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ziero0
2nd August 2018, 04:48 PM
has hit the $1 trillion mark.

Unfortunately they don't have a working definition of what $1 actually is so .... SO WHAT?

Cebu_4_2
2nd August 2018, 04:50 PM
Missed the boat again?

http://gold-silver.us/forum/showthread.php?99229-Apple-first-company-to-have-a-1-Trillion-market-valuation

ziero0
2nd August 2018, 05:35 PM
Missed the boat

I guess you did. If you had invested $1,000 in the '80s you would have improved your net worth to the tune of $450,000 today ... or you might be so old you really don't give a hoot.

Cebu_4_2
2nd August 2018, 05:41 PM
I guess you did. If you had invested $1,000 in the '80s you would have improved your net worth to the tune of $450,000 today ... or you might be so old you really don't give a hoot.

Cant change the past. and hoots are for kids.

ziero0
2nd August 2018, 07:24 PM
Cant change the past
Not so. Research NUNC PRO TUNC.



hoots are for kids.


hoot (n.)

mid-15c., "cry of dissatisfaction or contempt," from hoot (v.). Meaning "a laugh, something funny" is first recorded 1942. Slang sense of "smallest amount or particle" (the hoot you don't give when you don't care) is from 1891.

"A dod blasted ole fool!" answered the captain, who, till now, had been merely an amused on-looker. "Ye know all this rumpus wont do nobuddy a hoot o' good--not a hoot." ["Along Traverse Shores," Traverse City, Michigan, 1891]

Cebu_4_2
2nd August 2018, 07:48 PM
WTF is that? nunc come up with shit 3 searche engines

cheka.
2nd August 2018, 08:09 PM
i see (((changes))) to the past on a regular basis

ziero0
3rd August 2018, 04:00 AM
WTF is that?
Here is a hint:

ONLY THE DEAD LACK THE ABILITY TO ALTER THE PAST


Nunc Pro Tunc

[Latin, Now for then.] When courts take some action nunc pro tunc, that action has retroactive legal effect, as though it had been performed at a particular, earlier date.

The most common use of nunc pro tunc is to correct past clerical errors, or omissions made by the court, that may hinder the efficient operation of the legal system. For example, if the written record of a trial court's judgment failed to correctly recite the judgment as the court rendered it, the court has the inherent power to change the record at a later date to reflect what happened at trial. The decision, as corrected, would be given legal force from the time of the initial decision so that neither party is prejudiced, or harmed, by the error. The purpose of nunc pro tunc is to correct errors or omissions to achieve the results intended by the court at the earlier time.

Part of being alive is not being bound by errors and omissions of past courts.

Horn
3rd August 2018, 09:25 AM
I guess you did. If you had invested $1,000 in the '80s you would have improved your net worth to the tune of $450,000 today ... or you might be so old you really don't give a hoot.


I thought it were all a ziero0 sum game?

Apple reminds me of western digital before U.S. dissolved AT&T.

that was when back when .gov had a thought on things.

ziero0
3rd August 2018, 09:34 AM
I thought it were all a ziero0 sum game?

It is but you have to be aware of the location of the ziero0. If it happens to be in the numerator you are home free. If it falls in the denominator the sky is the limit.
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQVoPvfLHUvCJoRoV-E1ApRHR9HIhk7tl_cWOokroS18t-K9LCBwA
The bar represents the dividing line between sanity and insanity.

midnight rambler
3rd August 2018, 10:29 AM
Here is a hint:

ONLY THE DEAD LACK THE ABILITY TO ALTER THE PAST



Part of being alive is not being bound by errors and omissions of past courts.

The way to tell if someone is (civilly) dead is if they have a LAST NAME.

ziero0
3rd August 2018, 11:59 AM
The way to tell if someone is (civilly) dead is if they have a LAST NAME.

That is a good test. We living can produce as many names as we like.

midnight rambler
3rd August 2018, 12:19 PM
I have a surname or family name but I damn sure don’t have a LAST NAME. I find myself correcting people on a daily basis.

Horn
3rd August 2018, 12:26 PM
Sorry, I meant Westing House, not Western Digital

ziero0
3rd August 2018, 01:15 PM
Sorry, I meant Westing House, not Western Digital
House of Westing?

ziero0
3rd August 2018, 01:16 PM
I have a surname or family name but I damn sure don’t have a LAST NAME. I find myself correcting people on a daily basis.

The surname is the name of a trust. Remember the first night you stay as a stranger, the 2nd night as a guest and after that you are aghenhine ... a member of the household.

midnight rambler
3rd August 2018, 01:52 PM
Sorry, I meant Westing House, not Western Digital

You mean Western Electric and neither of the above.

Joshua01
5th August 2018, 07:52 AM
It is but you have to be aware of the location of the ziero0. If it happens to be in the numerator you are home free. If it falls in the denominator the sky is the limit.
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQVoPvfLHUvCJoRoV-E1ApRHR9HIhk7tl_cWOokroS18t-K9LCBwA
The bar represents the dividing line between sanity and insanity.

I was told there'd be no math!

Horn
6th August 2018, 01:16 AM
You mean Western Electric and neither of the above.

Yeah, West Electric I think it was owned by Bruuce Wayne or Adam West