Mark of the Beast
And he causeth all ... to receive a mark in
their right hand, or in their foreheads (Rev. 13:16)

END

  Home END Home   Site Top On This Page Related Articles   
  
Related Topics
Check out the related
sections in:


Countdown to Armageddon
- The Mark of the Beast

The Future Foretold
- The "Mark of the Beast"
- The ID Hurdle
- Watch out for 666!
- Power Behind the Throne
- Your own Personal Chip
  Implant

All Articles on Topic

40 Articles Found | Hide Details | Recent Articles on Topic | Search Entire Site

Recommended Articles

    Cyborg facts and fantasy: Chip implants
Katharine Mieszkowski, Salon        October 23rd, 2000
    Chip Implants are now a commercial reality and being readily accepted by the public due to the accessibility of the subject in the media.
    Chips get smaller and smarter
Eric C. Evarts, The Christian Science Monitor        July 26, 2000
    All the technology needed for chips to interact directly with humans is already available, says Gene France, a senior fellow at Texas Instruments. "All we have to do is figure out how to get them not to be so clunky."
    Professor Cyborg: Programming Humans
Janelle Brown, Salon        April, 2000
    In the future it is quite possible that robots won't even need humans to program them in the first place.
    Digital Angel: an implantable tracking and identification device
Yahoo         Dec 17, 1999
    The implantable transceiver sends data and can be tracked by GPS technology. When implanted within a body, the device is powered electromechanically through the movement of muscles, and it can be activated by the "wearer" or by the monitoring facility.
    Inside job: A chip implant
By Paul Somerson, PC Computing Magazine        December 1999
    New technology getting under the skin
Jon E. Dougherty, WorldNetDaily        December 1999
    World’s first Cyborg
The Week        
    Microchips of the rich and famous
Electronic Wire/TNS        
    10 years you have a chip in your head
The Straits Times        
    The future of money
Time Magazine        
    Cash is headed for a whole new dimension. Soon you'll send money encoded in an e-mail. You can storte the money any way you want--on a laptop, a debit card, even (in the not too distant future) on a chip implanted under her skin.

Other Articles

    Team links brain cells with a robot
Daniel Sorid, NY Times News Service        October 23rd, 2000
    Researchers have created a fish on wheels. They connected a robot to the brain of a fish producing what they call an "artificial animal."
    Implants: Revelation about "Digital Angels"
David Kupelian, WorldNetDaily        July 2, 2000
    "A few years ago there may have been resistance [against chip implants], but not anymore," Dr. Peter Zhou, chief scientist for development of the implant and president of ADS subsidiary DigitalAngel.net Inc. said. "People are getting used to having implants. New century, new trend."
    GPS implants will make it easy to pinpoint people
Kurt Kleiner, New Scientist        April 2000
    Computer-aided implant lets blind man see
Associated Press        April 2000
    Goodbye wallet; hello chip
Joanna Glasner, Wired        December 1999
    Proposal for Expriation Dates on U.S. Currency
Wired News        October 28, 1999
    Military ID cards could be replaced with smart cards
Federal Computer Week        August 1999
    Microchips away for health and fun
Garry Barker, The Age Melbourne        August 1999
    ID's under your skin
Geoff Metcalf, WorldNetDaily        July 1999
    Bar coding of our lives
Washington Post        June 1999
    Companies seek chip implants to control staff
The Sunday Times        June 1999
    Cyber-brains unleash the rats of war
The Sunday Times        
    The office can really get under your skin
Patrick Dixon, The London Times        May, 1999
    Commonplace chip implants
Electronic Telegraph        March, 1999
    A silicon chip that could be swallowed or implanted
BBC         Jan 27, 1999
    The century of the chip
Forbes ASAP        
    Passport with an ID chip
Reuters        
    Hello, Mr. Chips
Compiled from articles in The Christian Science Monitor, The Guardian, Reuters and Newsbytes        
    Africa: Untapped Smart Card Market
Knight Ridder/Tribute Information Services        
    Dogs, cats must get microchip
Jerusalem Post        
    Biological intelligence or worm
Discovery Channel Online         
    MONDEX: Payment card of the future
Canada NewsWire        
    Smartcard: New consortium
Weekend News Today         
    Police urge talks on DNA database for whole nation
The Guardian        
    The end of privacy
Geoff Metcalf        
    Mind over matter
AP        
    Scientists step closer to connecting brain to a computer
The Sunday Times        
    I am a microchip
The Independent        
    "Thought phone" could move limbs
Reuters        
    Forget the PIN, just look into the ATM's camera
AP        

Site Copyright, The Family 1997-2001