It is good to know that many (very much all?) of the posters here are part of the "horns and pipes turning the proverbial corner".
As someone said once again today, the volatility will increase in magnitude with the desired increase in share price. So, keep that well in mind all the time.
It will (is) do all involved well if there knowledge expande with experience. Complexity is the association of diversity...
Sence many appear to feel more at ease on this evening (and it reflects in the 'trnor' of posts), I will give a short story that may add to your ever broadening understanding of the eclectic nature of this and all healthy communities.
An old friend of mine worked for 40+ years as a theoretical mathematician. For 20+ years of that career he had considerable involvement in many of the teams that worked on varia of the theoretical concepts pertaining to the development of computer science (hardware and software...whatever). In the mid/late 1980's he was given a PC for his office, connected via dedicated wire line...for constent sharing with others on the team... He mastered DOS... In the mid 90's his university re-equiped with the than most up to date hardware and software ( pentium chip and windows 95...). He never looked at it much nor use the internet (still the new replacement for the previous www based service/dedicated line...), prefering to go through computer services... Three years before his retirement yet a new upgrade of hardware and XP. All the freedom one may ever want??? The monitor sat on top of stacks of old papers and journals... while the tower served as the new location for the in/out tray. One day a few months prior to retirement, on a visit to his office, he looked at me half blank faced and half amused. He said; "I understand languages. Mathematics, Music, and Linguistics. I am fluent in four languages of diverse origin and proficient in several derivatives of each. But I could never realy understand how computers worked or many other electrical gadgets for that matter. Science was never a strenth for me."
Old Jos