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Coronavirus
Austria introduces mandatory vaccination for its citizens
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<blockquote data-quote="Bird" data-source="post: 1556116" data-attributes="member: 14239"><p><a href="https://www.raiffeisen.at/ooe/de/firmenkunden/rundum-service-fuer/unternehmensgruender/mikro-chip-implantate.html" target="_blank"><strong><span style="font-size: 18px">The first banking house in Austria wants to make microchip implants palatable to customers.</span></strong></a></p><p></p><p><strong><em>MICRO-CHIP IMPLANTS AS AN OPPORTUNITY FOR DIGITALIZATION</em></strong></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>Man and machine are forming an ever closer bond. While the smartphone is already an indispensable everyday aid, more and more gadgets, from digital assistants to smart speakers, are making it easier for us to manage time-consuming routines. Banking is also undergoing a digital transformation. While some services will never be able to do without personal contact, others make banking transactions easier to handle. It's all in the mix! Raiffeisenlandesbank Oberösterreich employee Roland Hechenberger agrees. The corporate customer advisor is convinced that digitalization can make business life easier. To this end, he is also open to trying out innovations on himself. Like a personal digital upgrade, for example. In the world of Dr. Patrick Kramer, the world's most influential thought leader in digital and biological transformation, that means micro-chip implants that enhance people's capabilities.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>VISION BECOMES REALITY</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>The size of a grain of rice, the tiny antennae stand out under the skin, and in 2019, this will already be the case in more than 50,000 people across Europe. So the initial utopia has long since mutated into the mainstream, especially since Dr. Kramer's end customers are primarily families who would like to use it to facilitate keyless entry into their own homes, or to have their personal data stored on their own bodies. Technology can therefore be practical, especially when it no longer needs to be recharged, as is the case with the small implants.</em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bird, post: 1556116, member: 14239"] [URL='https://www.raiffeisen.at/ooe/de/firmenkunden/rundum-service-fuer/unternehmensgruender/mikro-chip-implantate.html'][B][SIZE=5]The first banking house in Austria wants to make microchip implants palatable to customers.[/SIZE][/B][/URL] [B][I]MICRO-CHIP IMPLANTS AS AN OPPORTUNITY FOR DIGITALIZATION[/I][/B] [I] Man and machine are forming an ever closer bond. While the smartphone is already an indispensable everyday aid, more and more gadgets, from digital assistants to smart speakers, are making it easier for us to manage time-consuming routines. Banking is also undergoing a digital transformation. While some services will never be able to do without personal contact, others make banking transactions easier to handle. It's all in the mix! Raiffeisenlandesbank Oberösterreich employee Roland Hechenberger agrees. The corporate customer advisor is convinced that digitalization can make business life easier. To this end, he is also open to trying out innovations on himself. Like a personal digital upgrade, for example. In the world of Dr. Patrick Kramer, the world's most influential thought leader in digital and biological transformation, that means micro-chip implants that enhance people's capabilities. VISION BECOMES REALITY The size of a grain of rice, the tiny antennae stand out under the skin, and in 2019, this will already be the case in more than 50,000 people across Europe. So the initial utopia has long since mutated into the mainstream, especially since Dr. Kramer's end customers are primarily families who would like to use it to facilitate keyless entry into their own homes, or to have their personal data stored on their own bodies. Technology can therefore be practical, especially when it no longer needs to be recharged, as is the case with the small implants.[/I] [/QUOTE]
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