About me
ThePeopleGeek Now in a Global Merger With Mr Sparkle presents....ThePeopleGeek LLC
Same quality you know.
Same guy you trust.
Same face you love.
Friends
thepeoplegeekllc has 7 friends
Stats
Performance this quarter
- Gain:
-8,430 - Leaderboard: #21436
- Best category: Business (#844)
- Worst category: Technology (#922)
- Open predictions: 19 (19 public)
- Created questions: 0 open
- Comments: 82
- Friends: 7
Some numbers updated hourly
Questions
| Created | 2 |
| Front page | 2 (100%) |
| Settled | 2 (100%) |
| Voided | 0 (0%) |
No questions yet
thepeoplegeekllc
Net worth: H$62,460
Predictions made: 2459
male, from Oregon, . Member since Tue 3rd Jun 2008
Latest activity
3 days ago
thepeoplegeekllc predicted 2.751 - 3.000 (H$5,000 at 66%) on How high will the price of gas reach this year in the US?
4 days ago
thepeoplegeekllc predicted 3.001 - 3.250 (H$400 at 15%) on How high will the price of gas reach this year in the US?
1 week ago
thepeoplegeekllc predicted 2.751 - 3.000 (H$2,000 at 51%) on How high will the price of gas reach this year in the US?
1 week ago
thepeoplegeekllc predicted 2.751 - 3.000 (H$2,000 at 56%) on How high will the price of gas reach this year in the US?
Shouts
Please log in or join to send shouts to your friends.
20
lewisdotcom
I know you are cheating somehow........
The New iPhone answer was overturned. The iPhone was indeed thicker. The Universe is once again "in whack".
You told me to remind you to bring me a KVM switch about 5 months ago, i forgot to remind you but now i am. No hurry.
Thanks
Thanks
Please direct any legal questions to our Atty/Acct Firm of Dewey, Cheetum and Howe. Thank You for your inquiry. As a new LLC we value your opini
Much less administrative paperwork and record keeping than a corporation.
Pass-through taxation (i.e., no double taxation), unless the LLC elects to be taxed as a C corporation.
Limited liability, meaning that the owners of the LLC, called "members," are protected from some liability for acts and debts of the LLC, but are still responsible for any debts beyond the fiscal capacity of the entity.
Using default tax classification, profits are taxed personally at the member level, not at the LLC level.
Check-the-box taxation. An LLC can elect to be taxed as a sole proprietor, partnership, S corporation or C corporation, providing much flexibility.
LLCs in some states can be set up with just one natural person involved.
Membership interests of LLCs can be assigned, and the economic benefits of those interests can be separated and assigned, providing the assignee with the economic benefits of distributions of profits/losses (like a partnership), without transferring the title to the membership interest (see, for example, the Virginia and Delaware LLC Acts).
LLCs in most states are treated as entities separate from their members, whereas in other jurisdictions case law has developed deciding LLCs are not considered to have separate juridical standing from their members (see recent D.C. decisions).
Unless the LLC has chosen to be taxed as a corporation, income of the LLC generally retains its character, for instance as capital gains or as foreign sourced income, in the hands of the members.
Pass-through taxation (i.e., no double taxation), unless the LLC elects to be taxed as a C corporation.
Limited liability, meaning that the owners of the LLC, called "members," are protected from some liability for acts and debts of the LLC, but are still responsible for any debts beyond the fiscal capacity of the entity.
Using default tax classification, profits are taxed personally at the member level, not at the LLC level.
Check-the-box taxation. An LLC can elect to be taxed as a sole proprietor, partnership, S corporation or C corporation, providing much flexibility.
LLCs in some states can be set up with just one natural person involved.
Membership interests of LLCs can be assigned, and the economic benefits of those interests can be separated and assigned, providing the assignee with the economic benefits of distributions of profits/losses (like a partnership), without transferring the title to the membership interest (see, for example, the Virginia and Delaware LLC Acts).
LLCs in most states are treated as entities separate from their members, whereas in other jurisdictions case law has developed deciding LLCs are not considered to have separate juridical standing from their members (see recent D.C. decisions).
Unless the LLC has chosen to be taxed as a corporation, income of the LLC generally retains its character, for instance as capital gains or as foreign sourced income, in the hands of the members.


