Diamonds? At least if you compare to actual worth as an industrial commodity.
I don't think anything can beat "high end" audio cables.
...
or this 20k 3 meter speaker cable.
http://www.audio-direct.com/p-7618-platinum-eclipse-biwire-speaker-cable-30-meter.aspx
I don't think anything can beat "high end" audio cables.
7k+ for 12 foot speaker wire.
$1500 for a power cord.
or this 20k 3 meter speaker cable.
http://www.audio-direct.com/p-7618-platinum-eclipse-biwire-speaker-cable-30-meter.aspx
Why does everyone always repeat that whole "ticket sales go to studios" stuff? If ticket sales go to the studios, then why can I go to a theater locally and watch TWO new releases for $5 total? Do the movie companies really say "hey, you're in NYC, therefore we're charging your theater $8 per person who sees the movie. Oh, and you - you're in a rural area, so we're charging $2 per person who sees this movie."
I think that the total costs are not being factored in.
Overall, networking/telecommunications equipment has a 20% margin.
Which is a hell of a level of success for capitalism if you ask me; Show me one government entity that is that amazingly efficient. (assuming the 20% margin is 'waste')
Printer ink?
Printers are sold using the razor blade business model—the printers are dirt cheap, but you have to keep buying ink for eternity. And wouldn’t you know, it turns out that printer ink, especially for photos, is probably the most expensive substance per volume you’ll ever buy—more expensive than gold, oil, perfume, even blood in most cases. If you’re buying name-brand ink cartridges, which typically hold a few milliliters of ink, you’re shelling out the equivalent of between $3,000 and $5,000 per gallon. (Suddenly, spending $45 to fill your car’s gas tank doesn’t seem so extravagant, eh?) Just as an idea of how valuable this particular golden goose is, more than 40 percent of HP’s $2.63 billion operating profits from last quarter came from it’s imaging and printing group alone. In other words, ink keeps printer companies in the black.
The IRS spends $0.51 to collect each $100 in taxes.![]()
I would explain the ridiculous R&D costs it takes to get something like that past regulators... but my head done exploded.I saw a story where hospitals were charging over $25000 for the little metal stents (I think that's what they were called) that they put into arteries during bypass surgeries.
What sort of retard would pay $1000 for "an app for flag football that helps keep track of stats for all leagues?" I can see the legitimacy of most of those apps but certainly not that one.