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I WAS IN THE PROCESS OF BLOG UPLOAD TO ROJO WHEN I CAME TO YOUR PAGE.
I FOR ONE AM SO VERY THANKFUL FOR SILICON VALLEY. (EVEN THOUGH I DONT KNOW ON A MAP WHERE IT IS)
IF IT WAS NOT FOR THERE WHERE COMPUTER STARTED. I WOULD NOT BE ON MY DELL NOW WRITING YOU.
ONE MAN SAID YOU NEED A DIFFERENT INTREST.
YOU WILL LIKE MY INTREST, FENGSHUI.
I NOTED YOUR MENTION OF CHINA WHERE FENGSHUI STARTED ABOUT 6000 YEARS BEFORE DELL.
WOULD YOU LIKE TO HELP BETA TEST OUR PAGE AND TELL FRIENDS IN SILICON VALLEY ALSO?
NOT TO WORRY OUR BLOG HAS PROOFREAD BY PROFESSIONAL TO MAKE IT EASY TO READ.
I HOPE YOU HAVE TIME TO TAKE NOTICE IN SOMETHING YOU HAVE INTREST IN, FENGSHUI WILL FIND YOU AS I JUST DID. GOOD QI CAN TRAVEL ANY LENGTH LIKE THE WORLD WIDE WEB. WE HOPE TO INTREST YOU, AND LOOK FROWARD TO YOUR RESPONSE.
ALOHA FROM MAUI,
HONG AI LI
PHOTOGRAPHER
ALOHA -H.LI
http://101fengshui.blogspot.com/
I wrote about this today, actually, on my blog:
http://www.iseff.com/2006/05/essay-second-life-...
I came to the conclusion that, while it may be very difficult to build a physical new silicon valley, we should begin to use technology available -- in this case, Second Life -- to try to spread some of the key strengths of Silicon Valley (the sharing and networking and people).
Ian
Him and that Scoble guy. And the Winer dude. And Spolsky. Tell me you're reading Spolsky? And while we're at it - Damian Mulley and Piaras Kelly. Om Malik too. And of course Guy Kawasaki.
These are the most interesting blogs. And no they ain't paid me to say that. And if you're not on that list....well...I probably read your blog but can't spell your name :)
I wouldn't bother with that MJ guy from Infurious. He's crap :)
I think he mises the presence of a lot of aerospace and defence companies in SV and the big fat defence contracts. and no mention of HP Sacrilege!
Anyway, I hope the next few weeks of your life are better than the last few weeks.
Like how many me too web 2.0 companies are being funded. It harkens back to the last bubble. It seems to be that there is no fresh thinking on business models.
It seems to me that a place like Livingston Montana has more 'real' people whose problems can be solved by smart developers. If its a feature useful to someone there I guarantee you have got a winner. Plus that area of the world is amazingly beatiful. Surely that would provide for inspiration.
But yes, a lack of people. Like Philly here, somewhat. Thats a problem. I suspect that will change though..the demographic of lot of mountain towns is changing as people move there to connect with the earth..take Durango, Bozeman, Salt-Lake City and Boulder for example in rough order of increasing techiness...
I am not sure that you need to be in Silicon Valley to do things. As you prove by blogging on the road you could be many places doing many things.
Being in places were exciting things are brewing can be good , it also makes us feel important but we all need some distance, some time to reflect.
I think we should all focus more on quality rather than quantity.
Serge
Biz:
http://www.njconcierges.com
Blog:
http://www.sergetheconcierge.com
Brian: I do love the place cause I grew up there, but there's a lot more to it. There is no other place in the world with so many high-tech headquarters and no other place I've visited comes close to as high a quantity of geeks.
Personally, I grew up in "SV" and it's not the same place I grew up in. One fella had it right back there. The price of houses. All of California in general.. Try raising a family here. It sucks. The public schools suck, the traffic sucks, the taxes suck, the gas prices are among the highest in the country, ever go to the mall on a Friday night? It takes 45 minutes to park anywhere. Try taking the kids to the zoo or aquarium where they are exposed to freako's and people pretending to be stuff they're not. And the mentality of some folks around here, that if nooone is physically getting hurt, then anything goes. I mean yeah there's a ton of geeks and places to work, and I love my network of people I have worked with (that includes your bro Alex) and my job I have now is the best I have ever had. But the truth is, I'm outta here. I'm moving the family to another state in August. Anyway, So where'd you go to school Scoble? I went to Del Mar class of '89.. Later..
Agreed on a whole lot of that stuff. But, I like being around geeks too. Why? Cause they create things that I find useful. I met lots of creative and interesting people in Montana too, but they don't create things I find useful. Just a different world, that's all.
One difference between Silicon Valley and, say, New York, is the percent of optimists vs. pessimists.
A former colleague moved from New York to (southern) California a few decades ago. When I asked him the difference, he replied "In California, when I tell people about my idea for a business, they all root for it. They tell me how good an idea it is and offer to introduce me to others who might help. In New York, when I mention the same concept, all I hear is that it will never take off, there's too much competition, etc."
New Yorkers are natural skeptics. So, while California's culture will foster more entrepreneurs, I'd staff my due diligence team with New Yorkers.
http://www.ballpark.ch/blog/english/584/is-euro...
We have some very cool hot tubs around here ;)
Hi from reboot!
Laurent: possibly! But I didn't see the concentrations of geeks that leads me to believe a new Silicon Valley is possible in Europe. That said your skiing and hottubs have many positive attributes! :-)
The only thing SV has is proximity, for saving travel time, and bandwidth. There's massive bandwidth in SV all over the place.
That's not to say you can't get bandwidth in other places, but it's easier to get there.
Since the days of the goldrush in California all of these things have been true.
As well the weather breads a certain style. Just like Seattle and Vancouver are different from the south left coast.
But largely I fall back to the people who inhabit the place and their style. Innovation is an art not a science.
Brain Based Business
Furthermore - not to rock your world too much - but as of last census, Denver Colorado had more programmers per capita and the quality of everything was higher. Of course, all those developers were working on real business systems that have to do work rather than dot bomb flameouts that just waste money.
Also, SV cost of living sucks, terrain sucks, lack of culture sucks, salaries as measured in median home prices are lowest anywhere and everything you can buy at Frys you can order from Amazon or someone.
SV is a lousy place to start a tech business.
The cool thing though is if you don't have other geeks around you to talk to you can always scour the Web for people with same interests. Also, and I don't recommend this to everywhere, but you can rename your SSID for your wireless network at your house with something like "Looking for fellow geek - 555-5555" because you know the other geeks out there are scanning for wifi networks in your neighborhood! I actually did this and someone called me. That was almost a year ago and we still chat on a regular basis.
I also agree with you Rob about India and China. There are some amazing people there. I know from calling Microsoft tech support! :)
Then we have Austin, RTE 128 in Boston.... Many areas in the UK, France, India, Japan...
John is right, Scoble. You REALLY REALLY need to take the blinders off and get out more.
social networks, Flickr, video, Second Life, IM, email...
Why is this such a surprise?
A more serious set of posts/essays on third-world technology-led economic development may be found at http://www.monashreport.com/category/public-pol...
CAM