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no no no no no. I cannot watch Alien movies. I saw the first one when I was a teenager.
Charlie Gilley
<italic>Stuck in a dysfunctional matrix from which I must escape...
"Where liberty dwells, there is my country." B. Franklin, 1783
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
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Is this a riddle? (or is that Ridley?) How many times can you remake the same movie?
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... Because it takes ALLLLLLL ELEPHANTING DAY TO INSTALL.
I've written some fairly large apps in my day that include installers. When I run the install they certainly don't take 8 BLASTED HOURS!!
WTF could possibly be in this install that takes ALL FRIGGIN DAY!!
Add to that, my PC is pretty much unusable right now. It's come to a total crawl and I can't use it/
.
.
Ok, I'm calm now..
If it's not broken, fix it until it is.
Everything makes sense in someone's mind.
Ya can't fix stupid.
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Web based installer? I normally download the ISO and install from that - it's far quicker.
This space for rent
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What amazed me was how half the kark they dumped in for "cross-platform" development fails to install but still works, gives weird status messages during the install ("bow down puny mortal before thy lord Codethulhu"), or says it installed but didn't.
Software Zen: delete this;
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Rumor has it that 2017 will be released next week and it's installer is FAR quicker than 2015 because it doesn't install everything, only what you pick to install.
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So you get started, and you're halfway into a project and have to stop & install more crap
Lovely
If it's not broken, fix it until it is.
Everything makes sense in someone's mind.
Ya can't fix stupid.
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I haven't run into that using the RC.
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Kevin Marois wrote: So you get started, and you're halfway into a project and have to stop & install more crap You'd prefer to download each NuGet and bower-package in advance?
If all the dependencies are known, as would be when there's a plan, then this would be a non-problem as you can install everything at the start.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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Months ago I had a very similar experience.
I wanted to dev a UWP.
1. VStudio said, oh you need Serivce Pack 5 so I did that. Took a while.
2. I have Windows 10 but VStudio required me to update to Anniversary edition (it had just released days before) to create a UWP
It basically took all day long. No fun at all.
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I whined about this combined with the size of the ISO a while back. I've just now started using VS 2015 this week and it's already crashed once on me.
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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Writing algorithms for trading foreign currencies is one of my main hobbies, which I'm just a few (hundred thousand) dollars short of turning into a career. Even though my original background is in video games and embedded systems, financial markets is really just more of the same (real-time programming).
Anyway, enough babbling. Am I the only one who frequents CP that writes algos for financial markets? Who else is there among you? Speak now or... well... don't.
You can't win.
You can't break even.
You can't quit.
You're welcome.
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I trade spot FX as a hobby. Been doing it for years on and off actually. I'm a MetaTrader guy, and while I don't write any predictive algorithms, I have spent a significant amount of time writing an indicator I use in MT4 that helps me manage my trades and risk using the percent-equity model. I hired a tutor a while back, and he set me straight on that pitfall.
I'd be curious to know your thoughts on brokers actually. I'm in the US and was with FXCM. Except they just got shut down for spot FX in the US for bogus practices - pretending to be a STP/ECN when they're not to name just one. So, I'm broker shopping now, and still on the fence between Forex.com/Gain Capital or Oanda. Both of their customer support folks seems to be subpar for me right now in regards of knowing what they are talking about.
What kind of algos are you in to?
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: I'd be curious to know your thoughts on brokers actually
Of all evils, I think the one that consists in making money out of money is the worst. The fact that one of the best paid job in the world (trader) is one of the most useless in term of added value for humanity just shows how plain wrong the path our civilization is on is the wrong one.
Having computers deciding about it by writing algorithms must takes it to another level, really.
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Trading is the cornerstone of our economy. Without it, we have no sense of worth for money, products, goods, services, etc. You wouldn't have an idea of how much salary to make to suit your skill-set, and the list can go on and on and on.
The only evil involved with money is greed. But greed is a human emotion that applies to everything... food, car seat space, romantic partners, etc. The list goes on. If you want to say greed is evil I could go for that. Yet, everyone is greedy. So just accept that as a part of human nature, and marginalize the risks associated with it.
However, money is not evil. Trading is not useless.
Jeremy Falcon
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I don't trade currencies but I did just open a new account with TD Ameritrade today with part of my tax return. Way better tools than the Robinhood account I currently have. Use one tool to research stocks to buy with the other
if (Object.DividedByZero == true) { Universe.Implode(); }
Meus ratio ex fortis machina. Simplicitatis de formae ac munus. -Foothill, 2016
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I never said money is evil or trading useless. I said making money out of money is evil. I said "trader", as a job = someone who plays (or let computers play for him) on market places with billions, for the sole sake of making more billions, is evil and serves no purposes : A trader buys dollars in US, then sell euros in Europe, then buy yens in Japan, then sell it in dollars in the US, and makes hundred of millions thanks to exchange rates in one day. What is the added value of all this ?
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I'm not playing this online kiddie game on CP anymore.
Jeremy Falcon
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Rage wrote: ...makes hundred of millions thanks to exchange rates in one day. What is the added value of all this ?
If these guys were doing it to horde money then I would agree with you. But let me ask you something about these so-called money-changers...
Do these people eat food? Well then they have to spend money on food, which someone worked to produce, and someone else worked to sell.
Do these people wear clothes? Ooh then they have to spend money on those clothes, which someone worked to manufacture, and someone else worked to sell.
What about things like cars, boats, houses, jewelry, etc.? Yeah. Exactly.
Just because a large amount of money is earned by someone who doesn't physically "produce" anything, it doesn't mean they provide no value. The fact is that the value they provide is in the redistribution of the money they earn. A single millionaire, by just spending his/her money, could be the reason why several businesses are able to remain in business, keeping dozens of people employed. Why then do you care how they make their money if they are doing it legally?
Sorry to keep this game going but I couldn't resist the bait.
You can't win.
You can't break even.
You can't quit.
You're welcome.
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TonyManso wrote: Why then do you care how they make their money if they are doing it legally?
This is purely philosophical on my side, so I have no solid arguments or reasons about why I care, but fact is that it bothers me. I have nothing against people making money, I simply have an ethic problem with jobs which have no other added value in society than making money BASED ON NOTHING ELSE THAN HANDLING MONEY. And do not get me started on legal aspects... As for redistribution, nah[^].
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TonyManso wrote: Sorry to keep this game going but I couldn't resist the bait. Learn to resist it man. I know it's rough... A successful investor has to get rid of the over emotional reactions that surround money. And while we may not be rich yet, it's part of the path to it.
It's like air, people only freak out about it when they don't have it.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: Without it, we have no sense of worth for money, products, goods, services, etc. You wouldn't have an idea of how much salary to make to suit your skill-set, and the list can go on and on and on Not really, because the values applied to goods companies, service companies, and everything else have nothing to do with the real world, or with the needs and desires of anyone except those making phantom money from the exchanges.
Is mcdonalds worth n because its trading value is x, or is it a viable business because of its cash flow? The two are completely unrelated.
If the mcdonalds share price dropped enough, the company would close, even though it makes astronomical profits.
Anyone who wants to understand the basics of the stock exchange should look into its history, and why it started -- i.e. the Dutch tulip insanity.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Fair enough on reading the history about it. But, until I read a post that shows the poster actually understand economics, I'm not gonna bother getting into yet another online debate with people lacking experience in the topic they're debating.
Jeremy Falcon
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