I finished my first book. You can buy the Ebook on my website. A printed version will be released the next two days on Amazon.
You can read a preview (about 5 chapter out of 41) on the my website. https://t.co/Lr9HiJqS8O
There should be a WHY. Until you find your why, you are just experimenting and figuring things out. The question won't be if you have why, it will be WHEN. At some point you need to decide what your why is. There are really three important questions in life. One of them is Why am I doing the things I do? Find your why in life. Sell a kidney if you have to.
All about screen, screen and screen. Not heard the word "friends" once. When I grew up and was 3 years old. I was the youngest in the village. And played every day outside with other kids. We were 20 children. Playing Hide and Seek, soccer, and other things. My father was working in the car factory and my mom was a housemaid.
I think that is the biggest problem. Children/kids don't play with other children anymore in a group. While parents want to manage everything precisely: screen time, nutrition, sleep etc. The most important factor is that children start to interact with their peers. But that is not something what parents can control or fix but the society and technology advance just completely destroyed. Screentime is ok. I played with the PS1 too (with friends) but majority of the time 95% we played outside.
If I would have been a father and needed to decide about how and what screen time to choose. I would buy a PS1. I would play Crashbandicot and Tekken with her/him. Cheers.
AI models will get insanley good. Fable level competence locally in the future. The problem won't be the local models intelligence/capabilities but your reach to compute and electricity. Electricity prices will skyrocket I guess.
Try everything! You will fail. You will suffer. The only option is to try over and over again. The winner will try once more when there is even no hope to win.
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Thank you @MH_Trading :)
That's a great idea. Also simple if someone is using Clear Street. I could poll the broker's REST API. Every user need to store the API key also locally.
Things get a bit trickier if a muti-broker support is needed. Same solution via aggregator API.
I am using TraderVue and TraderSync too. Checking my data etc.
But never imported my chart or my notes there.
I saved my charts into folders which felt like a mess.
Now my trading review for the day,week and month by reviewing and filtering the charts get faster.
I thought also about connecting the api to polygon/massive and also a local LLM and let the AI compare my execution with backtest and give back feedback.
I think we have so many things to explore how we combine AI with trading and trading tools.
Electronic trading itself is still young, AI still a baby.
Once the app is filled with your charts and execution, one could use the images to train/finetune the LLM to build an Agent which either feeds you with ideas or directly takes decisions for you.
I created a Desktop App over the weekend in which I can save my screenshots and filter them based on float, cycle environmet (hot,cold,neutral), volume, country, market cap, date etc. I can search for ticker names. So basically you could share your charts on twitter on also save them in folders locally categorized the folders in yearly or monthly names. But I wanted a app where everything is organized and also the screenshots can get saved and pushed into the application quickly via hotkeys.
Added way more features like Ideas I had during the trading day but didn't execute on. Just the reflect the reasons why I didn't. Sometimes in real time I don't like minor things like the tape or other criteria and pass on the trade but later on (in hindsight) forget why I didn't take hte trade or went small size on it. I called the tab Ideas. Then added a watchlist tab too. A watchlist for a weekly and monthly base not really a daily because the daily watchlist I use my DAS Trader market viewer tab where I put the ticker in.
I added a Themes tab too. I am selecting all the tickers in themes in Folders also in TradingView etc. I also made a feature in Bullbearz but I put it in the Desktop App too. Might be overlapping.
I will use it and tweak it a bit more and then release it next month probably.
The best thing about it is that I can bundle multiple screenshots into one trade. So each trade can have multiple screenshots. So I can put the 1min,5min,30min 1h and daily chart into the trade and review!
Three things I like about it:
1. Charts saved on your machine locally
2. Hotkey to save the chart after the screenshot capture. It is fast
3. Searching via month,year, ticker name, country, cycle environment and other criteria like float and % gain
The J-Curve was introduced and found by James C. Davis, an american sociologist.
Tocqueville wrote about the same in his book "L'Ancien Regime et la Revolution."
What we are seeing in northern ireland is just the beginning. Riots and civil unrest will be spread like a virus throughout the world. It all starts when people struggle financially. It has been the same cycle in history.
The revolutions was not and are not gonna be caused by poverty. I was and will be caused by the gap between rising expectations and constrained reality. The gap has specific shape. A J-curve.
The vertical axis is the satisfaction of human needs, economic, social, political. The horizontal axis is time. Davies drew two lines. The first line rises steadily over years or decades: real conditions improving, incomes growing, freedoms expanding, people's lives measurably better than their parents' lives had been. This rising line creates something. It creates expectations. People who have watched their conditions improve do not look at today and feel grateful. They project the line forward. They begin to expect continued improvement. They begin to feel entitled to it.
The second line is what actually happens.
At some point, the real conditions stop improving. A drought. An economic shock. A new government that reverses the previous gains. A global recession that closes the factories. Whatever the cause, the line of actual satisfaction bends downward. It doesn't have to fall far. It doesn't have to reach poverty. It only has to fall below the line of expectations. The gap opens.
This gap, between where people believe they are going and where they find themselves, is, Davies argued, the most combustible substance in politics. More dangerous than absolute deprivation, which produces despair. More dangerous than absolute prosperity, which produces complacency. The gap is dangerous precisely because it contains hope that has been disappointed. The people in the gap are not resigned. They have seen enough improvement to believe improvement is possible. They are angry because they know it is being withheld.