The Surf Report

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Quote from marketsurfer:

what are you talking about, prado? day 1 with the new system was killer and documented in real time, no inconsistencies. sorry you missed it.

i shouldn't have to do this, but here is the blotter:

9gbo6d.jpg




seriously, man, get real.


surf:confused:

www.twitter.com/marketsurfer

You start out today saying today will be a short biased day. But cover your ass saying you might go long. If you are so confused why post at all?

As far as your little system.....judging by your past horrendous calls, it's safe to say it will fail miserably.

The good thing is you aren't really a trader and just play around with a simulator. Must be fun playing in Fantasy Tradeland.

Also....Who cares how your first trade did, past performance means absolutely nothing right ?
 
Quote from marketsurfer:

Bias is short today in DJIA. however, this does not mean the daytrade system will not go long if triggered. follow the real time system trades on twitter. see you back on elite after the close.
www.twitter.com/marketsurfer

surf


yes, any trader will tell you that you need to be prepared to change your bias depending on what the market reveals. i am not psychic, sorry.

surf
 
Quote from marketsurfer:

yes, any trader will tell you that you need to be prepared to change your bias depending on what the market reveals. i am not psychic, sorry.

surf

Funny hearing you say this....the guy who puts in 20% stops on losers.

Surf, if you are trading real money and did catch those 190 ticks, congrats. But most likely you aren't, so it's hard for me to respect some guy on a simulator just throwin out signals. Anyone can play simulator trader......
 
Quote from Spooz Top:

i can`t help but agree with Prado on this one.........i see the fence straddling from MS as nothing more than pure entertainment.


He is entertaining...will give him that. But from a trading standpoint he brings nothing to the table. Just a "guesser" with him and his "team's" calls.
 
Thanks everyone for signing up and following along with our experimental twitter real time calls with the new YM system. an absolute killer day to start the week. YM is currently breaking out of a slim jim on the downside, however, we are flat on the day.

2h6ahpz.jpg




enjoy!



surf

www.twitter.com/marketsurfer
 
May 26, 2009, 6:36 pm
Hints of a Tech Gold Mine in the Stimulus Package
By Steve Lohr
The headline technology winners in the government’s economic stimulus package have been electronic health records and smart grids, where computing is front and center. Many billions have been pledged to these obviously high-tech fields.

Yet a far larger flow of money into information technology may eventually come from state and local governments as part of a vast array of stimulus-package investment projects, according to Joaquin Gonzalez, director of research for CivicUS, which advises state and local governments.

Mr. Gonzalez estimates that between $250 billion and $300 billion of the stimulus funding is targeted for state and local government projects intended to modernize and improve the efficiency of public services. This is not money, he says, to plug budget gaps, but for investments designed to make local government work smarter. In doing so, Mr. Gonzalez calculates, as much as one-third of that total will be spent on information technology projects, often involving the Web, to streamline and improve the delivery of public services and information to citizens.

The stimulus legislation, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, also calls for detailed reporting and tracking of the federal funds that will be handed out. Many companies, large and small, are rushing to offer project-monitoring software for state and local governments. In a research note this week, CivicUS surveyed the vendors’ scramble. The offerings come from the biggest companies, like Microsoft’s Stimulus360 and I.B.M.’s Economic Recovery Fund Tracking, and from smaller suppliers, like Acumen’s Stimulus Tracking and Recipient Transparency, or START.

These software “dashboards” for tracking projects are strategic products, especially for the big companies. The state and local government market for information technology is scattered and difficult to crack. By selling the dashboard software, the big companies are trying to get a foot in the door, Mr. Gonzalez said, and potentially a head start in grabbing a share of the expected surge in stimulus-funded technology spending.

In its report, CivicUS surveys other suppliers including MicroStrategy, CGI, Visible Strategies and Onvia. And state and local governments, the research firm says, should look to software to help them do three things: support reporting to the federal government, share information with citizens on the progress and benefits of projects, and manage the projects themselves.

The demand for project tracking technology, fueled by the stimulus package, extends beyond the companies cited in the CivicUS research note. A startup in San Francisco, Innotas, which offers Web-based technology-project software, has seen the effect. “The biggest growth area for us is state and local government,” observed Keith Carlson, chief executive of Innota
 
a crazy day in the YM. platform lock up issues and an erratic morning cut trading short but still managed to eek out a positive day despite the problems. Should have been another killer with the massive downwave strike but no complaints here. looking closely at MSTR at a LONG.
best, surf
 
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