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Hmm, the OP of this thread on the official NT forum has "heard" something ?
The discretionary trading is only available since the pre-Alpha version, so things may change, but you can "drop" an ATM-like to an existing position (from MC Blog):
Unfortunately, I didn't have enough time to play with this aspect of MC7, and found it harder to understand than Ninja ATM.
And as my demo license will be expired tomorrow, I couldn't test more this aspect.
A very good thing with MC demo-license is that you can make real trades, it has all the features of the real version.
But a bad thing, for Ninja users who wants to be sure they could use MC like they use Ninja, without losing the key features/indicators/ATM/historical data/... and make a lot of tests, 30 days is not enough (unless spending 1 hour on it every day). The language is very different, the datafeed/instruments management is very different, the whole logic of the product is very different, and I think it might be quite painful to migrate MC, for a NT "power user" like me (or I'm maybe too old and not smart enough ).
If you were to build a CPU built for optimization in Multicharts what specs would you use today? HIGH CPU processing power..HIGH memory..fast hard drive..the most computer for the dollar..with the intent to optimize.
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For you desk, a HP Z800, dual quad-Xeon.
If it's not enough, and if the noise is not an issuer for you, HP DL 580, quad octo-Xeon (32 cores).
But not for very cheap, you'll need avery good bot to covers the costs .
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About MC itself, you can forget my previous comments about the demo license duration, MultiCharts guys can allow more demo time if needed, a good point.
I'll say very good point, because unlike some other demo platforms which have limited functions in trial/demo mode (not all symbols for CQG, not cash trades with NT, ...), you have here the real platform, with all the features you'll have with a real live license.
Does anyone is testing the pre-beta 7 here ?
Any comment from people using this version and the ZenFire datafeed ?
I installed Multicharts through Optimus Futures from [U][FONT=Georgia][COLOR=#0000ff]http://www.optimusfutures.com/[AUTOLINK]multicharts[/AUTOLINK]-platform-demo.html[/COLOR][/FONT][/U] After connecting Multicharts with Rithmic, there were some problems with the data coming in, but with the great help from the people of Optimus (who spend >40 minutes on the phone, solving this problem) all is running fine. All my systems (in EasyLanguage) are put in and running perfectly. I can recommend Optimus Futures to anyone looking to trade with MultiCharts or one of the other platforms they have. They give a fantastic service and quite nice to see a broker with personal attention, where you're not just a number!
Really depends on the budget. For my trading style a HP Z400 is good enough, it comes at half the price or less of an HP Z800. It is as good, the CPU may be 20% slower. So if you wait for 20 seconds for your workspace to open with a Z800, it will be 24 seconds with the Z400. Of course this depends on the processor chosen. The Z400 can be equipped with watercooling, if need.
If you were to go this route, consider building your own workstation and save yourself ~$4000 compared to above HP spec servers.
Processor: 2 x Intel Xeon X5680 3.33GHz 12MB L3 six-core ($1400 x 2)
Motherboard: EVGA Classified SR-2 ($520)
Memory: 2 x 8GB GSkill Trident + DDR3 PC312800 (2 x $200)
Power Supply: EVGA Classified SR-2 1200W PS ($340)
Video Card: 2 x EVGA 9500 GT Dual DVI PCIe ($45 x 2)
HD's: 2 x Crucial C300 SSD's (RAID 0) + 3ware controller ($700)
Chassis: Full ATX Tower (Lian Li/ Antec / Corsair etc) ($200)
Windows 7 Pro 64-bit ($140 OEM)
Unless you simulate day in/day out and are running very complex brute force exhaustive tests, I'd recommend building a research workstation around the new Sandy Bridge i7-2600K processor ($330 @ Newegg). At stock frequency, it can complete arithmetic tests at a comparable rate to the Intel i7 980-X hex-core ($1000). Then add the fact the 2600k overclocks to 5.0ghz on air cooling, you are significantly cutting into the dual xeon hex-core advantage.You can realistically build a very powerful Multicharts research system for under $1500.
IMHO, focus on i7-2600K, SSD SATAIII 6GB/s (Crucial 128/256GB C300) + quality controller, 8-12GB memory, quality power supply.
So far so good imo! My CD volume development discussions with MC has been very good and after testing their initial Cumulative Delta Volume tools for several days I am very encouraged. I told MC they should release current CD tools to public in "Beta" form at their convenience (and start getting all that EXCELLENT feedback from traders/programmers). I am very encouraged by the positive attitude for ongoing Cumulative Delta (BID/ASK differential volume) development in MC going forward!
The MC CD tools are not yet set up for access to the 30 days of BID/ASK historical data from DTN.IQ feed, but they realize that is the final step to a proper CD volume capability.