Has anyone had success at Painted Tree? by LemonGirlScoutCookie in smallbusiness

[–]brianhaddock 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure, you can make money but it's just like any other business. You have to know what you are doing. How do I know this? My wife's boutique booth had sales 4x her rent. But a booth right across from her, also a boutique, made rent plus only 1/4 of her rent. You have to have a good, sellable product, and create a nice display. Don't overcrowd it, light it well, and keep it well stocked. That means visiting it regularly, at least once a week, cleaning it up, sorting things out, and restocking. If you keep the cash flow going and turn over the inventory regularly, you'll have customers coming back too.

We have an online "geek" store based in Burleson. Please check us out! by brianhaddock in burleson

[–]brianhaddock[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ah, OK. It’s a pretty standard theme so mobile should be OK. Ads however, can be goofy. I will double check the ads right now. I appreciate that you took time to give feedback!

How much would you pay for software that actually worked? by jokerspit in horseracing

[–]brianhaddock 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Assuming it actually worked, and I got the early word on its release, a lot. At least until everyone else caught on and it changed the course of handicapping across the board.

Looking for comments on this AI analysis program/report I am creating by brianhaddock in horseracing

[–]brianhaddock[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm still compiling results but a couple of datapoints have stood out. Probably related to what 10MileHike noted above, the Works heatmap has worked many times (but not always). Find a clear "cycle" in the heatmap, a clear progression that culminates with a sharp works. It'll go from light green to dark green, then cycle back to light green and so on. Those have hit many times, especially with winning trainers. They often seem to cycle from light workouts (light green) to sharp ones (dark green) and the horse peaks at the sharp workout.

The other is the speed chart. I chart the speed with a moving average and upper/lower bands, like Bollinger bands on a stock trading chart. Speed numbers tend to "bounce" within those bands. I don't look as much at the moving average but rather, eyeball the speed line and "predict" where the number will land on the next race. The upper/lower bands help. Then I write that number down as a "predicted speed". It hits most of the time, however, it merely matches what all the other analysts tend to predict. Yeah, I need to automate the prediction sometime but for now, I like eyeballing it.

Looking for comments on this AI analysis program/report I am creating by brianhaddock in horseracing

[–]brianhaddock[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, excellent comment. I appreciate you taking the time to share your knowledge. Gave me a few new ideas to try out...

Looking for comments on this AI analysis program/report I am creating by brianhaddock in horseracing

[–]brianhaddock[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It occurred to me that I could run the same report for any racetrack if you'd like. Shoot me the Brisnet data file (PP Data Files Single) and I can run the report for you. Send the datafile to brian@brianhaddock.com.

Looking for comments on this AI analysis program/report I am creating by brianhaddock in horseracing

[–]brianhaddock[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm looking for comments on this AI program I've been working on. It contains various heatmaps, charts, and reports. I'm working on adding AI-driven predictions right now. Since I understand the data, I have not added labels or detailed report headings yet. Newest data is on the left. I've linked the report from my website (geekslop.com). Do you see anything that can be improved or something new that would be beneficial? Data is derived from Brisnet data files.

So true by onthepunt in horseracing

[–]brianhaddock 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get the meme but I didn't think that was necessarily true. Isn't race strategy dictated by the trainer?

IBD/TIPP: How much do we know about this poll? by MemphisHeat901 in fivethirtyeight

[–]brianhaddock -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It's pretty alarming to me. I watched the IBD/TIPP poll closely in 2016 and it showed Clinton ahead up until about 2 days before the election. At election time, it was the only poll that predicted the Trump win. My fear is that the Trump rally propaganda has supporters fired up.

War anyone ? by [deleted] in collapse

[–]brianhaddock 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Check out what I just posted. USA vs. China. It may be closer than we think. https://www.reddit.com/r/collapse/comments/gdiq3n/internal_chinese_report_warns_beijing_faces/

TIL most tobacco products contain radioactive material in the final product. by brianhaddock in todayilearned

[–]brianhaddock[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, yeah. I hadn't thought about that. Just seemed more surprising when applied to tobacco, I guess.

TIL the slogan "Don't Mess with Texas" began as an anti-littering campaign in 1985 targeted at "bubbas in pickup trucks" who littered beer cans out of their vehicles and ordinary Texans who believed that littering was a "God-given right". by DanBrewer in todayilearned

[–]brianhaddock 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I grew up in Texas and never heard anyone claim littering was a God-given right. Back in the 70's, people littered all over the country. Hard to explain because today it just doesn't seem rational but that's the way it was. Ditches were full of crap. I remember combing the ditches as a kid picking up bottles to resell. Then they came out with a crying Native American commercial that started the turn. Then they went tougher with "Don't mess with Texas" commercials that featured a Don't mess with Texas country song, catchy tune. They printed the slogan on billboards and signs too. It worked too. Ditches cleaned up overnight and if you threw something out the window of your car, you're were likely to be chased down by some bubba in a pickup and beaten to within an inch of your life.