutting down for several anxiety-producing hours. was it a glitch or something deliberate? what federal investigators are saying was the cause. plus, hours after he was sent to prison in the wikileaks case, bradley manning saying he wants to identify himself as a

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130706:22:43:00

the tail, at which point it becomes a projectile. >> we know that a lot of flying now has been automated. >> yeah. >> when you were landing a plane like that, how much of it is automated, and how much of is it the pilot acting on his own accord? >> this case, you could do it either way. you could make the plane do the landing automatically or you could fly it by hand. on a day like today, certainly i think you would not be using the automated systems. >> as you look at what's left of fuselage systems there, burned out. we are hearing from our affiliate on the ground there are at least two casualties, up to 70 people hurt. we're waiting on some official numbers there. based on what you're seeing, do those numbers surprise you? >> yeah. i'm amazed that that many people got out of there. a lot of them walking out. that's phenomenal. >> and we saw them walking out. we've seen pictures of that. melissa, my colleague, standing

Plane , Tail , Lot , Flying , Projectile , Automated , Way , Case , Systems , Landing , Pilot-acting , Hand

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20121015:04:21:00

my name is annie. >> today the phone system's automated, a volunteer presses a button, a phone automatically dials the likely supporter, and her name pops up along with a script. >> have you had a chance to vote yet? >> the campaign called these people months before. >> this is a close race. we appreciate you voting. >> the computer kept track of who said they'd vote for their candidate. then on election day you call them again to make sure they did. >> you did? well, wonderful. thank you, mrs. casey. >> if you suspect they might not vote -- >> show up with a bus, a personal car? >> sure. >> people don't just vote anymore, you pick them up and take them there. >> yeah. it's an art form. >> when we return, i'll ♪ ♪ ♪

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20121014:19:21:00

my name is annie. >> today the phone system's automated, a volunteer presses a button, a phone automatically dials the likely supporter, and her name pops up along with a script. >> have you had a chance to vote yet? >> the campaign called these people months before. >> this is a close race. we appreciate you voting. >> the computer kept track of who said they'd vote for their candidate. then on election day you call them again to make sure they did. >> you did? well, wonderful. thank you, mrs. casey. >> if you suspect they might not vote -- >> show up with a bus, a personal car? >> sure. >> people don't just vote anymore, you pick them up and take them there. >> yeah. it's an art form. it's an art form. >> when we return, i'll

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