Reddit Posts
Download dataset of stock prices X tickers for yesterday?
Tech market brings important development opportunities, AIGC is firmly top 1 in the current technology field
Tech market brings important development opportunities, AIGC is firmly top 1 in the current technology field
AIGC market brings important development opportunities, artificial intelligence technology has been developing
Avricore Health - AVCR.V making waves in Pharmacy Point of Care Testing! CEO interview this evening as well.
OTC : KWIK Shareholder Letter January 3, 2024
The commercialization of multimodal models is emerging, Gemini now appears to exceed ChatGPT
The commercialization of multimodal models is emerging, Gemini now appears to exceed ChatGPT
Why Microsoft's gross margins are going brrr (up 1.89% QoQ).
Why Microsoft's gross margins are expanding (up 1.89% QoQ).
Why Microsoft's gross margins are expanding (up 1.89% QoQ).
Google's AI project "Gemini" shipped, and so far it looks better than GPT4
US Broker Recommendation with a market that allows both longs/shorts
A Littel DD on FobiAI, harnesses the power of AI and data intelligence, enabling businesses to digitally transform
Best API for grabbing historical financial statement data to compare across companies.
Seeking Free Advance/Decline, NH/NL Data - Python API?
A Littel DD on FobiAI, harnesses the power of AI and data intelligence, enabling businesses to digitally transform
A Littel DD on FobiAI, harnesses the power of AI and data intelligence, enabling businesses to digitally transform
A Littel DD on FobiAI, harnesses the power of AI and data intelligence, enabling businesses to digitally transform
A Littel DD on FobiAI, harnesses the power of AI and data intelligence, enabling businesses to digitally transform
A Littel DD on FobiAI, harnesses the power of AI and data intelligence, enabling businesses to digitally transform
A Littel DD on FobiAI, harnesses the power of AI and data intelligence, enabling businesses to digitally transform
Delving Deeper into Benzinga Pro: Does the Subscription Include Full API Access?
Qples by Fobi Announces 77% Sales Growth YoY with Increased Momentum From Media Solutions, AI (8112) Coupons, & New API Integration
Qples by Fobi Announces 77% Sales Growth YoY with Increased Momentum From Media Solutions, AI (8112) Coupons, & New API Integration
Qples by Fobi Announces 77% Sales Growth YoY with Increased Momentum From Media Solutions, AI (8112) Coupons, & New API Integration
Aduro Clean Technologies Inc. Research Update
Aduro Clean Technologies Inc. Research Update
Option Chain REST APIs w/ Greeks and Beta Weighting
$VERS Upcoming Webinar: Introduction and Demonstration of Genius
Are there pre-built bull/bear systems for 5-10m period QQQ / SPY day trades?
Short Squeeze is Reopened. Play Nice.
Created options trading bot with Interactive Brokers API
Leafly Announces New API for Order Integration($LFLY)
Is Unity going to Zero? - Why they just killed their business model.
Looking for affordable API to fetch specific historical stock market data
Where do sites like Unusual Whales scrape their data from?
Twilio Q2 2023: A Mixed Bag with Strong Revenue Growth Amid Stock Price Challenges
[DIY Filing Alerts] Part 3 of 3: Building the Script and Automating Your Alerts
This prized $PGY doesn't need lipstick (an amalgamation of the DD's)
API or Dataset that shows intraday price movement for Options Bid/Ask
[Newbie] Bought Microsoft shares at 250 mainly as see value in ChatGPT. I think I'll hold for at least +6 months but I'd like your thoughts.
Crude Oil Soars Near YTD Highs On Largest Single-Week Crude Inventory Crash In Years
I found this trading tool thats just scraping all of our comments and running them through ChatGPT to get our sentiment on different stocks. Isnt this a violation of reddits new API rules?
I’m Building a Free Fundamental Stock Data API You Can Use for Projects and Analysis
Fundamental Stock Data for Your Projects and Analysis
Meta, Microsoft and Amazon team up on maps project to crack Apple-Google duopoly
Pictures say it all. Robinhood is shady AF.
URGENT - Audit Your Transactions: Broker Alters Orders without Permission
My AI momentum trading journey just started. Dumping $3k into an automated trading strategy guided by ChatGPT. Am I gonna make it
The AI trading journey begins. Throwing $3k into automated trading strategies. Will I eat a bag of dicks? Roast me if you must
I made a free & unique spreadsheet that removes stock prices to help you invest like Warren Buffett (V2)
I made a free & unique spreadsheet that removes stock prices to help you invest like Warren Buffett (V2)
To recalculate historical options data from CBOE, to find IVs at moment of trades, what int rate?
WiMi Hologram Cloud Proposes A New Lightweight Decentralized Application Technical Solution Based on IPFS
$SSTK Shutterstock - OpenAI ChatGBT partnership - Images, Photos, & Videos
Is there really no better way to track open + closed positions without multiple apps?
List of Platforms (Not Brokers) for advanced option trading
Utopia P2P is a great application that needs NO KYC to safeguard your data !
Utopia P2P supports API access and CHAT GPT
Stepping Ahead with the Future of Digital Assets
An Unexpected Ally in the Crypto Battlefield
Utopia P2P has now an airdrop for all Utopians
Microsoft’s stock hits record after executives predict $10 billion in annual A.I. revenue
Reddit IPO - A Critical Examination of Reddit's Business Model and User Approach
Reddit stands by controversial API changes as situation worsens
Mentions
... Just because a company has a name doesnt mean their products carry on that name. AI doesnt even technically exist. We have language models but there is no consciousness. GPT is close but its not there yet. Siri is just voice commands that are connected to an API. Your voice triggers search querries that you can manually input with text.
AI is not my field, but sadly Intel waited too long in investing into AI technology. NVIDIA did the right choices on that. Can Intel catch up on that? Also nvidia play smart on their proprietary API, will make it harder for competitors to replace their model anytime soon. ARM have huge potential, I heard Google is trying to move their data centers CPU to some proprietary chips that are ARM based, I don’t have much information on that tho.
It’s AI because it understands intent not just a transcription of words. Additionally, everyone orders differently. This is a clean order, usually real world would go something like “um…. I think…. I’ll have some fried… no wait a frosty”. The AI needs to understand intent that the user changed their mind and wanted a frosty. Not to mention the back end API calls required to execute the order… again something transcription software can’t understand. Lots more subtleties here to talk about. Although it looks like old tech, this is quite developed.
When you say this. Do you only refer to dispensaries, dispensing flower? And that Canadian companies wont overtake the MSOS dispensaries? Or do you think MSOS are also superior in gaining federal licenses before canadian companies. Or are superior in producing API's, or rare cannabinoids, or have one step ahead in working with the Pharma, CPG or Tobacco sector? If so, can you list the US companies that are superior in this please?
I'm so new I don't get this downvoting thing. I think I have negative "karma" from fake reddit. I use Schwab, Alpaca, E\*Trade, Tradestation, and IBKR. Perhaps I should look into robinhood. I use a computer app to do daytrading via the API interface, and ETrade is my preferred broker. Alpaca is easier to use not needing to get a new token every day, but they only do FIFA and not LOFO, which is unethical.
How is does Tastytrade charting compare to TOS? Does Tasty have an API like TOS had previously?
I don't have an ETrade account anymore so you would have to ask r/etrade . But in Schwab - there are a bunch of ways to do it - a robust way is in ToS - [https://tlc.thinkorswim.com/center/howToTos/thinkManual/MarketWatch/Alerts](https://tlc.thinkorswim.com/center/howToTos/thinkManual/MarketWatch/Alerts) - you can use Thinkscript although I've not tried it. Schwab also has alerts you can set on their web interface - [https://www.schwab.com/learn/story/set-trading-alerts-to-help-monitor-your-portfolio](https://www.schwab.com/learn/story/set-trading-alerts-to-help-monitor-your-portfolio) At Schwab - the most robust method is with their API - you can also code your own in anyway you want - [developers.schwab.com](http://developers.schwab.com) If you search through r/Schwab - there are some posts about using alerts. Similarly for Fidelity - you can set alerts using various tools - I sometimes use Fidelity ATP. There is a web based alerts here - [https://scs.fidelity.com/customeronly/alerts.shtml](https://scs.fidelity.com/customeronly/alerts.shtml) - Fidelity has an official subreddit staffed by Fidelity reps at r/fidelityinvestments if you want to ask over there. All three of those brokers have phone support - if you have an account - just call and ask them.
> No, the python is simply a wrapper for the SQL, you are not "running python within the EDW solution". Honestly, I feel like we are dealing with semantics here. I don’t care where the Python is run (wrapper or not), I just want a product that lets me run Python so as a Solution Architect I don’t have to manage the updates, installation, infosec approvals, etc. on another product if I want to use Python scripting. Also, since you are probably working in the industry, I would just like to add that the Snowpark API is inspired by Spark. Your example link uses Python as a SQL wrapper but you can also use DataFrames to manipulate the data. This is a similar API as Spark except, again, we don’t need to maintain another entirely separate product to have the functionality. We can do it within our database product. > I'm glad you said this because not all "python coding" is the same. The "Snowpark python" isn't running in a Jupyter Notebook, so intermediate computations are not saved I definitely don’t think SnowPark is intended as an alternative to Jupyter notebooks. It’s helpful in building datapipelines. As you rightfully point out, the functionality doesn’t line up at all. With that said, in a far more technical discussion than a stock trading sub warrants, your intermediate computations can be preserved in the Snowflake results cache if your data engineers/DBAs wants to configure the Warehouse in the manner. What this means is if you re-run the same deterministic query it will be instantaneous rather than take an hour. You can refer to the Snowflake Query Profiler to check if the query results are coming from the Results Cache, Warehouse Cache, or Remote Storage. Also, you can also just store intermediary results in a temporary or transient table. It’s more work but you are coding from a database and not a Jupyter notebook. Jupyter notebook is yet another product solution in the tech stack like Spark. You wouldn’t argue Jupyter replaces Spark so I don’t see why you would be arguing Jupyter is better than Snowflake. Jupyter > Snowflake > Spark can all be used together and sometimes you just want the half baked functionality on one part of your tech stack.
Market data from Yahoo Finance API: pip install yfinance
depends what's you're looking for, but ninjatrader is pretty cheap. IBKR if you wanna have API access and don't mind paying more. Both make you pay for data. Not sure if Schwab does.
I would if there was an API to read this data.
Not making a joke, ask AI and specify you want an API in python. Sounds like your asking for work reasons so you might be able to ask a better model with external access so you’ll likely get exactly what your looking for.
A lot of brokers offer APIs. During the migration from Schwab, TDA stopped allowing new API signups. But the new API was just released - [https://developer.schwab.com/](https://developer.schwab.com/) TastyTrade released their API recently. [https://support.tastytrade.com/support/s/solutions/articles/43000700385](https://support.tastytrade.com/support/s/solutions/articles/43000700385) Ibkr has an API that has been around a bit. - [https://www.interactivebrokers.com/en/trading/ib-api.php](https://www.interactivebrokers.com/en/trading/ib-api.php) Tradestation has an API - [https://www.tradestation.com/platforms-and-tools/trading-api/](https://www.tradestation.com/platforms-and-tools/trading-api/) eTrade has an API - [https://developer.etrade.com/home](https://developer.etrade.com/home)
Spreadsheets is how I got into web engineering. I think you can make the jump pretty easily. YouTube is a great resource, I can recommend a handful of channels if you’re interested. Then you can grab some AI and use it to help learn (I think this is the true value of AI in coding for now). Hilariously, I am a reasonably active trader on Vanguard (terrible UI compared to others). They have an API, but they only support account checking from what I can find. Right now I’m sorta just messing around. Built a scraper for Yahoo Finance, it’s slow as shit but I don’t feel like I need the 1000 calls per minute some of these places offer. Right now I just want to display data the way I want and run the basic math analysis automatically. I actually do all this in excel right now but I’m tired of copy/paste and know I should put more into my developer portfolio.
2 days ago i found this rabbit's hole of API (I only know spreadsheet coding) while trying to figure out how to bring more market data into a Google spread sheet I'm working on but thankfully tradestation, the platform I use has an API. I've seen that there's a way to trade through Tradingview using your tradestation account. Now all I need to do is learn how to use it.
While I haven’t used them, I do think it would be cool to build my own site that uses Alpaca Markets API. I don’t know if other API brokers exist but I think it’s a neat idea. If anyone has a recommendation for an API broker other than Alpaca, I’m taking notes. I know that doesn’t mean much for the body of your post, but it’s my answer to your title.
Interactive Brokers. Only one AFAIK available in Canada with access to an API.
Generate revenue = making us pay for it Can we fuck off with these cheap Silicon Valley companies with only an OpenAI API that are somehow worth over $1bln?
So instead of your microphone gong to Siri, it's going to do an API call to chat GPT? Truly groundbreaking.
I say there is no doubt that all the journalist that were using X's free API calls are being really butt-hurt by the fact that Elon is making them pay a fair amount just like all the other social media platforms. Every single thing they can put out about him that paints his companies in a negative light, they are. Im buying as much of his stock as I can. He is the most forward thinking CEO who is actually out for the betterment of mankind. I bought it on the last dip at 148 and made a killing. Good luck to all the other EV automakers playing catch up just to get to where Tesla was 7 years ago.
GCP is ass. > data bricks and snow flake will have a difficult time to keep up Databricks and Snowflake are not cloud providers... They compete with BigQuery, and even then only on a subset of features. > Data bricks and snowflake are useful because they make the cloud platform efficient but if cloud providers catch up with them their use case will become obsolete I'm not sure what you mean here. You could say that about every company that runs on the cloud. This is easy to say but incredibly hard to accomplish and Google's competitive strategy is definitely __not__ to boil the ocean. They make money on Snowflake/Databricks. Talk to me when GCP has equivalent API/CLI/UI. That's the bare minimum to really compete. I don't doubt they can grow, but 20% growth of a small amount is much less than 15% growth of a large amount. GCP is also barely profitable since their datacenter design, services, and planning are not efficient. Their stability is also nothing to write home about. They co-locate AZ's. > Azure and google cloud will start dominating compared to amazon Nothing you said really backs up these claims, there's no competitive analysis, and just vague claims which are all fairly wrong. Each of the clouds have something going for them and you can definitely argue that GCP has the ability and opportunity to dominate. Execution and making that a reality is a whole different ballgame and requires some kind of strategy to make something happen.
Meta's open source models are already competitive with anything SOTA. They require licensing to use on commercial products over a certain size, and unlike API access corpo models, are finetuneable. Meta also uses them, and plans to use them in it's own products like VR, social media etc.
Robinhood currently doesn't support an API with options, but there are other brokers who do. Check out option alpha dot com
Yahoo finance still alive and kicking for API purposes, and I couldn't be happier
This is what happens when businesses only want to hire people with closely relevant experience. Reminds me of that twitter from some dev who made an API and then applied for a job that needed experience with that API. They wanted 5 years of experience but he didn't have enough because he made the API 2 years ago.
Android doesn't make money? Have you heard of Google play? Google takes a 30% cut on every app sale or subscription (well, 15% for apps that do under a million revenue, 30% of a million). Maps is used for advertising directly. It's also a massive data lake and they have operating leverage with it. Developers of other applications can pay to use the API. Cloud is a growing industry and Google hasn't even started flexing their operating leverage unlike the other cloud providers. All 3 of the big names will do well here. The reason I've mentioned Gemini is people think their search moat is under threat. I don't think this is true but if it is the fact is that Google is at the forefront of AI anyway.
API report came in today with a shortening of 3.2 million barrels for last week, the crude oil prices should react with an increase to $85-$86. Anything in oil should increase with it.
> I’m amazed at how bad the big companies are at designing the UI on their app and webpages. Aging SaaS software products are a quagmire. They are hideously inflexible. They were written in a time before hard lessons were learned involving the (de-)coupling of data and application state. For a lot of these old products, redesigning the UI means either working within the limitations of whatever dead-language frameworks they were originally written in 15-20 years ago, or rearchitecting your entire product using modern principles that allows you plug-and-play UI elements on top of a stable API. Taking the first approach means limiting yourself to the capabilities of the old frameworks, taking the second approach is a massive and expensive undertaking and ultimately always results in having to maintain two separate codebases (see: new and old reddit) because customers either refuse to use the new platform or the new platform lacks functionality that are difficult to replicate from the old platform. The late-stage lifecycle for these products is either to ultimately undertake the re-architecting that may or may not be a financial success that could ultimately end in ruin, or to keep the ancient product working as long as possible until it reaches a natural death. Most legacy enterprise companies will pick option 2 and seek to acquire a small startup competitor as a replacement.
what API are you planning to use to execute buy and sells?
Reddit is a social media site. However, social media is sharply declining with the Genz audience, hence why Reddit users prefer it to be called an "online forum." Moving on.. Reddit primarily makes $$ from advertising revenue. The largest source of income of social media platforms is the payment from other companies for advertisements on their platform. Reddit has said that they have reserve shares for top users based on their "karma" offering users to buy a piece of a company that has never made a profit and lost $91 Million last year. Additionally, Reddit plans to grow its business and revenue by share and licensing of user-content with 3rd party AI companies to train and improve their AI capabilities, such as their recent $60 Million partnership with Google. However, several Google developers complained that the API update is too costly for Reddit.
How many % of my portfolio would be reasonable to have in very volatile stocks for "experimenting"? Right now I have about 97% of my portfolio in FTSE and a 5.2% API savings account, the other 3% is in Porsche because I like the company and they been serving me quite well. I would like to experiment with more volatile stocks like AI for example but I want the losses that are probably quite likely at some point to not be that significant. So back to the original question, how many percent of my portfolio would be safe fo have in more volatile assets?
The Schwab API is pretty new but should be functional. Besides Schwab - I am aware of the following brokers that offer APIs to retail customers - Interactive Brokers, Tastytrade, Tradestation, eTrade, Alpaca, Tradier. Using a long-lived API key isn't always a good idea unless you really know how to manage it. Brokers like - Schwab Alpaca, and eTrade will support OAUTH 2 tokens instead.
as rightfully it should One is the leading API chip maker with 80% of market and the other is a 3rd tier box assembler
China likes money but will never release their algos to the US. They will sell their user to US but not the AI algos. Basically, sell frontend and API interface but backend China keeps.
You have 3 options: 1. Buy low cost ETFs and hold for ten years. 2. Read “An Introduction to Computational Finance Without Agonizing Pain”, pick up Rust and BLAS, write a client that connects to E*TRADE API, implement a convex optimizer for your portfolio, and start doing analyses. 3. Open a robinhood account with level 1 options l, buy 100 puts on SPY that are $20 out of the money at 1:00pm on Monday and pray.
If it's not the average of all contracts for that expiration, what else would it be? You said "single stock" not "single contract", so the IV for a "stock" has to be an average over all contracts. If you want a single contract's IV history, you can get closing values for free from here (not an API): [https://www.optionistics.com/quotes/option-prices](https://www.optionistics.com/quotes/option-prices) If you want time series data that would allow you to calculate historical IV yourself, you can get that from here: [https://polygon.io/pricing?product=options](https://polygon.io/pricing?product=options)
Limiting the NFC API to only work with Apple pay and not allowing 3rd party apps to use NFC to accept or send payments isn't exactly "winning a competition."
Some are listed here. You want the ones that offer a web API: [https://www.reddit.com/r/options/wiki/faq/pages/data\_sources/](https://www.reddit.com/r/options/wiki/faq/pages/data_sources/)
The best way would be to use an SMS API based platform. This way, you can configure your own triggers and also put a layer of AI on it. An SMS API platform recommendation - Message Central.
This is due to the whole Reddit API fiasco last year, with a lot of subs being affected for good reason. Found an an article [here](https://qz.com/reddit-amas-r-iama-protest-api-changes-steve-huffman-1850600843) with the announcements from r/AMA on this matter.
Sign up for an API. There are many. polygon.io, developer.schwab.com, etc...
Lack of fixed income products and mutual funds is just one thing. But realistically, there are lots of ETFs these days which can be used as a substitute. For me - it's services like, access to futures, portfolio margin, 24x7 live support, dedicated customer rep, local presence for certain transactions, API, etc. There are also some fees like wire fees that matter to me. I do make use of wires often and Fidelity doesn't have a fee for inbound/outbound wires. Robinhood also doesn't support common option strategies like box spreads - which I use regularly. Although to be honest, Fidelity's margin requirements on long box is kinda useless. Robinhood is kind of a weird broker - imo. They really went after very inexperienced active traders who don't really know much about trading and investing with the promise of no commissions and a dumb-down application process. That really swelled their account numbers but average account size was very small. The reality is that many brokers already offered no commission trading to their active traders so the more experienced traders with larger account sizes don't usually consider Robinhood as a viable broker. So - I'm guessing that these promos that Robinhood is doing is a way to try to entice larger accounts. It actually makes sense why Robinhood is doing these promos. For me - a buy and hold IRA portfolio and the credit card promos can make sense. And that's what I'm looking at Robinhood. But I'm not really sure how Robinhood would make money off accounts like mine so the account grab just doesn't make sense to me. Ultimately - I do think that the Robinhood promos are good incentives. And it can be a great way for many people to get an extra few hundred bps even if it's not permanent. I do think that it's a personal choice though - for me - the extra bps may not be worth it. I like the comfort of knowing that I can have really good support and customer service from a broker. As an example - today is the tax deadline. Due to my mismanagement and misunderstanding from my tax accountant, I ended owing a large payment. This meant that I had to move funds from some Fidelity and Schwab accounts into a bank account. With both firms - I was able to get transferred to their wire desk and reach an actual wire clerk who stayed on the phone with me while they did the actual wire transfer. I'm not sure I would get the same type of support from Robinhood. I have been trading and investing for decades so I've seen and have had accounts at dozens of brokers. And I've worked at a couple (institutional only) brokers. So I'm a little familiar with how brokers work. I do think that Robinhood has a good opportunity to be a great retail broker if they can just get hit the right sweet spot. So - if you are looking to try out Robinhood - it could certainly work well for you. Everyone has their own requirements, just because it may not be right for me - doesn't mean that it won't work for you.
I do! And there's no paywall. The [finvizfinance API](https://pypi.org/project/finvizfinance/) is 100% free. Only issue is querying frequency, so I have a 250ms delay built in between requests.
Don't overlook GoogleFinance, which is an API that's built into Sheets (as an alternative to Excel).
That's not quite right. Customers are using pytorch to develop ml models on virtualized hardware running on large-scale networked systems. They aren't asking AWS or a service provider to translate their programs into cuda. The developer uses the cuda API in pytorch to develop and train their models. Aws provides the hardware infrastructure that can actually run the models so users don't have to buy millions of dollars of hardware.
I can o it imagine how good the Goldman one is. I was using the yahoo finance API but then they changed the access model. Thanks for the tip on fin hub.io
I used to work at Goldman and theirs is amazing, but really hard to get access to. The best I could find was finnhub.io But they have started charging more for their API.
What do you use to store the data? If I were to buy from polygon and figure out how to use the API… do you just load CSV files into like a DB program like access? (Is there some DB management tool that’s very popular?) I guess then I could just read in to Python from that db and use some libraries like “zip line”
It’s an API based on Yahoo finance
That's awesome, I appreciate it, but it'd be slow as hell for inference of a large model. The thing I wanted to set up is a bit involved and would require scraping reddit gilding events so I just haven't dived into it yet. Things with wsbapp have been taking priority. In a perfect world I'd have a few A100s in a rack and run an absolutely massive model, completely unaligned, to do both classification for the subreddit and amusing VM chatter. Tall order. It might be easier to do all of this from some LLM API if I can make enough through people gilding him for more attention or something. Idk, if I hit a brick wall I'll poke ya.
That might be possible, the API we use is finnicky I might only know about it if it's that week.
Do you just get the data from an API?
not ready to be shared yet (have some work to do on it so it doesn't run up my API bills etc), but will share once it's there, sure
Let me check Robinhood inside reddit, could it really be that hard to integrate the API's ![img](emote|t5_2th52|27421)![img](emote|t5_2th52|27421)![img](emote|t5_2th52|27421)
The point isn't how good it is right now. The point is how good it will be next year, and how easily machines can utilize the API.
GPT isn't entirely free. You have limited API calls. It also operates essentially at a loss, as a project of Microsoft (the nonprofit status is more or less just MS Tax shelter for its research, as the OpenAI CEO debacle showed). It won't be free forever. Why would a consumer use Google AI powered search over OpenAI? No idea. But if I'm a company setting up a *machine* / AI to use a search engine, I can see lots of reasons I'd lean towards Google instead.
Yes via API they should have it if not find a broker with API access
Whispertrades.com. But if you need something niche you would need to code your own filters and hook into their API to enable/disable bots. If it's really niche, you may want to hook in directly with your brokers API. TDA/Schwab's API gives you realtime market data/Greeks fwiw.
zjz you gotta tap into a better API for your stock prices
Only $30M more to go to break even! I'm being facetious obviously, but this is kind of the rub -- Google is likely one of, if not the biggest customer for them in the AI learning sphere, and even that doesn't come close to offsetting their losses. Even assuming they get a few dozen more buyers lower down the pricing ladder, is that really going to be enough to turn a reliable profit year over year? Or lead to any sort of growth? Like you say, if they had proven capable of being profitable at literally any point in the past I'd be slightly more confident, but it's just hard to believe that monetizing their API is going to suddenly turn them into a well-run company.
The oral form is also far less effective for weight loss even at equivalent doses. Also the supply issues have nothing to do with the underlying API semaglutide, it’s the production of the single use auto injecting pens.
meh, you can create a trading bot using freqtrade framework with AI in couple hours these days if you know python, basics of coding and how to read API documentation. Spoilet alert: it does not print cash. Be careful with that.
You should be able to algo trade with Ibkr. Schwab's API just came online last week so you can check out their API as well - the new API replaces the legacy TDA API. I recall looking at Alpaca in the past and thought they were a bit immature.
So the 2025 budgets aren't offering the information we all want right now, but some interesting points: Notable budget requests for 2025: / FDA Foreign Office Expansion This $1 million investment will strengthen FDA’s oversight of imported products by expanding the Agency’s foreign office footprint and deployed personnel. / Expand FDA’s Ability to Disclose and Use Certain Information Related to Impurities in Drugs That Pose a Risk to the Public Health / Require Site Master Files for Drug Manufacturing Facilities SMFs can improve FDA understanding of quality management practices and supply chain management, which will improve overall supply chain resiliency / Expanding Information Disclosure Authorities with States / Evaluation of Non-Application Drug (finished dosage forms and active pharmaceutical ingredients (API) Manufacturers Before Marketing Under this proposal, a manufacturer that intends to distribute a non-application drug in interstate commerce from an establishment for the first time would be required to notify FDA of its intent at least six months prior to its first distribution. A recent focus on firms manufacturing non-application drugs has identified a high rate of non-compliance with current good manufacturing practice (CGMP) requirements, especially when a facility is first inspected. / Require Destruction of Imported Products that Pose a Significant Public Health Risk FDA also believes this authority would increase efficiency when Customs and Border Protection (CBP) seizes an FDA-regulated product. ---> I find this interesting, since it sounds like a loose end which is now a DEA task when seizing marijuana. / Provide the FDA product centers with the timely and definitive toxicity assessments required for informed public-health decisions on substances such as cannabis-derived products, including cannabidiol (CBD), and opioids. / Cannabis-Derived Products such as Cannabidiol (CBD) FDA recognizes the opportunities that cannabis or cannabis-derived compounds have for widespread consumer consumption and potential therapeutic use. However, FDA is aware that some companies are marketing products containing cannabis and cannabis-derived compounds in ways that violate the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act Despite that approval (Epidiolex), much is still unknown about the potential toxicities related to the thousands of cannabis-derived products marketed as foods, beverages, cosmetics, dietary supplements, and products for animals. NCTR is working with the FDA product centers to answer questions about the science, safety, and quality of products containing CBD.. / Chief Scientist Challenge Grants FDA Headquarters established, and now manages and coordinates the review and granting of intramural research award programs that supports four competitive research areas: The scientific areas of the recent projects include nanomaterials, ... AI,..., and surveillance of cannabis-derived products. / DEA 2025 budget narrative Schedule 1 Research Expansion The DEA fully supports opportunities to conduct and expand research with schedule I controlled substances to include marijuana and psilocybin and DC continues to be a vital resource for researchers and scientists. Further focus on protecting forests from illegal grows, and national lands. / Drug Control Policy 2025: Cannabis is mentioned when they are talking about state legal things remaining stable. Marijuana is mentioned when talking about illegal things. / Difference in vocabulary: DEA only mentions "marijuana". FDA mentions "cannabis and cannabis derived products"
Alpaca and Composer are newer introducing brokers that focus primarily on providing API services to retail algo traders. Alpaca clears through Velox and Composer clears through Apex.
Alpha Vantage provides free access to historical and real-time stock data. It offers weekly and daily data for stocks, indices, and ETFs. They have a Python API that allows easy integration into your projects. Quandl offers a wide range of financial and economic data, including stock prices, indices, and ETFs. While some datasets are free, premium datasets are also available for a fee. Quandl provides Python libraries for data access. Yahoo Finance provides historical data for stocks, indices, and ETFs. Although their API has had some changes over time, you can still access data through various Python libraries like `yfinance`.
I saw a video where a guy said Amazon's API's usually mean an Actual Person in India 😂😂😂
LLMs were not unexpected. It's an evolving technology that those who follow the space saw rising. ChatGPT didn't just magically appear one day. It was a tool intended to showcase GPT3 and GPT3's API. As it usually happens, luck and timing played an important role and popularity of the tool skyrocketed. You can have "unexpected" developments in any field, including home robotics. This is moot, however, as Apple probably was already working on home automatization to some degree. They work on a lot of things at any given time. What has changed is the narrative. Bloomberg now paints a story about a company pivoting from cars to robots, but likely they had engineers working on both things for a while. Staff from the car team is now being reassigned and so robotics efforts are being reinforced, that's all.
I always thought API meant Anal Pathway Inspection
Hi, there was an issue with the data synchronziation, the financials should now be available no later then 48 hours after release. Please contact us in case you need a bulk dataset for any of your watched companies. If you would like to try out the new paid API features (signals, comparison, private company research) you can use code REDDIT50 for 50% off the first three months of any subscription. Kind regards the [markets.sh](http://markets.sh/) team
Hi, there was an issue with the data synchronziation, the financials should now be available no later then 48 hours after release. Please contact us in case you need a bulk dataset for any of your watched companies. If you would like to try out the new paid API features (signals, comparison, private company research) you can use code REDDIT50 for 50% off the first three months of any subscription. Kind regards the [markets.sh](http://markets.sh) team
You rely on Open AI endpoints whether you use azure or direct Open AI API. Plus there's no true on-prem deployment of GPT4 due to the sheer resource intensiveness of it.
OpenAI doesn't do humanoid robots, it just provides an API to figure. Theoretically, Tesla could get the same if they wanted to. But OpenAI's lead is shrinking by the day (eg, Anthropic has the best current LLM in the market). But yes, Tesla is competing with Fugure. Elon even replied to the Figure's CEO to bring it on.
They aren't playing catch up. There isn't some magical special sauce that NVIDIA puts into its AI accelerators that other companies are trying to mimic....it's just the CUDA API plus the standard hype of "NVIDIA GPU better". Seriously people go buy an RTX 3050 for $275 instead of an RX 6600 for $200 even though the RX 6600 beats the crap out of the RTX 3050. AMD isn't lagging behind in hardware they are lagging in public perception.
It's not second rate hardware that is the part people seem to not get. NVIDIA has a software API called CUDA that software is why they have that monopoly on AI hardware. NVIDIA cards can run CUDA natively where as it needs to pass through a translation layer to run on other companies hardware. Also yeah I think that if Microsoft or Google could get more compute power from AMD for the same price as they would pay NVIDIA they would definitely go AMD because they don't need to give a fuck about CUDA because they can just run their own in house shit or create a translation layer in house.
I am fairly certain Intel got into GPU manufacturing to make AI accelerator shit. They have some FPGA AI accelerator stuff going on and they have their own FABs to make chips now. Intel hasn't gotten it's AI hype stock boost so if they do make something significant (didn't say they would just saying it is very plausable) then the stock could eaisly get a boost from it. What the fuck can NVIDIA announce that isn't priced into their stock currently? The widespread use of the CUDA API is basically the only reason why NVIDIA has a monopoly on enterprise AI hardware. A translation layer was made that let AMD hardware run CUDA based software and it took basically a zero hit in compute power to do so. Buying NVIDIA now is straight up FOMOing in after the huge bump to it's price. I think it's neat you know nothing about hardware or AI.
AWS bills Software licenses API access for services Salaries
here's the i-nav google sheet: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1I5_OpvQ9i8pv78fnJvOK3VYfEtxvBjSgmAwkiJukJBI/edit#gid=514343090 you can click on the "chart" sheet to get current nav this will refresh every 2 minutes (i can have it refresh every minute but then google complains about me hammering their API too much) props to the homie for the idea
Thank you, yes, I am looking for historical data, in the above, online suggested smart flow API and that seems to have this... if you know other resources for the same, please let me know
DOGE is the play … Musk has indicated that new X payment systems will allow use of DOGE. Also DOGE recently released a new API allowing businesses to more easily use DOGE as payment. I can see companies like Square and Shopify integrating Doge. More easily gaining wider acceptance.
dbt cloud is just a runner. No compute happening there. It submits the same SQL as dbt core. Snowflake for ML has some good stuff in private/public preview but I wouldn't use it for ML in production yet (except for very specific instances). Airflow is a great addition if you need to orchestrate things along with dbt. There's also cosmos which is an Airflow operator for dbt that takes your dbt DAG and integrates it into your Airflow DAG. You can also just trigger your dbt cloud job/runner from Airflow via API as well. However, if all you care about is orchestrating your transformations (separate of ingestion) then dbt is a great solution.
IB API would be the easiest way. Also kudos to you for not learning this like most people do after buying or selling monthlies when they wanted weeklies.
To use API, does one have to use or write something like QuantConnect's LEAN to trade live? Or are APIs only good for backtesting? Also, would you use their IV or do your own calculations? (I learned from ORATS that there are a lot of intricacies in IV calculations)
Maybe you can use some tools like Smart Option Flow Data API to help you figure out? It returns real-time and historical structured data for Unusual Options Activity(UOA), representing anomalies in the Options Order Flow, and the data latency is generally within 1 minute [https://docs.optiondata.io/reference/api-reference/smart-option-flow-data-api](https://docs.optiondata.io/reference/api-reference/smart-option-flow-data-api)
Maybe you can use some tools like Smart Option Flow Data API? It returns real-time and historical structured data for Unusual Options Activity(UOA), representing anomalies in the Options Order Flow. And the data latency is generally within 1 minute!! [https://docs.optiondata.io/reference/api-reference/smart-option-flow-data-api](https://docs.optiondata.io/reference/api-reference/smart-option-flow-data-api)
Smart Option Flow Data API is a good one! It returns real-time and historical structured data for Unusual Options Activity(UOA), representing anomalies in the Options Order Flow. And the data latency is generally within 1 minute!! [https://docs.optiondata.io/reference/api-reference/smart-option-flow-data-api](https://docs.optiondata.io/reference/api-reference/smart-option-flow-data-api)
Smart Option Flow Data API is a good one! It returns real-time and historical structured data for Unusual Options Activity(UOA), representing anomalies in the Options Order Flow. And the data latency is generally within 1 minute!! [https://www.optiondata.io/](https://www.optiondata.io/)
You realize the cash cow of Reddit hasn’t been tapped yet? The VAST amount of human conversing in multiple languages, tones, topics, ways of life. They’ve monetized their API….its only a matter of time before ChatGPT calls for some massive amount of data….again with some of that Microsoft money. Also with any other AI modeler. But hey….ads right?
Fair enough. See OP’s response though, the guy didn’t understand something that’s literally fundamental in his job. I’d let someone call me an idiot if I couldn’t explain to them what an API is and I call myself an engineer
SNOW is way more than a Data warehouse. They have Data Lake, snowpark where their Python workbook where you can run API, streamlit for ML and building apps and a lot more. There’s a reason it’s growing so fast
CUDA is predominately a software API and has nothing to do with the quality of the chips.
I think if Reddit stock has any value, it will definitely be AI-related. Remember when they locked the API? Exactly why. Anyhow, planning on buying when it drops even more.
Nice. Your method sounds much more stable and reliable than mine... I am just an amateur doing this for fun and to try and learn. But maybe I will mess around with that API when I have some time. Thanks! Honestly not adding the AYR warrants has just been sheer laziness. I just figured it hasn't mattered much with the low weighting, but on a day like today it is somewhat important for sure. Anyways, I just did it and it pretty much only took one line. Hah. AYRWUprev = (yf.download('AYR-WTU.CN', DateStart, DateEnd, interval='1m'))\['Adj Close'\].iloc\[-1\] Oh, and I do similar to you with the backfilling... I backfill with the most recent minute close for each ticker, but use minute averages otherwise: avg(High, Low, Close) The one idea I'm proud of is to use SPY to setup the original dataframe with all the minutes, and then use those to fill and then backfill the MSOS data as well so I'm never missing any minutes, even the zero volume ones. I also use SPY to help with automation to see if the market is currently open/close. Just an amateur, but I was pretty proud of those ideas so thought I'd share. Anyways my updated closing NAV is [now $9.924](https://ibb.co/q1fhvtD) with the AYR warrants, so a little more in agreement now. Probably just small rounding differences from Yahoo... they are weird with that. Thanks!
>Try scraping Reddit for valuable data and see how those API fees eat you alive. I see what you're saying if you or me tried to get data from it with retail API fees but I'm talking about a big tech competitor. Would Reddit itself not have similar costs associated with collecting and managing its own data than would another big tech company trying to do the same thing? >It was certainly unprofitable before as most start ups are. The intent was to create formal infrastructure and grow a stickier userbase which they have done successfully and have been profitable as of the most recent quarter. Reasonable and fair. > a few billion in market cap for one of the 10 most used resources on earth while still in its commercial infancy seems reasonable. To me it has to do with the supply side. What Reddit does is replaceable. Now the actual userbase and network effects are not easily replaceable but we've seen time and time again through the evolution of the web that things come and go. This isn't a prediction, but I have to wonder if Reddit's best days are behind it.
Try scraping Reddit for valuable data and see how those API fees eat you alive. I’m assuming you cannot reasonably suggest trying to do so manually because that would be useless. It was certainly unprofitable before as most start ups are. The intent was to create formal infrastructure and grow a stickier userbase which they have done successfully and have been profitable as of the most recent quarter. Again, not saying they’re going to cure cancer but a few billion in market cap for one of the 10 most used resources on earth while still in its commercial infancy seems reasonable.
i use the google apps script and have my own data fetcher implemented. i can switch it to use anything but have been using the globe and mail's barchart API to fetch data because it gives me real-time for all tickers, but i realized yesterday that the US market tickers are now 15-minute delayed (i think they did this change recently). anyway, since the OTC data is 15-min delayed anyway, i figured it was okay i use the `MSOS` timestamps as the pivot and backfill any data from the last known minute (otherwise from the previous day's close) for ayr warrants, you can write a custom fetcher to fetch or just use this ticker from yahoo since the values are USD anyway: https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/AYR-WTU.CN
Like I said, I've seen about 3 ads my entire time here. I go "whoops, my adblocker is off or I'm using the wrong browser". Youtube makes a few pennies when I happen to watch on my phone where I don't have an adblocker, but I try to avoid that. And yes, all those things are happening, and despite that, they lose $90 million a year, which is *after* they juiced the numbers as much as possible for the IPO with stuff like the crazy API pricing scheme. They're not a profitable company, and .7B revenue is super low for an $8B company.
1. Robinhood doesn't show your realized or unrealized gains and losses. It's not a default report so you have to email them and ask for it. 2. You can't sell by lots. You need to manually track your lots and if you want to sell a specific one, then you have to contact Robinhood within a couple days. Robinhood might show you have an unrealized gain, but if you want to take some, but not all, profits, you really don't know if you're selling FIFO at a gain or loss. In Fidelity, I just click a button and get that info in less than a second. 3. Customer service is awful. They used to send GL reports in Apple Numbers format and I'd get different information each time. With my other brokers I get pretty consistent help. I've actually been super impressed with TradeStation phone support. So aside from the issues in 2021, those are the big ones I still have with Robinhood. I currently use Fidelity (long term and retirement), TradeStation and Tradier for API trading, Robinhood for very specific trades that I don't or can't do in the others.