Meir Barak is very generous and open in teaching students and readers about how day trading works, which is truly admirable, and quite unique. From what I can judge, having a decade of experience in trading myself, he is the real deal. There are lots of valuable insights here, and great practical advice. Covers everything form screen setup to psychology.
I couldn't help getting slightly annoyed by the more theoretical parts however. There are often explanations for market phenomena that are just outrageous, conspiratorial and worst, completely unsubstantiated. Maybe all his explanations are correct, but it would seem incredible to me. Having a background myself in different trading strategies (though not day trading), I can say that: Some of his writing on the actions and reasoning of other market participants is just plain wrong.
Anyway, results speak for themselves, and Barak really seems to have found some things that work. Whatever the reason is for that, maybe we shouldn't be concerned about. If the conclusions are correct, then what are we really arguing about after all? Also, I have found that most successful traders have a quite conical view of the market, and Barak would certainly not be an exception in this regard.