


You’re not going to win the Super Bowl if you aren’t even playing in the right stadium. And because so many of the movers and shakers are already there, if you want to be the next big thing in finance, you want to be there, too. Subscriptions cost between $20,000 and $24,000 annually, and right now, there are more than 325,000 subscribers signed up.īasically, it’s still the place a lot of traders, analysts, and executives prefer to do their work. It still looks like it’s straight out of the ’80s - it’s got a black background, lots of neon text, early days computing-style block letters, and a funny-looking keyboard - and it isn’t the easiest system to navigate, but it’s established a grip on Wall Street that competitors haven’t really been able to shake. Today, the company does a lot of things - it deals in data, in technology, and in media - but it came to prominence because of the Bloomberg Terminal, a computer software system for the financial industry that basically puts all the relevant information, capabilities, and people in the same place. How he got there: a computer system most people have never heard of, let alone seen.īloomberg is the founder of Bloomberg LP, a private, multibillion-dollar firm he launched in 1981. And not just billionaire rich - he’s one of the richest people in the world, clocking in at more than $50 billion. The workstation #018, with a unique Bloomberg Terminal’s keyboard, is located near the Quiet Study Room, and users have to first use a UTSA computer log-in ID and password to log into this workstation, then log into Bloomberg Terminal. If there is any problem with the Bloomberg terminal at JPL 2nd floor, we would have to notify CoB IT Service as they're the ones who handle the Bloomberg terminals at UTSA.Michael Bloomberg is very rich. At the 2nd floor of JPL Information Commons:: workstation #018 - the only one Bloomberg station available at UTSA Libraries.At the Business Building: 13 terminals in Financial Studies Center (located on the first floor BB 1.01.04) and 2 terminals in the Advanced Projects Lab (located on the 3rd floor BB 3.02.14).Locations of designated workstations at UTSA: Note: UTSA (UTSA Libraries and College of Business) no subscription to web-based Bloomberg Anywhere.For first-time user of Bloomberg, after you log into a designated Bloomberg workstation at UTSA, then you must register with the Bloomberg system by using your UTSA email, in order to get your log-in ID and password from Bloomberg.Bloomberg is only available on designated workstations at UTSA.Bloomberg Professional Standalone Terminal’s Log-in Requirement:
