If I'm going to take a service seriously, I don't want to spot spelling errors within 20 seconds of hitting the homepage.<p>stradegies->strategies<p>That said, interesting idea using JS to create buying/selling patterns and test them against historic data. That could be handy, if not just geeky fun :)
Please checkout my new startup and let me know what you think. Its a marketplace to buy, sell, trade stock applications.<p>Homepage: <a href="http://quantonomics.com" rel="nofollow">http://quantonomics.com</a><p>Example Source: <a href="http://quantonomics.com/community/forum/3-trading-systems" rel="nofollow">http://quantonomics.com/community/forum/3-trading-systems</a><p>Marketplace: <a href="http://quantonomics.com/applications" rel="nofollow">http://quantonomics.com/applications</a><p>Documentation: <a href="http://quantonomics.com/documentation" rel="nofollow">http://quantonomics.com/documentation</a>
<a href="http://quantonomics.com/" rel="nofollow">http://quantonomics.com/</a><p>Looks kind of neat, although being in the middle of 'A Random Walk Down Wall Street', and being pretty convinced of the "buy an index fund and hold it" strategy, I don't think I'm the target market.
Interesting concept. Some major JS errors going on all over the site which doesn't give me much confidence on the accuracy of the experiments. Needs some major work but the concept overall is solid.
Here's a small change you can make to engage users:<p>Tell them benefits not features. Users will like that more. Make all the bullet points speak for how awesome your product is!