Sunday, March 25, 2018

Tesla -- March 25, 2018 -- Nothing About The Bakken

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March 27, 2017, 12:01 a.m.:I think a lot of folks agree that "Matt Drudge" of the "Drudge Report" has a pretty good "political" feel. What gets posted, where it's posted (on the Drudge Report page), and most importantly how long it stays on the Drudge page correlates directly with the "importance" of the story and whether the story "will have legs."

Some news items stay on his page for two, three, or even four days.

The CBS "60 Minutes" Stormy Daniels interview was linked Sunday night and into Monday morning, with the banner suggesting this was the highest '60 Minutes" rating in its history. Interestingly, it was not reported very much elsewhere (in other media) throughout the day.

And now, tonight, before midnight, less than 30 hours later, this huge, huge, huge story is no longer linked at the Drudge Report. It's not even moved to the body of the Drudge Report with the hundred-other links, some of which have now been there longer than the Stormy Daniels story.

if Drudge is "right" on this one, this story -- the Stormy Daniels story -- has no legs.
 
Original Post
 
The screenshot via twitter; the link is here for the article itself.

Disclaimer: this is not an investment site. Do not make any investment, financial, job, travel, or relationship decisions based on anything you read here or think you may have read here. I am posting this to provide an example of succinctness in a report.

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The Apple Page

I don't know if I've blogged anything along this line or not. Don't remember. But this should not be a bit surprising to anyone who actually knows something about Apple.

From Macrumors:
Apple's services revenue is growing at a rapid pace and is on track to be the company's primary revenue driver in the future, according to a note Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty shared with investors this morning.

Huberty believes that over the course of the next five years, services revenue growth will contribute more than 50 percent of Apple's total revenue growth. The iPhone, meanwhile, will make up just 22 percent of revenue growth during the same time period, despite the fact that it's contributed 86 percent of Apple's revenue growth over the past five years.
Of course, this begs some obvious questions. 

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