“About astrology and palmistry: they are good because they make people vivid and full of possibilities.
They are communism at its best. Everybody has a birthday and almost everybody has a palm.”
Foreword-The Science backing up
We need to understand that Predictive Astrology is not the same as Natal Astrology.In fact, their core is different, for one of them serves our need to foretell the future or predict the outcome of a certain event, while the other helps our personality and growth reliant on the moment of our birth-but the concept of science is same behind behind of them.

Horoscope.com
The first of our list is horoscope.com. It is a greeting site that offers a wide range of suggestions on love, carrier, money travel, marriage, business and general sun sign signs. It is in Chinese astrological horoscopes, as well as various types of tarot reading, fun game and mobile applications. This site is very popular when searching for key words like zodiac signs, daily horoscope, today’s horoscope, etc.

DailyHoroscope.com
Is Part of the daily insight group, the powerful network of online and mobile features are also tarot.com, numerology.com, decoz.com and twittascope.com. It gives detailed information in the individual horoscopes as the site name suggests and creates an assessment using birth date, place, date and time.

Cainer.com
The website is hosted by the famous British astrologer Jonathan Kiner. Along with his website Cainer.com, he wrote about Astrological predictions for Daily Mail and the three Australian newspapers, Melbourne Harold Sun, Sydney Daily Telegraph and Perth Sunday Times. Kinesir’s estimates are also published in Auckland Sunday news, the Botavana Echo and Misti Magazine (Japan). Twelve million people have estimated his readings.
Breaking the common notion
So, though astrology — looking for answers, signs and predictions in the movements of the celestial bodies —isn’t itself just science,also there’s been a long history of humans looking up at the stars to plan their lives. Farmers used the skies as a calendar as long ago as Ancient Egyptians, when the rising of Sirius, the Dog Star, around mid-July, was seen as a marker of the imminent annual flooding of the Nile. Travelers used the skies as a compass, following the stars to know where to go. And many people used the skies as a source of mystical direction, too.