The incommodity involved in visiting a brick and mortar casino is more than enough to give it up as a bad job altogether. At the end of the day, all those long drives, the incommodity, and tasks at hand won’t seem to excuse the hassle merely for this possibility of trying your luck at casino, this said in case you are the sort of guy who is rather excited by card playing then opting for online betting halls would be the most obvious way to go. Top venue gambling strategy games here.
For this, you won’t need to leave the house to experiment with online gambling for the reason that you can do all this from where you are if you possess a pc plus a broadband connection to the Internet. On the other hand, don’t hold your breath too soon because there’s a fair number of instructions which you will positively want to be aware of in regards to online gambling, the more so should you happen to be a rookie. So, calm your tizzy and examine what comes next. Here’s my condensed framework which unravels how to decide on a reputable, secure online gambling Web page. The first thing which a truly intelligent virtual wagerer is sure to look out for is an online gambling website of the type which offers the best odds. Here’s some more pieces of advice in regards to pinpointing your virtual casino gaming website.
You definitely must be sure to ensure the virtual casino gaming website has an authentic license, for instance by looking for the ministerial operating authorization as proffered on the casino webpage. If you’re unable to trace any ministerial operating authorization on that chosen virtual casino gaming website, don’t attempt any betting rooms at that place. Following, we would advise you watchfully consider the various bonuses that the virtual casino gaming website has to offer you. Moreover, another bit of advice would be to play for a start in trivial amounts in place of draining large amounts of money right from the start. Check out the health of this virtual casino gaming setup before triggering some grave menace– the more so in terms of money! And here’s another important cue in regards to online betting. It must be this- to never forget that gambling in online casinos should chiefly be about amusing yourself and not so much about making money. Betting in an online casino is definitely no chore, instead it’s a pastime which can help you feel cheerful and life as a whole gratifying.
So simply having minded the cues explained above, you can go and acquiesce to the pull of virtual casino gaming.
Writer/director John Sayles (Passion Fish, Lone Star, The
Brother from Another Planet) is very particular about the
beginning of his screenplays.
Whether the movies are dark and urban or bright and rural, he
likes to let the audience know what kind of world they’re
visiting, settling them comfortably into the place where they’ll
be spending the next couple of hours.
That doesn’t just entail a nice description of the landscape.
Sayles also pays attention to tone and character.
If it’s a comedy or tongue-in-cheek piece like Alligator, he’ll
include some humor to clue the audience in. That way they’re “in
on the joke” and they’ll know not to take the story too
seriously.
If he’s introducing characters, he creates people who’ll
credibly exist in that kind of world: gritty cops, square-jawed
heroes or desert sheriffs.
He’s not just setting the scene; he’s making the world seem
real, giving it a logic that provides believability. Then he
gets on with telling the story.
If your screenplay’s going to a reader, don’t be shy to pop some
clues in the first ten pages about the style, setting and
characters.
It will help that reader to understand what kind of movie you’ve
written, and the audience you’re aiming for.
It will help you to establish a rhythm as you’re writing, and
get to know your world.
While our own lives are full of coincidences, surprises and
inconsistencies, audiences like their movies to be less uneven.
So look at your first ten pages and set up some events and
locations that you can progress from in a logical fashion.
An example: a hardboiled mystery. We start off in a detective’s
office - his personal ‘world’ - meet the hero and a client who
leads him to another location. He finds a clue and that leads
him somewhere else.
With some noir-ish action along the way, you have set the tone
of the movie and the audience knows what to expect.
Then, you can throw them some curveballs…
Fundamental analysis.
Fundamentals analysis says the best way to predict the future trends of a stock is to understand the financial figures of the underlying company. The fundamental analyst would calculate a theoretical value of the company using cash flow analysis, recent dividends and earnings, future dividends and earnings projections plus a host of other economic numbers. If the current stock price is lower than the calculated value, a trader who uses fundamental analysis would buy this stock.
This writer has the opinion that fundamental analysis is difficult to master for it to be useful as a forecasting tool. Understanding and analyzing balance sheets and profit and loss accounts is not enough. You will need to analyze the micro and macroeconomic picture as well. Often you will need to be have the same knowledge equivalent to senior-management of a company you want to analyze - minus the leadership and management skills.
Take the example of Google’s free 2 GB e-mail service. How much does it cost them? Probably about $2 yearly for each customer. Assuming 100 million internet users sign up, the advertising revenues from this segment alone would provide a tidy profit. It is the analyst job to provide a good educated-guess of this number. More importantly, this new signings will provide a customer base to challenge Yahoo and Microsoft. With Google’s dominance in the search engine market, the data mining of such a huge pool of internet users will provide them with an edge in deciding future strategies over its two nearest rivals. Try translating this to what can Google earn in the next two quarters.
One of the better tools is the Z-Score, developed by Edward Altman, a financial economist and professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, in 1968 to predict corporate bankruptcies within a two-year period. This formula has a 70-plus percent accuracy rate
Technical analysis.
The “price action discounts everything” premise is central to charting, also known as technical analysis. Technical analysis uses graphic representations for prices and makes uses of various quantitative techniques to forecast price trends.
A technician makes profits in any market by having positions in line with the price trend. When the trend is up, then buy. Conversely, when the trend is down, then look to sell. Technical analysis is not an exact science, but it is easy to learn and effective.
Technical analysis is a good starting point for beginners. The foundation should include classical technical analysis, Japanese candlesticks, trendlines, RSI, MACD, ADX, stochastics and moving averages. Learners can complete these core topics within three to six months. With constant practice, you should be able to independently analyze and identify the current trends in the stock market.
Most users of stock charts may only focus on daily charts. However, if users pay equal attention to weekly as well as monthly charts, the picture is intuitively more complete. This is equivalent to understanding how the short, medium and long-term investors are viewing the markets, after all three main types of investors form the market. A handful of stock charting software has this feature of showing say, the relative strength index for the daily, weekly and monthly values on a single screen.
One last point - no single method in technical analysis is sufficient for real-world investing. For example, even if you master Elliott Wave Theory or Gann techniques, by itself it would bring more heartache and disappointment. Often, you will need knowledge from other disciplines and sources to improve your overall investing skills.
Some tips for successful investing in stock markets.
1. Investing is a business. The rules of running a profitable business are the same as investing in stock markets.
2. Learn to spot your own mistakes fast. When a mistake is made, exit your position and live to fight any day. The faster you realize your own mistake and the faster you react will reduce your losses, hence increasing your chances of winning in the long run. A useful method is using a 10% stop loss exit strategy. If you are long, and your stock price goes down by 10%, exit. If this same stock reverses and starts to surge, take this as your mistake of not identifying a more accurate (lower) entry point.
3. Understand yourself inside out. What makes you happy, sad, excited, depressed, ecstatic - the whole spectrum of human emotions are merely states of the mind. This is easier said than done but you have to keep improving your own control mechanisms.
4. Learn the methods of successful fund managers - diversification, emotional detachment and having realistic expectations. Investing is a marathon not a sprint.
5. Money management skills. Whether the amount is $10,000 or $10 billion, the same rules apply. There are plenty of sources of information on this subject from the internet.
6. Learn technical analysis.
The main thrust of this article is to avoid making mistakes that will cost you dearly. How you prepare yourself for bear markets, sideways markets and market crashes are vital to your success.
There are no secrets in investing - no magic formula, no discovery of some useful ancient secrets. Just knowledge, hard work, common sense and discipline will serve you well in the years ahead. This verse from a 2500-years-old text is a useful reminder:
“Those who know do not speak,
Those who speak do not know.”
- Tao Te Ching, 56th verse
Stan Seecrets’ Postulate: “There are two types of people in the world - those who know what they don’t know and those who don’t know what they don’t know.”
You may freely reprint this article provided you publish it in its entirety, including the author’s bio and activating the link to the URL below.
The author, Stan Seecrets, is a veteran software developer with 25+ years experience at (http://www.seecrets.biz) which specializes in protecting digital assets. He has developed real-time prices delivery systems and has witnessed stock markets collapse of 1987 and 2000/2001 in real-time. You can contact him via email (Stan at Seecrets.biz).
© Copyright 2005, Stan Seecrets. All rights reserved.
April officially marks the beginning of a new season - spring. It can also mark the beginning of a new season in our lives. For those of us with older children, we may be preparing to send our child off to college for the first time.
I am remembering my own experience of three years ago when my daughter graduated from high school and was looking forward to leaving for her freshman year in college. She was full of excitement and anticipation for what lay ahead in her life. Off to a new school, a new found independence and a season to test her wings. My feelings were more mixed.
I began to feel my season change the day I ironed her graduation gown, long before she actually left. I had a little movie running through my head of the baby that loved to run naked outside. The beautiful child whose smile revealed a gap where two front teeth used to, a sea of naked Barbie’s, a young girl struggling to fit in a new high school, pajama parties that left popcorn and nail polish on my carpet, the captain of the cheerleading squad, the award young woman in her first long gown. So many pictures of so many seasons; I felt I was losing the job I most loved and losing my child to a world I wouldn’t share.
When the leaving time came, standing beside her little car so packed full of stuff she would never use, I found myself saying things like, “Don’t take candy from strangers”.
“Be sure to eat your vegetables.” “Zip up your coat.” And most important “Call Me.” My mind kept going over all the things I had taught her. Was it enough? Did I cover everything? At the last moment I went back to my Native roots and blurted out something my mother had told me in my leaving season. “The strength and wisdom of all the grandmothers that came before you runs in your blood, now go out and grab your life.” I kissed her goodbye and watched her taillights disappear down the driveway and then she was gone.
And did I miss her! Sara chose a college, with my blessings, that was too far away for weekend visits (What was I thinking?) I longed for her to come home and mess up the house. My home was strangely silent and echoed the sounds of giggling girlfriends and loud music. What would I do now? Where would I go from here? I had planned for this time, guided and nurtured my daughter for the leaving season, but had I nurtured myself for its coming? Yes and no. The big overall picture was there, but the detail of it could only be imagined. Like any other season, I had to grieve its passing and welcome a new one. I had to change my perspective and reframe my outlook on life.
What came from this ending was the beginning of a brand new chapter in my life. I got to discover whether I really liked green beans of if I had been eating them all these years because the kids like them. I rediscovered a side of myself I had put on hold to raise children. I redefined the intent with which I would continue to live my life and it gave me the freedom to fill my life with new meaning. Instead of concentration on my loss, I concentrated on what I found: an older, much wiser woman with gifts to bring to the table and newfound time and energy to do it with.
A couple of months later, I got the call from my daughter. (You will too, so heads up!) Tearful and unsure it went like this, “I hate it here, I have no friends, school is too hard and confusing and I want to come home.” As I coached her and calmed her I realized I was still her mom and always would be. She would always need me, I had lost nothing. My parenting had just evolved to a new level. My seasons and hers would always be tied together. I had not lost my child: I had gained a woman with whom I could cultivate a whole new relationship. She would always need me to guide her path and share her life.
If you have children beginning a new season, take heart. There is a closing of an old chapter, but a glorious new chapter yet to write. Be interested and interesting. Your children will always be yours. Now is the time for you to blossom and bring your other gifts back into the light. Perspective is yours to shift and choose. Life happens: things change. Choose a perspective that honors you and models for your children what a complete person does when seasons change. They are, at the end of the day, they still look to you.
Jeanne Webster,CPC is a professional life coach that works with teens, parent/teen relationships and young adult issues. She is a speaker, columnist and author of the two time national award winning book, “If You Could Be Anything,What Would You Be?” For more information on raising and directing your teens for a successful future visit http://www.youcouldbeanything.com.

