Let's suppose that I have an event whose probability of occurring is $\frac{44}{1000}$.
Let's also assume that I can make multiple independent attempts at observing the event.
I want to know what the compounded probability is that the event would occur after a certain number of tries. My intuition is that each event has the same chance of occurring as each attempt is completely independent.
Since I couldn't reason my way out of it, I thought instead about the probability of the event NOT occurring. I asked myself "What is the probability of the event NOT occurring x times in a row?"
Since these attempts are independent and the probability of 2 independent events occurring in sequence is $P=P(A)*P(B)$, I computed $P=(1-\frac{44}{1000})^x$
With $x=100$, $P\approx 1.1\%$. Applying the same logic again this means that the probability of not not seeing the event in 100 attempts is $1-P(100)=98.9\%$ Following this reasoning, at x=323 Excel returns 0, meaning near $100\%$ probability (this is of course an artifact of finite precision, it approaches but not reaches 0).
This seems to contradict the earlier statement that each event had an independent probability of $\frac{44}{1000}$.
What is the correct way of reasoning about this that resolves the seeming contradiction between the odds of the event occurring and the odds of it not occurring after x attempts?