Execute trade without nervous mouse click

Quote from stvee:

Hi guy,
Does anybody feel the nervousness of the mouse clicking when we make a trade. I felt that pretty heavy before. Even though the analysis is good, but when it is time to execute the trade through the clicking of the mouse with our hand, I tend to hesistate. Anybody share the same problems?
Realizing that psychological effect of the mouse clicking to buy or sell. I have developed a program to execute the trade through speech. It is pretty accurate, since it only a few command that I have to speak. Buy, sell, buy market, sell market and cancel and to confirm Yes or No to those command. What it really is I control a series of mouse movement through speech. For example, when I say buy market, it will confirm me of this action, and then the mouse will automatically click on the lowest offer, then click on buy. THat really take a lot of hesitation out of my nervous hand. So far this program of mine is only custom made to fit with my own trading application, X-trader. But it can definitely be modified to use with any application, and automatically control any repeated sequential mouse movement during a trading session through speech. Let me know if anybody interested so I can develop this application for your use and I will let you try it.

+++++++

I am aware of my feelings while trading.

Pay much more attention to working the trading plan + price than my feelings.

:cool:

Sounds like a smart idea for some;speech comanded trading.
 
The mouse is good for many things. But the keyboard is much better
for fast, reliable, high-stakes trade control.

Most specialized, scalper-specific software is keyboard oriented. It's
much faster and much less error-prone.

A two-year-old can accurately press a selected key on the keyboard the
first time. Mastering the mouse takes extensive practice.

I can hit a tennis ball with reasonable accuracy. Given the repetitive task of
placing balls in a bucket, I would rather stand next to the bucket and drop
them in. Especially if accuracy confers a monetary reward. It's better to
be correct rather than stylish when money is at stake.

Repetitive tasks, such as trading, attract errors. Every tool and technique
employed to reduce those errors will pay dividends over time.

Many view keyboard-control as clunky and old, so many broker programs
don't support it. Fortunately, the better one's do.


Richard
 
You're actually using voice recognition?

I worked with some very good software for a while and was not able to get it to work satisfactorily.

Just think, even if you get 99% successful recognition. That 1% can cause you to:
buy or sell the wrong stock
enter the wrong price
Enter a market order when you wanted a limit order

All that much more power to you if you have voice recognition that works 100%!

Cash
 
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