If anyone wants to learn more and have a computer technical/programmer background rather than biology, this article reversing the pfizer mRNA code was very interesting:
https://berthub.eu/articles/posts/reverse-engineering-source-code-of-the-biontech-pfizer-vaccine/I'm not vaccinated yet, but still willing to take vaccine when it becomes available. After reading about different vaccines a lot I would prefer Sputnik V, because my focus is not political, it's technical, and I rather pick one with better base protection than one with milder symptoms once infected with Covid.
Thank you for pointing me to this, it's been a fascinating hour reading this stuff. Finally STEM (Science Translational Medicine journal) is not only cited, but has excellent information that I can somewhat read :-) Merited the hell out of the post.
Will probably spend the rest of the weekend reading this stuff. I remember hearing about the Tau replacement for U, the fact that they used it like this is a great example of how some discoveries that seem kind of pointless years ago turn out to be very handy later....
You're welcome. I read the article several times to get the gist of it (not quick and smart, rather slow and stubborn), what fascinates me more than anything is the "payload" mechanism, and how it avoids detection by the immune system, clever approach.
I kind of got tired of this mini-bear (so far).
What is Mr. Market waiting for? G-7?
JPMorgan (Feds's market agent/proxy) said target was 35k ... since then price has targeted and oscillated around 35k as if in frequency response to an unsophisticated 2nd order controller.
... wrap a control loop around any market price using options/futures as your input and unlimited control authority (fiat slush fund impervious to losses) and dial in the set point
... these AI neural net controllers are more sophisticated again, adaptive, large state sets, cross-coupling with external variables add in some kalman filtering, stochastics, dynamic programming etc to the witches brew from the quants
This is bad news for most of us if true (can you cite something?), assuming "fiat slush fund impervious to losses" is similar to the %0 interest loan (money printer) access?
I was thinking something simpler like many bots running
rebalancing individually using statistics which makes price flat (oscillate less) at low volumes, but maybe roughly the same result regarding outcome without having a set price level, just happens to settle around last major volume spike.
If your statement is correct, looks like JPMorgan's strategy still fail a lot when the volume gets high, guess there's hope in that.