Connection between ARM, Q Posts, and SoftBank
>https://8ch.net//qresearch/res/274511.html#275719
Imagine THIS.
Raw intel collection.
Narrative FEEDER.
Narrative COLLECTORS.
Narrative DISTRIBUTORS.
How do you retain 'Freedom of the Press' if those in front of the camera [trusted by select viewers] are extensions of the ARM?
>https://8ch.net/qresearch/res/1722591.html#1723368
Full weight of the House v. ARM.
Why are optics important?
>https://8ch.net/qresearch/res/1732078.html#1732422
WHAT THEY DO NOT ANTICIPATE IS POTUS DECLAS IT ALL DUE TO OPTICS AND ARM
WHY DID POTUS NAME FAKE NEWS AS OUR BIGGEST ENEMY?
>https://www.fastcompany.com/90285552/the-most-powerful-person-in-silicon-valley
Segars, CEO of chip designer Arm, had imagined that he might win some new business from Son–perhaps SoftBank would agree to put Arm’s chips in the cell phones
They discussed how Arm’s technology could be used to turn anything–tables, chairs, refrigerators, cars, doors, keys–into a wired object.
WeWork’s potential lies in what might happen when you apply AI to the environment where most of us spend the majority of our waking hours.
He starts by pulling up an aerial view of the WeWork floor I had just visited. My movements, from the moment I stepped off the elevator, have been monitored and captured by a sophisticated system of sensors that live under tables, above couches, and so forth. It’s part of a pilot that WeWork is testing to explore how people move through their workday.
“We can go to Berlin,” Tanner says, tapping another monitor. He’s now using Field Lens, project-management software that WeWork acquired in 2017.
A live image appears. Zooming in, Tanner shows me how the system can pick up granular details about a site. We’re 4,000 miles away, but I see a nail sticking up from a floorboard.
ARM
OPTICS
THE WORLD IS WATCHING.
“There are good times and bad times,” he proclaimed when he launched the Vision Fund, “but SoftBank is always there.”