An annoying quadratic differential

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mathematicians in my Financial Engineering


...ahem...

mathematicians?
For Windows, yes. Inside a vmware virtual machine emulating Linux, in fact. That's just porting laziness at its best.
Oh well... I hadn't run windows for almost a month and then a friend gave me a game whose name I won't mention...

I promise I *will buy* the game however if they make it run on Linux.
To get really good at FE, you really need a combination of math skills, financial understanding, and programming skills. Most people have one or two of the three.

As more people cram into graduate FE programs, there are more and more students with Master's and PhD's in physics and mathematics before applying for the programs. These students tend to be the ones who can better handle the proofs in stochastic calculus. Those with comp. sci. backgrounds are better able to implement numerical methods to solve pricing problems. Those with financial experience are better at explaining why models might not work or why there seems to be arbitrage opportunities in the market, when there really aren't. Of course, this is just a generalization.
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