Re: A note on my math.
I belive my math is indeed fairly accurate, and here's why:
A baby might grow at the rate of 2.5cm its first month, and the Pony Express might have counted horses for 2 years, but these figures are not nearly as long-sighted as counting fifty years of history. There's a big difference in one month or two years versus fifty years. If a statistic is that steady for such a long amount of time, chances are good that it'll remain constant. And the point about Ford developing cars also isn't relevant here. In the history of radio, we've seen plenty of technological advances which where supposed to wipe us out but didn't.
Finally, as another point to bolster my argument, let's look at the price of a share of stock in a major publicly traded corporation. Using your logic, we can assume a company is headed for the moon simply because its closing price is substantially up for two days. But, over the course of ten years, these peaks seem unimportant.
And lunch is waiting, whether you agree or not!
I belive my math is indeed fairly accurate, and here's why:
A baby might grow at the rate of 2.5cm its first month, and the Pony Express might have counted horses for 2 years, but these figures are not nearly as long-sighted as counting fifty years of history. There's a big difference in one month or two years versus fifty years. If a statistic is that steady for such a long amount of time, chances are good that it'll remain constant. And the point about Ford developing cars also isn't relevant here. In the history of radio, we've seen plenty of technological advances which where supposed to wipe us out but didn't.
Finally, as another point to bolster my argument, let's look at the price of a share of stock in a major publicly traded corporation. Using your logic, we can assume a company is headed for the moon simply because its closing price is substantially up for two days. But, over the course of ten years, these peaks seem unimportant.
And lunch is waiting, whether you agree or not!