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Bulls Run Back The Kickoff, Hold on for Victory


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I had this older Dell computer with 70gb of hard drive space that the kids use. I couldn't believe how it only had 4 gb of space left and didn't want to keep deleting programs from it. I told my 11 year old son the computer was on the verge of a collapse and I'd have to buy another computer because I couldn't figure out how to free up any more space.

 

After doing a little research he found massive amounts of orphaned installer .msp files. He downloaded a microsoft program and guess what -

 

The computer now has 55gb of free space .... LOL

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Energy crisis is postponed as new gas rescues the world

 

Engineers have performed their magic once again. The world is not going to run short of energy as soon as feared.

America is not going to bleed its wealth importing fuel. Russia's grip on Europe's gas will weaken. Improvident Britain may avoid paralysing blackouts by mid-decade after all.

The World Gas Conference in Buenos Aires last week was one of those events that shatter assumptions. Advances in technology for extracting gas from shale and methane beds have quickened dramatically, altering the global balance of energy faster than almost anybody expected.

Tony Hayward, BP's chief executive, said proven natural gas reserves around the world have risen to 1.2 trillion barrels of oil equivalent, enough for 60 years' supply – and rising fast.

"There has been a revolution in the gas fields of North America. Reserve estimates are rising sharply as technology unlocks unconventional resources," he said.

This is almost unknown to the public, despite the efforts of Nick Grealy at "No Hot Air" who has been arguing for some time that Britain's shale reserves could replace declining North Sea output.

Rune Bjornson from Norway's StatoilHydro said exploitable reserves are much greater than supposed just three years ago and may meet global gas needs for generations.

"The common wisdom was that unconventional gas was too difficult, too expensive and too demanding," he said, according to Petroleum Economist. "This has changed. If we ever doubted that gas was the fuel of the future – in many ways there's the answer."

The breakthrough has been to combine 3-D seismic imaging with new technologies to free "tight gas" by smashing rocks, known as hydro-fracturing or "fracking" in the trade.

 

 

Whoohoo!

:ph34r: :lol:

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jickiss is back!

 

 

 

jickiss is back!

 

 

and

 

that Gas article is something else....but meanwhile, we have the doolar to watch. somebody told your jickiss once upon a time that the number 8 is l"ucky" in China.

 

did anyobe notice an 8 day doolar cycle in place????.....let's see, walk the doolar up for 8 days, weaken gold then buy more gold...naaaaa, say it is not that easy!

 

Hoohhaa!

post-1911-1255392091_thumb.png

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Energy crisis is postponed as new gas rescues the world

 

Engineers have performed their magic once again. The world is not going to run short of energy as soon as feared.

America is not going to bleed its wealth importing fuel. Russia's grip on Europe's gas will weaken. Improvident Britain may avoid paralysing blackouts by mid-decade after all.

The World Gas Conference in Buenos Aires last week was one of those events that shatter assumptions. Advances in technology for extracting gas from shale and methane beds have quickened dramatically, altering the global balance of energy faster than almost anybody expected.

Tony Hayward, BP's chief executive, said proven natural gas reserves around the world have risen to 1.2 trillion barrels of oil equivalent, enough for 60 years' supply �" and rising fast.

"There has been a revolution in the gas fields of North America. Reserve estimates are rising sharply as technology unlocks unconventional resources," he said.

This is almost unknown to the public, despite the efforts of Nick Grealy at "No Hot Air" who has been arguing for some time that Britain's shale reserves could replace declining North Sea output.

Rune Bjornson from Norway's StatoilHydro said exploitable reserves are much greater than supposed just three years ago and may meet global gas needs for generations.

"The common wisdom was that unconventional gas was too difficult, too expensive and too demanding," he said, according to Petroleum Economist. "This has changed. If we ever doubted that gas was the fuel of the future �" in many ways there's the answer."

The breakthrough has been to combine 3-D seismic imaging with new technologies to free "tight gas" by smashing rocks, known as hydro-fracturing or "fracking" in the trade.

 

 

Whoohoo!

:ph34r: :lol:

 

Whoa. Not so fast.

 

http://forums.wallstreetexaminer.com/index...howtopic=841335

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What is the indicator you are running in the top window if you dont mind me asking?

 

The Polycycle thing...

 

 

Found it on the trade station discussion form. It's one of them thar polynomial math things. Here's a link https://www.tradestation.com/Discussions/To...;txtExactMatch=

 

If that doesn't work, search this xcap_ipolycycle

 

You can tweak it a million different ways and like everything else it has its share of headfakes, but it seems fewer than most. I just use the simple part of it...

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Found it on the trade station discussion form. It's one of them thar polynomial math things. Here's a link https://www.tradestation.com/Discussions/To...;txtExactMatch=

 

If that doesn't work, search this xcap_ipolycycle

 

You can tweak it a million different ways and like everything else it has its share of headfakes, but it seems fewer than most. I just use the simple part of it...

Thanks :D

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Thanks :D

 

 

And just to clarify, in that same panel are several other indicators; A stochastic momentum indicator (SMI) set at 13-25-2 also found on tradestation, an ergodisc_tsi indicator set at 21-3, a TRIX indicator set at 6 and a couple macd's - 7-21-1 - 8-13-1 and 5-21-1. The thicker white line is the relative strength line from the polycycle indicator.

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Que?

 

From the article:

 

Based on the experience in the Barnett Shale in Texas, Berman said he doesn't expect the yields from the wells to be high enough or last long enough to make the gas shales that profitable, even when current low gas prices rise.

 

His view contrasts with that of other anal cysts and the industry who see natural gas as playing a key role in the face of concerns about declining oil supplies and climate change. The Potential Gas Committee at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden said in June that the U.S. natural gas reserves total nearly 2,000 trillion cubic feet, up about 35 percent from 2006 estimates and mostly due to such unconventional gas fields as shale and the Rockies' sandstone formations.

 

Peter Dea, chief executive of Denver-based Cirque Resources, said the abundance of natural gas "truly is an American treasure." He called the vast layers of rock containing gas in Texas, the Northeast and elsewhere game-changers.

 

"It really gives us surety of this 100-plus-year supply that we now have in America," Dea said.

 

New technology and hydraulic fracturing -- injecting liquids, sands and chemicals underground to open pathways for gas -- have increased the efficiency and decreased production costs, Dea said. Natural gas, he added, has the potential to replace coal as the country's main source of electricity and fuel the nation's vehicles.

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