This is absolutely useless against old diesel cars. I don't need no stinkin' computers or sparkplugs.
Many of them to prevent starting off in a cloud of smoke due to low engine RPM and cold starting tempratures do have an engine control module. You might still move, but with limited injector control. It could be a slow speed chase.
Doesn't capital gains tax (or whatever they might call it where you are) and brokerage fees wipe out most of the benefit to doing this ?
Short answer.. No. Long answer.. forget day trading. forget small gains. Often the fees are per transaction. Don't mess with ones and two's. Move blocks for the same fee. Move when the gains are not small. Fees are a tiny portion. I sold 1541 shares at $26 per share. The total fees were less than $5. I bought at 19.. Sold at 26 and paid less than $5 for the whole lot in fees. Fees were not a problem. Choose your broker carefully. Some charge a lot. Kicking 10 shares of VMWare on a $1 market swings day trading is a way to get eaten up in fees. A less than $5 fee to receive a $40,061 check instead of a 40,066 check is not a problem. Most times a fee is per transaction, not per share. Make transactions count and the fees are negligible.
If I want the exact 1541 shares back, I could buy Intel tomorrow for 25.50 or less for a total cost of 39,295 and pocket the $760.50 bucks. Not a bad profit for a $5 fee X 2. I'll see what happens. If Intel dips to 25.0, I'll have hit my buy order. If it doesn't, I'll look for something else. The market is entering the time to buy.
a vacuum also conducts electricity.Maybe not as well.could they use a vacuum?
Only when there is a source of free electrons nearby. A CRT works by having an electron gun in the back. When it is dead, the electron flow stops. Add a small amount of gas and excite it and you have a low pressure plasma much like in a neon tube or plasma sphere. A vacuum is used as an insulator. Here is an example..
Sure, it's hard to spot when you turn it off maybe... does that make up for the fact that it looks like it glows like a goddamn spotlight when it's turned on, or am I missing something?
The demo unit is clear. The real unit has opaque paint.
Furthermore, the noise this thing produces will stand out like a sore thumb for a HARM (High speed Anti Radiation Missle) missle.
There is no reason it needs to be any noisier than a F40 florescent tube. Last time I checked, neon signs and florescent lights didn't attract HARM missiles. These tubes can be sensitive to HF and VHF while excited by DC or low frequency square wave AC. HARM missles due to the limited size of the RF direction finding is mostly limited to Microwave and UHF. HARM missiles mostly target microwave facilities, satellite uplink sites and radar. They are pretty blind to AM radio and lower frequency HF due to antenna size limitations.
I work in an electronics lab, and occasionally we use a sputtering system - which generates a ball of plasma to transfer ions from one surface to another. Anyway, point being, when we do this, the guys next door, who do a lot of RF measurements, go absolutely nuts
Have you completed RF leakage testing? Is the RF screen in place in the quartz windows? Is the cable secure between the RF gen and the matching network? Is the RF gasket in place between the match and the chamber. There is no reason to have excessive RF leakage. If you are causing interference, you may be in violation of OSHA and FCC standards. It is time to check into the condition of your plasma dep tool. The only unshielded one I have ever used is for coating small samples for scanning electron microscope work. They are low power and unshielded like a compact florescent lamp using a simple quartz glass tube for a chamber (bell jar).
Or perhaps the price will never get down to 25 and you'd have to buy back at 35 if you wanted to trade that stock again.
You don't always catch the up elevator. Never climb the stairs to catch up to the elevator. Let it go and look for the other elevator that just came down. The impatient that just has to be on the high stock are the ones who get burnt. Look at the last 5 days of VMWare, and Google. They were high and tumbled. Now look and compare them to Intel and Microsoft.
Drop your money in a few good index funds and sit around 20-40 years while you wait for retirement. Anything else is borderline gambling.
I don't bother day trading. Look at the stock I mentioned. It hasn't been at $19 for quite a while. Now look at the same stock over the last 10 years. Buy and hold is not the answer either. When the stock market bubbled 3 years ago, was the time to sell, sell, sell. After the bubble burst was the time to buy, buy, buy. Buy and hold over the last 10 years was not a good plan. Buy low whenever that is and sell high whenever that is would have more than doubled the gains of buy and hold in the last 10 years. I started to buy and hold to build my portfolio. I managed to buy a few shares high just to ride it down. Ouch. Now I watch what the market is doing much closer. When it is down, I buy. When it is high, I sell. I regularly invest into the pot to build. Having the market swings help build is nice. I am going to watch the downturn even out and start to recover, then while low, I am going to buy again.
Or sell high and watch the price go even higher. The basic problem is that the future stock price can't be predicted, and can sometimes defy your expectations for months or years.
A common mistake is crying because you didn't get to sell right at the peak and calling it a loss. It's not a loss. The basic problem is entirely true. Forget selling at the peak. Those holding out for the peak knowing full well the stock is in super high bubble status are the ones left holding the bag when the bubble bursts. Set a price when the stock is rising. How far it will rise is a crapshoot. Any stock that is considered expensive needs sold. Let me repeat.. Any stock considered expensive needs sold. Don't wait for the peak. Don't wait for free-fall. Expensive stocks fall and fall quickly when there are lots of stockholders ready to pull the trigger and not nearly enough people lined up to catch bargains on the way down. These stocks move down quickly from way expensive to reasonable in a short amount of time.
I for one don't buy high just to miss the start of the sell-off and wind up taking "what I can get" at a loss.
Again, forget trying to sell at the peak calling a further rise a loss. Sell high an be happy. I sold some Intel at 26 and some more at 27. Today the stock traded all day at near 25. I missed the peak at about 27.50. Big deal. I bought at 19 and sold at 26 and 27. I count that a gain. I'm not crying that I ddin't sell at 27.5. I'm sitting with a buy order at 25 to re-buy the shares I sold at 27. See a trend here? Sell high and buy low. Knowing when stock is high and when it is low isn't rocket science. Knowing what the peak will be is a crap-shoot. Leave that alone.
The fact that you can say "buy low and sell high" without irony disqualifies you as an expert at making money. It's just a cliche, and this is the first time I've every heard it used non-humorously.
Are you serious? The only way to make money in the stock market is to buy low and sell at a profit. Buying high and selling low is stupid. It doesn't take an expert to understand that. I'm not an expert, but I am makeing money. Look at some popular tech stocks over the last 3 months. Take Microsoft, Intel, VMWare, AMD, and Google. See any trends? How about a period of slow growth followed by a sudden downturn. Look for the downturns. Think sale prices. Look for growth. Think ripe apples. Wait too long and they are on the ground rotting. Look for a downturn and find the low. Look for it to wiggle and maybe start recovery. Put in a buy order about 3-5% below the today price. Wait.. If you get some smile. Watch it rise. Put in some sell orders and wait. Keep the sell orders fresh.
In a nutshell, buy low.. buy low.. buy low. Sell high. Don't expect to always get the rock bottom price and sell at the peak. I didn't say buy at the rock bottom and sell at the tippy top. It's simply buy low and sell high. Most times you will miss the peak. but sell high.
If you looked at AMD, it is worth looking at how well a company is doing. AMD is low.. for a reason. If the company gets a shot back at Intel, then grab some low stock. don't buy tainted stock that may spoil and die.
VMWare is good to look at. It was high priced. It made a big drop. Google is a big company with lots of growth and is expanding into Microsoft territory. The value in the company is why the stock is high. Most of the stock growth is done, much like Microsoft and General Electric. Google stock may even have overgrown it's stock into a bubble. Watch for the burst like VMWare.
Intel grew and did well with the new chips. Now is not the time to buy. Wait for the selloff. I just sold at 26 and again at 27. Dont' forget to sell high. I didn't sell at the peak of about 27.50, but I did sell high after I bought low at 19. Look for the stock dip. Look for a company to do well, and sell as the stock rises. Don't fret you are unlikely to sell at the tippy top. Just sell high.
Yes, I was not joking when I said buy low and sell high
I just wonder why do you tell your 'super method' to the masses. Won't it break your scheme?
Buy low sell high is already well known. If the masses use it, will it break it? Short answer, no. To get into the market, you need to by shares. Someone somewhere will have shares sitting there with a sell order waiting for someone to buy it. Someone else is ready to retire and pull out of the market and take retirement. They will sell and someone with a buy order will pick up the shares.
If everyone bought into the scheme, all that would happen is the sharp peaks and drops would simply die and the market would be a pretty boring place. In the long term as people look for growth, the market would have a steady slow grow. The impatient and worriers driving emotional type A personalities are the ones making the market wiggle and feeding my buy and sell points.
The more they drive the market, the sooner I buy, then sell, then rebuy at lower price. The impatient and worriers push prices while I am there with the trap set waiting for them to buy high and sell low. They rarely let me down.
While I personally would be selling my GOOG shares if I were to own any, it isn't an easy practice to know how far a group of overly optimistic speculators can raise the price of a company's stock. Sell too soon and you've given up potentially large profits, hold too long and potentially wind up with a loss.
Absolutely true. The point many miss is this is a market. When the price is high and a ton of sellers show up all at once, not everyone is going to sell for top dollar. Stop chasing top dollar. Pick a reasonable price and set a sell order and wait. Few get it. Trying to get top dollar right after the peak to lock in profits is very hard. The begining of the fall brings in lots of stock to market to sell sell sell sell sell. Look at the last 3 months of Intel, Microsoft, VMWare, Google, etc. There is a period of steady climb with little dips and peaks and then a sudden market downturn. Getting a good price in the downturn is difficult as you try to lock a price and chase it down. I watch a market climb. I set a sell order above my purchase price (avoid selling at a loss) and wait for the rising stock to reach it. When the market is showing signs of being in high territory, look for oppertunities to sell high. Friday's drop didn't bother me as I had sell orders in on Intel at $26, $27, and $28. I sold some at $26 and $27. I have buy orders in at $25 and $24. I'll buy the same shares back and pocket the profit when it gets there.
Unlike a lottery ticket, You can always hold it and sell it later unless it goes bust. So far I have had no stock go bust unlike lottery tickets. Too bad you can't buy and hold a lottery ticket until it wins.
Well, the general knowledge really is "it is at the right price." If everyone thought it cost too much, then they would all be selling or shorting it.
The general knowledge that it is at the right price is long past. The general knowledge is it has passed the right price, but it's still climbing so I better hold and ride it up, and "I want the action too so deal me in regardless of the cost". When it starts back down and gets traction, those who think the price is too high will quickly sell off to lock in the profit. When enough do it, the stock rushes down to the "right price". Take a look at VMWare for example. People rode it up. It peaked and there was a sudden sell to take the money. There were not enough buyers lined up to buy it at the right price to stop the free fall to the right price. Google is poised to do the same because it is also considered overpriced.
I mean seriously, how the heck can you tell if a company is "low" or "high" within a 3 week period?
Ask aroung and look at the comments... Has anyone lately said Google is low? The general take is Google is high. The knowledge is "It is high". Use that to your advantage. It is high simply means there are tons of people who will bail when the bubble bursts. If you don't want to hold the bag when the massive sell-off starts, it is a good stock to not be holding.
If it is climbing, put in a sell order and smile when it hits it and sells. Put in some buy orders at $450, $ 400, $350, and $300. Catch some bargans when the investors bail like lemmings. Look at VMware over the last 3 months for a prime example. It was high last week. It went over $110 per share. When it started falling, lots of people tried to sell to take the money. The late ones are selling at below $90. Put in some buy orders at $80 and if you have some VMWare, put in some sell orders at $100 and see what happens. If you missed this sell-off, don't panic sell. Wait the next cycle. Buy at $80 and sell at $100.
When this crashes it will be loud and hard. Hopefully you guys working at Google are going to do the smart thing and save as much money as you can while you can.
This happens when people fail to sell high and hold and buy instead. When a stock gets expensive, I sell. Take a look at the market last week. A couple stocks I don't own are Google and VMWare. VMWare started too expensive. Last week it peaked over $110 a share. This morning, it is at $87. Google is also too expensive to hold. Many investors are holding it, ready to bail when it starts dropping. The last ones off will be left holding the bag.
I work the market the other way. I put in buy orders when the market is on the way down. When it gets low enough, I pick up some stock. When it's on the way up, I put in sell orders and smile when my price points are hit. 3 weeks ago I sold a bunch of stock. Last week, I sold some more. This week the market is down almost 8%. When it makes it down another couple percent, I'll buy back the same stock I sold at the higher price, but keep 10% of the money... Why ride the stock down when you can sell, and later buy it back at a lower price?
Don't forget.. Buy low and sell high.
I sold some Intel at $26 and some more at $27. It didn't reach $28. If it hits 24, I'll be buying a bunch back.
Dont get to greedy with the stock options, just before WorldCom went on its downward spiral some people were bragging about their options and what they were worth, some had been with the company for 10+ years, in the end they lost almost everything
People forget how to make money in stock. Buy low and sell high. They tend to hold when it's high thinking they are going to be richer.. I keep sell orders in and smile when they hit my prices. I sold a bunch 3 weeks ago and sold some more last week when it peaked. If the price dips enough, I'll buy back some at lower prices. Often I can increase my holding by 20% in a month this way, or pocket 20% of my holdings and wind up rebuying the same amount of my original shares. I love it when the market moves up and down. That is how to make money.
Please add to your host files: 127.0.0.1 www.nice8.org 127.0.0.1 www.we168.org
Be sure to put them in the upstream router. Autorun may compromise the system.. DUH it's a trojan. Since the affected drives are portable drives, it is very important to disable autorun as well as block the sites upstream of the compromised machine.
in food production http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3846/is_200307/ai_n9282236 http://www.pbase.com/four12/image/46413392 The toiling continues. To handle the growth, TCCA opened a new manufacturing plant two years ago in Boardman, east of Portland along the Columbia River, and completed an automatic storage and retrieval system (ASRS) at the Tillamook creamery. Opened in 2000, the ASRS is a 35-million-pound capacity cold storage warehouse with seven refrigerated shipping bays, and a new electrical distribution and refrigeration system.
Sorry I couldn't find an online photo of the inside of the automated refrigerated warehouse. It isn't open to visitors.
It took some looking. The article has a link to the extortion letter. The letter has the URL for the settlement support center. The URL in the PDF is not clickable.
I'm simply delighted how law enforcement is called bad guys in this analogy =^.^=
There is more than just law enforcement that is interested in the contents. BSA, RIAA and MPAA are the ones I was not mentioning by name. The US post office can open your mail.. But there is a huge red tape procedure to follow. X-ray is one thing to look for explosives. Opening every letter to see if it has the lyrics of a popular song by the RIAA is not permitted by the post office. Inspecting every letter by the DHS for bomb plans is also not permitted, except electronic mail. The post office may know you mailed a CD to your buddy. The package is not inspected to see if it contains the latest teen pop rap.
I did a Google search for the settlement support center. It must not be very popular. I could not find a link to the site.
I had to search for RIAA demand letter to find the info. Even then, I found just refrences to the letter, but not a copy of the letter with information to the settlement support center.
No. Each wire entering into the ECM is another vector, thus inputs into the ECM would have to be protected.
Coaxial feed thru capacitors through a RF gasketed cover followed by a small RF choke and ferrite bead should do the trick.
This is absolutely useless against old diesel cars. I don't need no stinkin' computers or sparkplugs.
Many of them to prevent starting off in a cloud of smoke due to low engine RPM and cold starting tempratures do have an engine control module. You might still move, but with limited injector control. It could be a slow speed chase.
Doesn't capital gains tax (or whatever they might call it where you are) and brokerage fees wipe out most of the benefit to doing this ?
Short answer.. No. Long answer.. forget day trading. forget small gains. Often the fees are per transaction. Don't mess with ones and two's. Move blocks for the same fee. Move when the gains are not small. Fees are a tiny portion. I sold 1541 shares at $26 per share. The total fees were less than $5. I bought at 19.. Sold at 26 and paid less than $5 for the whole lot in fees. Fees were not a problem. Choose your broker carefully. Some charge a lot. Kicking 10 shares of VMWare on a $1 market swings day trading is a way to get eaten up in fees. A less than $5 fee to receive a $40,061 check instead of a 40,066 check is not a problem. Most times a fee is per transaction, not per share. Make transactions count and the fees are negligible.
If I want the exact 1541 shares back, I could buy Intel tomorrow for 25.50 or less for a total cost of 39,295 and pocket the $760.50 bucks. Not a bad profit for a $5 fee X 2. I'll see what happens. If Intel dips to 25.0, I'll have hit my buy order. If it doesn't, I'll look for something else. The market is entering the time to buy.
a vacuum also conducts electricity .Maybe not as well.could they use a vacuum?
Only when there is a source of free electrons nearby. A CRT works by having an electron gun in the back. When it is dead, the electron flow stops. Add a small amount of gas and excite it and you have a low pressure plasma much like in a neon tube or plasma sphere. A vacuum is used as an insulator. Here is an example..
http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/electric_power/illustrated_glossary/substation_equipment/vacuum_circuit_breakers.html
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=1601629
http://www.power-technology.com/contractors/switchgear/huayi/huayi5.html
no gas. no plasma. little arc from vaporised metal.
Sure, it's hard to spot when you turn it off maybe... does that make up for the fact that it looks like it glows like a goddamn spotlight when it's turned on, or am I missing something?
The demo unit is clear. The real unit has opaque paint.
Furthermore, the noise this thing produces will stand out like a sore thumb for a HARM (High speed Anti Radiation Missle) missle.
There is no reason it needs to be any noisier than a F40 florescent tube. Last time I checked, neon signs and florescent lights didn't attract HARM missiles. These tubes can be sensitive to HF and VHF while excited by DC or low frequency square wave AC. HARM missles due to the limited size of the RF direction finding is mostly limited to Microwave and UHF. HARM missiles mostly target microwave facilities, satellite uplink sites and radar. They are pretty blind to AM radio and lower frequency HF due to antenna size limitations.
I work in an electronics lab, and occasionally we use a sputtering system - which generates a ball of plasma to transfer ions from one surface to another. Anyway, point being, when we do this, the guys next door, who do a lot of RF measurements, go absolutely nuts
Have you completed RF leakage testing? Is the RF screen in place in the quartz windows? Is the cable secure between the RF gen and the matching network? Is the RF gasket in place between the match and the chamber. There is no reason to have excessive RF leakage. If you are causing interference, you may be in violation of OSHA and FCC standards. It is time to check into the condition of your plasma dep tool. The only unshielded one I have ever used is for coating small samples for scanning electron microscope work. They are low power and unshielded like a compact florescent lamp using a simple quartz glass tube for a chamber (bell jar).
Are you running in the KW range or mW range?
Or perhaps the price will never get down to 25 and you'd have to buy back at 35 if you wanted to trade that stock again.
You don't always catch the up elevator. Never climb the stairs to catch up to the elevator. Let it go and look for the other elevator that just came down. The impatient that just has to be on the high stock are the ones who get burnt. Look at the last 5 days of VMWare, and Google. They were high and tumbled. Now look and compare them to Intel and Microsoft.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=INTC&t=5d&l=on&z=m&q=l&c=goog,vmw,msft
It's the high priced stocks that lost the most.
Drop your money in a few good index funds and sit around 20-40 years while you wait for retirement. Anything else is borderline gambling.
I don't bother day trading. Look at the stock I mentioned. It hasn't been at $19 for quite a while. Now look at the same stock over the last 10 years. Buy and hold is not the answer either. When the stock market bubbled 3 years ago, was the time to sell, sell, sell. After the bubble burst was the time to buy, buy, buy. Buy and hold over the last 10 years was not a good plan. Buy low whenever that is and sell high whenever that is would have more than doubled the gains of buy and hold in the last 10 years. I started to buy and hold to build my portfolio. I managed to buy a few shares high just to ride it down. Ouch. Now I watch what the market is doing much closer. When it is down, I buy. When it is high, I sell. I regularly invest into the pot to build. Having the market swings help build is nice. I am going to watch the downturn even out and start to recover, then while low, I am going to buy again.
For 10 cents on the dollar, you can get a sexy trendy and stylish computer that will run the Gimp.
Or sell high and watch the price go even higher. The basic problem is that the future stock price can't be predicted, and can sometimes defy your expectations for months or years.
A common mistake is crying because you didn't get to sell right at the peak and calling it a loss. It's not a loss. The basic problem is entirely true. Forget selling at the peak. Those holding out for the peak knowing full well the stock is in super high bubble status are the ones left holding the bag when the bubble bursts. Set a price when the stock is rising. How far it will rise is a crapshoot. Any stock that is considered expensive needs sold. Let me repeat.. Any stock considered expensive needs sold. Don't wait for the peak. Don't wait for free-fall. Expensive stocks fall and fall quickly when there are lots of stockholders ready to pull the trigger and not nearly enough people lined up to catch bargains on the way down. These stocks move down quickly from way expensive to reasonable in a short amount of time.
I for one don't buy high just to miss the start of the sell-off and wind up taking "what I can get" at a loss.
Again, forget trying to sell at the peak calling a further rise a loss. Sell high an be happy. I sold some Intel at 26 and some more at 27. Today the stock traded all day at near 25. I missed the peak at about 27.50. Big deal. I bought at 19 and sold at 26 and 27. I count that a gain. I'm not crying that I ddin't sell at 27.5. I'm sitting with a buy order at 25 to re-buy the shares I sold at 27. See a trend here? Sell high and buy low. Knowing when stock is high and when it is low isn't rocket science. Knowing what the peak will be is a crap-shoot. Leave that alone.
The fact that you can say "buy low and sell high" without irony disqualifies you as an expert at making money. It's just a cliche, and this is the first time I've every heard it used non-humorously.
Are you serious? The only way to make money in the stock market is to buy low and sell at a profit. Buying high and selling low is stupid. It doesn't take an expert to understand that. I'm not an expert, but I am makeing money. Look at some popular tech stocks over the last 3 months. Take Microsoft, Intel, VMWare, AMD, and Google. See any trends? How about a period of slow growth followed by a sudden downturn. Look for the downturns. Think sale prices. Look for growth. Think ripe apples. Wait too long and they are on the ground rotting. Look for a downturn and find the low. Look for it to wiggle and maybe start recovery. Put in a buy order about 3-5% below the today price. Wait.. If you get some smile. Watch it rise. Put in some sell orders and wait. Keep the sell orders fresh.
In a nutshell, buy low.. buy low.. buy low. Sell high. Don't expect to always get the rock bottom price and sell at the peak. I didn't say buy at the rock bottom and sell at the tippy top. It's simply buy low and sell high. Most times you will miss the peak. but sell high.
If you looked at AMD, it is worth looking at how well a company is doing. AMD is low.. for a reason. If the company gets a shot back at Intel, then grab some low stock. don't buy tainted stock that may spoil and die.
VMWare is good to look at. It was high priced. It made a big drop. Google is a big company with lots of growth and is expanding into Microsoft territory. The value in the company is why the stock is high. Most of the stock growth is done, much like Microsoft and General Electric. Google stock may even have overgrown it's stock into a bubble. Watch for the burst like VMWare.
Intel grew and did well with the new chips. Now is not the time to buy. Wait for the selloff. I just sold at 26 and again at 27. Dont' forget to sell high. I didn't sell at the peak of about 27.50, but I did sell high after I bought low at 19. Look for the stock dip. Look for a company to do well, and sell as the stock rises. Don't fret you are unlikely to sell at the tippy top. Just sell high.
Yes, I was not joking when I said buy low and sell high
I just wonder why do you tell your 'super method' to the masses. Won't it break your scheme?
Buy low sell high is already well known. If the masses use it, will it break it? Short answer, no.
To get into the market, you need to by shares. Someone somewhere will have shares sitting there with a sell order waiting for someone to buy it. Someone else is ready to retire and pull out of the market and take retirement. They will sell and someone with a buy order will pick up the shares.
If everyone bought into the scheme, all that would happen is the sharp peaks and drops would simply die and the market would be a pretty boring place. In the long term as people look for growth, the market would have a steady slow grow. The impatient and worriers driving emotional type A personalities are the ones making the market wiggle and feeding my buy and sell points.
The more they drive the market, the sooner I buy, then sell, then rebuy at lower price.
The impatient and worriers push prices while I am there with the trap set waiting for them to buy high and sell low. They rarely let me down.
While I personally would be selling my GOOG shares if I were to own any, it isn't an easy practice to know how far a group of overly optimistic speculators can raise the price of a company's stock. Sell too soon and you've given up potentially large profits, hold too long and potentially wind up with a loss.
Absolutely true. The point many miss is this is a market. When the price is high and a ton of sellers show up all at once, not everyone is going to sell for top dollar. Stop chasing top dollar. Pick a reasonable price and set a sell order and wait. Few get it. Trying to get top dollar right after the peak to lock in profits is very hard. The begining of the fall brings in lots of stock to market to sell sell sell sell sell. Look at the last 3 months of Intel, Microsoft, VMWare, Google, etc. There is a period of steady climb with little dips and peaks and then a sudden market downturn. Getting a good price in the downturn is difficult as you try to lock a price and chase it down. I watch a market climb. I set a sell order above my purchase price (avoid selling at a loss) and wait for the rising stock to reach it. When the market is showing signs of being in high territory, look for oppertunities to sell high. Friday's drop didn't bother me as I had sell orders in on Intel at $26, $27, and $28. I sold some at $26 and $27. I have buy orders in at $25 and $24. I'll buy the same shares back and pocket the profit when it gets there.
Unlike a lottery ticket, You can always hold it and sell it later unless it goes bust. So far I have had no stock go bust unlike lottery tickets. Too bad you can't buy and hold a lottery ticket until it wins.
Well, the general knowledge really is "it is at the right price." If everyone thought it cost too much, then they would all be selling or shorting it.
The general knowledge that it is at the right price is long past. The general knowledge is it has passed the right price, but it's still climbing so I better hold and ride it up, and "I want the action too so deal me in regardless of the cost". When it starts back down and gets traction, those who think the price is too high will quickly sell off to lock in the profit. When enough do it, the stock rushes down to the "right price". Take a look at VMWare for example. People rode it up. It peaked and there was a sudden sell to take the money. There were not enough buyers lined up to buy it at the right price to stop the free fall to the right price. Google is poised to do the same because it is also considered overpriced.
I mean seriously, how the heck can you tell if a company is "low" or "high" within a 3 week period?
Ask aroung and look at the comments... Has anyone lately said Google is low? The general take is Google is high. The knowledge is "It is high". Use that to your advantage. It is high simply means there are tons of people who will bail when the bubble bursts. If you don't want to hold the bag when the massive sell-off starts, it is a good stock to not be holding.
If it is climbing, put in a sell order and smile when it hits it and sells. Put in some buy orders at $450, $ 400, $350, and $300. Catch some bargans when the investors bail like lemmings. Look at VMware over the last 3 months for a prime example. It was high last week. It went over $110 per share. When it started falling, lots of people tried to sell to take the money. The late ones are selling at below $90. Put in some buy orders at $80 and if you have some VMWare, put in some sell orders at $100 and see what happens. If you missed this sell-off, don't panic sell. Wait the next cycle. Buy at $80 and sell at $100.
When this crashes it will be loud and hard. Hopefully you guys working at Google are going to do the smart thing and save as much money as you can while you can.
This happens when people fail to sell high and hold and buy instead. When a stock gets expensive, I sell. Take a look at the market last week. A couple stocks I don't own are Google and VMWare. VMWare started too expensive. Last week it peaked over $110 a share. This morning, it is at $87. Google is also too expensive to hold. Many investors are holding it, ready to bail when it starts dropping. The last ones off will be left holding the bag.
I work the market the other way. I put in buy orders when the market is on the way down. When it gets low enough, I pick up some stock. When it's on the way up, I put in sell orders and smile when my price points are hit. 3 weeks ago I sold a bunch of stock. Last week, I sold some more. This week the market is down almost 8%. When it makes it down another couple percent, I'll buy back the same stock I sold at the higher price, but keep 10% of the money... Why ride the stock down when you can sell, and later buy it back at a lower price?
Don't forget.. Buy low and sell high.
I sold some Intel at $26 and some more at $27. It didn't reach $28. If it hits 24, I'll be buying a bunch back.
Dont get to greedy with the stock options, just before WorldCom went on its downward spiral some people were bragging about their options and what they were worth, some had been with the company for 10+ years, in the end they lost almost everything
People forget how to make money in stock. Buy low and sell high. They tend to hold when it's high thinking they are going to be richer.. I keep sell orders in and smile when they hit my prices. I sold a bunch 3 weeks ago and sold some more last week when it peaked. If the price dips enough, I'll buy back some at lower prices. Often I can increase my holding by 20% in a month this way, or pocket 20% of my holdings and wind up rebuying the same amount of my original shares. I love it when the market moves up and down. That is how to make money.
Don't forget.. Sell high!
Please add to your host files:
127.0.0.1 www.nice8.org
127.0.0.1 www.we168.org
Be sure to put them in the upstream router. Autorun may compromise the system.. DUH it's a trojan. Since the affected drives are portable drives, it is very important to disable autorun as well as block the sites upstream of the compromised machine.
Why is this news? these kinds of warehouses have been around for years.
Yes.. In semiconductor manufacturing
http://www.asyst.com/products/fsol/amhs/amhs.asp
in food production
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3846/is_200307/ai_n9282236
http://www.pbase.com/four12/image/46413392
The toiling continues. To handle the growth, TCCA opened a new manufacturing plant two years ago in Boardman, east of Portland along the Columbia River, and completed an automatic storage and retrieval system (ASRS) at the Tillamook creamery. Opened in 2000, the ASRS is a 35-million-pound capacity cold storage warehouse with seven refrigerated shipping bays, and a new electrical distribution and refrigeration system.
Sorry I couldn't find an online photo of the inside of the automated refrigerated warehouse. It isn't open to visitors.
Yeah, because I ALWAYS use encrypted torrents to do my banking.
Nice straw man. Too bad you had to go and knock him down.
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I get other things in plain brown wrappers... What they are is NOYB even if it isn't illegal.
I bet your trunk is filled with cocaine and corpses
I'll take your bet. You lost.
I ran out of ice and the stench was killing me. I ditched the corpses shortly after Halloween.
the worst that can happen is that it's still broken when you're done with it.
Not always. Do a Google search of videos for counterfit nokia explosion. They test the failure of genuine Nokia batteries and 2 cheap knock-offs.
http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=nokia+battery+explosion&sitesearch=
The worst that can happen is you can be injured.
It took some looking. The article has a link to the extortion letter. The letter has the URL for the settlement support center. The URL in the PDF is not clickable.
The page with the link to the letter is here; http://consumerist.com/consumer/riaa/the-riaa-p2plawsuit-letter-sent-to-college-students-241054.php
The Settlement demand letter is here; http://consumerist.com/assets/resources/2007/03/riaaletter.pdf
https://www.p2plawsuits.com/ Settlement support center link is here.
I'm simply delighted how law enforcement is called bad guys in this analogy =^.^=
There is more than just law enforcement that is interested in the contents. BSA, RIAA and MPAA are the ones I was not mentioning by name. The US post office can open your mail.. But there is a huge red tape procedure to follow. X-ray is one thing to look for explosives. Opening every letter to see if it has the lyrics of a popular song by the RIAA is not permitted by the post office. Inspecting every letter by the DHS for bomb plans is also not permitted, except electronic mail. The post office may know you mailed a CD to your buddy. The package is not inspected to see if it contains the latest teen pop rap.
Online the privacy standards are now seen as a problem to internet users as attacks on users are clogging up the court system an fleecing many to pay the extortion money to the settlement support center. If there was privacy, this would not be a problem.
http://www.p2pnet.net/story/6337
http://recordingindustryvspeople.blogspot.com/2005/09/suits-against-settlement-support.html
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20051004-5382.html
I did a Google search for the settlement support center. It must not be very popular. I could not find a link to the site.
I had to search for RIAA demand letter to find the info. Even then, I found just refrences to the letter, but not a copy of the letter with information to the settlement support center.
http://recordingindustryvspeople.blogspot.com/2007/04/uc-santa-cruz-passes-along-riaa.html