T-Bond,T-Note,Bund&others-Quel gran pezzo del Bernakka(v

Ci sono RIUSCITOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO !!!

... da un'istanza di macchina virtuale WindowsXP (sistema operativo ospite - Guest) sono riuscito a caricare e fare funzionare la piattaforma Qicktrade !!! :eek: :eek: :eek:

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L'Host, ovvero il Sistema operativo ospitante al momento è Windows Xp stesso ... in pratica faccio funzionare una macchina virtuale WinXP all'interno di un sistema operativo (ospitante) XP.

Il Sistema operativo Guest (ospite) è completamente incapsulato in un'unico file (VMWare Virtual Disk), che comprende sistema operativo, programmi ed aggiornamenti + configurazioni del S.O. stesso e dei relativi programmi.

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L'immagine di questo sistema operativo virtuale può essere avviata e funzionare da un qualsiasi sistema operativo ospitante (Host) ivi mantenendo le stesse configurazioni e programmi del sistema operativo virtuale avviato.


... in pratica il mio Windows Xp virtuale e la piattaforma quicktrade, con tutte le sue configurazioni può essere avviata ed eseguita da qualsiasi sistema operativo ospitante, che sia questo Linux, Win2000, BeOs .. o qual si voglia, purchè ospiti un programma di macchine virtuali comwe VMWare o Xen.

In questo modo :
- posso avviare la piattaforma anche da Linux (il mio primario obbiettivo :D ) ... e da qualsiasi altro sistema operativo
- Il backup del S.O. Guet è immediato ed istantaneo perchè basta copiare un'unico file (proprietà dell'incapsulamento).
- ogni configurazione dei relativi programmi viene mantenuta, e quindi basta un'unica copia del S.O. guest che può essere condivisa .... avviabile quindi su diversi S.O. e pure su diverse macchine (quindi da altri computer che non siano il proprio) ... in pratica il massimo livello di astrazione possibile ! :D :D :D



STI' CAZ.ZI !!! ... questa volta ho superato me stesso !!! :D :D :D :D


N.B. : unico problema ... la richesta di RAM .... queste psicosi non le potete fare se non avete almeno 1Gbyte di ram ... la virtualizzazione di un sistema operativo richiede una sua quota di ram per farvi funzionare il S.O. ospite, inoltre pure il programma di vitruazizzazzione richede una sua quota di ram per funzionare + altra ram è necessaria al comune funzionamento del sistema operativo Host che ospita il S.O. virtuale.


Approfitto per porgerVi i miei più sinceri auguri di Buona pasqua tutti ! :) :) :)
 
Che testa di Gastro che sono :down: ...avevo capito che pure ieri le valute erano chiuse (Pasquetta) e manco le ho guardate...morale: aus si è fatto un bel balzo e lo spread, da venerdi, è passato da 1092 a circa 1150 :wall: ...che testina che sono :rolleyes:
 
Giorno caro ... hai comunque fatto bene a mio avviso, che se ne vadano affanchiurlo stì maledetti ... la pasquetta io non me la sono fatta rovinare ! :) :V :smokin:


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... sù fino alle pendici del TRIGLAV ! :eek: :)

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Bonjour a tout les bondaroles

uèèè tutti di nuovo in sella neh :eek: i forzati del trading
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l'argento è un fituso uscito in close giovedì menandoci una decina di ticks sull'originale profit , speto oggi le prime resistenze per tornare in groppa . Impressionante il grafo, tutti gli oscillatori son saltati dal daily al weekly ; lo stesso andamento del comparto energy sta a significare che in molti ormai danno per probabile l'attacco all'Iran :down: soccia che mondo di pazzi :rolleyes:
 
Malgrado l'allargamento di ieri, mi pare che nz si mantenga tonico - dipende forse dalle attese sui dati di inflazione che, credo, usciranno stanotte. Aspettiamo fiduciosi :)
 
N.Z.'s Annual Inflation Rate Accelerates to 3.4% (Update3)
April 19 (Bloomberg) -- New Zealand's annual inflation rate accelerated in the first quarter as fuel prices and the cost of house construction rose, dimming prospects the central bank will cut interest rates this year.

Consumer prices rose 3.4 percent from a year earlier, which was faster than the 3.2 percent pace in the fourth quarter, Statistics New Zealand said in Wellington today. Prices gained 0.7 percent in the three months ended March 31, matching the fourth quarter and the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 14 economists.

Annual inflation exceeded central bank Governor Alan Bollard's target range of between 1 percent and 3 percent for a third successive quarter. New Zealand's dollar has fallen 7.8 percent this year as investors bet Bollard would cut rates to avoid a recession after the economy unexpectedly contracted in the fourth quarter.

``The Reserve Bank of New Zealand was right when they told us in early March that inflationary forces were sticky and there was no case for easing,'' said Annette Beacher, an economist at Citigroup Australia in Sydney.

``We were expecting monetary policy easing from the third quarter, but we've now changed our view. There's no case for easing this year.''

On March 9, Bollard said he wouldn't cut rates this year unless domestic demand slowed faster than he expected. Retail sales rose by the most in two years in February, according to a report on April 13.

Bank-Bill Yields

The yield on a three-month bank-bill futures contract maturing in September rose 0.02 percentage points to 7.24 percent at the 5 p.m. market close in Wellington. That suggest traders are less confident about a rate cut before September. The New Zealand dollar bought 63.19 U.S. cents, unchanged from immediately before the report.

Bollard said on March 9 he expected prices would rise 0.6 percent in the first quarter. Annual inflation wouldn't slow to less than 3 percent until after June 30, he said.

About 33 percent of companies surveyed last month by the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research raised prices in the previous three months, according to a report published on April 11.

About 47 percent of firms said costs rose as a 10 percent decline by New Zealand's dollar made fuel and other imports more expensive. Gasoline prices rose to a record in March, according to the Automobile Association.

Just three of 14 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News on April 7 forecast an interest-rate cut before June 30. Beacher, who expected a 0.5 percent inflation rate, now doesn't expect an interest-rate cut until the first quarter of next year.

Gasoline Prices

Gasoline prices rose 5.1 percent from the fourth quarter when they fell 3 percent, the statistics agency said. They rose 24 percent from a year earlier, the biggest annual increase since September 2000.

If gasoline prices were unchanged the past year, annual inflation would have been 2.6 percent, the agency said.

International airfares fell 12 percent after a record 12 percent surge in the fourth quarter. Prices of new cars, appliances and furniture fell.

The cost of buying and building new homes, rent and house insurance all rose. Power and telephone connections were more expensive.

The cost of buying and building a new house increased 1 percent in the quarter -- the 28th consecutive gain, the statistics agency said. Expenses of buying a home, including realtor fees, rose 2.6 percent.

Non-Tradable Prices

Analysts said the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is focused on costs that aren't influenced by the currency or commodity prices. Those so-called non-tradable prices rose 1 percent in the first quarter, the statistics agency said.

The annual rate of change in non-tradable prices gained 4.2 percent, lagging behind the 4.3 percent increase in the year to December.

The prices of tradable goods, which are imports or those in competition with foreign goods or services, fell 0.1 percent in the quarter and increased 2.1 percent from a year earlier. Excluding gasoline, tradable prices would have increased 0.2 percent from the year earlier, the agency said.

To contact the reporter on this story:
Tracy Withers in Wellington, New Zealand at twithers@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: April 19, 2006 01:05 EDT

Sutton Says Government `Happy' With New Zealand Dollar's Drop
April 19 (Bloomberg)
-- New Zealand's government is happy the nation's currency has declined, said Jim Sutton, minister for trade negotiations. A lower dollar may spur returns for exporters.

The New Zealand dollar has fallen 7.6 percent this year against the U.S. dollar, making it the worst performer of the world's most-traded currencies, according to Bloomberg data. The currency bought 63.15 U.S. cents at 12:30 p.m. in Wellington. It rose to a record 74.66 U.S. cents in March last year, which was the highest since it began trading freely in 1985.

The nation's currency has dropped ``at last,'' Sutton said in an interview in Tokyo. ``The government is happy enough with the current level. What we would like to see is maximum stability, minimum surprises.''

The $97 billion economy contracted for the first time in more than five years in the fourth quarter of 2005 as the record- high currency crimped exports. The economy shrank 0.1 percent in the quarter from the previous three months, the government said in March. Exports, such as dairy products, meat and wool, make up 30 percent of the economy.

``It is a problem being a small economy, there tends to be an element of volatility about the value of our currency,'' Sutton said.

He also said the New Zealand government is optimistic it may reach a free-trade agreement with China by the end of this year. China's Premier Wen Jiabao was in Wellington this month for talks with New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark.

Free-Trade Deal

Jiabao said an agreement could be completed within two years and may be the first such accord with a western developed country, New Zealand Press Association reported on April 6.

``It could be done in one year from now,'' Sutton said. Wen ``was actually referring to the total time taken for the negotiating -- one year has gone, one year to go. It is a perfectly realistic ambition to try to get it done by the end of this year.''

Wen said talks had run into difficulties relating to agriculture and services, though obstacles could be overcome if ministers paid careful attention, according to the New Zealand Press Association report.

``The difficulties are not major,'' Sutton said. ``Many farmers in the world don't want to see extra competition in their domestic market, and governments tend to be protective of that.''

Wen ``was just signaling that, like our other negotiating partners, they want to make sure that their farmers are not damaged. We are happy to go along with that.''

China is New Zealand's fourth-largest trading partner taking NZ$3.25 billion ($2.1 billion) of exports in the year to February, or about 11 percent of overseas sales.

``We are already developing some close working relationships particularly in the dairy sector,'' he said.

To contact the reporter for this story:
Victoria Batchelor in Sydney at vbatchelor@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: April 18, 2006 21:14 EDT
 

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