COLLIN SPILINEK
Fremont Tribune
Moving forward past the COVID-19 pandemic, Rep. Jeff Fortenberry said the impacts the pandemic have had on the world will be felt for a long time.
âWith Zoom meetings, telework, telemedicine, distant learning, tele-education, the advances that we are making in this digital sphere are really phenomenal,â he said. âAnd as much suffering as the pandemic has caused, we are taking a leap here digitally, which has huge, huge implications for a lot of things.â
On Friday morning, Fortenberry spoke with leaders, business owners and members of the Fremont community at a virtual discussion hosted by the Fremont Area Chamber of Commerce.
North Carolina health officials expect providers to inoculate people at rates reflective of the broader population. If 35% of the residents in a county are Black, 35% of the shots
Saturday, 6 March 2021, 6:08 pm
Due to the impact of the pandemic, global smartphone
production plummeted significantly in 2020. According to the
research data analyzed and published by Comprar Acciones,
there was an 11% decline, sending total output to 1.25
billion units during the year. The figure is projected to
increase by 9% in 2021 to 1.36 billion.
Based on a
report from Canalys, global smartphone shipments fell by 7%
from 1.37 billion in 2019 to 1.26 billion in 2020.
Meanwhile, Gartner states that there will be an 11.4%
increase in smartphone sales in 2021 to 1.5 billion
units.
Huawei Shipments Tanked By 22% in 2020 to
188.5 Million Units
In 2021, the top six brands in
terms of production will include Samsung, Apple, Xiaomi,
WATAUGA - Mollie A. Teilhet, age 72, of Watauga, Tennessee passed away on Wednesday, March 3, 2021 from her residence. Mollie was born in Elizabethton to the late William J. and Cleo Mottern Watkins. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her brother, William J. Watkins, Jr.
Mollie was a strong, independent woman with a wonderful spirit of adventure and joy, who loved her children and grandchildren fiercely. Motherhood was her priority and always ensured their care. Mollie had been an agent for the Internal Revenue Service for 3 ½ years and for 1 ½ years she was a tax auditor for the Tennessee Department of Revenue Sales Tax Division and was the first female Certified Public Accountant in Elizabethton to have her own business. Her clients were her top priority and that was apparent in her success, having operated her business for 30 successful years. She was a member of the American Institute and the Tennessee Society of CPAs and graduated cum Laude in 1970 f