On Thursday, October 17, Tower Research Ventures hosted a C++ meetup with the NYC++ organization, a community of active C++ programmers. The group gathered at Tower’s SoHo office for an evening of casual networking, followed by a technical discussion led by Mike Shah, a graphics lecturer in Yale’s Computer Science department. Shah provided live code examples, along with real-world insights into how to run programs concurrently and the performance implications on real systems.
Given the prominence of C++ in Tower’s tech stack, we hosted several engineers from Tower’s Core Engineering team, as well as over 60 external developers from the broader finance and startup developer ecosystem of New York City.
If you’re a C++ enthusiast interested in working at Tower or a Tower portfolio company, or if you’re interested in starting a business in the developer tooling or code generation space, reach out to ventures@tower-research.com.
The views expressed herein are solely the views of the author(s), are as of the date they were originally posted, and are not necessarily the views of Tower Research Ventures LLC, or any of its affiliates. They are not intended to provide, and should not be relied upon for, investment advice, nor is any information herein any offer to buy or sell any security or intended as the basis for the purchase or sale of any investment. The information herein has not been and will not be updated or otherwise revised to reflect information that subsequently becomes available, or circumstances existing or changes occurring after the date of preparation. Certain information contained herein is based on published and unpublished sources. The information has not been independently verified by TRV or its representatives, and the accuracy or completeness of such information is not guaranteed. Your linking to or use of any third-party websites is at your own risk. Tower Research Ventures disclaims any responsibility for the products or services offered or the information contained on any third-party websites.