This Company Embeds Microchips in its Employees
(how did this come about?)
"McMullan is the president of Three Square Market, a technology company that provides self-service mini-markets to hospitals, hotels, and company break rooms. Last August, he became one of roughly 50 employees at its headquarters in River Falls, Wisconsin, who volunteered to have a chip injected into their hand.
"The idea came about in early 2017, he says, when he was on a business trip to Sweden—a country where some people are getting subcutaneous microchips to do things like enter secure buildings or book train tickets. It’s one of very few places where chip implants, which have been around for quite a while, have taken off in some fashion." To read the entire revolting article, go to technology review.
The [Age of] Technological Revolution
Technological revolution is a relatively short period in history when one technology (or better a set of technologies) is replaced by another technology (or by the set of technologies). It is an era of an accelerated technological progress characterized not only by new innovations, but also their application and diffusion.
A difference between technological revolution and technological change[1] is not clearly defined. The technological change we could see as an introduction of an individual (single) new technology while the technological revolution as a period in which more new technologies are adopted at the almost same time.[citation needed] These new technologies or technological changes are usually interconnected—as the third Kranzberg's law of technology says: "Technology comes in packages, big and small.” Wikipedia
Industrial Revolutions of Our World through Time
- The First Industrial Revolution: 1760 – 1840 [i.e., First Steam Engine]
- The Second Industrial Revolution: 1870 – 1914 [i.e., telegraph/Morse, telephone, first air flight and Henry Ford]
- The Third Industrial Revolution: 1969 – 2000
- The Fourth Industrial Revolution: the digital revolution occurring since the middle of the last century [we are in this one]
The First and Second Industrial Revolutions interesting engineering
How the First and Second Industrial Revolutions Changed Our World: The Industrial Revolution can be summed up as the revolution that happened to the industrial sector in the past 300 years. But it still can't be explained in just one sentence, as it doesn’t do justice to the greatness of the revolution. It brought about a radical change that was direly needed.
The Digital Revolution (i.e. Third Industrial Revolution)
The Digital Revolution, also known as the Third Industrial Revolution, is the shift from mechanical and analogue electronic technology to digital electronics which began anywhere from the late 1950s to the late 1970s with the adoption and proliferation of digital computers and digital record keeping that continues to the present day.[1] Implicitly, the term also refers to the sweeping changes brought about by digital computing and communication technology during (and after) the latter half of the 20th century. Analogous to the Agricultural Revolution and Industrial Revolution, the Digital Revolution marked the beginning of the Information Age. Wikipedia
The Third Industrial Revolution:
How the Internet, Green Electricity, and 3-D Printing are Ushering in a Sustainable Era of Distributed Capitalism
It is becoming clear that the
Second Industrial Revolution is dying
The digitisation of manufacturing will transform the way goods are made—and change the politics of jobs too economist [think Amazon and employee microchiping]
Since the beginning of the Great Recession in the summer of 2008, governments, the business community, and civil society have been embroiled in a fierce debate over how to restart the global economy. While austerity measures and fiscal, labor, and market reforms will all be necessary, they are not sufficient to re-grow the economy. Let me explain by way of an anecdote. Just months after arriving in office, the new Chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel, asked me to come to Berlin to help her administration address the question of how to create new jobs and grow the German economy in the twenty-first century. I began my remarks by asking the chancellor, “How do you grow the German economy, the EU economy, or, for that matter, the global economy, in the last stages of a great energy era and an industrial revolution built on it?” worldfinancialreview
The Fourth Industrial Revolution [think A1, Robotics]
The Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) is the fourth major industrial era since the initial Industrial Revolution of the 18th century. It is characterized by a fusion of technologies that is blurring the lines between the physical, digital, and biological spheres.[1] It is marked by emerging technology breakthroughs in a number of fields, including robotics, artificial intelligence, blockchain, nanotechnology, quantum computing, biotechnology, The Internet of Things, The Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT), fifth-generation wireless technologies (5G), additive manufacturing/3D printing and fully autonomous vehicles. Klaus Schwab has associated it with the "second machine age"[2] in terms of the effects of digitization and artificial intelligence (AI) on the economy, but added a broader role for advances in biological technologies.[3][need quotation to verify] It is disrupting almost every industry in every country. And the breadth and depth of these changes herald the transformation of entire systems of production, management, and governance.
Schwab sees as part of this revolution "emerging technology breakthroughs" in fields such as artificial intelligence, robotics, the Internet of Things, autonomous vehicles, 3D printing, quantum computing and nanotechnology.[4] The fourth wave of the industrial revolution is expected to see the heavy implementation of several emerging technologies with a high potential of disruptive effects.
Where are we heading . . . hopefully into the Geulah.
The Industrial Revolution 1760–1840
At the same time:
Generation 47 of Seder Olam:
At the same time:
Generation 47 of Seder Olam:
Year 5520 – 1760 CE – Legacy of the Baal Shem Tov (the Besht)
Year 5543 – 1783 CE – Moses Mendelssohn and the Haskalah
Year 5630 – 1870 CE – The Malbim
Year 5621 – 1861 CE – When the Jews owned Jerusalem
Year 5633 – 1873 CE – The Chafetz Chayim
(to be continued)
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