Glance at the chart below and you might think it was a hot new IPO on the Dubai stock exchange, or perhaps a coffee drinker's EKG after he's downed a triple espresso. But both guesses would be wrong, for it is in fact a bar chart of yesterday's price action in the 30-Year T-Bond future. Some old timers may remember the T-Bond contract as one of the deepest and most liquid securities in the world. But that was before U.S. Treasury debt became mere side-action for what has grown into a $210 trillion global derivatives market. For comparison, consider that in 2005 the world produced real goods and services valued at just 25 percent of that amount, or $54 trillion. Clearly, making money the old-fashioned way has gone out of style. If the chart were an EKG, a diagnosis of atrial fibrillation would send the patient to the hospital pronto. But in the ethereal world of debt and derivatives, it is just a gratuitous blip signifying nothing more than that investors were agitated yesterday when the Fed announced it would raise administered rates to 5%. A moment's reflection tells us that a little atrial fibrillation in the T-bond market is not such a bad thing, considering that the primary source of the world's economic growth is now, indisputably, volatility. *** Avoid MyInks.Com Canon, HP, Brother and other printer manufacturers recommend OEM replacement ink cartridges because, they say, third-party products contain inferior ink that will clog the print head. I've found this to be true, at least for my Canon, although I was able to revive my printer by repeatedly soaking the print head in denatured alcohol and running it through the deep-clean cycle a zillion times. Whatever you decide, I would strongly advise you to steer clear of one vendor in


