And remember that this note (100T$) is evaluated in zimbabwean dollars which had been devaluated by a factor 10 000 000 000 in August 2008...Itself devaluated by a factor of 1000 in 2006, so the factor is 10^27 in pre-2006 dollars.
Incidentally, it the first note I see whose facial value has so much zeroes...(14) And when I saw one in Ebay last spring, I could'n resist and bought a set of 4 notes (10, 20, 50 and 100 T$).
And the last occurence of a such hyperinflation bout in the world has occured in Hungary in 1946. The highest denomination note ever issued by any country at any time was a note with a face value of 100 000 000 b-pengös and a b-pengö was 1 000 000 000 000 pengös, so the note had a value of 100 quintillon pengös
(100 000 000 000 000 000 000) . The value wasn't written in numerical, but only stated in words. This hyperinflation killed this currency and let the way to the new one: the hungarian forint.
But the note was not so nice because it hadn't any zeroes, so it was not as impressive...