Funny thing there: we have been automating an insane amount of work and processes since the 1950s. Email Messages arrive within seconds instead of weeks by snail mail. Computers optimize rail and road fright for optimal performance to ship more things faster or cheaper. Things can be measured, counted and sorted by computers much faster and accurately than humans ever could. A 1000 euro computer and one secretary can do the billing department for millions of orders.
How did workers profit from the previous productivity advances? I did not see working hours go down or pay go up by an proportional amount?
White Tights, White Pantyhose or White Stockings[1] (Russian: белые колготки, beliye kolgotki; Lithuanian: baltosios pėdkelnės; Latvian: baltās zeķbikses; Estonian: valged sukkpüksid) is a Russian urban legend about female sniper mercenaries fighting against Russian forces in various armed conflicts from the late 1980s.[2] The legend describes these women as blond Amazon-like nationalistic biathletes turned anti-Russian mercenaries. They come predominantly from the Baltic states, but subsequent variations of the legend have diversified the ethnic composition of the snipers, including Ukrainian and Russian women in their midst.
Can someone explain to me what goods would be affected by this deal? From my understanding the main exports from us and India are very different, so which US products would now be imported from India into Europe because of lower taxes?
Hm, aber gibt es nicht schon seit Jahr und Tag eine Option "poweron over lan" im bios?
Schaltet man den Rechner dann über eine mac Adresse an, oder wie ist das gedacht?
You need about 6 working people to financially support 1 pensioner. Can you see the problem in a society that is getting older, has less children and outsources jobs to either robots or overseas countries?
This seems like a problem that can be solved now that everything is connected to the Internet and has a computer inside. Turn on the water boiler only when the price is less than 10ct/kw. Run aircon or heater only when it's cheap, and insulation will keep the temperature constant for half a day.
I'm sure people in the middle ages where adapted to most of the situations. For example If you don't wash for a few days or sit near a fire mosquitoes are less of a problem. Most towns, inns or taverns where less than 1 days march from the next in medieval Europe, so you would not have to sleep in the woods. There where also seasonal workers who would not live in one place, but move depending on the season to help sow or harvest fields, or work at different cities in their trade to learn new skills from different masters to see different countries.
Funny thing there: we have been automating an insane amount of work and processes since the 1950s. Email Messages arrive within seconds instead of weeks by snail mail. Computers optimize rail and road fright for optimal performance to ship more things faster or cheaper. Things can be measured, counted and sorted by computers much faster and accurately than humans ever could. A 1000 euro computer and one secretary can do the billing department for millions of orders. How did workers profit from the previous productivity advances? I did not see working hours go down or pay go up by an proportional amount?