I tried to leave a comment on pixelrn.com but the problem with talking about hacked sites is that you often end up using language that gets flagged as spammy. Here’s what I tried to say but the WordPress installation over on pixelrn wouldn’t let me:
Hi Beth, I checked and it doesn’t look like you have [...]
WP Wall is a “Wall” widget that appears in your blog’s side bar. Readers can add a quick comment about the blog as a whole, and the comment will appear in the sidebar immediately (without reloading the page). It has been added to your wordpress blog.
Go to the Plugins page and activate the plugin.
Use [...]
Introduction
WP Wall is a Worpdress plug-in created by Vladimir. This plug-in will add a “Wall” widget that appears in your blog’s sidebar. Your readers can add a quick comment about the content of your blog, about your blog design, etc … This widget make good use of AJAX hence the comment will appear in the [...]
First... if you want to add links - click on the link button (where the arrow is pointing). It will bring up a new box where you can paste your link. When you click on the check o.k. button it will bring the link into the comment sort of like this.
< a href="http:///www.coldheartedtruth.com/">
You then add what you want your text to say.
< a href="http:///www.coldheartedtruth.com/">What I want my link to say
Then click the link button again to close the "tag".
< a href="http:///www.coldheartedtruth.com/">what I want my link to say< /a>
When you finish the post it will look like this:
what I want my link to say (if you curser over it you will realize that it is a link).
I like to add a < strong> < /strong> on either side (Str button) and it looks like this:
This is what I wan
Sometimes they work, sometimes they don’t. They’re all there, even the spam ones, but they aren’t always visible. I have my “people” working on it. Also, while we’re on the subject of the site, I know it doesn’t load correctly in Internet Explorer 6.0 and I’m working on that also. You could just upgrade to the latest IE or maybe start using FireFox.
Don’t be afraid to comment. Really. I like comments.
add to:
Readers,
I just started reading Mark Douglas’ The Disciplined Trader and am gripped by the intro and first chapter and wanted to pass on the reference to those who are gripped by fear in trading.
I take notes on everything I read, and in this book, I have written down so much already, and I am just beginning! I can’t wait to study more into the insights of the book and how fear develops, causes us to trade from a fear mentality, constricts our view of market opportunities, and causes what we fear to come true. I suppose I’m most interested in how to overcome this, but knowing the foundation is important.
Mark gives his personal story, which sets up the rest of the book, and describes how successful traders can overcome their fears with a new mentality.
I plan to post more insights from my personal experience and trading as I progress, but I wanted to pass on how much this book has captivated me already.
Feel free to post comments if you have read this book as to y
While thousands of posts and articles have been written on why traders are not achieving the success they desire (or worse, are failing), I wanted to point out three quick ideas that summarize behaviors that lead to failure in the market by newer traders.
Traders play for large targets and “swing for the fences” and take on too much risk with too little information or knowledge
Traders play for small targets when they should be playing for large targets and take on too little risk when odds are on their side and opportunities arise
(New) Traders are more likely to be distracted by others’ opinions or their own emotions (overreactions) that occur when taking risk, or just pass on the trade
In a shorter summary:
New traders take on excessive risk when they shouldn’t
New traders don’t take enough risk when good opportunities arise
New traders let their responses to their emotions keep them on the sideline altogether.
Also, newer traders tend to be REACTIV
Just read "Twine and Linked Data on the Semantic Web", a blog post by Nova Spivack.
He says that Twine has a SPARQL endpoint, it's just not open yet. He also says that it is able to consume Linked Data.
This is all good, however, even though it's stated in the Twine ...