So you own Apple stocks.
Great.
Now see
best
From: Just Murray <krismurray@gmail.com>
To: "iPad@yahoogroups.com" <iPad@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, 16 February 2012, 23:42
Subject: Re: [iPad] Curious
To: "iPad@yahoogroups.com" <iPad@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, 16 February 2012, 23:42
Subject: Re: [iPad] Curious
So, no source, other than you believed a television reporter? Don't get me wrong. I love apple stuff and couldn't be happier than my $40 stocks are worth over $500. Since the mid80s I've never owned a non Macintosh computer. Love'm. But up there with da Vince? Manson maybe lol I mean even the FBI files on his speak of his ability to distort reality ;)
~KM
~KM
\,,/ Banged Out on an iPhone4 \,,/
See CNBC Documentary on Steve Jobs.Source?
~KM--\,,/(^_^)\,,/(^= I rocked this email on my iPad2 =^)---He is rated as in the class of Leonardo da Vinci and Thomas Edison.From: David H. Bailey <dhbailey52@comcast.net>
To: iPad@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, 16 February 2012, 12:43
Subject: Re: [iPad] Curious
On 2/16/2012 6:21 AM, pabitra saha wrote:
>
>
> A man with the calibre of Steve Jobs is born once in 3 centuries.
>
C'mon now, that's a bit much. You mean that the discoverer of
penicillin or a person who fought for human rights like Gandhi or King
isn't of the same calibre as Steve Jobs? That's ludicrous, plain and
simple.
Is Steve Jobs more important than the person who invented the
transistor, which is what makes all of Steve Jobs's creations possible?
Is he more important than Einstein? Edison? Is the marketer of music
more important than the creators of the music he markets?
Is he really more of a genius than Mozart or Beethoven or Picasso? I
don't think so.
Steve Jobs had a great inventive mind, true, but hardly of the class of
person who only comes along once in 3 centuries. Either that, or if we
take the number of equally or more great people who have been born
within the last century alone, this planet is in for a few millenia of
non-geniuses, since the quota of "one every 3 centuries" has been used
up for many such time periods to come, just from the 20th century. And
then there's the 19th and 18th centuries to examine, where we'll also
find people of equal genius.
--
David H. Bailey
dhbailey@davidbaileymusicstudio.com
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