Imagine getting a call you system is down and is costing them millions per hour
This is how, say, a modern x-ray machine prevents itself from failing in a way that radiation gets stuck on.
Yes, if you think that doing pointless work is fun. What do you tell your grandchildren?
Now you might counter that it also brings some negatives (e.g. fleeting liquidity, market manipulation risk, etc.) and there's certainty some validity to that. But none of this supports an argument that it's pointless.
More generally, activities aren't pointless if you are earning money from it which pays your rent, puts food on your table, etc. A large portion of the world works mainly for this goal. It's perfectly valid to tell your grandchildren "I spent my life making sure we'd have enough money for you and your parents to live comfortably", and we shouldn't look down on someone who does that.
On average with a few caveats yes, but it also causes issues by reducing the vastly more important signaling aspects of the market.
Trade volume for example can get almost completely divorced from economic reality.
You have to look at the bigger picture. HFT companies only increase the barrier to entry to participate in the market. This means that while you may be able to put food on the table, you make it more difficult for other people to put food on the table.
Come on, it is not difficult to find better things to do with your brains. Like work in medicine, etc.
Now imagine telling your grandkids you worked on pushing short form content in absolutely every app to maximize engagement and rot brains?
There are some Ethernet switches with 4ns latency, and those do more than just sending and receiving, so there's clearly still an order of magnitude of improvement still available. 4ns is basically ~40 cycles of the bit clock for 10G Ethernet.
Essentially a few ns after the header is received it will already be passed on to the output port after some signal conditioning, which happens almost without latency. A typical 'high speed' switch will have 800 ns round trip, so that 60 ns quoted here is actually quite impressive.
They also do some packet accounting and cute features off the critical path. None of that at 4ns.
Surprisingly, if ChatGPT is prompted _juust_ right, it will even give you a good way to do this.
E.g.,
IIRC. cut-through only needs the first 6 bytes. Since it only needs the destination address for the port lookup.
Potentially the first bit, on broadcast.
FPGA engineer with a focus on ultra-low latency networking at Jane Street.
Yikes.What is the current state of the art figures?