Quote from blah12345678:
Oy, dude. You seriously need to improve your reading comprehension. There is nothing in this thread suggesting the OP is a gambler or has a gambling problem.
The only nutcase in this thread is you - not the OP, not JH, not Net. You're the only one who's demonstrated poor reading comprehension and rather simplistic/limited IT/programming experience.
On top of that, you're heaping out-of-left field judgment and name calling of a person you know nothing about.
Anybody reading this thread can easily discern one thing - you're a "my way or the highway" kind of person. Should anyone disagree, you resort to name calling and character assassination.
Calling the kettle black is the term which applies here...
Quote from CalVolibrator:
I promised myself each time I see JH or stock777 in a forum then its time to wave good bye. Both together? I gotta board the train. Good luck getting career advice from those two I am sure they have a track record that results in sound and intelligent advice.
Quote from vicirek:
But it is a start to broaden your horizons and find something that you can use for trading. Since trading is more and more algorithm based then you can find application of your skills in the future.
Programming by itself is not the most important thing in trading. That is why I would not recommend Computer Science because programming is a commodity. You need extra skills in science like math, physics, finance or engineering plus the ability to program.
Quote from Laissez Faire:
A start to broaden my horizons was all I expected from these courses.
Could you expand on your last paragraph regarding Computer Science?
Thanks.
Quote from vicirek:
There is a lot of competition from around the world in the programming space. Most big companies outsource lots of tedious programming work to countries that pay much less for the same work. Since programming is very time consuming they need large groups of programmers working on the same project. No matter where you are based as a computer programmer you are just one of many.
To be competitive in this space you need an extra edge. One of them is very good knowledge of systems and hardware with the ability deliver performance and security working on very low level close to bare metal (hardware).
Another way to stay competitive is to have the ability to generate sophisticated algorithms using cross-disciplinary approach. This requires knowledge and better yet degree in science other than programming.
As a pure programmer you are often perceived as a "coder" coding other people ideas.