 - Last login: 3 hours agoVousDeux
- the one you were warned you about is a 44 year old guy from Cadillac, Michigan, USA.
- Likes 817 pages, 1 video, 3 photos • 189 fans • Received 52 reviews
- Member since Sep 18, 2003
I'm just a busy guy who occasionally has something I want to say. Now, whether anyone is interested or not may be another story (while viewing this blog, you may want to make certain that you have selected the "Entire Blog," or "His Blog" setting.)
Favorites » His Blog

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InformedTrades : Learn Trading. Trading Education. | - Top Learning Links for Tr…
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Aug 10, 8:55am
1 review
daytrading, investing, futures
http://www.informedtrades.com/trades.php?page=traderlinks
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This page contains links and comments for a number of trading-related articles that have been written by some of the best, most well-known traders in the business.
Whether you are a beginner, novice, or an accomplished trader, there is something here for everyone.

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Using Macroeconomics to Obtain Long-term Market Forecasts :: The Market Oracle :…
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Aug 10, 7:25am
1 review
economics
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article5809.html
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Let's see if I've got this straight...a weak dollar causes expensive oil and commodities; which, in turn, leads to high unemployment, low interest (cheap credit), high debt, and poor returns on investments.
I think I liked it better when there were higher taxes, lower unemployment, higher interest (expensive credit), and better returns on investments.
Our present economic policy has encouraged us all to go out and spend, spend, spend and run up huge amounts of debt. We need to get back to an economic policy that encourages us to save and spend our own money.
While all of this spending might look good on the bottom-line of the GDP reports, the GDP didn't look so bad when it had more tax revenue in the bottom-line either...and people were more prosperous too!
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Jul 23, 2:46pm
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PC World - Business Center: Details of Major Internet Flaw Posted by Accident
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Jul 23, 7:15am
1 review
hacking
http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/148722/details_of_major_interne...
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Act quickly...patch your DNS today!
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Jul 16, 3:08pm
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Jul 10, 3:17pm
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You know it's a bear market when...

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Jun 26, 4:23pm
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St. Louis Fed: FRED GRAPH
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Jun 3, 10:00am
1 review
economics
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/fredgraph?chart_type=line&width=1000&hei...
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Wow! What do you suppose this means?

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seekda.com - Helping to Find and Use Web Services
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May 24, 6:17am
1 review
programming
http://seekda.com/
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Abstract: "The seekda Web Services Search Engine helps you to find Web Services based on a catalogue of more than 27,000 service descriptions. Web Services listed at seekda cover a wide range of functionality. For example, we have identified services that can send messages via fax or sms, validate addresses or allow you to translate some text. To find Web Services just type the keyword or the whole phrase into seekda Web Services Search Engine or alternatively browse Web Services and their providers by several other criteria defined by us."

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Iometer project
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May 13, 11:19am
2 reviews
computer-hardware
http://www.iometer.org/
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Abstract (from documentation):
"Iometer is an I/O subsystem measurement and characterization tool for single and
clustered systems. Iometer is pronounced eye-OM-i-ter, to rhyme with
thermometer. Iometer does for a computers I/O subsystem what a dynamometer
does for an engine: it measures performance under a controlled load. Iometer was
formerly known as Galileo.
Iometer is both a workload generator (that is, it performs I/O operations in order to
stress the system) and a measurement tool (that is, it examines and records the
performance of its I/O operations and their impact on the system). It can be configured
to emulate the disk or network I/O load of any program or benchmark, or can be used
to generate entirely synthetic I/O loads. It can generate and measure loads on single or
multiple (networked) systems.
Iometer can be used for measurement and characterization of:
. Performance of disk and network controllers.
. Bandwidth and latency capabilities of buses.
. Network throughput to attached drives.
. Shared bus performance.
. System-level hard drive performance.
. System-level network performance."
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