If you don't route your orders correctly, other traders can take advantage of that. Your trade becomes public knowledge when it is filled and other traders can take advantage of that information at other exchanges. There is no knowledge of the rest of your trade being sent to other exchanges, thus it isn't front running. It's basically just a good guess.
The feds could have transferred his BTC to another wallet. Your backups are of no use when the blockchain insists that those Bitcoins don't belong to you anymore. Correct me if my understanding of Bitcoin is wrong, please.
As a computer engineering student at the University of Waterloo, I have met many folks who have worked at BlackBerry. Their problem is that they have too much management and not enough development. The entire company consists of tiny teams being micro managed and not coordinating with other teams. They would have done better with large teams, with one very busy manager. This is how every other large and successful tech company I have worked for has been managed. This is the key here, in my opinion.
I'm a student at the University of Waterloo. These people are brilliant professionals. Some other interesting tech company will take its place in Canada's technology sector and hire these people.
Also RIM is a management nightmare. The ratio of managers to designers is 1:3. That's no way to get things done. Let's have a better structured company take over.
Given the proof of FLT required proving an isomorphism between topology and number theory (among other things), I wonder if these problems are so similar that this will again be the case. It's interesting how the number system is related to geometry.
Not to mention a data centre requires much more complex engineering for the systems installed inside of it. It has to be able to get a huge amount of electricity and handle that load, it must be properly and efficiently air conditioned. As well it's probably fitted with all kind of precautionary systems such as argon gas fire extinguishing so as to prevent data loss due to fire.
I couldn't agree more with this. But OpenGL right now does not seem to be geared towards games in any way. Mostly just CAD and other workstation uses. I'm unsure of how it would perform with something as dynamic as a video game.
Having just purchased a Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon I am finding it to be fantastic. It still feels solid like my ol' T42 and it was considerably less expensive than most (but not all) ultrabooks on the market with comparable specifications.
It has an incredible keyboard (in my humble opinion) and does not look flashy which I consider to be a huge plus.
I'd say the ThinkPad series hasn't changed one bit.
The smartest person I know works with me at an IT company. She's the only female tech... in town. She's also a student at the University of British Columbia taking science. She's going to make a lot more money than a typical IT person and only intends to have IT as a fall back career. Definitely smarter than the average man.
A computer engineer I worked with was going through the border and was apparently not allowed to have burned CDs of software on him. He just so happened to have a very stable version of XP he didn't want to get rid of. Solution: Stick it in the CD drive, put the battery somewhere and they won't take the time to check the drive.
It is similar to quantum computing. Quantum computing can be insanely fast, but it is often makes inaccurate calculations.
It's mainly about quantity, not quality. A possibly use for it is computation knowledge engines, like WolframAlpha. It would be inexpensive for computation servers, but only really useful if it was at least 98% accurate.
Similar sort of thing here in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. I sit on the board that run the Smart Communities Society which administers a fiber network called NTNet. We're going to be increasing our fibre network as soon as a bridge is built across a river to connect fiber from the south.
It is really only effective for businesses who resell our network. Cable users gain infrastructure, I guess because our internet service provider makes money off what they (over)charge for bandwidth.
Makes sense because many scientists are from foreign countries were religion is perhaps more sacred, like India, for example.
Although an atheist I appreciate some religion. Science can learn from it. I went to a CBC Massey lecture and listened to a great anthropologist, Wade Davis speak, and this was very well explained. If anyone else is interested in science, language, religion, anthropology and how they all come together they should read "The Wayfinders" by Wade Davis.
Although I believe in captialism, this is just wrong. Intel has the money that they can afford to delsalinate water. Many of their employees are based in India and China, and this is incredibly unfair that they have to make their own employees and those who can't afford water, suffer. If they were efficient, they could probably incorporate a desalination plant and keep a server farm there cooled by water from a salt ocean and then desalinate it.
Capitalism has taken a lot of water in the largest aquifer in Peru. The Bush family actually own a large section of land on their aquifer and may consider selling it if oil doesn't work out. (Source: Blue Gold, documentary).
This is in fact a terrible idea if your goal is to prevent HFTs.
HFTs will just assume a 3.0s delay since they're making many trades very frequently.
But infrequent traders will have to assume a 5.0s delay because they don't trade enough to invoke the law of large numbers.
So in the end you give HFTs a 2.0s edge for no reason.
HFTs are not front-running. Read this and educate yourself: http://clarkgaebel.com/you-are....
If you don't route your orders correctly, other traders can take advantage of that. Your trade becomes public knowledge when it is filled and other traders can take advantage of that information at other exchanges. There is no knowledge of the rest of your trade being sent to other exchanges, thus it isn't front running. It's basically just a good guess.
The feds could have transferred his BTC to another wallet. Your backups are of no use when the blockchain insists that those Bitcoins don't belong to you anymore. Correct me if my understanding of Bitcoin is wrong, please.
As for the hacking charge, I'm not sure - but you can read the court docs here - http://www1.icsi.berkeley.edu.nyud.net/~nweaver/UlbrichtCriminalComplaint.pdf. I still need to go through this myself so I won't comment on why there is a hacking charge.
Someone got rejected from Waterloo.
As a computer engineering student at the University of Waterloo, I have met many folks who have worked at BlackBerry. Their problem is that they have too much management and not enough development. The entire company consists of tiny teams being micro managed and not coordinating with other teams. They would have done better with large teams, with one very busy manager. This is how every other large and successful tech company I have worked for has been managed. This is the key here, in my opinion.
I'm a student at the University of Waterloo. These people are brilliant professionals. Some other interesting tech company will take its place in Canada's technology sector and hire these people.
Also RIM is a management nightmare. The ratio of managers to designers is 1:3. That's no way to get things done. Let's have a better structured company take over.
Die BlackBerry! Die!
Given the proof of FLT required proving an isomorphism between topology and number theory (among other things), I wonder if these problems are so similar that this will again be the case. It's interesting how the number system is related to geometry.
But I'm glad I invested in Bitcoin.
Not to mention a data centre requires much more complex engineering for the systems installed inside of it. It has to be able to get a huge amount of electricity and handle that load, it must be properly and efficiently air conditioned. As well it's probably fitted with all kind of precautionary systems such as argon gas fire extinguishing so as to prevent data loss due to fire.
I couldn't agree more with this. But OpenGL right now does not seem to be geared towards games in any way. Mostly just CAD and other workstation uses. I'm unsure of how it would perform with something as dynamic as a video game.
Having just purchased a Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon I am finding it to be fantastic. It still feels solid like my ol' T42 and it was considerably less expensive than most (but not all) ultrabooks on the market with comparable specifications.
It has an incredible keyboard (in my humble opinion) and does not look flashy which I consider to be a huge plus.
I'd say the ThinkPad series hasn't changed one bit.
Oh yeah, and they've still got a clit mouse!
It's my birthday. When all of your friends are nerds, they totally forget about it.
I think this is what having a birthday on Christmas like.
THEY TOOK OUR JOBS!
...100% of your Facebook apps! Nothing to worry about here, folks.
...There predecessors are in their 80s and 90s now or dead. If a 70 year old isn't smarter than a dead person, then I don't understand science!
The smartest person I know works with me at an IT company. She's the only female tech... in town. She's also a student at the University of British Columbia taking science. She's going to make a lot more money than a typical IT person and only intends to have IT as a fall back career. Definitely smarter than the average man.
That's about the mass of yo momma!!
I had an obligation to this comment - sorry. :(
They're preparing them for a technological future with MACS!!
Sorry - this was obligatory. :(
A computer engineer I worked with was going through the border and was apparently not allowed to have burned CDs of software on him. He just so happened to have a very stable version of XP he didn't want to get rid of. Solution: Stick it in the CD drive, put the battery somewhere and they won't take the time to check the drive.
And I will still lack the rhythm to play this awesomeness.
Because of 'dem terrorizers!
It is similar to quantum computing. Quantum computing can be insanely fast, but it is often makes inaccurate calculations.
It's mainly about quantity, not quality. A possibly use for it is computation knowledge engines, like WolframAlpha. It would be inexpensive for computation servers, but only really useful if it was at least 98% accurate.
Similar sort of thing here in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. I sit on the board that run the Smart Communities Society which administers a fiber network called NTNet. We're going to be increasing our fibre network as soon as a bridge is built across a river to connect fiber from the south.
It is really only effective for businesses who resell our network. Cable users gain infrastructure, I guess because our internet service provider makes money off what they (over)charge for bandwidth.
Makes sense because many scientists are from foreign countries were religion is perhaps more sacred, like India, for example.
Although an atheist I appreciate some religion. Science can learn from it. I went to a CBC Massey lecture and listened to a great anthropologist, Wade Davis speak, and this was very well explained. If anyone else is interested in science, language, religion, anthropology and how they all come together they should read "The Wayfinders" by Wade Davis.
"Water flows uphill towards money." -Unknown
Although I believe in captialism, this is just wrong. Intel has the money that they can afford to delsalinate water. Many of their employees are based in India and China, and this is incredibly unfair that they have to make their own employees and those who can't afford water, suffer. If they were efficient, they could probably incorporate a desalination plant and keep a server farm there cooled by water from a salt ocean and then desalinate it.
Capitalism has taken a lot of water in the largest aquifer in Peru. The Bush family actually own a large section of land on their aquifer and may consider selling it if oil doesn't work out. (Source: Blue Gold, documentary).