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To: Steve Felix who wrote (1263)3/4/2001 3:41:33 PM
From: TechTrader42  Respond to of 1471
 
Steve: Too bad it's a privately owned company, since it would appear to have a profitable future ahead of it. But at least chronoscopes will be more available to mainstream users.

As for bingo, one good win would pay for a top-of-the-line chronoscope. A chronoscope could help ensure a big win, no doubt. Bit of a Catch-22. Chronoscopy gets around such maddening circles with the concept of sphericity, but there again a chronoscope is required. Truly a vicious circle.

I've received quite a few inquiries about chronoscopy, so I'll provide a Q&A on the topic in my next note.



To: Steve Felix who wrote (1263)3/4/2001 3:59:58 PM
From: TechTrader42  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1471
 
I've received quite a few inquiries about chronoscopes, and thought I'd post this Q&A on the topic, by H. Morton Sanders:

What exactly is chronoscopy?

Chronoscopy is an emerging nonlinear method of data analysis that can be adapted to statistical and stock market analysis. In chronoscopy, data is collected through "instantaneous time exposure rather than the historical and chronological passage of time." With a chronoscope, data can be slowed to a zero-instant and analyzed in a way that is coextensive with the data's continuous development. By retaining the infinite at a zero-instant, and retroverting history to the infinite, future data can be extrapolated without linear referents. Recently, with the development of new chronoscopy digital systems, applications for the use of chronoscopy in technical analysis of stocks have become more accessible to mainstream users. The implementation of a new coordinate transformation interface standard, announced recently, should make chronoscopy even more accessible to traders.

What results can I expect in trading with chronoscopy?

Because chronoscopy ensures efficiency of concept during upward and downward slopes (and even in normally disqualified periods of nonturbulence, as the Frey-Delaurenze study demonstrated), results are maximized. Chronoscopy essentially releases the trader from three-dimensional Cartesian space, which is problematic and deterministic, and which has become increasingly costly. Chronoscopy captures data in the zero-instant, and therefore, there is no distinction between before and after. All data is simultaneous and infinite, and therefore viewed in terms of maximum potentiality. Through the expansion of fractal symmetries, expectancy is raised by measurable coefficients. This has been established in several studies.

How can I learn more about chronoscopy?

Several excellent books on chronoscopy have been published in recently months, but they're already out of print. I don't know why this is. The books received good reviews among academicians and futures traders, but they were not hot-sellers in bookstores, nor at Amazon.com. Some have said that Amazon would do well to adapt principles of chronoscopy to its own accounting procedures. I won't comment on that.

Are you an expert on chronoscopy?

No, though I'm a physicist by training, I'm just a student in the relatively new field of chronoscopy. Chronoscopy is a complex topic, and I haven't even begun to understand it. I'm still completely in the dark when it comes to sphericity and nonlinear topology, and the relativistic mechanics of the chronoscope.

Where can I purchase a chronoscope?

Chronoscopes are difficult to obtain, because the science is still in its infancy. Your best bet would be to contact chronoscope manufacturers, including Chronoscopy Tubes Inc., a privately held company that has had an uncertain address during the development stages. At one point, it was run out of a prominent scientist's garage. I noticed that the dateline kept shifting in press releases. I don't know what that means. I couldn't even hazard a guess. I've been assembling and testing a chronoscope, and I had it running briefly last week, but the fields were off by just enough to make trading with it problematical. I did lose track of time, though, and I attributed that to chronoscopy, so something must have been working right.

Are all chronoscopes the same?

This is a good question. No, they aren't.

How does the chronoscope work with charting programs?

Synergistically -- that's the beauty of it. The manuals explain everything, and are surprisingly clear, in plain English.



To: Steve Felix who wrote (1263)3/4/2001 6:30:31 PM
From: Chartgod  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1471
 
Hello Steve,

How are things?

jim