From: Craig on 26 Jun 2010 13:34 Nope. Ain't tried it. My eyes are crossing just reading the "about" page. Not sure of the exact licensing terms (couldn't find it): the authors say it's free for non-commercial use in one place. In another they talk about a free version for academics, developers... Cross-platform (requires .net or mono). > Fairmat is a derivative and capital investments modelling tool. It > permits you to build a pricing model for many financial projects (or > derivative contracts) using a graphical representation blended with a > high level algebraic language. It is also possible to use it to > evaluate projects and perform real options valuations. The platform > can be extended using a plug-in system. <http://www.fairmat.com/> -- -Craig
From: hummingbirdy on 26 Jun 2010 17:28 On Sat, 26 Jun 2010 23:20:10 +0200, F. Reeware wrote: > Is this what the Lehman Brothers, other Wall Street ciminals and > various big banks have used? Dont b silly. Socialists are compooter elliterate! -- I love Banking
From: Craig on 26 Jun 2010 17:55 On 06/26/2010 02:20 PM, F. Reeware wrote: > Craig<netburgher(a)REMOVEgmail.com> wrote: > >>> <http://www.fairmat.com/> > > Is this what the Lehman Brothers, other Wall Street ciminals and > various big banks have used? No, no, no, no. Fairmat is legit. And, anyway, everyone knows that Lehman simply prognosticated by throwing a small bag of bird bones on the executive conference table each morning. Use Fairmat? <sheesh> I just don't understand how these urban legends start... -- -Craig
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