This is a great video. To add onto this if your going to be creating a web application, then its definitely wise to learn the devops end of things because that is crucial in getting your systems live on a server. Definitely start bare metal like on a DigitalOcean VPS, learn how to use CI/ CD pipelines to automatically deploy your code, learn docker to containerize your code, and learn about the basics of Linux / security as that is important to keeping the information safe and prevent unauthorized access. Of course you can use AWS and other providers that abstract the nuances of setting something up bare metal, but you will gain a better understanding of what's going on under the hood.
Hope youre doing well, my friends and I appreciate your work. You made videos for the best books for Quantitative Developers, and Quantitative Traders. If you could make a video for the best ones the Quant Researchers at your firm recommend it would help out significantly, is this something youre already working on? Thank you for your time, and content
Hey man, quick question, what are your thoughts on independent quants? it seems less stressful and I’m honestly not too greedy in how I scale my money?
I'm guessing we could integrate this with the C# trading engine project you made right? As an extension feature? Think i'm gonna give this a go to get better at C#, Python will only get me so far haha
What are the hours for the different quant roles like, especially quant researcher? I tried to find this on the internet but I saw everything from „I work 2h a week and earn 2M dollars per year“ to 70-80h work weeks which also seem a little bit exaggerated.
can someone tell me if quant devs can build models,back test algos and understand the market inside out then why even work for a company when u can be the next James Simons and start ur own fund. Am i missing something?
This gave me imposter syndrome as a programmer so I need to learn more about it. Does the imposter syndrome ever stop? I’m a junior in college, yes I’m saying it like that for comedy
@@tr0wb3d3r5 we’re in this together lmao. I’m into edge hunting and pricing models but I’d like to be a man of many weapons. I’ve never even typed async into a file before. I’m gonna code this how he has it and then I have an idea. I’ll respond to this video with my own :)
@@ethernetwink7230 async allows you to perform multiple tasks at the same time. It’s especially useful when you are getting external data like responses from an API or extracting from a large database. Make sure you do your research on multi threading.
The code is not on github yet. What coding language was that in the screengrab? didn't look like python..definitely was not c++. Also, why GRPC if you are simulating market data feed? UDP stream on multiple channels like CME does would have been more realistic, no? With an occasional dropped packet to throw the client off and sending a snapshot on request would be more realistic IMHO. Thanks!
“The code is not on Github yet” tells me he didn’t watch more than a minute before commenting. His questions would all be answered if he watched the video, but if he can’t be bothered to watch it I won’t be bothered to answer.
Have you ever thought about branding your "Jesus" concept more? Like for example you can start referring to your viewers as disciples, or at 1:05 when you say "as a viewer" "Coding Jesus, I have no idea what you're talking about" and then as you "Let me break this down" instead of saying break this down go with something like "if you don't understand any of this, you came to the right sermon" and stuff like that. It might add some effortless humor, because why not. But of course a great video as always, very accurately determines the knowledge gap a lot of people have, SO MANY tutorials etc. stop short of explaining this
that's a great idea...things like these surely help in going viral and making a brand focusing on you and not on your profession, so whenever you want to try something else, you have some amount of people with you supporting you whatever you choose