Предмет: Обществознание, автор: 3333agtdhutftttkk

тут легко просто сделайте

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Автор ответа: fnsly7
1

Вы кассир, а к вам подошёл 13 летний школьник и просит продать ему сигареты, а вы, как добропорядочный гражданин и преданный своему магазину человек - отказываетесь, позже выясняется что парень сей му*ак и сказал что сожжёт ваш магазин.

Дабы разрешить эту ситуацию стоит прибегнуть к троллингу, чтобы из сего маленького чуда вышла вся злость и он ушёл в слезах, а ваше чувство собственной важности взлетело до небес.

Не вводить данные карты на подозрительных сайтах.

Смотреть нет ли подложки в банкомате которую оставили кардеры.

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The robots are coming
In fact, they are already here in many parts of the world. These are ‘service’ robots and they often go unnoticed. Such robots may clean the windows of very tall buildings, install car parts in a factory or perform difficult surgical tasks in a hospital. In addition, there are now robot fire¬fighters and also robots designed to help in natural disasters such as earthquakes.
However, there is a new age of robots which could change our everyday lives directly. Heathrow airport, London, is currently testing a driverless taxi on passengers, for public use later this year. The taxis are small, personal and reliable. They travel on very narrow roads and use half the energy of buses. Passengers give their destination on a touch-screen when they get into their car ‘pod’, then travel up to 40 km an hour, driver-free, to and from the airport terminal.
Such technology is likely to be very popular and it could change the face of our cities in the future. Some experts believe that by the year 2050 our roads could be full of driverless cars; people will drive themselves only if they want to.
Robots have been used by the military for many years now, mainly for searching enemy areas using UAEs (unmanned aerial vehicles). They are also used in mine clearing, where they save lives. However, there are new robots available which are increasingly ‘autonomous’: they have no operator and make decisions (semi) independently. As the technology develops, robots are also making more and more difficult decisions: fighting robots now exist, programmed to decide who is the enemy and who is not, before taking action.
In South Korea, one of the leaders in the robot revolution together with Japan, the government has stated that every household will have a robot by 2020. They have already built robot border guards with the power to attack; they are currently developing a robot police force.
For Japan, with its ageing population, robot carers may be the answer. Robots which bathe and feed old people are already in use. In addition, several large companies in this part of the world now make ‘robot toys’ for children. As well as entertaining the youngsters by singing, dancing, talking and telling jokes, these robots can feed and look after them. They are capable of sending messages to parents or minders. These robots are considered so safe that children can be left for hours in their care.