It's not what you look at that matters; it's what you see Henry David Thoreau Many of you asked about it; now I can tell you: I've signed a deal with Wiley to publish my book, Using Hidden Dimensions to Solve Unseen Problems: Hypernomics and Markets. It studies market phenomena we haven't been able to examine previously, mainly because no one invented the techniques to do so. Until now. The book's theme of finding the location and direction of market competitors mirrors the development of radar and has a like effect. In the years between WWI and WWII, many countries sought to discover opposing planes' positions and headings. Several had acoustic detectors like that in (A) but found they could only provide broad direction of incoming aircraft. It took the development of the Chain Home Radar (B) to reveal the value of having a much finer granularity of approaching enemy warplanes. Modern economics gives us simple 2D charts such as (C), showing the intersection of iron supply and demand curves. But planes use iron, and to characterize them thoroughly, we need the 4D arrangements the book offers, as (D). The book's readers will gain ways to see more clearly for themselves, improving bottom lines.

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