I can do something close in Portland, Oregon... Accessing the Tri-Met website (www.tri-mer.org/wap) on my cell phone tells me how long until the bus I'm waiting for reaches my stop...
For example, while your car is an asset, the loan that you got to buy that car is a liability; likewise with a house: the house is an asset, the mortgage is a liability. Assets and liabilies balance against one another. If your assets are greater than your liabilities, you have a positive net worth (otherwise, you have a negative net worth, which is... um... bad.)
The other things you mention: gas, maintenance, etc., those are expenses, they balance against income, such as salary, etc.. If you have more income in a month than you do expenses, then you are left with "spare money" (an asset, actually...)
I cannot personally vouch for the accuracy of anything I just said... I just woke up.
I found the patch tool here: http://kb2.adobe.com/cps/915/c...
I can do something close in Portland, Oregon... Accessing the Tri-Met website (www.tri-mer.org/wap) on my cell phone tells me how long until the bus I'm waiting for reaches my stop...
Presumably, the key must be obtained by legal means in country A before it can be given to country B.
"Presumably" is rather a big flaw in you argument.
T
Liabilities are your debts, the things you owe.
For example, while your car is an asset, the loan that you got to buy that car is a liability; likewise with a house: the house is an asset, the mortgage is a liability. Assets and liabilies balance against one another. If your assets are greater than your liabilities, you have a positive net worth (otherwise, you have a negative net worth, which is... um... bad.)
The other things you mention: gas, maintenance, etc., those are expenses, they balance against income, such as salary, etc.. If you have more income in a month than you do expenses, then you are left with "spare money" (an asset, actually...)
I cannot personally vouch for the accuracy of anything I just said... I just woke up.