Good day.
I don’t want to offend anyone, so I would like to start my questions from a distance.
So, I am not really clear. You want to sell an EA, which you adjusted code on, originally from code you derived from github, which is free or offers free source code, and claim it is something worth taking an interest in.
I am curious why you wouldn’t keep running the EA demos if they are profitable. Because, I have EA demos running on accounts that have already gone live, and yet, I still continue to run the EA demos.
Why? Because it proves that the EA can be run in both demo and live environments with similar results and it also creates confidence that it can be run in a production environment.
It is very disturbing to me to read that you would stop demoing an EA because it is not not live and to add that it was a reminder for yourself that it works.
In real life, most people stop demoing an account when things go south or things go sour.
To be blunt, when a demo account goes in negative balance, most people abandon that demo account rather quickly and usually create a new one, a new demo account.
On the other hand, when a demo account produces results magnificently, it is usually kept running. Indefinitely.
With that being said, what is your goal with this thread? What did you set out to accomplish?
From a business perspective, I wouldn’t invest in your product or service because, um. well. it lacks, well, just about everything.
From a professional standpoint, it is my opinion, but, you do not have confidence in your product, or else you wouldn’t market it for 100$.
If you were selling your product or service for 10,000$ or 100,000$, that would get my attention. I would consider looking into it.
Of course, you would need the ongoing live results. And, then, you would truly have my attention.
Time for teppan, I chose the sirloin over the filet today, needed the extra calories. Steak, anyone?