Just in time.

While working on this column I chanced on a link to an article on the BBC web site that asked Would you let a robot invest your hard-earned cash? The article dealt with the benefits and drawbacks of algorithmic trading, and noted that:

Companies like New Jersey-based Tradeworx are erecting line-of-site networks of microwave relays, involving towers interspersed every 30 miles or so.
This network will convey financial information from Chicago - where financial products called futures are traded - to the New York Stock Exchange 2.3 milliseconds faster than data sent over existing fibre-optic cables.
This tiny time saving is enough to give a trader an advantage in the hyper-fast world of "flash trading" - the controversial phenomenon exposed in Michael Lewis' best-selling book, Flash Boys.
I have no doubt that the people who write television detective programs are constantly reviewing news sites to get ideas for plots that may seem a bit off the wall but can actually be well grounded in reality. This one is a good case in point.



Go to: A very quick buck, or
Go to: What will we do with all that "spare" time?