
Bruce Rogow
Chief Technology OfficerBruce Rogow is chief technology officer at KPBS where he oversees engineering, information technology, television broadcast operations, construction management, and total quality management for the station.
Bruce became a member in 1983 and began working at KPBS in 1995. He currently serves on the board of directors for Wayword Radio.org and is a member of the San Diego State University Senate Sustainability Committee. He is a former board chair for San Diego Renewable Energy Society.
Prior to KPBS, Bruce worked as a broadcast engineer at KUSI Television. He also founded the San Diego State University Suntrakker Solar Car Project as a student in 1990. Bruce holds a Bachelor and a Master of Science in Business Administration from San Diego State University.
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Talk may be cheap, as the saying goes, but is it still free? It depends on what your politics are. On this week’s show, we tackle the woke backlash, campus protests, and detained foreign students. It's free speech in Trump’s America with New York Times reporter Jeremy Peters and the Manhattan Institute's Ilya Shapiro.
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Experts say companies often base their pricing on what they think colleges are willing to pay.
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The House wants to raise the SALT deduction cap, which would help wealthy Californians pay less in federal taxes. The Senate wants to keep it where it is.
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President Trump's financial disclosure shows more than $630 million in income from 2024 including tens of millions from cryptocurrency and Trump-branded products touted on the campaign trail.
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Shahar Segal — known for restaurants around the world that include Manhattan's Michelin-starred Shmoné — is a spokesperson for the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
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The three-time Olympic champion improved on her record time for a female runner in the one mile, set two years ago, but couldn't get under 4-minute mark.
- Musk forms new party after split with Trump over tax and spending bill
- How this long-lost Chinese typewriter from the 1940s changed modern computing
- Inside the evolution of Biosphere 2, from '90s punchline to scientific playground
- At least 78 dead and dozens missing after catastrophic Texas flooding
- How good was the forecast? Texas officials and the National Weather Service disagree