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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TobagoJack who wrote (18491)4/27/2002 4:14:26 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74559
 
< What do you suggest I buy?>

Spectrum! auction.med.govt.nz

Jay, Real Estate has always been a good investment [if done right]. In cyberspace, there is real estate too. There are geostationary orbits, there are cellphone sites, but most importantly, there is spectrum. cityphone.co.nz We don't have anything there yet - just a fill-in page.

If you want to invest, send big strings of nausages.

Perhaps more importantly, if you want some fun [with Japanese and Kiwi snowboarders] snowadventures.co.nz - the season starts at spectrum auction time, so you could come down for fun, scope the joint out, join us for bidding, maybe buy a bunker while you are here [in case your theories of global catastrophe come to pass] and maybe even join the other hordes of Hong Kongese who are now living in Auckland, even if things go well.

So, buy:

A plane ticket
A Snowadventures holiday [lots of fun activities other than snowboarding - see the photos]
A bunker
A business immigrant citizenship
Spectrum

Mqurice

PS: I have 900 Paladin shares you can buy too if you like. The company owns some silly real estate in Hong Kong; my father bought them in the 1980s and left me holding the bag as executor of his estate - at HK11c each, they are not worth much now. He never heard of CDMA.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (18491)4/27/2002 5:13:27 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 74559
 
<do you not see a common thread, a pattern, a vague outline? Do you imagine history moves at the blink of an eye, the click of a mouse, and the flip of a TV channel.>

Jay, good morning!! Swing those Au weights. I look at random walks and see patterns. Everywhere I look, there are patterns. They can drive one nuts!

No, I don't think history moves very quickly - it amazes me how slowly people react, concatenate and coalesce when something happens [or they decide to do something]. Which is nice, because it makes it easy to get to the emergency door first or stoop to pick up a nugget left lying around ... oops, I shouldn't mention nuggets ... it's just a figure of speech.

Sometimes though, things move very, very fast and reaction times measured in 1/100ths of a second are vital. When an aircraft is heading for an office window, it is good to react quickly and be descending the stairs before impact and the crowds figure out that it's best to run for it.

If markets collapse, floor on floor, one had better be moving really quickly [better still to be well clear of the building before the collapse process begins]. But usually, as you say, things happen in an eerily slow but relentless way, until the denouement arrives which is when the dramatic action happens, as you implied <The most outrageous is always saved for the last moment of the script>. The Titanic didn't bump an iceberg and sink quickly [there was apparently plenty of time for the band to play some spirit-strengthening music]. Nero had plenty of time to fiddle while Rome burned [according to legend]. Incidentally, I had my best round of golf ever a week or so ago [78]; I have no idea how superhumans take 12 hits less than that [regularly].

So, yes, I see trends, threads, patterns and outlines which I find discomfiting.

I have abandoned my Dow 16,000 expectations for now. There is currently too much distress and conflict for happy mercantile activity to propel the world forwards to economic nirvana.

But our great idol, Uncle Al, has saved the world from a precipitous plunge because he years ago put the screws on and initiated the clearing of irrational exuberance from investors' minds. So, the prospects for collapse are small. After much mumbling, cursing, muttering, gnashing of teeth, wailing and whining, people will once again put their shoulder to the wheel, nose to the grindstone, ear to the ground, back to the wall, feet on the ground, eyes on the goal, hands to the oars, chest out, stomach in, shoulders back [the other one anyway], money where their mouth is and get back to work, making their lives, and therefore the world, [due to consumer surplus effects], a better place once again. Ever onward and upward.

So, I'm waiting to see whether the patterns will resolve into pandemonium or whether we'll revert to the long trend of history, and progress without a big crunch. I still expect the latter [but am feeling wary].

While I wait, I have cleared the decks, just in case emergency moves are needed - just as well too, because already we are taking on water. [To mix yet another metaphor]. I have hopped up on the surface and am running for cover...where's my damn bunker? I'll view proceedings from my bunker in Hobbitland while the Lord of the Rings works its evil magic around the world. But I'll leave some CDMA phragmented photons encircling the world as a countermeasure to Aztecian human sacrifice and the evil allure of that ring. I'm sure the magic of CDMA will have more power [but it's a bit scary waiting to find out for sure].

Mq

PS: Au weights! I just realized Au is the instigator of CDMA in Japan, Land of Genki Dama. Now that's rich irony! au.kddi.com



To: TobagoJack who wrote (18491)4/27/2002 6:04:03 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Respond to of 74559
 
<No, not true. GSM is used to earn jingling Aztec relics. I have no idea what CDMA does for me or anybody else. I do not want top watch movies or play interactive games on my cell phone.>

Jay, GSM is used to earn money with which you can buy CDMA, which can deliver cyberspace to you wherever you are, and turn wherever you are into the epicentre of the universe. The universe will revolve around you and your energy will radiate out into the universe from wherever you are rather than you looking for a static point to hook up to reality. You can be a permanent Force 10 earthquake instead of a weak-force wired-link on an intermittent basis.

You don't really want to own gold - it's the idea of Au you like and the incantations from the high priests looking for their next victims have mesmerized you. When you see what Au [the CDMA company] can offer in the cyberspace world, you'll realize that Aztec Au has had its day.

GSM is like a horse and cart, which enables you to do useful things to enable you to buy a Big Mack truck and Ferrari, which enable you to do even more and have a lot of fun too [and Ferraris attract more females than horse and cart - if we believe the advertising though I have my doubts]. Once you have your Mack truck [and car] you won't need your horse and cart.

Next time you are hanging out in China, see if you can spot CDMA shops [China Unicom]. It's true that GSM is what nearly all subscribers use at present in China - but since CDMA has only recently become available in China, do not be misled by the great success of GSM. GSM can't do cyberspace very well, or high capacity networks - there isn't enough spectrum for GSM to satisfy everyone. Spectrum is cyberspace real estate.

Mq