Technicians with holes in their shoes and frayed shirt collars

Quote from 20angryguru:

Let's see how surf's non TA, non Trend trade works out, called in real time: LONG the EUR/USD @1.3666
http://tinyurl.com/yfetfaf
____________________________________________________
Just wanted to mention the Surf's call was again a beautiful fade for 200 pips or $2500 per contract . . . so far.
 
Quote from ProfLogic:

Do the leg work on your own. Contact then for a sample of their Erogodic indicator. Once you get it I'll provide you with the documents that show the parameters they use I created and have been using for 2 years before they started offering it.

I don't care because they don't know how to use it nor do they instruct others on its proper use. I give it away anyway. I just think it is a hoot that they repackaged it and are selling it.
I've searched and can't find any Ergodic Indicator for sale on Jurik's website. And the Ergodic is a publicly disclosed indicator already. So basically you're accusing Jurik of stealing and selling your settings to a free indicator? :confused:
 
Quote from crgarcia:

University professors are sometimes asked by their students, "If you're so smart, why aren't you rich?"
The question usually rankles professors, who think of themselves as passing up worldly riches to engage in such an obviously socially useful occupation as teaching. The same question might more appropriately be addressed to technicians.

For, after all, the whole point of technical analysis is to make money, and one would reasonably expect that those who preach it should practice it successfully in their own investments.

On close examination, technicians are often seen with holes in their shoes and frayed shirt collars. I, personally, have never known a successful technician, but I have seen the wrecks of several unsuccessful ones. (This is, of course, in terms of following their own technical advice. Commissions from urging customers to act on their recommendations are very lucrative.)

Curiously, however, the broke technician is never apologetic. If you commit the social error of asking him why he is broke, he will tell you quite ingenuously that he made the all-too-human error of not believing his own charts.
To my great embarrassment, I once choked conspicuously at the dinner table of a chartist friend of mine when he made such a comment. I have since made it a rule never to eat with a chartist. It's bad for digestion.

Burton G. Malkiel
A random walk down Wall Street


My next door neighbor is worth about $12mil and he looks like he is on food stamps.....keep that in mind...peace
 
Quote from kut2k2:

I've searched and can't find any Ergodic Indicator for sale on Jurik's website. And the Ergodic is a publicly disclosed indicator already. So basically you're accusing Jurik of stealing and selling your settings to a free indicator? :confused:

Wow, talk about left field corner.

The Ergodic is a publicly disclosed and free indicator but it can be customized and adjusted to literally millions of unique settings. My customized setting as are only good, as far as I've tested, for use on constant volume bar charts.

One of the things Jurik does is to try to smooth common indicators, so why wouldn't they try to smooth every free indicator and offer to sell it?

Prior to the date of my post in March Jurik offered a customized indicator that was amazingly similar to my customized Ergodic. I was contacted by two separate programmers that had received a trial version of that indicator and contacted me of the amazing coincidence and similarity.

No, I am not basically accusing Jurik of stealing and selling my settings to a free indicator. I am saying that considering the coincidences someone in their organization should get a new position of buying chances in international and national lotteries.
 
Quote from ProfLogic:

One of the things Jurik does is to try to smooth common indicators, so why wouldn't they try to smooth every free indicator and offer to sell it?
The only one I'm aware of is their customized version of the ever popular RSI which they call RSX. Frankly I don't see Mark Jurik doing anything with Lane's stochastic or Bollinger bands anytime soon.
 
Quote from kut2k2:

The only one I'm aware of is their customized version of the ever popular RSI which they call RSX. Frankly I don't see Mark Jurik doing anything with Lane's stochastic or Bollinger bands anytime soon.

Many years ago he offered Smoothed Stochastics. He probably discovered it was a worthless indicator to begin with.
 
Quote from ElCubano:

My next door neighbor is worth about $12mil and he looks like he is on food stamps.....keep that in mind...peace
Daytraders look like they are in food stamps,
and they ARE on food stamps.

Keep that in mind.

Quote from ProfLogic:

Many years ago he offered Smoothed Stochastics. He probably discovered it was a worthless indicator to begin with.
Of course all indicators are worthless since they just CAN'T predict the future.
 
Quote from crgarcia:

Of course all indicators are worthless since they just CAN'T predict the future.

Hey butt munch, go pack a few pages to my real time call on the Euro FX. That trade only made about $10K per contract. That's more than you made all of last year.

Nice to see Fire caught you in a lie about your day trading career too.

Can you really afford to take a day off from the fry station?
 
Quote from crgarcia:

Technicians with holes in their shoes and frayed shirt collars

I live across the street from a farmer. He wears dirt covered overall jeans every day of the year (and has done so for the last 50 years). He doesn't drive a Lexus, but he does drive a $350,000 John Deere Combine for 6 weeks out of a given year. The rest of the time, he travels in his 1982 era chevy pick up. He sent all six of his kids to college and paid their freight (two went to Harvard).

He also donates more to local charities each year than many people make in a given year.

When you judge a book by its cover, you do so at your own peril.

- Spydertrader
 
Quote from Spydertrader:

I live across the street from a farmer. He wears dirt covered overall jeans every day of the year (and has done so for the last 50 years). He doesn't drive a Lexus, but he does drive a $350,000 John Deere Combine for 6 weeks out of a given year. The rest of the time, he travels in his 1982 era chevy pick up. He sent all six of his kids to college and paid their freight (two went to Harvard).

He also donates more to local charities each year than many people make in a given year.

When you judge a book by its cover, you do so at your own peril.

- Spydertrader

that explains why my fvcking tomato costs 2 dollars
 
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