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Stephen Hawking: Earth Will Become A Flaming Ball Of Fire By 2600

He also warns that if humans want to avoid permanent extinction, we should be making plans to evacuate the earth.
Hawking claims that mankind will destroy the earth making it a fireball within the next 600 years. The renowned physicist believes soaring population sizes and consequential increasing demands for energy and food will lead to the catastrophe. Hawking also says that humanity should begin looking to the stars to avoid this fate, with our nearest neighbor Alpha Centauri the best candidate for our escape. Hawking also urged financial backers to put funds behind a project that would send probes to the star system.
The Alpha Centauri system is the closest star system to our sun and consists of three stars. Of those three stars, Proxima is the closest to our sun. At a mere 4.367 light years away, on our sky’s dome, we see this multiple star system as a single star – the third-brightest star visible from Earth. And it’s this system that Hawking has his eye on.

Stephen Hawking

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What is a ‘Zero-Sum Game’?

Zero-sum games are the total opposite of win-win situations – such as an agreement that creates value between two counter-parties – or lose-lose situations, like war and mutually destructive relationships for instance. In real life, however, things are not always so clear-cut, and winners and losers are often difficult to quantify. New traders get confused and do not understand that in trading, profits come from the people on the other side of your trade that are making the wrong decision. The reason that trading is difficult is because you have to out smart someone to get their money, how you do this is what gives you your edge if you are profitable. In all financial markets buyers and sellers are always equal and the time frame in which they are trading determines if their decision was the right or wrong one at the time of their trade. Your entry is someone else’s exit and your losses are in some one else’s account as profits.

A zero-sum game is a situation where one person’s gain is always equivalent to another person’s loss, so the total wealth for the players and participants in the game is always a net change of  zero as a whole.  The financial contract markets of futures and options are a zero-sum game with several million players. Zero-sum games are found in game theory, but are less common than non-zero sum games. Poker and gambling are popular examples of what a zero-sum game is since the sum of the amounts won by some players equals the combined losses of the others. The money at a poker table at the start of the game does not grow it is just redistributed to the winners from the losers by the end of the game. All of the casino’s profits come from the gambler’s losses and all the gamblers profits are taken from the casino. Games like chess and tennis also fit this model becasue there is one winner and one loser they are always equal. In the financial markets, option contracts and future contracts are examples of zero-sum games, excluding transaction costs, for every long contract their is someone short the same contract. Some one has to sell a contract to create open interest and someone has to buy it, there has to be a winner and a loser at all times, one long and one short. Brokers and market makers disrupt the perfect balance of winners and losers by taking commissions or profiting from the bid/ask spreads. But, for every person who profits on a contract’s value going in their direction, there is a counter-party who loses who is on the other side. (more…)

Japan's Docomo to help farmers increase milk production

Wireless sensors will tell when cows are in heat

NTT Docomo’s sensors, placed on the neck of cows, will detect motions and other activities indicating estrus.

– Japanese telecommunications giant NTT Docomo will launch an internet-linked monitoring service later this month that will help farmers better determine whether a cow is in heat.
Dairy cows are said to produce more milk when in estrus, and the innovation would also promote the efficient breeding of beef cattle.

 Docomo’s system will adopt devices developed by Hokkaido startup Farmnote. The plan is to market the product via regional agricultural associations and have 1,000 dairy farmers adopt the technology in two years.

Sensors placed on the cows’ necks will monitor their movement, rumination times and other data. That information will be collected wirelessly to determine whether those activities have escalated — a sign that a cow is in heat. This internet of things application is believed to be at least 90% accurate for free-range cattle.
Artificial intelligence programs will enable determinations based on individual differences. Prices for sensors and other devices come to 29,800 yen ($264) per head, along with a monthly service fee of 200 yen a cow. Data-relaying equipment and placing the sensors on the cattle will cost extra.
Dairy farmers who own 50 cows stand to lose nearly 4 million yen annually in reduced milk volume if they miss estrus cycles. For that reason, producers are expected to recoup initial costs after using Docomo’s system for a year.
The devices will also quickly detect signs of sickness or similar problems within cattle. Docomo is also looking at providing additional services, including those that would aid raising calves, monitor feed levels and support farm produce logistics.
Docomo aims to take in about 100 billion yen from its internet of things business in fiscal 2020, or triple fiscal 2016’s estimate.

Open Mind

Nothing is infallible in the stock market — no theory, no measure of the market be it technical, fundamental, or cyclical. The basic tenet of any investment or trading methodology worth its salt should be that it’s not infallible.

Those that demand the least from a method will gain the most from it. Those who demand the most from a method will be the ones most frustrated by it.

The only way to gain control is to give up control. The only way to gain control is to give up the idea of trying to have control.

The market is more art than science: The good and bad part of any genuine approach to the market is that it requires interpretation, which is what makes markets and opportunity, but is bad because it’s frustrating.

The study of the market is part theoretical and part philosophical. That’s what makes it so intriguing. The market is a mystery. Despite all the artificial intelligence and computer power available, no one has solved the mystery. There’s no sure thing in the markets.

This is no-man’s-land. Every technical benchmark and data point seem but an island in the market’s stream of confusion.

As a trading bro said to me over the weekend, “If you have an opinion in this market, you’re wrong.”

Keep an open mind.

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