Howdy, Folks!
AND...I continue to invest in it. Veddy nice retirement nest egg.
It's still gonna be worth a decent ride, BTW, for I figure...oh, another 10-15 years.
Any provider interested, email me.
I'll give you the advice for a recent, accurate, non-photoshopped full frontal nude pic of you with no draping of any kind(shopping around to see what to spend some of my earnings on...).
.
For free, I recommend to all of you: Tantalum.
http://www.globalissues.org/article/...nd-cell-phones
[Article written in 2001; prescient, given the explosion of iPhones and other tiny mobile devices.]
From the above:
"For the high-tech industry, tantalum is magic dust, a key component in everything from mobile phones made by Nokia (NOK) and Ericsson and computer chips from Intel (INTC) to Sony (SNE) stereos and VCRs."
"The demand for coltan is not going away. As global consumers continue to crave the newest cell phone and the latest computer, high-tech companies will continue to pay top dollar for tantalum capacitors, and their suppliers will continue to take tantalum from wherever it is available."
"Coltan - which is found in 3 billion-year-old soils, like those in the Rift Valley region of middle Africa, western Australia and central Asia - has become a critical raw material in high-tech manufacturing. The tantalum extracted from the ore is used mainly to make tantalum capacitors, tiny components that manage the flow of current in electronic devices. Many semiconductors also use a thin layer of tantalum as a protective barrier between other metal coatings. The metal, which is also found in other minerals and can be extracted as a byproduct of tin refining, is used in the airline, chemical, pharmaceutical and automotive industries as well.
The market for the material is huge. Last year, about 6.6 million pounds of tantalum was used around the world, 60 percent finding its way into the electronics industry, where it can be found in products like mobile phones, computers, game consoles and camcorders. (The United States is the largest consumer of tantalum in the world, accounting for 40 percent of global demand.)
In 2000, demand for tantalum capacitors exploded in tandem with the mobile phone and PC markets, causing a severe shortage. Tantalum ore prices shot up, with per-pound charges for refined powder climbing from less than $50 to a peak of over $400 at the end of last year[Year 2000 - BP]."
Recycling it currently, is difficult and expensive.
Happy investing!