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  3. 200K-350K salary for MFC programmer!

200K-350K salary for MFC programmer!

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csharpcareerc++asp-netcom
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  • M Masaaki Onishi

    Hello, the CPians around the world. ;) Can you believe this? http://www.windowsdevelopment.computerjobs.com/job_display.aspx?jobid=1499382&siteid=123&sort=pd&view=s&searchid=55341200&page=1&published=[^] I'v never heard that one programmer might get $200K - 350K salary? Ouch. X| -Masaaki Onishi (eCoolSoft)- ASP.NET Web and Windows Application Development by C# and MFC. eCoolWebPanelBar(BETA) is availabe now. http://www.ecoolsoft.net/homepages.aspx

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    Tomaz Stih 0
    wrote on last edited by
    #24

    I work on an intensive straight through processing system that I developed myself. The guy who will take this job will have to give his life to his company. But that is only half of the salary. You see - compensation in the financial business is not the value of your work - but the value of the know how that you can take with you when you leave the company. Many financial companies develop complex quantitative analysis packages and base their whole strategies on it. The programmer with know how about these systems is KEY person in such company - and the only way company can keep their investment safe is by buying his absolute loyalty. 200K - 300K does exactly that. Anyone disagrees? Kind Regards, Tomaz

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    • C ColinDavies

      Giles wrote: clear understanding of the business at hand - as its trading then thats how they can afford to pay for it. Seems only fair that if they get someone in that can work in a high pressure trading environment that they share in some of the spoils agreed, anyone they employ, the will expect results and outcomes from. Being able to understand the industry will be just as important as the coding skills. I guess they wish to attract the best the industry has to offer. Regardz Colin J Davies

      *** WARNING *
      This could be addictive
      **The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "

      It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox

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      Joey Bloggs
      wrote on last edited by
      #25

      There was a similar job advertised on www.jobnet.com.au for the last six months or so, it doesn't seem to be there now, I don't know whether they filled it or gave up. From memory they were offering AUD 150k or USD 100k bit of a difference !!!

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      • T Tomaz Stih 0

        I work on an intensive straight through processing system that I developed myself. The guy who will take this job will have to give his life to his company. But that is only half of the salary. You see - compensation in the financial business is not the value of your work - but the value of the know how that you can take with you when you leave the company. Many financial companies develop complex quantitative analysis packages and base their whole strategies on it. The programmer with know how about these systems is KEY person in such company - and the only way company can keep their investment safe is by buying his absolute loyalty. 200K - 300K does exactly that. Anyone disagrees? Kind Regards, Tomaz

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        Joey Bloggs
        wrote on last edited by
        #26

        It depends, how much is that after tax. complex quantitative analysis packages, one of the financial papers here runs a regular 10 week virtual trading competition. Monkeys, schools kids and the dart board regulary win the competition. So they know the price of everything and the value of nothing eh.

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        • J Joey Bloggs

          It depends, how much is that after tax. complex quantitative analysis packages, one of the financial papers here runs a regular 10 week virtual trading competition. Monkeys, schools kids and the dart board regulary win the competition. So they know the price of everything and the value of nothing eh.

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          Tomaz Stih 0
          wrote on last edited by
          #27

          > complex quantitative analysis packages, one of the financial papers here > runs a regular 10 week virtual trading competition. Monkeys, schools kids > and the dart board regulary win the competition I work for a company where a study comparing brokers and machines was made and trading decisions were trusted to the machines. They put a hell of an effort to prevent reverse engineering of their patterns, but if an insider would decide to go to another company that would exposed them dangerously. The know how that predicts the market is not half as valuable as the know how to predict their every move... Tomaz

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          • T Tomaz Stih 0

            > complex quantitative analysis packages, one of the financial papers here > runs a regular 10 week virtual trading competition. Monkeys, schools kids > and the dart board regulary win the competition I work for a company where a study comparing brokers and machines was made and trading decisions were trusted to the machines. They put a hell of an effort to prevent reverse engineering of their patterns, but if an insider would decide to go to another company that would exposed them dangerously. The know how that predicts the market is not half as valuable as the know how to predict their every move... Tomaz

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            Joey Bloggs
            wrote on last edited by
            #28

            Interesting perspective. I hope you realize that these people and systems are just vampires sucking away at our lives and the productive work we do throughout them.

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            • T Tomaz Stih 0

              I work on an intensive straight through processing system that I developed myself. The guy who will take this job will have to give his life to his company. But that is only half of the salary. You see - compensation in the financial business is not the value of your work - but the value of the know how that you can take with you when you leave the company. Many financial companies develop complex quantitative analysis packages and base their whole strategies on it. The programmer with know how about these systems is KEY person in such company - and the only way company can keep their investment safe is by buying his absolute loyalty. 200K - 300K does exactly that. Anyone disagrees? Kind Regards, Tomaz

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              Marc Clifton
              wrote on last edited by
              #29

              tstih wrote: Many financial companies develop complex quantitative analysis packages and base their whole strategies on it. The programmer with know how about these systems is KEY person in such company - and the only way company can keep their investment safe is by buying his absolute loyalty. 200K - 300K does exactly that. Anyone disagrees? Yes, I disagree. Companies that put so much emphasis on a single person's ability/knowledge are obviously run by people who know nothing about how to run a business. Marc Every line of code is a liability - Taka Muraoka
              A doable project is one that is small enough to be done quickly and big enough to be interesting - Ken Orr
              Latest AAL Article My blog

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              • M Marc Clifton

                tstih wrote: Many financial companies develop complex quantitative analysis packages and base their whole strategies on it. The programmer with know how about these systems is KEY person in such company - and the only way company can keep their investment safe is by buying his absolute loyalty. 200K - 300K does exactly that. Anyone disagrees? Yes, I disagree. Companies that put so much emphasis on a single person's ability/knowledge are obviously run by people who know nothing about how to run a business. Marc Every line of code is a liability - Taka Muraoka
                A doable project is one that is small enough to be done quickly and big enough to be interesting - Ken Orr
                Latest AAL Article My blog

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                Tomaz Stih 0
                wrote on last edited by
                #30

                > Yes, I disagree. Companies that put so much emphasis on a single > person's ability/knowledge are obviously run by people who know > nothing about how to run a business. You can hide the overview of the system from the engineers and delegate a part to each individual - but at the top someone will have the full picture. It is very likely that two or more persons will have the full picture (in case something happens to one of them). But there is a trade off to pay. The more people know it - the more exposed you are. Tomaz

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                • J Joey Bloggs

                  Interesting perspective. I hope you realize that these people and systems are just vampires sucking away at our lives and the productive work we do throughout them.

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                  Tomaz Stih 0
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #31

                  Someone has to so I decided to put my blood on the market and get the most of it. Tomaz

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                  • T Tomaz Stih 0

                    Someone has to so I decided to put my blood on the market and get the most of it. Tomaz

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                    Joey Bloggs
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #32

                    Understood. Have you ever read 'the velocity of money' fiction.

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                    • T Tom Archer

                      I thought all people who contributed articles to CodeProject got paid that kind of money :confused: Cheers, Tom Archer Inside C#,
                      Extending MFC Applications with the .NET Framework It's better to listen to others than to speak, because I already know what I'm going to say anyway. - friend of Jörgen Sigvardsson

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                      Nnamdi Onyeyiri
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #33

                      Tom Archer wrote: I thought all people who contributed articles to CodeProject got paid that kind of money Yeah, wheres my money! :rolleyes: Another Post by NnamdiOnyeyiri l Website

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                      • M Masaaki Onishi

                        Hello, the CPians around the world. ;) Can you believe this? http://www.windowsdevelopment.computerjobs.com/job_display.aspx?jobid=1499382&siteid=123&sort=pd&view=s&searchid=55341200&page=1&published=[^] I'v never heard that one programmer might get $200K - 350K salary? Ouch. X| -Masaaki Onishi (eCoolSoft)- ASP.NET Web and Windows Application Development by C# and MFC. eCoolWebPanelBar(BETA) is availabe now. http://www.ecoolsoft.net/homepages.aspx

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                        Joseph Dempsey
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #34

                        2 things: 1) Its in NY city with has has one of the highest cost of living in the US. Semi-Nice apts can go for like 4000 a month. 2) The money is also probabaly a lot for the NON-tech experience.. Its very specific. "Convertible Bonds Experience" How many programmers you think have this experience. Joseph Dempsey joseph_r_dempsey@yahoo.com "What?, Of course its fireproof! ...... < 10 Minutes later in the ER > Sorry..." How about, "Bugs?, of course there are not bugs .... < 3 weeks after Production Release > Sorry..."

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                        • M Masaaki Onishi

                          Hello, the CPians around the world. ;) Can you believe this? http://www.windowsdevelopment.computerjobs.com/job_display.aspx?jobid=1499382&siteid=123&sort=pd&view=s&searchid=55341200&page=1&published=[^] I'v never heard that one programmer might get $200K - 350K salary? Ouch. X| -Masaaki Onishi (eCoolSoft)- ASP.NET Web and Windows Application Development by C# and MFC. eCoolWebPanelBar(BETA) is availabe now. http://www.ecoolsoft.net/homepages.aspx

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                          RaviBee
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #35

                          Jobs in the finance industry seem to pay premium salaries, although $250+K for an MFC developer seems pretty high. /ravi Let's put "civil" back in "civilization" Home | Articles | Freeware | Music ravib@ravib.com

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                          • R Roger Wright

                            igor1960 wrote: For that money: I'll write it in assembly For that money I'll do it in ones and zeros, and if the budget is tight, I'll find a way to do without the zeros. We didn't always have them in the old days, you know...

                            "Welcome to Arizona!
                            Drive Nice - We're Armed..."
                            - Proposed Sign at CA/AZ Border

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                            Gary R Wheeler
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #36

                            Roger Wright wrote: I'll find a way to do without the zeros Real men use lower-case and upper-case zero's. Only wimps need one's.


                            Software Zen: delete this;

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                            • R Roger Wright

                              igor1960 wrote: For that money: I'll write it in assembly For that money I'll do it in ones and zeros, and if the budget is tight, I'll find a way to do without the zeros. We didn't always have them in the old days, you know...

                              "Welcome to Arizona!
                              Drive Nice - We're Armed..."
                              - Proposed Sign at CA/AZ Border

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                              John M Drescher
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #37

                              Roger Wright wrote: For that money I'll do it in ones and zeros, and if the budget is tight, I'll find a way to do without the zeros. We didn't always have them in the old days, you know... :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: John

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                              • M Marc Clifton

                                tstih wrote: Many financial companies develop complex quantitative analysis packages and base their whole strategies on it. The programmer with know how about these systems is KEY person in such company - and the only way company can keep their investment safe is by buying his absolute loyalty. 200K - 300K does exactly that. Anyone disagrees? Yes, I disagree. Companies that put so much emphasis on a single person's ability/knowledge are obviously run by people who know nothing about how to run a business. Marc Every line of code is a liability - Taka Muraoka
                                A doable project is one that is small enough to be done quickly and big enough to be interesting - Ken Orr
                                Latest AAL Article My blog

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                                igor1960
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #38

                                Yes, I disagree. Companies that put so much emphasis on a single person's ability/knowledge are obviously run by people who know nothing about how to run a business. And I disagree with you. You don't really know specifics of that business. What you consider "money" is just "peanuts" for that company. Imagine good convertible bonds trading system, that just places trades utilizing Arbitrage: that money (300,000) is just one good trade! It maybe not even the best. If you have no idea what Arbitrage is, let me explain to you what it is: Trading happened on different markets, like for example US, Europe, or regional inside US. On each market price for the same instrument is slightly different: So, Arbitrage will peak up the most profitable market to perform the trade. Just in here you can peak up 10 times more what the salary range is, assuming your transaction is in Billions... So, MFC portion of advertisement has nothing to do with more important qualities of that position. Plus, frankly speaking: MFC maybe the best language that system should be written on! With all that arrogance coming from .NET world: we are talking about proprieatary trading system and the best the world has offered for that is still MFC! The fastest to write on. The fastest to execute. More secured from reverse engineering. "...Ability to type is not enough to become a Programmer. Unless you type in VB. But then again you have to type really fast..." Me

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                                • T Tomaz Stih 0

                                  > Yes, I disagree. Companies that put so much emphasis on a single > person's ability/knowledge are obviously run by people who know > nothing about how to run a business. You can hide the overview of the system from the engineers and delegate a part to each individual - but at the top someone will have the full picture. It is very likely that two or more persons will have the full picture (in case something happens to one of them). But there is a trade off to pay. The more people know it - the more exposed you are. Tomaz

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                                  Marc Clifton
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #39

                                  tstih wrote: The more people know it - the more exposed you are. Ah yes. And the government has a whistle-blower protection clause. Well, they'd have to pay me more than $300K a year to keep me from spilling all the corporate swindling deals and other shenanigans that go on. Marc Every line of code is a liability - Taka Muraoka
                                  A doable project is one that is small enough to be done quickly and big enough to be interesting - Ken Orr
                                  Latest AAL Article My blog

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • M Masaaki Onishi

                                    Hello, the CPians around the world. ;) Can you believe this? http://www.windowsdevelopment.computerjobs.com/job_display.aspx?jobid=1499382&siteid=123&sort=pd&view=s&searchid=55341200&page=1&published=[^] I'v never heard that one programmer might get $200K - 350K salary? Ouch. X| -Masaaki Onishi (eCoolSoft)- ASP.NET Web and Windows Application Development by C# and MFC. eCoolWebPanelBar(BETA) is availabe now. http://www.ecoolsoft.net/homepages.aspx

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                                    Eddie Velasquez
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #40

                                    OMG! The're going to fire me! :(( Just kidding! ;)


                                    The nice thing about C++ is that only your friends can handle your private parts.

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