Chevy malibu. Taken from the redwood estates. The men has crashed and ditched a white sedan and a minivan and a sharks jersey and green beanie and black and white sneakers and took a knife. The residents toll ktvu they are still too flustered to talk but from the encounter that investigators got their first good description of the suspect. A thin latino man in his 20s or 30s about 59 with groom facial hair. Authorities want people to be on the lookout for that malibu but they dont know how long he traveled. We have involved all agencies and the suspect is determined. You know he is willing to brave the elements and the terrain and so you know it is a challenge but it is a change we hope to meet and bring him into custody. Now authorities are not saying which department the Law Enforcement vehicle belonged to. Only that there was no Police Scanner and no weapons inside. Authorities on the lookout for this vehicle and for the Bank Robber Still at large. We will send it back to you. Ted a
Than 200 years. Replacing the old model will be a Global Digital economy fueled by advances in Information Technology, data crunching, automation and robotics as well as advances in genetic and biological sciences. Thats a lot, but to really understand the gravity of what im talking about, it is useful to go back in history and see how transformative past Industrial Revolutions have been. In the late 1700s the british pioneered the use of water, superheated into steam by coal to power mechanicized production. That led to factories dotting the countryside producing clothes and textiles. The second Industrial Revolution in the late 1800s switched to coal power to electrical power to create mass production. The economies of scale involved change the course of Human History by destroying Cottage Industries and luring millions of workers from the fields to the cities and towns. The third Industrial Revolution in the final decades of the 20th century took off with the use of electronics and
Industrial revolutions have been. In the late 1700s the british pioneered the use of water, superheated into steam by coal to power mechanicized production. That led to factories dotting the countryside producing clothes and textiles. The second Industrial Revolution in the late 1800s switched to coal power to electrical power to create mass production. The economies of scale involved change the course of Human History by destroying Cottage Industries and luring millions of workers from the fields to the cities and towns. The third Industrial Revolution in the final decades of the 20th century took off with the use of electronics and Information Technology to automate the mass production. That computer revolution created all the devices we cant imagine living without today. The fourth Industrial Revolution, the one thats now underway, is being fueled by billions of people and things connected by mobile devices with unprecedented processing power. More Storage Capacity than you could ev
A Global Digital economy fueled by advances in Information Technology, data crunching, automation and robotics as well as advances in genetic and biological sciences. Thats a lot, but to really understand the gravity of what im talking about, it is useful to go back in history and see how transformative past Industrial Revolutions have been. In the late 1700s the british pioneered the use of water, superheated into steam by coal to power mechanicized production. That led to factories dotting the countryside producing clothes and textiles. The second Industrial Revolution in the late 1800s switched to coal power to electrical power to create mass production. The economies of scale involved change the course of Human History by destroying Cottage Industries and luring millions of workers from the fields to the cities and towns. The third Industrial Revolution in the final decades of the 20th century took off with the use of electronics and Information Technology to automate the mass prod
A Global Digital economy fueled by advances in Information Technology, data crunching, automation and robotics as well as advances in genetic and biological sciences. Thats a lot, but to really understand the gravity of what im talking about, it is useful to go back in history and see how transformative past Industrial Revolutions have been. In the late 1700s the british pioneered the use of water, superheated into steam by coal to power mechanicized production. That led to factories dotting the countryside producing clothes and textiles. The second Industrial Revolution in the late 1800s switched to coal power to electrical power to create mass production. The economies of scale involved change the course of Human History by destroying Cottage Industries and luring millions of workers from the fields to the cities and towns. The third Industrial Revolution in the final decades of the 20th century took off with the use of electronics and Information Technology to automate the mass prod