D) The research, analysis and trading tools you need and what each platform offersOk — so now that we’ve gone over the profiles of each of these 4 players, let’s dive deep into the practical research and analysis tools you’ll want to utilize and how each platform fares in terms of their services in this aspect.This topic can include many activities, but from a beginner’s standpoint, you’d be most commonly looking at analyst research, company news, and examining company fundamentals.ROBINHOODRobinhood has a very clean and simplistic format — and their web platform consists of 5 main sections: Free Stocks, Portfolio, Cash, Messages, and Account.The home page that you land on when you first log in is typically the portfolio tab. The first thing you’ll notice is a chart of your portfolio balance and its performance across these different time periods below. If you scroll down past that, you’ll see the research section of the site, starting with this popular lists module.Robinhood’s List SectionYou see, Robinhood’s UX is very similar to the way Instagram or Twitter operate — they have these tags that’ll take you to specific category pages that showcase a watchlist in that particular subject.This one, for example, will take you to a list of Trending Technology stocks — it shows you the ticker, stock price, price action, and market cap and you can even add it to your own personal watch lists.Now back on the main portfolio page, if you scroll past the popular lists, you start to see some new modules that highlight breaking news, market movers, and other headlines from your watchlist. Now, this is all good if you’re browsing for new opportunities to invest in, but what if you wanted to dive deep into a particular stock in terms of analyst research, company news, and…