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Updates are being pushed out for a reason.
Enjoy your unpatched exploits.
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Make it all clean and clear again ... the way it should be!
1) Right click on the desktop.
2) Select "Personalize" from the pop up menu.
3) On the left of the screen, select "Themes".
4) Under "Related Settings" select "Desktop icon settings".
5) Uncheck "Recycle Bin" and click OK.
Presto! No more icons on your desktop! Ahhhh ...
(You can still open it by searching for "recycle" when you do need it.)
Why under "Themes"? Explains why I never saw it before ...
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Yes, it's been there since Windows 95. I use it on all new Windows installations.
Themes? I guess to save it as an option when saving theme packages as to not interfere with background images. I know back during the Vista years, moving wallpaper was a big thing.
"When you are dead, you won't even know that you are dead. It's a pain only felt by others; same thing when you are stupid."
Ignorant - An individual without knowledge, but is willing to learn.
Stupid - An individual without knowledge and is incapable of learning.
Idiot - An individual without knowledge and allows social media to do the thinking for them.
modified 19-Nov-21 21:01pm.
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Disabling and hiding that (and all other desktop icons) is one of the first things I always do with a fresh install.
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I stumbled upon this article: The coding language used by the most elite developers in finance | eFinancialCareers[^]
I've never heard of K or Q, but apparently programmers of the languages are earning £1k a day in London
Another great earner is OCaml, a language I have heard of because F# was influenced by it, which earns you $200k + a $100k sign-on bonus + a $100-$150k performance bonus.
That's $400-$450k in your first year and $300-$350 every year after, or also about $1k a day
This is a forum with almost 15 million users... Does anyone here know any of these languages (that is, be productive in it)?
If you know someone who knows someone (heck, who knows someone) who uses K, Q or OCaml, I'd be happy to know too
Really, just out of curiosity, not really looking to land a job in finance with any of those languages.
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I know people doing around 300K on plain old C++ and not in financial industry.
A few thoughts about those salaries in fin services:
- if you put them in perspective, as percentage of company's earnings, they are paid peanuts.
- up to a point the choice of language increases productivity but in the end any Turing complete language can do any job. Why would you choose only one esoteric language is beyond me.
- financial industry is not a paragon of intelligence. 2008-2009 crisis springs to mind.
Mircea
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Thanks for not answering my question
Mircea Neacsu wrote: Why would you choose only one esoteric language is beyond me. According to this article, because some lead dev liked the language.
Also, I do believe a language like OCaml, or F#, makes it harder to make certain mistakes in your code.
Mircea Neacsu wrote: - if you put them in perspective, as percentage of company's earnings, they are paid peanuts. Salaries aren't usually based on what a company makes.
Or maybe they are, but based on the lowest charging company.
If company A makes $1.000.000 a year and has ten employees, which it pays $90.000 each (saving $100.000 for the owner), then company B can pay $100.000 and get all the best employees, even if they make $10.000.000 a year (saving $9.000.000 for the owner!).
Roughly said.
In this particular case, you're not going to earn more than $300k anytime soon as a developer, even if your boss makes a 100 times what you earn.
Mircea Neacsu wrote: - financial industry is not a paragon of intelligence. To be fair, neither is the IT industry! A whole lot of examples come to mind
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Sander Rossel wrote: saving $9.000.000 for the owner!
I get what your saying but the company gets 9 million, not the owner. IF the owner is like most owners, they will actually pocket <= to the developer, probably, putting everything back into the company, etc.
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Depends on the company structure, but if you're making 9 million and the owner gets it all you're doing something wrong
It was an oversimplified example, of course, to make a point
In real life, other factors will play a role as well, such as company car, laptop, pension, commute, company culture...
Take Amazon, one of the largest and richest companies in the world, with the richest owner in the world, but employees are treated like Chinese sweatshop workers.
If people are desperate enough for a job, they'll take anything, apparently.
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Perhaps the company gets the 9 million rather than the owner because of the tax implications for the owner - his wealth is better influenced long term by the capital growth of the company. Other than the tax dodge - I'm not sure that the difference is significant.
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Sander Rossel wrote: I've never heard of K or Q, but apparently programmers of the languages are earning £1k a day in London
Another great earner is OCaml, a language I have heard of because F# was influenced by it, which earns you $200k + a $100k sign-on bonus + a $100-$150k performance bonus.
That's $400-$450k in your first year and $300-$350 every year after, or also about $1k a day
...
Really, just out of curiosity, not really looking to land a job in finance with any of those languages.
Why not?
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Daniel Pfeffer wrote: Why not?
Because then you'd have to work with complete bankers ... and that's not rhyming slang but it should be.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Because that would require me to do something completely different from what I do now.
Mostly math and statistics, which I hate.
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Not worth moving to a foreign country and learning a whole new language.
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Yeah, I think so too.
I've worked for a financial company and the company culture wasn't all that great.
Basically, everyone was pretty obsessed with prestige, titles and money.
Lots of managers.
Everyone was a manager.
Except the ones doing the work, who also earned the least.
It may not have been a good representation of your average financial company, but based on what I've heard, it was.
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a lot of times, companies will promote people to manager, director, or VP so that those employees can make more money (all about pay brackets).
companies that care about their employees and/or are trying to retain them, use this approach sometimes.
Goldman Sachs does it. I used to work for them. Obviously, I did not get promoted.
modified 16-Jun-21 15:49pm.
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I see why now. I looked up the K programming language. It looks to be a short-hand type of language to product functions on as few keystrokes as possible. Also, the database is a in-memory relational database. I imagine they use it for performance due to the enormous amount of transactions the banks have to keep up with.
K (programming language)[^]
K is the foundation for a family of financial products. Kdb+ is an in-memory, column-based database with much of the same functions of a relational database management system. The database supports SQL, SQL-92 and ksql, a query language with a syntax similar to SQL and designed for column based queries and array analysis.
"When you are dead, you won't even know that you are dead. It's a pain only felt by others; same thing when you are stupid."
Ignorant - An individual without knowledge, but is willing to learn.
Stupid - An individual without knowledge and is incapable of learning.
Idiot - An individual without knowledge and allows social media to do the thinking for them.
modified 19-Nov-21 21:01pm.
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Donathan.Hutchings wrote: on as few keystrokes as possible The language is completely unreadable
Wikipedia wrote: The following expression sorts a list of strings by their lengths:
x@>#:'x
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I've seen some code golfs when I first started programming.
Now that's something else
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Never heard of them. These stories tend to be beat ups. I've gone for $1000 a day jobs, but that's about 600 pounds
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You make it sound as if 600 pounds a day is an average salary
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I used to work at a bank, one of the most advanced digitally aware in SE Asia, in the finance department, never heard of K 0r Q although I did run across a k formula that I could never trace the origin of, I wanted to convert it to c#.
Mostly they use Python for their processing calcs, bloody horrible language. And yes $1k a day was about right.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity -
RAH
I'm old. I know stuff - JSOP
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Yes, I found out in University that a group of Computer Science researchers from various universities got together and decided on languages and what they would do, by then there had been A, B, and we were on to C. Since then I have seen D, F, and Q and R personally. Don't be surprised if you eventually see a language represented by each letter of the English alphabet. Since you asked, Q is for quantum processor programming, Microsoft came out with Q# a while back to simulate a quantum environment for programmers to work within.
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AnotherKen wrote: Don't be surprised if you eventually see a language represented by each letter of the English alphabet. I don't doubt it!
AnotherKen wrote: Q is for quantum processor programming, Microsoft came out with Q# a while back Q for quantum makes sense!
I guess it'll be a while before we're seeing that language being used in the wild.
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