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awealthofcommonsense.com
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| | | | | Last week I wrote that the one constant in the stock market is losses. And not just minor losses but losses of the double-digit variety. The S&P 500 has experienced at least one double-digit drawdown in half of all years going back to 1950. The bond market tells a different story. Investors in high-quality bonds... | |
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ritholtz.com
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| | | | | Macro Perspective on the Capital Markets, Economy, Geopolitics, Technology, and Digital Media | |
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ofdollarsanddata.com
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| | | | | On the upsides and downsides of investing in a 100% U.S. stock portfolio. | |
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www.codesimplicity.com
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| | | Here are some clues that tell you that your code may be too complex: You have to add "hacks" to make things keep working. Other developers keep asking you how some part of the code works. Other developers keep mis-using your code, and causing bugs. Reading a line of code takes longer than an instant for an experienced developer. You feel scared to modify this part of the code. Management seriously considers hiring more than one developer to work on a single class or file. It's hard to figure out how to add a feature. Developers often argue about how | ||