#trading online
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priyashareindia9 · 2 months ago
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The online commodity trading platform lets you invest in precious metals as well as daily necessities and earn profit each time their value increases or decreases. While long-term trades allow you to profit from price increases, short-term trading lets you buy high and sell low. 
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statusmessagesquotes · 1 year ago
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11 Ways 2024 How to Make Money Trading – Earn by Trading Online
How to earn money from trading: In recent times, people are earning lakhs of rupees from online trading through mobile sitting at home. Among these, there are some people who have earned lakhs of rupees in a day by trading for a few hours in their daily life. However, this does not mean that trading only leads to profits. The reality is that sometimes you may have to face big losses hidden…
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6ittrade · 1 year ago
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Before entering Forex trading, risk management, Psychology and Emotions. Educate yourself and practice prudence.
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beritavalas · 1 year ago
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porrigens · 1 year ago
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raison d’etre + sushi = profit
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giornalepop · 2 years ago
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IMPARARE A INVESTIRE CON I CORSI DI TRADING
IMPARARE A INVESTIRE CON I CORSI DI TRADING
Nel corso degli ultimi anni c’è stato un notevole avvicinamento degli italiani verso il mondo degli investimenti online. Anche se la maggioranza dei cittadini preferisce mantenere i propri risparmi in forma liquida o impiegarli in soluzioni a basso rischio, è in netta crescita la fetta della popolazione che sceglie di investire in borsa e su vari asset. Questo fenomeno è dovuto principalmente…
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sshadovv · 28 days ago
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Art trade for @askefrueee3!!!
you know I'm always only too happy to draw Galloper. And this is a double joy!!!
this was a very cool trade, I'm so glad we were able to do this and make someone happy with our work!!!!
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overtake · 7 months ago
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Weekend Warm-Up | 2024 Miami Grand Prix
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fatehbaz · 1 month ago
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About the entanglement of "science" and Empire. About geographic imaginaries. About how Empire appeals to and encourages children to participate in these scripts.
Was checking out this recent thing, from scavengedluxury's beloved series of posts looking at the archive of the Budapest Municipal Photography Company.
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The caption reads: "Toys and board games, 1940."
And I think the text on the game-box in the back says something like "the whole world is yours", maybe?
(The use of appeals to science/progress in imperial narratives probably already well-known to many, especially for those familiar with Victorian era, Edwardian era, Gilded Age, early twentieth century, etc., in US and Europe.)
And was struck, because I had also recently gone looking through nemfrog's posts about the often-strange imagery of children's material in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century US/Europe. And was disturbed/intrigued by this thing:
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Caption here reads: "Game Board. Walter Mittelholzer's flight over Africa. [...] 1931. Commemorative game board map of Africa for a promotional game published for the N*stle Company, for tracking the trip of Walter Mittelholzer across Africa, the first pilot to fly a north-south route."
Hmm.
"Africa is for your consumption and pleasure! A special game celebrating German achievement, brought to you by the N*stle Company!"
1930s-era German national aspirations in Africa. A company which, in the preceding decade, had shifted focus to expand its cacao production (which would be dependent on tropical plantations). Adventure, excitement, knowledge, science, engineering prowess, etc. For kids!
Another, from a couple decades earlier, this time British.
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Caption reads: "The "World's globe circler." A game board based on Nellie Bly's travels. 1890." At center, a trumpet, and a proclamation: "ALL RECORDS BROKEN".
Same year that the United States "closed the frontier" and conquered "the Wild West" (the massacre at Wounded Knee happened in December 1890). A couple years later, the US annexed Hawai'i; by decade's end, the US military was in both Cuba and the Philippines. The Scramble for Africa was taking place. At the time, Britain especially already had a culture of "travel writing" or "travel fiction" or whatever we want to call it, wherein domestic residents of the metropole back home could read about travel, tourism, expeditions, adventures, etc. on the peripheries of the Empire. Concurrent with the advent of popular novels, magazines, mass-market print media, etc. Intrepid explorers rescuing Indigenous peoples from their own backwardness. Many tales of exotic allure set in South Asia. Heroic white hunters taking down scary tigers. Elegant Englishwomen sipping tea in the shade of an umbrella, giggling at the elephants, the local customs, the strange sights. Orientalism, tropicality, othering.
I'd lately been looking at a lot of work on race/racism and imperative-of-empire in British scientific and pop-sci literature, especially involving South and Southeast Asia. (From scholars like Varun Sharma, Rohan Deb Roy, Ezra Rashkow, Jonathan Saha, Pratik Chakrabarti.) But I'd also lately been looking at Mashid Mayar's work, which I think closely suits this kinda thing with the board games. Some of her publications:
"From Tools to Toys: American Dissected Maps and Geographic Knowledge at the Turn of the Twentieth Century". In: Knowledge Landscapes North America, edited by Kloeckner et al., 2016.
"What on Earth! Slated Globes, School Geography and Imperial Pedagogy". European Journal of American Studies 16, number 3, Summer 2020.
Citizens and Rulers of the World: The American Child and the Cartographic Pedagogies of Empire, 2022.
Discussing her book, Mayar was interviewed by LA Review of Books in 2022. She says:
[Quote.] Growing up at the turn of the 20th century, for many American children, also meant learning to view the world through the lens of "home geography." [...] [T]hey inevitably responded to the transnational whims of an empire that had stretched its dominion across the globe [recent forays into Panama, Cuba, Hawai'i, the Philippines] [...]. [W]hite, well-to-do, literate American children [...] learned how to identify and imagine “homes” on the map of the world. [...] [T]he cognitive maps children developed, to which we have access through the scant archival records they left behind (i.e., geographical puzzles they designed and printed in juvenile periodicals) [...] mixed nativism and the logic of colonization with playful, appropriative scalar confusion, and an intimate, often unquestioned sense of belonging to the global expanse of an empire [...]. Dissected maps - that is, maps mounted on cardboard or wood and then cut into smaller pieces that children were to put back together - are a generative example of the ways imperial pedagogy [...] found its place outside formal education, in children's lives outside the classroom. [...] [W]ell before having been adopted as playthings in the United States, dissected maps had been designed to entertain and teach the children of King George III about the global spatial affairs of the British Empire. […] [J]uvenile periodicals of the time printed child-made geographical puzzles [...]. [I]t was their assumption that "(un)charted," non-American spaces (both inside and outside the national borders) sought legibility as potential homes, [...] and that, if they did not do so, they were bound to recede into ruin/"savagery," meaning that it would become the colonizers' responsibility/burden to "restore" them [...]. [E]mpires learn from and owe to childhood in their attempts at survival and growth over generations [...]. [These] "multigenerational power constellations" [...] survived, by making accessible pedagogical scripts that children of the white and wealthy could learn from and appropriate as times changed [...]. [End quote.] Source: Words of Mashid Mayar, as transcribed in an interviewed conducted and published by M. Buna. "Children's Maps of the American Empire: A Conversation with Mashid Mayar". LA Review of Books. 11 July 2022.
Some other stuff I was recently looking at, specifically about European (especially German) geographic imaginaries of globe-as-playground:
The Play World: Toys, Texts, and the Transatlantic German Childhood (Patricia Anne Simpson, 2020) /// "19th-Century Board Game Offers a Tour of the German Colonies" (Sarah Zabrodski, 2016) /// Advertising Empire: Race and Visual Culture in Imperial Germany (David Ciarlo, 2011) /// Learning Empire: Globalization and the German Quest for World Status, 1875-1919 (Erik Grimmer-Solem, 2019) /// “Ruling Africa: Science as Sovereignty in the German Colonial Empire and Its Aftermath” (Andrew Zimmerman. In: German Colonialism in a Global Age, 2014) /// "Exotic Education: Writing Empire for German Boys and Girls, 1884-1914". (Jeffrey Bowersox. In: German Colonialism and National Identity, 2017) /// Raising Germans in the Age of Empire: Youth and Colonial Culture, 1871-1914 (Jeff Bowersox, 2013) /// "[Translation:] (Educating Modernism: A Trade-Specific Portrait of the German Toy Industry in the Developing Mass-Market Society)" (Heike Hoffmann, PhD dissertation, Tubingen, 2000) /// Home and Harem: Nature, Gender, Empire, and the Cultures of Travel (Inderpal Grewal, 1996) /// "'Le rix d'Indochine' at the French Table: Representation of Food, Race and the Vietnamese in a Colonial-Era Board Game" (Elizabeth Collins, 2021) /// "The Beast in a Box: Playing with Empire in Early Nineteenth-Century Britain" (Romita Ray, 2006) /// Playing Oppression: The Legacy of Conquest and Empire in Colonialist Board Games (Mary Flanagan and Mikael Jakobsson, 2023)
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mamiinthemiddle · 3 months ago
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Good Morning! 🥰👋🏾☀️
I’ll be online today, feel free to message me and interact (as long as you’re not on my DNI List)! 😘
I’m very interested in trading or buying content from sapphic women who actually want to make it for me…any takers? 👀🎀💕🌸
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Male mutuals may also DM this weekend, may the odds be ever in your favor! 😏😈😜🔥
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puffinft · 3 months ago
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Little guys be upon ye🌼🌷🌿🌿🌿🌷🌱🌱🌼
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Sneaking around with plants in my pockets at the @daycarefriendpickup magma
Reference doodles below the cut vvv
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made these a while ago, and now they've taken over a small chunk of my brain
I can not resist making Sun & Moon into little guys vv
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heyheyhaydn · 1 month ago
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COG ATTACK TRADING CARDS #1 - 15
I spent many many hours of my child life playing Toontown Online when it was ran by Disney, and many many hours of my adult life playing it now that it's entirely ran by fans for free. It's a game about cartoon animals fighting corporate robot bad guys called Cogs. The toon animals use comedy gags like throwing pies to fight the cogs, but the cogs themselves have attacks that are visual interpretations of business jargon but used offensively. Though the objective of the combat is to stay alive, it's funny to think about the millions of other players going 'oh no! not the paradigm shift! Not the water cooler!! Not the rolodex!!!' as the cogs attacked their characters. Back when Disney ran the game, they'd send out newsletters (which I have!) and trading cards (which I don't have) to members. The trading cards would be for things like the gags, the cogs, and important NPCs - but never the cog attacks. This is me filling this niche while drawing fan art for something I'm a fan of. It's a silly little passion project. I even wrote all the words on the backs.
I've already come to terms with the fact it's my very own Megalopolis - across other platforms if I were to look at the numbers critically I'd say these were... flops. But I enjoyed making them, and I'll make a post of my favourites at one point. If these find an audience here, I will cry happy tears - if not, then I've learnt a lesson from doing this.
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6ittrade · 1 year ago
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Most Effective Forex Trading Indicators for Every Trader
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Indicators for forex trading are tools that traders can use to assess market data and make wise trading decisions. A number of variables, including as your trading strategy, trading style, and personal preferences, affect an indicator's performance. Here are a few of the most popular and successful Online Forex trading indicators that traders frequently include in their tactics:
MAs, or moving averages:
Simple Moving Average (SMA): Aids in trend identification and smoothing out price data.
The exponential moving average (EMA) is more responsive to price fluctuations because it gives greater weight to recent price data.
Using two moving averages (MAs) and a histogram, the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) indicator can spot trends and potential buy/sell signals.
RSI: Relative Strength Index
calculates the rate and variety of price changes. Indicating overbought and oversold levels allows traders to foresee reversals.
Oscillator Stochastic:
Similar to the RSI but uses a different calculation approach to indicate overbought and oversold circumstances. There are two lines in it: %K and %D.
Using Bollinger Bands
consist of an upper and lower band reflecting standard deviations from the SMA, and a middle band (SMA). Bollinger Bands aid traders in spotting market reversals and volatile periods.
The Fibonacci retracement
Identifies probable levels of support and resistance using Fibonacci ratios (e.g., 38.2%, 50%, and 61.8%).
Cloud Ichimoku:
Provides a thorough analysis of possible support and resistance levels, trend direction, and momentum. The Tenkan-sen, Kijun-sen, Senkou Span A and B, and Chikou Span are only a few of the lines that make up this span.
SAR (Stop and Reverse) using a parabola
provides trailing stop levels, which may be used by traders to protect gains and control risk.
ATR, or average true range
Establishes stop-loss and take-profit levels by measuring market volatility.
Quantity Indicators:
Understanding the strength of a price shift can be gleaned from trading volume. On-Balance Volume (OBV) and Volume Profile are two useful volume indicators.
Williams%R:
It aids in the detection of overbought and oversold conditions and is similar to the stochastic oscillator.
Average Directional Index, or ADX
determines the force of a trend. It can be used by traders to identify a market's trend or range.
Key Points:
These levels of support and resistance were determined using the price information from the previous day. They can aid traders in locating potential breakout or reversal moments.
Indicators frequently perform best when used in conjunction with other indicators or as part of a larger trading strategy, but it's vital to remember that no indication is infallible. When choosing and using indicators, traders should also take into account their risk tolerance, timeframes, and market conditions. Furthermore, any technique must be fully back tested before being used in a real-time trading environment.
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lafflanes · 8 months ago
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one of my favorite toontown online series 2 trading cards is the one for smudgy mascara bc of this joke
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askefrueee3 · 28 days ago
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Art trade with @sshadovv Khira (also known as Twig hahaha) was such a wonderful model to draw!!! Thank you for the lovely opportunity to exchange art <3 This trade has been a honour and great pleasure!
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rainbow-glittersprinkes · 10 months ago
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Its Done! ITS FINALLY DONE!!!!
I have been working on this fanmade trading card for nearly a month, and im so proud of how it turned out!
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