Anyone have an opinion on this? Will I not save any real money on account of historical data fees if I go with option 1?
Quote from garchbrooks:
Got any recommendations for this? This is what I'm after, really. Something very, very reliable.
DarthSidious, You are right indeed.Quote from DarthSidious:A brain-free post indeed!
I tend to agree with Donald Trump who said: "Nothing is free, but who wants Nothing?"1) With TradeStation and my backup brokerage account there, I get the platform basically for free.
The fact that company publicly traded is not a measure of performance, neither it impacts the quality of its products or services.2) TRAD is publicly traded company. Who has seen the financial statements of Multiwho? Take a guess on who is more likely to go belly up?
Do you have a crystal ball or something? If TRAD goes belly up, the employees loose their jobs, CEOs kept their bonuses, and the public who own shares take all the losses. Clients end-up with nothing. Kiss your money good-bye. Guaranteed. On the contrary as a MultiCharts user you would still have a product on hand. Guaranteed.3) TS goes belly up, I lose nothing! With multicharts, kiss your money goodbye. Unless of course, you are on monthly sub plan with multicharts, and you can rationalize that $99/month.
You don't have to. As a MultiCharts user you choose your Datafeed, and the Broker. Also, in the long run the cost is less.Seriously, tell me why I should pay $99/mo + $50 to 100/month for a data fee when TS provides this for free?
I don't work for MultiCharts, therefore don't know the details how DRM works. But I couldn't care less. All I know is: DRM is there to protect the product from free-riders who want to use it "free". I am glad it's there, because since introduction of DRM the developer added more features. As a life-time license owner I couldn't be happier. If DRM protects continued development of MultiCharts, and, as a consequence offers improvements to me over the period of time, then DRM protects my investment into the software, and it's the right thing for me.I do not have detailed info on MultiChart's DRM, but maybe someone can chime in. Does it phone home every time the software is launched? Every x minutes when it is online? Why? Why can't it phone home every x days or so? Then, one fine morning when their auth servers are taking a dump poor users can still go about their business, right?
Well the above are my reasons. And I respect yours.I can't figure out how MC has one customer