Cuatro espías de alta tecnología industrial roban un microchip ultrasecreto y confiadamente lo ocultan en un coche de juguete de control remoto. Por causa de una confusión de equipajes en el aeropuerto, la anciana señora Hess recoge el juguete y se lo regala a su vecino de ocho años Alex. Los espías desearán recuperar el valioso chip a toda costa, pero Alex está preparado para darles una cálida bienvenida.
En un 2021 distópico, Johnny es un traficante de datos que tiene un implante que le permite almacenar de forma segura datos demasiado confidenciales para las redes informáticas normales. En una carrera de entrega, acepta un paquete que no solo excede los límites de seguridad del implante, y lo matará si los datos no se eliminan a tiempo, sino que también contiene información mucho más importante y valiosa de lo que jamás había imaginado. En una carrera contra el tiempo, debe evitar a los asesinos enviados para matarlo y eliminar los datos antes de que también acabe con su vida.
Max es un brillante matemático que está a punto de dar con el descubrimiento más importante de su vida: la decodificación del sistema numérico que rige el aparente caos del mercado bursátil. Mientras se acerca a la verdad, y afectado periódicamente por unas brutales jaquecas, Max es acosado por una agresiva firma de Wall Street y una secta judía que pretende descifrar los secretos ocultos tras los textos sagrados. Todos ansían apropiarse del inminente hallazgo de Max.
Assassins led by Black Widow are out to kill Antonio Morales to prevent him from handing a computer chip over to IWAR headquarters. It's up to secret agents Chris Cannon, Mark Austin, and Samantha Maxx to stop them
Master burglar Max Hopper is released early after three years and soon gets an exceptional job: stealing an advanced computer-chip from the IQ Industries headquarters. His first attempt fails; when he enters in cop uniform during an emergency board meeting, a fire quickly spreads- he considers it a godsend opportunity and stays, but soon has his hands too full saving other lives and just surviving to concentrate on the chip; only the owner, his wife who just filed for divorce and a few employees remain, but it soon turns out one of them stole company secrets but the arsonist and/or another chip-thieves are among them.
As always, Sickan has come up with a new plan. This time he wants to rob the IKEA furniture store. During their nightly break-in Sickan discovers that the store is used as a secret smuggling central for sending American computers to the Soviet Union. The computers are picked up by Soviet submarines sneaking into the Swedish archipelago. Naturally, it is their arch enemy Wall-Enberg who is behind all of this.
It happened more or less by accident; the people who made it happen were amateurs; and for the most part they still are. From his own Silicon Valley garage, author Bob Cringley puts PC bigshots and nerds on the spot, and tells their incredible true stories. Like the industry itself, the series is informative, funny and brash.
In 2027, everyone is implanted with a chip which records everything they see. It is the end of judicial doubt, but not of crime.
A robot named Bobtron wishes to obtain the sense of taste, which he believes to be the last step to becoming fully human. More importantly, with this new sense he would be able to show Tina, his human girlfriend, how much he loves her. For this, he asks inventor Dr. Roger to implant on him a "taste chip" that he obtained from another scientist, Dr. Mifune from Japan, but things don't go as planned!
In a world divided by the Iron Curtain, East Germany sought to carve its niche in the technological race. Enter "Robotron" - a name that seamlessly blended "robot" and "electronics." This wasn't just a brand; it was an ambitious answer to the West's technological advancements, a testament to the GDR’s drive to match, if not surpass, Western innovation. Drawing inspiration from the corporate giants of the West, the GDR‘s government merged various businesses to form this tech behemoth. With 16 major hubs in Central Germany alone, it was clear: "Robotron" was to be the DDR's technological crown jewel. But what was the Socialist Unity Party (SED), the GDR's ruling party, envisioning with this grand venture? How did "Robotron" navigate the challenges of operating within a socialist planned economy, while striving for global excellence? And as it grew to dominate East Germany's tech landscape, why did it always seem to be one step behind the leading global tech powers?