I can already see Matt Levine's column: if someone places secret recorders at Starbucks and leaks the transcript to the internet, is it insider trading?
imagine a bot drone that flies around a big city like NY,
and just tags walls + suitable spots with interesting gen art from various sources .. likely a lawsuit in the making but cool to see.
I had a great time reading the following group of related books.
How To Beat the Dealer by Ed Thorp.
You might think this is lame and outdated, but it will clue you into how bond traders think. In fact, Bill Gross of pimco was so inspired by the book that he went to Vegas and became a gambler (before pimco but OTW). That book also is the holy grail for card counting. It will up your blackjack at least, and prepare you for the next book.
Liars Poker by M.Lewis
Lewis actually mentions Thorp, b/c Thorp went on to become a wildly successful trader throughout the 90s: he even called out B.Madoff as a crook in the early 90s (dude knew his finance games and clearly the SEC did not), and Thorp developed a lot of arbitrage trade strategies that are common today. All of this and more as M.Lewis clues you into wallstreet cronies and big bond trading, insider talk about salmon smith barney, and just how sketchy that industry really is ...
Ok now you know a few things about wallstreet and trading, now go to:
The Big Short by M.Lewis
Lewis again with an awesome breakdown of how/what of the credit bubble and various characters betting against that massive momentum as it builds. Really this book is about personal fortitude: having a vision as a trader and sticking to it, even when the rest of the world is betting against you, even when your vision implies the rest of the world is d0000med in an almost end-of-money kind of way :)
Now move into an interesting layer of finance, which all of us Hackers will enjoy ...
The Quants by S. Patterson
This has the making of a great movie if only hacking were interesting on film (too bad its not really like Hugh Jackman in Swordfish!). Buffet: "beware of geeks bearing formulas" ... exactly and this book is all about the buildup of these trading systems and the people behind them, the little bill gates (relative to bank-account) characters that run those giant quant funds ... And just questions on layering probability and the feasibility of trading into this complexity.
FYI there's a new book by Scott Patterson coming out next week called "Dark Pools: High-Speed Traders, A.I. Bandits, and the Threat to the Global Financial System" which looks interesting.
nah they're just saying that they think social is an important aspect of search, and messaging out to the world in preparation for integrating social everywhere.
then when regulators come calling about unfair search + social integration (assuming they make some inroads over time), they have a story already cooking, and a defense that social IS part of search, that goog's mission DOES involve social aspects.
yes good thoughts, seattle is actually in the running, i'm from portland so its well known to me, just wishing i could stay in the warmer climate + sunshine (i gave up on pdx after 7yrs of rain)
Then I would say look into Plano, Texas. A lot of my co-workers work there and they are pretty happy about it, a lot of them are from San Francisco and Southern California. And its is pretty warm there. Its apparently becoming a hot-bed for start-ups (At least that is what I have been told)
I love how he figured out business people require financial incentives to work hard, while engineers just want interesting projects? Man sick of this "engineers don't want money" meme, we always get ripped off.