Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Christian Gonzales

Amplify’d from www.fatihsyuhud.com
Name: Christian Gerard Alfaro Gonzales

Nickname: Christian Gonzales

Date of birth: 30 August 1976

Place of birth: Monteveido, Uruguay

Religion: Islam (Muslim convert)

Convert to Islam: 9 October 2003

Previous religion: Catholic

Muslim name: Mustafa Habibi

Wife: Eva Siregar

Children: Amanda Gonzales, Michael Gonzales, Fernando`Alvaro, Vanesa Siregar Gonzales

Previous nationality: Uruguay

Current nationality: Indonesian
Christian Gonzales

Christian Gonzales sujud syukur

Christian Gonzales doing a sujud syukur. A Muslim tradition to express big thank to the Almighty

Read more at www.fatihsyuhud.com
 

Kompyang

Amplify’d from www.suarasurabaya.net

Kompyang Tak Keras Lagi

asal usul roti kompyang, berasal dari Fuzhou, salah satu propinsi di China.


Menurut cerita, dulunya dibuat ransum tentara China, karena keras dan tahan lama., roti ini diikat di badan mereka sehingga mereka bisa makan pada saat berperang.Komposisi roti ini sangat sederhana, terdiri dari campuran tepung terigu, garam, gula dan air.

kompyang jaman sekarang, hadir dengan rasa dan bentuk yang berbeda. Sudah dimodifikasi
lebih lembut dan empuk. Ada yang kosongan, alias tanpa isi, ada juga yang berisi aneka rasa. Seperti daging ayam, daging sapi, salad tuna dan rumput laut, isiannya sedikit mengingatkan pada Bakpao.
Read more at www.suarasurabaya.net
 

Sunday, December 19, 2010

STUPID HUMOUR

Malaysian a s # h@ l e

Amplify’d from yoyooh.com

Car operating system

Bill's company made software to run a car.

Bill was taking a test ride of the car. Suddenly a truck came from opposite side.

Bill pressed ctrl+b to apply brakes.

A pop-up window appeared asking, "Are you sure you really want to stop?"

Before Bill could enter "Yes", there was a crash and the car caught fire.

In panic Bill forgot the password to open the door.

He started shouting "F1! F1!" but there was no computer professional present there to understand his screams.

Then he tried to come out through the car window-pane.

A message appeared on the screen, "An illegal function is performed.

All the window-panes of the car will be closed." Poor Bill died.

Messengers of death took away his soul and said to him, "You have never ever performed any good deeds in your life. You always stole the code from others. We are going to send you to hell."

Bill pleaded, "I am ready to go to hell but do provide me a computer, please."

Messengers of death smiled inwardly and permitted him a computer, but with no Alt, Ctrl and Delete keys on the keyboard.

Read more at yoyooh.com
 

Friday, December 17, 2010

ADX Directional Movement Index

Amplify’d from www.chartfilter.com

ADX Directional Movement Index

Overview


  • The higher the DMI (on a scale of 0-100) the better the trend potential of a move.
  • The DMI system is made up of three lines; ADX and +DI & -DI.
  • DMI can be used either as a system on its own or as a filter for a trend-following indicator (i.e., Parabolic SAR).



The Directional Movement Index, DMI, is an effective and frequently used trend indicator. This system was designed by Welles Wilder Jr. and is made up of three lines:


  1. The +DI indicates the up average.
  1. The -DI indicates the down average.
  1. The ADX, average directional movement index, shows whether a trend is in effect by smoothing the difference between the +DI and -DI.

In the example above two clear buy signals have been generated. The first could have been ignored because ADX was very close to 25 - a potential danger signal. The second was perhaps more significant, even though ADX was trending downwards. It did provide a clear indication of the beginning of a very strong move in this market.



Buy and sell signals are given when +DI and -DI cross. The time periods most commonly used in the complex formula are 10 or 14 days.



According to Wilder the DMI should be used with the ADX as a filter.


  • A rising ADX line means the market is trending and a better candidate for a trend-following system.
  • A falling ADX line indicates a non-trending market.
  • Some traders also look for an ADX greater than 20 or 25 to confirm that the market is trending. When the ADX line starts to drop from above the 40 level, that is an early sign that the trend is weakening. A rise back above 20 is often a sign of the start of a new trend.

Signals



Generally speaking, the two main buy and sell signals generated by DMI are as follows:


  • A buy signal is given when +DI crosses above the -DI line.
  • A sell signal is given when +DI crosses below the -DI line.

However, some refinements are suggested by experienced traders:


  • The crossing of DI lines only provides an early warning signal; other criteria must be fulfilled for the actual signal.
  • The ADX should be between the upper DI line and the lower one.
  • An ADX below 25 is a strong warning to avoid trading.

Wilder himself developed a refinement to take care of whipsawing (when the DI lines cross back and forth over a short period, providing unreliable signals). He called it his Extreme Point Rule.



The Extreme Point Rule is derived by noting the high or low point on the day when the +DI and the -DI cross one another. +DI determines the high or low point (if +DI is above -DI the Extreme Point is the high of the day, if +DI is below -DI, the Extreme Point is the low for the day).



The extreme point is then used for the actual buy or sell signal. For example, if the price once again rises above the Extreme Point price level you have a buy signal. If the price fails to rise above the extreme point, you should continue to stand aside. The converse holds true for sell signals.


Read more at www.chartfilter.com
 

Untitled

Amplify’d from www.chartfilter.com

ADX Directional Movement Index

Overview


  • The higher the DMI (on a scale of 0-100) the better the trend potential of a move.
  • The DMI system is made up of three lines; ADX and +DI & -DI.
  • DMI can be used either as a system on its own or as a filter for a trend-following indicator (i.e., Parabolic SAR).



The Directional Movement Index, DMI, is an effective and frequently used trend indicator. This system was designed by Welles Wilder Jr. and is made up of three lines:


  1. The +DI indicates the up average.
  1. The -DI indicates the down average.
  1. The ADX, average directional movement index, shows whether a trend is in effect by smoothing the difference between the +DI and -DI.

In the example above two clear buy signals have been generated. The first could have been ignored because ADX was very close to 25 - a potential danger signal. The second was perhaps more significant, even though ADX was trending downwards. It did provide a clear indication of the beginning of a very strong move in this market.



Buy and sell signals are given when +DI and -DI cross. The time periods most commonly used in the complex formula are 10 or 14 days.



According to Wilder the DMI should be used with the ADX as a filter.


  • A rising ADX line means the market is trending and a better candidate for a trend-following system.
  • A falling ADX line indicates a non-trending market.
  • Some traders also look for an ADX greater than 20 or 25 to confirm that the market is trending. When the ADX line starts to drop from above the 40 level, that is an early sign that the trend is weakening. A rise back above 20 is often a sign of the start of a new trend.

Signals



Generally speaking, the two main buy and sell signals generated by DMI are as follows:


  • A buy signal is given when +DI crosses above the -DI line.
  • A sell signal is given when +DI crosses below the -DI line.

However, some refinements are suggested by experienced traders:


  • The crossing of DI lines only provides an early warning signal; other criteria must be fulfilled for the actual signal.
  • The ADX should be between the upper DI line and the lower one.
  • An ADX below 25 is a strong warning to avoid trading.

Wilder himself developed a refinement to take care of whipsawing (when the DI lines cross back and forth over a short period, providing unreliable signals). He called it his Extreme Point Rule.



The Extreme Point Rule is derived by noting the high or low point on the day when the +DI and the -DI cross one another. +DI determines the high or low point (if +DI is above -DI the Extreme Point is the high of the day, if +DI is below -DI, the Extreme Point is the low for the day).



The extreme point is then used for the actual buy or sell signal. For example, if the price once again rises above the Extreme Point price level you have a buy signal. If the price fails to rise above the extreme point, you should continue to stand aside. The converse holds true for sell signals.


Read more at www.chartfilter.com
 

15 WAYS TO TRADE MOVING AVERAGES

Amplify’d from www.hardrightedge.com
15 WAYS TO TRADE MOVING AVERAGES

Reading a chart without moving averages is like baking a cake without butter or eggs. Those simple lines above or below current price tell many tales, and their uses in market interpretation are unparalleled. Simply stated, they're the most valuable indicators in technical analysis.

You can trade without moving averages, but you do so at your own risk. After all, these lines represent median levels where your competition will make important buying or selling decisions. So it makes sense to predict what they're going to do before the fact, rather than afterward.

Here are 15 ways you can manage opportunity through moving averages:

1. The 20-day moving average commonly marks the short-term trend, the 50-day moving average the intermediate trend, and the 200-day moving average the long-term trend of the market.

2. These three settings represent natural boundaries for price pullbacks. Two forces empower those averages: First, they define levels where profit- and loss-taking should ebb following strong price movement. Second, their common recognition draws a crowd that perpetrates a self-fulfilling event whenever price approaches.

3. Moving averages generate false signals during range-bound markets because they're trend-following indicators that measure upward or downward momentum. They lose their power in any environment that shows a slow rate of price change.


4. The characteristic of moving averages changes as they flatten and roll over. The turn of an average toward horizontal signifies a loss of momentum for that time frame. This increases the odds that price will cross the average with relative ease. When a set of averages flatline and draw close to one another, price often swivels back and forth across the axis in a noisy pattern.


5. Moving averages emit continuous signals because they're plotted right on top of price. Their relative correlation with price development changes with each bar. They also exhibit active convergence-divergence relationships with all other forms of support and resistance.


6. Use exponential moving averages, or EMAs, for longer time frames but shift down to simple moving averages, or SMAs, for shorter ones. EMAs apply more weight to recent price change, while SMAs view each data point equally.


7. Short-term SMAs let traders spy on other market participants. The public uses simple moving average settings because they don't understand EMAs. Good intraday signals rely more on how the competition thinks than the technicals of the moment.


8. Place five-, eight- and 13-bar SMAs on intraday charts to measure short-term trend strength. In strong moves, the averages will line up and point in the same direction. But they flip over one at a time at highs and lows, until price finally surges through in the other direction.

9. Price location in relation to the 200-day moving average determines long-term investor psychology. Bulls live above the 200-day moving average, while bears live below it. Sellers eat up rallies below this line in the sand, while buyers come to the rescue above it.


10. When the 50-day moving average pierces the 200-day moving average in either direction, it predicts a substantial shift in buying and selling behavior. The 50-day moving average rising above the 200-day moving average is called a Golden Cross, while the bearish piercing is called a Death Cross.


11. It's harder for price to break above a declining moving average than a rising moving average. Conversely, it's harder for price to drop through a rising moving average than a declining moving average.


12. Moving averages set to different time frames reveal trend velocity through their relationships with each other. Measure this with a classic Moving Average-Convergence-Divergence (MACD) indicator, or apply multiple averages to your charts and watch how they spread or contract over different time.


13. Place a 60-day volume moving average across green and red volume histograms in the lower chart pane to identify when specific sessions draw unexpected interest. The slope of the average also identifies hidden buying and selling pressure.


14. Don't use long-term moving averages to make short-term predictions because they force important data to lag current events. A trend may already be mature and nearing its end by the time a specific moving average issues a buy or sell signal.


15. Support and resistance mechanics develop between moving averages as they flip and roll. Look for one average to bounce on the other average, rather than break through it immediately. After a crossover finally takes place, that level becomes support or resistance for future price movement.

Read more at www.hardrightedge.com
 

Daryl Guppy multiple moving average

Amplify’d from www.guppytraders.com
GUPPY MULTIPLE MOVING AVERAGE

This indicator was developed by
Daryl Guppy. It is fully explained in TREND
TRADING
. Captures the inferred behaviour of traders and
investors by using two groups of averages. Uses fractal repetition
to identify points of agreement and disagreement which precede
significant trend changes.

ADVANTAGES


  • Better understanding of trend strength

Effective evaluation of unusual price
movements, such as dips and spikes

DISADVANTAGES

Not effectively applied to  trend less stocks
Do
not use as a moving average crossover signal
Read more at www.guppytraders.com
 

MULTIPLE MOVING AVERAGES FOR SWING TRADER

Amplify’d from web.streetauthority.com
. As a swing trader you must be very clear to identify which
trend is your friend.

Swing traders must be attuned to the minor trend as
they look to capitalize on short-term moves that may last from a few
days to at most a few weeks. However, if your exclusive focus is just on
the near-term picture, then you will often get hit with nasty surprises.

for the
following days: 4, 9, 20, 30, 50, 150 and 200. They are simple (not
exponential) moving averages.

Different technicians will swear by the 40-day moving
average or will extol the virtues of combining the eight-day moving
average with the 32-day or the power of the 65-day moving average.
However, I don't think any single moving average is "the right
one." Once you have found a combination that works for you, then
stick by it so you get a feel for the signals that those particular
averages generate. There is no one moving average or combination with a
special power; the key point is to represent the moving averages in
various, multiple time frames. Here's why I have decided to focus on
each of these particular time periods:

The four- and nine-day moving averages represent
the very short-term (or minor) trend.
The 20-, 30- and 50-day moving averages for me
represent different "slices" of the intermediate-term
trend.
The 150- and 200-day moving averages are
definers of the long-term market trend.

In any good charting package, you should be able to
place all of these moving averages on the same chart. While at
first this practice may seem like information overload, you will quickly
adjust to these types of charts (and your persistence will be rewarded
with more accurate trading signals).

Combining moving averages from multiple time frames
allows you to determine when the trends from all three periods are in
your favor.
. Moving averages define the trend
and provide support and resistance. By placing and examining multiple
moving averages on the same chart, we increase the probability of
trading in harmony with all three trends: primary (or long term),
intermediate and short term.
As long as price remains above the key moving
averages and the moving averages are trading above one another in what
I've labeled "bullish alignment," traders should hold their
long positions. If price is below the key moving average and the
averages are in "bearish alignment," then that particular
stock should be held short.
swing traders can use as few
as two moving averages or as many as three or more. These moving
averages should be combined with other technical analysis tools such as
candlesticks and indicators such as MACD
A moving average crossover system of great importance
to swing traders was made popular by R.C. Allen. This system involves
the 4, 9, and 18-day moving averages. Allen created his system well
before Bollinger bands were created, and I have modified his concept
slightly by

A moving average crossover system of great importance
to swing traders was made popular by R.C. Allen. This system involves
the 4, 9, and 18-day moving averages. Allen created his system well
before Bollinger bands were created, and I have modified his concept
slightly by
substituting a 20-day moving average for the 18-day. This
change gives me the advantage of adding a Bollinger band to the chart
without creating visual clutter.

According to Allen's system, a cross of the 4-day
above the 18-day is an early signal that the trend has changed to
bullish. When the 9-day crosses above the 18-day, this change in trend
is confirmed and a buy signal is created. It's worth noting that at that
time, of course, all three moving averages will be in "bullish
alignment" with each other and all three will also likely be
sloping upward.

When the uptrend is in the process of reversing, an
early indication of trend change will take place when the 4-day moving
average crosses down through the 9-day. A swing trader might want to
nail down profits at this time even though a confirmed signal has not
yet been gi
A swing trader might want to
nail down profits at this time even though a confirmed signal has not
yet been gi
ven.

When the uptrend is in the process of reversing, an
early indication of trend change will take place when the 4-day moving
average crosses down through the 9-day. A swing trader might want to
nail down profits at this time even though a confirmed signal has not
yet been gi
ven. The confirmation does come when both moving averages
cross below the 18-day and all three averages are in "bearish
alignment."

See more at web.streetauthority.com
 

Multiple Moving Averages

Amplify’d from www.forexfactory.com
Guppy and Hulls Multiple Moving Averages work all the time; in all time frames..
Try this in M1 or M5 timeframe for scalping:

EMA (weighted close): 25,30,35,40,45,50,55 (Yellow)

EMA (weighted close): 89,99,109,119,129,139,149 (Green)

See more at www.forexfactory.com