Showing posts with label lies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lies. Show all posts

Friday, January 27, 2023

What is Poli-Tech?

Mick Williams explains what Poli-Tech is for those who don't know. Politics + Tech. Why is this important? Tech costs and creations are linked to outcomes made by our governing officials and politicians. From streaming to the creation of cars! Tech is greatly affected and impacted by policies put in place, or even removed often by voters decisions. You can’t have one without the other. World’s First Poli-Tech Show. Brought to you by Mick Williams’ Cyber-Line.


Click Below to listen to further:

 https://www.spreaker.com/user/16519152/politech


  


Poli-tech is a portmanteau of the words "politics" and "technology." It refers to the intersection of politics and technology, and how the two interact with each other. Poli-tech can be used to describe a wide range of topics, including the use of technology in politics, the impact of politics on technology, and the ways in which technology can be used to promote or challenge political goals.


Poli-tech is a relatively new field of study, but it has quickly become an important area of research. This is because technology is playing an increasingly important role in politics, and understanding how the two interact is essential for anyone who wants to understand how politics works in the 21st century.


There are many different ways to study poli-tech, but some of the most common approaches include:


* Studying the use of technology in political campaigns and elections.


* Analyzing the impact of technology on political activism and engagement.


* Exploring the ways in which technology can be used to control or manipulate public opinion.


* Studying the impact of politics on the development and regulation of technology.


* Examining the ways in which technology can be used to promote or challenge political goals.


One thing to always remember is radio & podcasts are theater of the mind. Mick Williams is known to embellish the truth from time to time. Mick Williams is solely responsible for this own choices, words, and actions on the Mick Williams' Cyber-Line show. Not everything is truthful or factual on the Mick Williams' Cyber-Line show, or it's social media channels. It's considered "theater of the mind." Because of this, YouTube has removed some videos from the Mick Williams' Cyber-Line YouTube channel. We apologize in advance.

Poli-Tech is not copyrighted or trademarked to any entity on this website.

 

Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Here is a bit of what the so-called INFLATION REDUCTION ACT has tucked away within the WORDS WORDS WORDS!!

 - $6.5 Billion Natural Gas Tax Which Will Increase Household Energy Bills

- $12 Billion Crude Oil Tax Which Will Increase Household Costs
- $1.2 Billion Coal Tax Which Will Increase Household Energy Bills
- Corporate Income Tax Hike on U.S. Businesses Which Will Be Passed on to Households
- $124 Billion Stock Tax Which Will Hit Your Nest Egg — 401(k)s, IRAs and Pension Plans
- 95% Federal Excise Tax on American Pharmaceutical Manufacturers
- $52 Billion Income Tax Hike on Mid-Sized & Family Businesses
- Supersizing the IRS to Increase Audits – $124 Billion
KEEP IN MIND THAT VIRTUALLY EVERY SINGLE PENNY of this bill will ultimately be coming out of the consumer's pockets.
Remember this as you go to the polls this November.

Sunday, August 30, 2020

TuneIn

  Dear Cyber-Line listeners:

I got an email from TuneIn @tunein telling me that due to "contractual obligations" they will be disabling the record function on the Tunein Pro app. This will become effective 14 September, 2020.
For at least 20 years. I've recommended Tunein to listen to radio stations around the world. Even though my show, Charley Jones, The John David Wells report and countless other shows have used Tunein to get their message out we still had the options of time shifting.
I have never been compensated for my suggestion to your purchase. I've received no percentage of sales. My only goal was to empower you with a great product that allowed you the freedom to consume information as you see fit!
When asked about Tunein I've always suggested to my listeners to pay the one time fee of $5.99 for the pro version. Charley Jones and many late night shows could now be recorded for daytime listening. Morning and afternoon shows like Jon-David Wells people are working and can't listen. If they can then the RF and buildings get in the way of AM reception.
As to my own show, I'm on the weekends. The time my listeners are spending is weekend time with family. I've never complained about recording the show. Much of my email is from listeners telling me how much they enjoyed the convenience.
On behalf of myself and the Cyber-Line @cyberlineusa crew I wish to apologize. Even though the fee wasn't $5.99 a month its still had value to you.
Tunein has posted a standard answer to the record button complaints. It's B.S. They are protecting their new pay to play service. If you're going to disable a product Tunein you should tell the truth!
Meanwhile, we will continue to report to you our dear listerners. We will still be on Tunein and will inform you of ways to exercise your freedom of information consumption via other products as they become known.
Thanks for listening!
Mick Williams
Host/Executive Producer
Mick Williams Cyber-Line
********what i posted in app store********
I'm a nationally syndicated tech talk show host. I've recommended tune in pro for years so that listeners can record (MY OWN CONTENT THAT *I* OWN!) and play it later. I also use my iPad to record *MY* show and archive it.
I also record shows that are on at 2am my time I feel cheated and an idiot. Cheated because I paid for it. I feel like an idiot because I got my listeners to pay for it! You should refund the money we paid!
You're response blows. Your protecting you paid service. #refund #tuneinapp @tunein

As you can tell I have too much time on my hands and I don't use spell check.

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

VIA CNBC:

 VIA CNBC:

Shares of Netflix soared more than 8% in extended trading Wednesday after the company released its earnings report for the third quarter. The company reported mixed results, with an earnings beat and a miss on domestic subscriber adds, while revenue slightly missed analysts' expectations.
Here are the results vs. expectations:
Earnings per share: $1.47 vs. $1.04 expected, per Refinitiv estimates
Revenue: $5.24 billion vs. $5.25 billion expected, per Refintiv
Domestic paid subscriber additions: 517,000 vs. 802,000 expected, per FactSet estimates
International paid subscriber additions: 6.26 million vs. 6.05 million expected, per FactSet.
For the fourth quarter, Netflix expects to report earnings of 51 cents per share on revenue of $5.4 billion. The company is projecting 7.6 million global net adds for the fourth quarter, compared to 8.8 million in the same quarter one year earlier.
Netflix previously forecast paid net adds would increase year over year, but it's now adjusting estimates to reflect an increased difficulty to project its future content slate, "minor elevated churn" due to pricing changes and increasing competition.
In its letter to shareholders, Netflix addressed the onslaught of new streaming services that are set to arrive later this year, including Disney's Disney+ and Apple's Apple TV+, as well as NBCUniversal's Peacock and WarnerMedia's HBO Max. The company warned the launch of these new services will be "noisy" and it could generate "modest headwinds" in the near term.
"Many are focused on the 'streaming wars,' but we've been competing with streamers (Amazon, YouTube, Hulu) as well as linear TV for over a decade," the company said. "The upcoming arrival of services like Disney+, Apple TV+, HBO Max, and Peacock is increased competition, but we are all small compared to linear TV. While the new competitors have some great titles (especially catalog titles), none have the variety, diversity and quality of new original programming that we are producing around the world."
Netflix also touched on its content strategy as the streaming wars continue to heat up, saying it's not afraid to take "bold swings" when necessary, but that it won't "chase every deal on the table." The company said its multi-billion-dollar content budget and robust subscriber base allow it to pursue a variety of different projects.
Even with a bevy of streaming services available, Netflix subscribers are still tuning into original series like "Stranger Things." The company said the third season of "Stranger Things," which debuted in July, was the most viewed season yet with 64 million accounts watching it in the first four weeks.
Starting in the fourth quarter, Netflix will break out revenue and membership numbers into several regions, including Asia Pacific, Europe, Middle East and Africa, Latin America and the US and Canada.
This story is developing. This was posted without permission. 

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

TRANSISTORS BY THE NUMBERS:

 

1926: The year Julius Edgar Lilienfeld patented a field-effect transistor. It could not be built at the time.

1947: Point-contact transistor invented by American physicists John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley.

1954: The first working silicon transistor was developed at Bell Labs on January 26. First commercial silicon transistor was produced by Texas Instruments that same year.

1954: The first "production" pocket transistor radio was the Regency TR-1, released in October. Produced as a joint venture between the Regency Division of Industrial Development Engineering Associates, I.D.E.A. and Texas Instruments of Dallas Texas, It was a near pocket-sized radio featuring 4 transistors and one germanium diode. the TR-1 was manufactured in Indianapolis, Indiana.

1955: Chrysler announced that the new line of 1956 Chrysler and Imperial cars, would have the first transistor in dash radios replacing vacuum tube ones. The cars hit the dealership showroom floors on October 21.

1956: Bardeen, Brattain, and Shockley shared the Nobel Prize in Physics for their transistor achievement.

1960: The first MOSFET actually built at Bell Labs.

2SB54: The most commonly used audio frequency PNP transistor used in radios.

SC-72: a common "through hole" transistor.

3 BILLION: The amount of MOSFET transistors in an advanced microprocessor circa 2009.

60 MILLION: The amount of transistors built in 2002. for [each] man, woman, and child on Earth. https://twitter.com/cyberlineusa #Radio #Tech #Technology #CyberLine #CyberLineNet #MickWilliams #Internet #Scifi #CyberLineUSA See less