Again.
As I've said repeatedly, the SLA/AMT is a primer, for the beginner and the damaged. If one not only reads it but studies it, he can develop the habits required for any trader: (1) accepting the certainty of loss, (2) thorough preparation, (3) planning, (4) discipline, (5) patience, (6) data collection and maintenance. If he can't or won't do any of this, then it really doesn't matter what approach he pursues: he will fail.
Once one acquires and develops these habits and they become second-nature, there are of course nuances that become easy to incorporate as a result of the experience of trading behavior, e.g., the significance of and importance of double tops and bottoms (and higher lows and lower highs) or the importance of focusing on the median of a trend channel or trading range rather than the limits.
I should also point out for those who might actually be sufficiently interested in this to read the material *gasp!* that reading and study are not nearly enough. One must also engage the material, not be content with watching and following and copying. If one leans toward the latter behaviors, he needs to find someone in a trading room who provides calls (there is no such thing as a "real-time" call on a message board). I'm sure there are at least some good ones out there.
But if one wants to become an independent trader, he must take hold of the material and trade it and make it his own, whether by developing his own plan or by following the SLA/AMT. While many are content to follow and copy somebody else, this is not only expensive but ultimately unsatisfactory.