A 33-year-old nerd just turned $1,000 into $946,207 trading Bitcoin, using a trick he stole from hurricane forecasts.
No finance degree. No trading desk. Just a trick every meteorologist uses and every trader forgets.
The trick: meteorologists never forecast tomorrow with a single model. They run 31 and count the votes. He aimed exactly that same trick at Bitcoin.
A Claude agent reads every 5-minute BTC market and feeds it into MiroFish, a simulation that runs 31 model paths and only fires when 28 of them agree. Below 26 votes, it kills the trade.
The agent system's coverage speed is way faster than any elite trading team's.
They gather data 24/7 and run simulations with that data in the MiroFish engine, completely autonomously.
Every trade is a perfect cycle. Every dollar earned is pure exploitation of market inefficiency.
That's the whole edge. Not a prediction. A quorum.
Sizes with Kelly and hits a button. Most signals never pass the vote, so most days it stays still.
He spent years learning that certainty is a scam and consensus is the edge.
You only need Claude + laptop + 1 hour/day.
Giving This Free for 24 hours. To get it:
1. Comment the word 'Claude'
2. Like and Retweet this post
3. Follow me @marryevan999
A 29-year-old sales consultant from Oklahoma quit his job thanks to AI.
Now he makes his director’s yearly salary in two weeks.
$306,000 profit in the last month.
He replaced an entire quant team with Claude + 6 autonomous agents.
Built his own ETH simulation engine.
Each agent validates trades independently.
Together they pull ~$15K/day.
The system runs 24/7:
collecting data
running simulations
tracking reactions
remembering patterns
All autonomous.
Powered through MiroFish.
Every trade is a cycle.
Every dollar comes from inefficiency.
He doesn’t predict the future.
The math already knows it.
He just reads the numbers first.
Save this if you want to understand where trading is heading.
You only need Claude + laptop + 1 hour/day.
Giving This Free for 24 hours. To get it:
1. Comment Your thoughts .
2. Like and Retweet this post
Jürgen Klinsmann: “Había 70.000 personas, nosotros estábamos calentando seriamente. Mientras sonaba ‘Live Is Life’, Maradona empezó a hacer malabares con el balón. Dejamos de calentar, porque no había nada más que pudiéramos hacer aparte de mirarlo.” MAGIA!
@JoeCassandra I agree! There are hundreds of Dominicans and Venezuelans coming from regions of these countries where they are naturally talented at baseball
@RobyK7ng Salvo excepciones, casi el 100% de los venezolanos jugando en México, también juegan en la LVBP y sin ningún tipo de restricciones! El núcleo para que un equipo sea competitivo tiene que ser de jugadores de la Liga Mexicana! Juán Yépez sano es serio candidato a MVP en la LVBP
La anunciada adquisición de la licencia por parte de @Fanatics, a través de su marca @Topps, para producir las barajitas del @FIFAWorldCup y otros eventos de @FIFAcom desde 2031, representa el más reciente tramo de una carrera que parece tener como meta la monopolización del coleccionismo de tarjetas deportivas a nivel global.
Ya @Topps tiene los derechos sobre:
• @MLB • @NBA • @NFL • @WWE • @MLS • @Bundesliga_EN • @ChampionsLeague
Y también sobre:
• @Argentina • @England • @CBF_Futebol • @Azzurri • @DFB_Team
De hecho, @Topps cayó en manos de @Fanatics una vez que perdió la licencia de @MLB, la cual pasó a la segunda.
De acuerdo con una nota de @TheAthletic publicada hoy, @Fanatics espera registrar este año ingresos por cuatro millardos de dólares.
Para @Fanatics, el coleccionismo deportivo es ya un negocio descomunal. Y va por más.
Kevin O’Leary explains why they have over $100,000,000 invested in cards
“I’d argue this is no different than building a portfolio of modern art”
“I’ve got three partners. One of them is Shyne, he’s a legend in the hobby. He curates for us and so he decides which card we buy next”
“If you look at the data… 90% of the returns come from a fraction of the cards that are piece uniques. The ones that trade for $5M, $10M, $20M, $30M, even $40M now”
“Because they’re so rare, they’re so coveted, they’re so well known, they’re so liquid, the rest do not get those kind of returns”
“So this card here is a 1997 Jordan… it’s 2 of 9 and we also control another one, it’s a grail piece. It would trade today around $4.7M to $5.2M. Had you bought it on its issue in 1997, you’ve outperformed every market”
“So the strategy I’m using here is to build a portfolio… we’re well over $100M now in cards but only the piece uniques”
“My analyst showed me how this outperformed many other alternative asset classes. I challenged him I said look at my watch collection, let’s compare it against that and he said, sorry boss this thing wiped you out”
“This is such a broad interest, 150 million people are in the hobby in America with sons and daughters and so it’s become part of culture”
“But I prefer the living legends or the legends that have passed. Kobe right now, a signed auto Kobe, Kobe’s gone. He won’t be signing any more cards. Those are very, very valuable”
“Versus let’s say, a Pokémon which never really lived anyways and so for me, I’m steering my say in the syndicate away from the fictitious stuff. I want living or historic legends”
Hall of Famer Luis Aparacio was born this day in 1934 in Maracaibo, Venezuela. He was a 9-time Gold Glove winner. When he retired, he held the all-time major league records for games played (2,583), assists (8,016), and double plays (1,553) by a shortstop. Notably, he never played a single inning at any defensive position other than shortstop. Aparicio led the American League in stolen bases for a major league record 9 consecutive seasons (1956–1964). He finished his career with 506 stolen bases. He was a 13-time All-Star and 1956 AL Rookie of the Year. He was part of the 1966 World Series Champion Opioles. He was the first Venezuelan player inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1984. What are your thoughts and memories of Luis Aparicio?