"Calendar trading" is nonsensical and a good way to burn all your money; what you're looking for is probably cyclical trading. Reptilia doesn't do that though, he follows a linear regression. Not that that's a much better strategy (spoiler: It'll fail horribly eventually).
What oda does is called swing trading, and he uses the same tools as what you attribute to momentum trading "lotof scary stuff: volumes, MACD, MFI, WTF..." (volume, the most basic info besides price, is scary?) because both base their trading on technical analysis, and that doesn't differ by timeframe.
Just because a few people have divulged their BTC denominated gains doesn't mean anything even if you take it at face value because 1) they are probably not representative to your listed "styles", 2) Bitcoin's path is probably not representative of all future 8 months paths, 3) variance
I have a better suggestion than listening to some people on the internet; learn yourself:
http://www.babypips.com/school "Calendar trading" is nonsensical and a good way to burn all your money; Newbies know that panic/impulsive/emotional trading is bad, but they usually overestimate their ability to control their emotions. One way to achieve it is to avoid looking at charts. The recommendation "Buy and forget for a couple of years" is almost standard one.
Calendar trading (c) is an extension of this approach. It gives you better returns because it adds the second assumptions (1)Bitcoin grows. 2)Rallies each 8 months). It is also more risky because of it. (Trading is trying to guess a future, based on some assumptions. If you assume nothing, you can tell nothing about the future, i.e. cannot trade. More assumptions - more complex models to handle, more input information required, more time you spend on it, more often you trade, more risk and more return in case of winning).
Not that that's a much better strategy (spoiler: It'll fail horribly eventually). Everything will fail eventually. All your assumptions will become wrong at some point. That's why there is the the third rule in the OP: as the time goes, discard your assumptions one by one and move to more and more safe (and ergo - less profitable) strategies and eventually quit the game completely.
What oda does is called swing trading Probably my terminology is a bit too creative
volume, the most basic info besides price, is scary? Everything is scary in trading. At least for me. Look at my avatar
because both base their trading on technical analysis, and that doesn't differ by timeframe. See my answer to oda. As for tools mentioned, it was misleading indeed.
Just because a few people have divulged their BTC denominated gains doesn't mean anything even if you take it at face value because 1) they are probably not representative to your listed "styles", 2) Bitcoin's path is probably not representative of all future 8 months paths, 3) variance Sure, mileage can vary(c). But it's the best information available. And it's sufficient to illustrate the point: more info - more trades - more growth (if you can handle the info).
I have a better suggestion than listening to some people on the internet; learn yourself: http://www.babypips.com/school Thanks for the link. It will improve my trading or at least my terminology.
But this manual, although very informative, is about forex trading. Bitcoin is different(c), because it rides on top of a technological revolution. Hence the unique features of bitcoin trading: exponential growth, evenly spaced rallies, exponential influx of new traders...
The only honest advice to an average would-be-forex-trader should be: don't trade. (The reasons are in the OP). While in bitcoin an average trader can trade successfully. My one-page "bitcoin trading for dummies" shows them how to do it. This manual, despite it's numerous drawbacks, is the best bitcoin trading manual, because it is the only one (as far as I know). I believe that you and people like you would be able to create much better introduction to bitcoin trading. But will you?
tl;dr; I wrote the OP because you didn't.