I am looking for a MATHEMATIC PROGRAMMER with knowledge of probability theory and MQL4-MQL5, to work together on a project. - page 13

 
Georgiy Merts:

Only the question of what you stand to lose if the idea "fails" has somehow not been answered (what ***... ugh... "like-minded people" stand to lose - clearly, effort and time).

Why are you picking on the man? Grown-up people will always figure out who loses what and what they gain.

 
PapaYozh:

Why are you picking on the man? Grown-ups can always figure out who has what to lose and who has what to gain.

So I'm not an adult, that's why I'm picking on you.

I don't see what the author has to lose by failing. Tell me, since you're an adult.

 
Georgiy Merts:

I don't see what the author of the thread has to lose by failing. Tell me, since you are an adult.

time.

 
Andrei Trukhanovich:

time.

Nah. The author is wasting his time anyway. That's just the whole zimmes of the situation is that in the presence of l...a like-minded, this time is shishko greatly reduced, depending on the hard skills l...a (well, I do not believe in the grail, shishko a lot of them I have seen).

So, draw conclusions.

PS. Well you will not find a normal specialist to work for a grail, which is somewhere out there. A normal specialist wants to eat here and now, and rest two times a year at least, in hotels that are not 5* a la Egypt, but slightly higher (Hilton, Rixos, Selectum or Mitsis, for example, look at the prices).

PSS. Want to make a grail? Three options: teach it yourself, pay it yourself and look for an investor. Ah, well, yes, there is still hope for someone for a chuppa-chupps. Anybody else have any advice?

PSSS. Didn't mean to offend anyone. Just for thought.

 
Vladimir Simakov:

You are contradicting yourself, but that's your business.

There are plenty of options for non-financial gain, and with your approach it's best to claw martins and grids in freelancing.

 
Georgiy Merts:

So I'm not an adult, that's why I'm pestering.

I don't see what the author has to lose by failing. Tell me, since you're an adult.

What's the point? What's the use?

 
PapaYozh:

Why are you picking on the man? Grown-ups will always figure out who has what to lose and what to gain.

There's just one child looking for "like-minded people" without stating his thoughts :-)

 
Vladimir Simakov:

PSS. Do you want to saw the grail? Three options: teach it yourself, pay it yourself, look for an investor. Oh, yeah, there's still hope for someone for a chuppah-chuppah. Anybody else have any advice?

PSSS. Didn't mean to offend anyone. Just for thought.

Well, you can try to interest. An average coder (which I include myself) may well work for free, "on the horizon" if there is an interesting idea, and especially if it will be close to the existing development coder. Initially I thought so, which is why I joined the discussion.

But more and more I become convinced that the author has nothing but vague premonitions that some of his ideas will give a huge stable profit.

And that already contradicts my experience, which is that the market is non-stationary. And how the author proposes to account for it or compensate for it is completely incomprehensible to me.

 
Georgiy Merts:

Only the question of what you have to lose if the idea "fails" has somehow not been answered (what the losers... ugh... "like-minded" will lose - clearly, effort and time).

Send me your phone number - I'll explain it to you personally!

 
Aleksei Stepanenko:
Fine, let it all work out! Let me know when it works out, so we can be happy, too.

I'll be sure to write. Maybe someone will understand what direction to go in, maybe they will say it's not my thing, I'll continue to study with indicators or something else...