Automated Trading Profit > Senior C++ Developer for Algorithmic Trading (New York) ” Find ...
[Physical Sciences / Math Jobs] Person Requirements Qualifications: - Strong C++ or Java development skills on Unix/Linux (minimum 3-5yrs). - Must have experience working on high performance, low latency multi-threaded trading systems.
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[Axelon Services Corporation Jobs] Job Information: Design and develop electronic markets applications using Java in a multi-threaded, `real-time` environment utilising Ion Marketview, RV,MQ and relational databases (Sybase, M/S SQL). Problem-solve integration issues related to .
[QuantFinanceJobs.com - Latest Jobs] High Frequency Algorithmic Systems Developer/Trading Systems ...: You will have the opportunity to use your proficient Java or C++ skills, any experience of a statistical language such as R or MATLAB is desirable. You will be familiar with high performance data and trading systems and have a background in at least one of the two following areas which is essential: a) Working with large data sets from a computer modelling point of view (concurrency/multi-threading, distributed computing) b) Experience of event-driven, asynchronous architectures and messaging/market data processing.
[Physical Sciences / Math Jobs] SENIOR ALGORITHMIC TRADING SYSTEMS DEVELOPER - C++/C#/Java ” Find ...: Successful Multibillion dollar, multi strategy Hedge Fund in New York seeks a senior experienced and successful Algorithmic Trading Systems Developer to play a leadership role in refactoring their algorithmic trading system. Working in a culture where technology is considered essential to maintaining a competitive edge and drives strategic decision making, you will have a significant impact on the feel and composition of this algorithmic trading platform.
[Free Classifieds, Free Ads] Java Developer - Intermediate - Equities Algo - (Stamford): Our award-winning algorithmic trading system is developed purely in-house, coded entirely by IT developers. It already successfully trades a significant proportion of Cash Equities volume across all global markets, and has earned us a reputation as one of the very best in this area.
[QuantFinanceJobs.com - Latest Jobs] Java, C++, Grid Computing, Enterprise Systems, FX Trading, Algo ...: in either Java or C++ platforms and have contributed significantly towards the evolution, design, development and implementation of multi-threaded applications that deal with large data-driven structures. Industry exposure is secondary to exposure on systems that reflect the above points and your experience may include working on Grid Computing, Parallel Computing, Algorithmic Trading Technology, Cloud Computing or any similar related systems.
[Latest Jobs : Technojobs.co.uk] Job: Senior Java Developer - Algo Trading/Cash Equities. - Technojobs: Significant java development takes place in Hong Kong and there is now a need for more development expertise in London to deliver global solutions.
[NewYorkJobs.com] Senior C++ Developer for Algorithmic Trading: <P>Seeking a senior developer to join an established,global team developing multi-asset,algorithmic trading solutions. The candidate will focus on extending our algorithmic offering and be responsible for the development and maintenance of equity algorithms as well as working on the underlying frameworks.
[10 most Recent Topics - Algorithmic Trading Group Forum] Algorithmic Trading Group Forum - Post here your job offer: The Desk manages the Quant hedge funds for the Asset Management Division, as well as numerous separate accounts. It uses sophisticated quantitative models across multiple assets classes on a global basis using a wide variety of instruments (cash securities, futures, forwards, options, and a wide variety of OTC derivatives).
[DevCentral Weblogs] Will 2008 be the year for C++?: Define "Mission Critical" here. If they mean, legacy systems then I wouldn't disagree. In my experiences with our large enterprise customers and partners, I have heard ZERO talk about development in C++ in current projects. Our customers are working on cutting edge automation and dynamic service environments and if C++ was the "most widely deployed development language", you would think it would come up at least once. The mix I see is roughly 60% Java, 30% .Net, and 10% other (php, ruby, python). Maybe C++ falls into that other 10% category, but even if it is, that's hardly the "most widely deployed".
[Event Processing blog] Event Processing blog: Scalable concurrency, a design pattern in ...: . These are silos of execution which take the factory model to the next level. A context defines a logical container that holds and executes instances of a scenario (of the same or differing types). The EPL provides a semantic for inter-context communication, there is no need for mutexes, semaphores or other locking schemes thus avoiding common deadlock code patterns typical of imperative languages such as java. Each context in effect has it's own logical input queue to which events are streamed from external sources or other contexts. Behind contexts our CEP engine squeezes the most out of operating system threads to leverage maximum use of multi-core processors.
[Hedgehogs.net: connections' blogs] Ultimate latency performance in financial trading, in managed code ...: Extreme low-latency is usually achieved by extremely customised, low level coding in unmanaged languages like C, with the typical consequence of inflexible implementation, brittle stability, complex and time consuming development and maintenance, and a very high requirement for in-house technical excellence (and thus cost) within the user's IT team. Not only has RA's implementation avoided these problems by the use of managed code, but they have done it in such a way that it actually outperforms the typical "best of class" results achieved by such fragile and specialist techniques by a significant margin, producing what by current standards appears to be the ultimate benchmark for competitive FIX engine performance.
[Event Processing blog] Event Processing blog: Design Patterns in CEP - The instance Life ...: Granted all of these are not equivalent,there are pros and cons in using them for life cycle management. Furthermore, frameworks such as J2EEapplication servers provide their own instance management schemes to make theapplication development task of instance management easier.
[TheServerSide : Thread List - Blogs] Article: Complex Event Processing Made Simple Using Esper ...: this means an event processing system must be able to query external databases, analytics or filters and provide an easy way to perform multi-dimensional queries of the in-memory data. Looking at the various SQL inspired languages, none of them provide an easy way to express multidimensional cubes or provide an easy way to plugin external components.
[Matt Cutts: Gadgets, Google, and SEO] Text links and PageRank: If you want to build back links a safe way and that is controlled by legitimate users why not try submitting content from your site to digg.com also placing buttons on your site so it makes it easy for your website’s audience to bookmark your site in Del.icio.us this way you dont need to spend money on text links and you can leave it to your audience to build links to your website via there Del.icio.us profiles ect.. Also if your site has great content on it then it could attract potential bloggers who would maybe blog about your articles or service.
[Object Mentor Blog] TDD Triage: “Use TDD to build a browser better than Firefox, an editor better than VI, a game better than DOOM or World of WarCraft, a language better than Haskell or C, (say), a database better then PostGres, an Operating System better than Linux, Search Engine btter then Google (all examples of codebases NOT developed with TDD and the authors of these code bases being the kind of people interviewed in CaW - the kind of “unprofessional”, “stone age” programmers in Bob Martins words .”
[Hack the market] Hack the market » tick data & hdf5 (part 2): One of my needs is to be able to access this functionality in Java so that the StratBox GUI can use this data. To that end, I made sure that as I was developing the prototype I maintained SWIG interfaces and a parallel test driver in Java. Apart the initial set-up, this proved pretty easy, though adding SWIG to a project does add some complexity. In any case, I wanted to see how bad a performance hit I’d get running the same tests in Java. Again, looking at the case highlighted above { No-compression/32768 chunk size/256 contracts}, the Java/SWIG timings are about twice those of HDF5’s native C. So, we take a pretty significant hit, but it seems unavoidable and ~600K records a second isn’t exactly slow.
[Lambda the Ultimate - LtU Forum, Site Discussion] "Critical code studies" | Lambda the Ultimate: But perhaps somewhere in the anti-matter universe, someone is posting to a blog right now about how his software for detecting race conditions in multi-threaded applications might have a lot of applicability to gaining a deeper understanding of Shakespeare, and a bunch of other people are responding "Right on! Using that technology stuff for creating databases of Shakespeare's complete works that can be indexed by prosody at the sentence level might be really useful!"
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