Quote from dbphoenix:
It may. With the 30k+ views this thread has had, there may be a half-dozen people who are genuinely interested.
Since it's now been nearly twenty years since the first reasonably sophisticated charting software became available to the little guy, followed several years later by discount brokerages, and several years after that by trading forums like this one, few people are still around who remember how things used to be. Their programs come loaded with dozens of indicators, each of which has dozens of settings, and all kinds of bars and candles and whatall, so surely all that should be used. And the vendors are everywhere, pushing this indicator or that pattern or whatever else, making it all seem so difficult that the novice absolutely must rely on the vendor to clear the way or else risk ruin(my setup is better than his setup nyah nyah).
Trading price, then, becomes a thoroughly alien concept, with a language that is virtually incomprehensible. How, for example, can one conceivably trade without candlesticks, or moving averages, or even *gasp* bars? And given the youth of those who populate the internet, trying to compare how things are with how things used to be (trading by price alone has been around for centuries) is pretty much like talking to oneself.
So I've abandoned the effort to correct misinformation. Anyone who's interested is welcome to contact me and make the journey (journey . . . journal . . . journey . . . journal). Otherwise, I've said what needs to be said and said it many times over. Many many times over. And it's there until the internet winks out. So I can move on to other things, and the kids can argue amongst themselves regarding truly important subjects like whether "TA" (which is always defined incorrectly) is subjective or objective, and what the best MACD settings are.
db,
I am fascinated by your knowledge of trading, your benevolence to share your knowledge and the volume of your writing on ET and TL.
If I may, just to get a better picture of the master that you are:
What is your experience with trading?
Your educational background?
What else do you do, other than trade?
Have you ever written a book?
Are you American, European, African, Asian, Australian?
How do you/or your trading improve by helping other traders?
Are you excited/motivated to take on the market everyday?
Lastly, how accurate do you think these stages of trader evolution are: http://www.tischendorf.com/2010/01/16/bo-yoder-and-vadym-graifer-6-stages-of-a-trader/
Thanks.

