Can you make please a video on the quant side of things? all the mathematical modeling skills we need and in what order to learn them so everything makes sense. Thank you.
@@melvin6228 I love Pharo but unless there is a breakthrough that can make it's model at least as fast as Javascript or even better very close to Java there will not be an incentive to grow a strong enough adoption. Only Rust and languages like Rust that improve rust's safety model while making it more ergonomic are the only ones that will ever see major adoption in the future. Dynamic languages even as great as Pharo can not compete with proper strong and statically compiled languages on maintaining large codebases in a principled way and being able to refactor faster larger amount of code if business decisions demand it. Pharo can at max only compete with the likes of Clojure or Elixir that are very loved but even those are weak in adoption rate, Elixir being the only one with continuous growth because of BEAM greatness and Clojure being stagnant for 5-7 years. Better designed languages can make a powerful enough impact only if the libraries in it's ecosystem are innovative also when compared to Python , Java or other large ecosystems....not only the language itself. But it's a vicious circle. If the language does not make as it's main priorities both runtime performance AND safety wile delivering them in a more ergonomic way than competitors like Rust you have no chance of people being motivated enough to rewrite or write from scratch cutting edge libraries that are better than in other ecosystems. Rewrite it in Rust is a phenomenon unique to Rust because only Rust has the cumulative effect of all those amazing features and micro features that no other language can replicate at this time as well. Julia is the prime example. only from this year going forwards it has fixed enough of the problems with it's precompilatin issues to be somewhat compelling but it's at least 5 years too late and not only that but with Mojo being a threat both for Julia and Rust there are even smaller chances that Julia will ever do anything meaningful to drive people to migrate from Python. More people will migrate to Mojo in a year than all the accumulated people that have migrated to Julia in the last 7+8 years once the language is close to beta level of stability.
I drop my question here hoping someone with experience can answer it. I'm an MBA guy with 15 years of experience in the manufacturing industry. I am determined to break in Quant Finance (I know my background won't help me) and I would like to know if I go for CQF (Certificate in Quantitive Finance) alongside with intensive side trainings, can I hope finding a junior role in the quantitative finance world. I'm mostly interested in Quantitative Trading? Thanks a lot in advance to anyone answering my question.
Can you continue with your series of algorithmic trading? I am looking to become one and you are the best here. Appreciate your work. I am in a software engineering degree + being a daytrader myself and I like being a trader so if I dont succeed at this at least I would like to work in something related.
Bro these are all the mandatory classes for a cs degree. I was expecting some classes in math applications in finance, other finance classes, analysis of algorithms, etc
Networking is very important as the ability to measure network latency, esp. when working in cloud. Networking is nearly always the biggest bottleneck and a python program with optimized networking will always beat a C program with poor networking. Sometimes it's just a case of run your algos on machines with minimal hops between the exchanges you're trading on.
To what extend are juniors expected to know this? Just a question out of curiosity, I studied CS back in the day and took most of these courses (I failed my compiler class and am over-indexed on security courses which taught low level stuff way more in-depth than computer systems and computer architecture, I personally would recommend a hardware security course where you reimplement meltdown and spectre since it teaches you how Intel CPUs do branch prediction + pipelining in a lot more detail).
Thanks for your video. Would love to see videos for experienced developers. Can experienced developers break i to to quant dev? Do you need to go back to uni for that or take other courses? Thanks
@@imvlb778It’s more so to optimize for the RU-vid algorithm. Posting around once a week is best. This video will come out on Thursday whether or not it’s set to premiere, just like a movie comes out on a specific date despite it being complete months in advance.