I notice that the software has ISI,ADP,and SAGE as order routes.What are these supposed to be?
Originally posted by lescor
Systems go down in offices too, so you are at risk no matter where you are. Trading remote, you are probably have a better chance of a being bumped from your internet connection, but it's only 30 seconds from the time you pick up the phone until you are out of your positions. When I've had to call, I've always gotten through immediately.
One thing thing that impressed me about Echotrade was when their system went down right after the open, and it cost me about $600, they recognized that it was their fault and they wiped out all my trades for the morning. Firm-wide, it cost them about $15,000. I haven't heard of any other firm eating losses when it's their fault.
Originally posted by NasdaqTrader
According to Rtharp,Echo uses T 3's for their remote traders.
Originally posted by Tom Frey
why everyone always thinks he needs to have the top notch hardware for being able to trade.
It all depends on what your style is like.
You using tons of charts? then i'd go for more ram. I'm using 512mb, but 256 would be sufficient as well with winxp.
Trading software generally doesn't waste too much of CPU power so it doesn't need to be a >1GHz processor.
And how cares about disk space? you can be fine even with 3GB.
T-1 what for? are traders fulltime movie leechers or what? ( ok some are =))
It's not the bandwith that is decisive.. furthermore it's the ping time.
And with fastpath enabled DSL lines you can have faster pings than with T-1.
conclusio:
you don't always need the state of the art setup to trade successful although it's beyond any doubt nice to have bot no "must".
Get what you can afford and you're fine
Originally posted by nitro
Hmmm - I have with 1GB of memory and dual Xeons that are at 100% the entire time the markets are open...
nitro
Originally posted by TonySanDiego
500 mGZ Pentium III
4 gB hard drive
784 mB memory
DSL (with cable backup)
3 + 1 monitors (2 machines)
No problems, I often get filled much faster than I really want.
(now why the heck did I just do that dumb move for?)
Multiple monitors with good resolution is one thing you really will want to have.
Originally posted by bro59
Running Sterling on a PII 266 with 400 megs on a laptop and Windows 2000 via a cable modem from Anchorage, Alaska. Great reliability and the system is plenty fast. I'm the weakest link in the setup, as I suspect are many traders who overemphasize equipment and connectivity issues in their trading.
Originally posted by JCM2
Sorry for the dumb question, but what does "SLA" stand for and what is it?
Thanks!