stock slock रीट्वीट किया
stock slock
9.9K posts

stock slock रीट्वीट किया
stock slock रीट्वीट किया
stock slock रीट्वीट किया
stock slock रीट्वीट किया

Among the software names that have been completely washed out, $NOW stands out as my top conviction.
Going out on a limb here, but this has that $META at $80 in 2022 type of setup where in a few years, anything under $100 is going to look like an absolute gift.
Chris@StonkChris
$NOW setting up like a classic fake breakdown → reclaim → send. If price can reclaim that lost horizontal support, that’s your signal the HTF lows are likely in, and this one probably accelerates higher from there. Earnings next Wednesday (4/22 After-hours) could easily be the catalyst. Fundamentals are just ridiculous: - Massive contracted revenue backlog already locked in - ~98% renewal rates (basically unheard of) - Elite margins - Absolute cash flow machine Still don’t understand how this is trading under $100, but I don’t think it stays here long. Initial target: ~$150 over the coming months Bigger picture: This is likely a much higher name by end of decade
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stock slock रीट्वीट किया
stock slock रीट्वीट किया
stock slock रीट्वीट किया

The $IREN (1W) weekly chart is an absolute beauty.
Price has officially reclaimed the weekly cloud (a major bullish shift) and is now coiling in a clean bull flag just beneath resistance.
Even more constructive, the weekly RSI put in a higher low vs. April 2025 and is starting to curl higher, signaling momentum is resetting for the next leg.
When this resolves higher, the path toward $100+ opens up quickly.

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stock slock रीट्वीट किया

$CIFR is breaking out of a clean weekly bull flag as momentum resets, with the RSI turning higher and confirming the move.
This is one of the strongest-looking AI data center setups in the market right now, and it’s starting to expand out of consolidation.
If this breakout holds, the path toward $30+ opens up quickly.

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@TheKennyClaude @DudespostingWs The conversation is/was about the antiquated dropped ball rule, not any particular play. The rule is based on cricket and stems from a time the catcher had no protective gear and stood 20 ft. behind home plate. The dropped ball rule should be obsolete.
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@SlockStock @DudespostingWs The pitch hit the glove and was dropped into the dirt. I don't know what level of blindness is going on with half of these comments.
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@MAGA_X_Times Oh my goodness, my heart is broken.
Please lord help this young lady.
Those sons of bitches, we have get this fixed man.
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Minnetonka, Minnesota
Meet Janelle Hansen (Skye) an autistic adult female has been evicted from her home because Jama Mohamod stopped paying rent on her apartment and has been homeless for eight months, Mohamod raked in $2.2 million in Medicaid money lived in a luxurious mansion complete with indoor basketball court and the kicker is no charges wherever filed against him, sounds about right for Hennepin County, Minnesota🤬
Aside from the victimization of the American taxpayer there are real life consequences to the actions of these Somali PIRATES🤬
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@rnelson0 @MoonStomper973 @DudespostingWs More like fooled the batter with a great pitch, but lobbed it works, too. I hated throwing a knuckleball, watching the batter flail at it, and then seeing him on first base. (You can tell who were pitchers and who were batters by this divide in opinion.)😆
GIF
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@SlockStock @MoonStomper973 @DudespostingWs You mean you don’t like rewarding the pitcher who lobbed it into the dirt?
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@markfrigsby @DudespostingWs Exactly: Antiquated. Derived from British cricket and when catchers, with no protective gear and standing 20 feet behind home plate, had to catch the ball on the bounce.
(4-pitch intentional walks and 19-inning extra-inning games had also been around for 100 years.)
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@SlockStock @DudespostingWs Agreed...but that has been the rule for about 150 years.
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@IGolfDoU @MatthewTru54148 @DudespostingWs 3. Cricket Influence: Early American baseball was loosely based on cricket, where the batter is technically always allowed to run, but hitting the ball makes it easier.
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@IGolfDoU @MatthewTru54148 @DudespostingWs 2. The "Fair Ball" Analogy: Founders viewed a missed swing (strike 3) that wasn't caught as a "fair ball" (like a grounder). Because catchers in the 1800s had no protective gear and stood far back, catching the ball on a bounce was typical, and it was treated like a live ball.
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@IGolfDoU @MatthewTru54148 @DudespostingWs Maybe something to do with this:
"Early Days: Before protective gear, catchers sometimes stood 20–25 feet behind the batter rather than right behind the plate."
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@SlockStock @MatthewTru54148 @DudespostingWs Not sure why but that has always been the rule. Why? I have no idea
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@MatthewTru54148 @IGolfDoU @DudespostingWs I think everyone understands what happened, and it was an exciting play, I just don't like the rule. I think once it crosses the plate for a 3rd strike (swinging/called), the batter is out. If the pitcher can get the batter to swing a horrible pitch, all the better.
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@IGolfDoU @SlockStock @DudespostingWs Not on a drop 3rd and 1st has to be unoccupied as it wasn't. Hence why the runs counted.
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@IGolfDoU @MatthewTru54148 @DudespostingWs I got you. But with less than two outs, if the "play is over," why should the batter be afforded the chance to run to 1st when it is the 3rd out? I am questioning the logic, not the rule.
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@MatthewTru54148 @SlockStock @DudespostingWs I think you misunderstood what I was trying to say. Because there were already 2 outs, the batter can still run to 1B on a dropped 3rd strike, whether there was a runner on 1B or not
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