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by raverbashing 3884 days ago
The question is why do we have the most talented people in a certain industry having to live in confined spaces while paying through the roof for it.

Not even Hollywood is like that. People may stay in trailers for some time but that's it

As personally having to live in a tiny place (not in SF though) it is not something I want to do for an extended period of time, even though the advantages like 'city living' are good

3 comments

> The question is why do we have the most talented people in a certain industry having to live in confined spaces while paying through the roof for it.

Because it's their choice.

Right now the housing market in San Fran is redic. However, there are other major tech areas that don't nearly have the same problems.

It's obviously their choice. OP didn't mean anyone is forced against their will. The question is: why does the vast majority of new tech continue to

A) establish themselves in such an uncomfortable location

B) not embrace distributed teams

It's a terrible cycle at this point.

> why does the vast majority of new tech continue to > A) establish themselves in such an uncomfortable location > B) not embrace distributed teams

Hiring networks. You want to hire people based on referrals and not experience or qualifications, you need to hire through your extended friend network, which if you're raised in the SF startup scene, is all in SF.

It's also a state of affairs that ends up being unintentionally racist, since probably most of your friends look like you, and probably most of their friends that they'll refer to you when you're hiring look like them

While I see why you think "Because it's their choice." isn't very helpful, I would say there some truth to it.

People in technology seem far more willing to accept to accept "worse" conditions and just generally less aware of technology as an competitive industry compared to other people in their respective industries.

<<The question is why do we have the most talented people in a certain industry having to live in confined spaces while paying through the roof for it.>>

I think you making a pretty broad leap here... This is entirely his choice, and nobody is "making" them live in a confined space - most of my friends that are starting a family leave San Francisco and move to the suburbs to get more space at a lower cost (e.g., San Mateo) and take BART to get to their job in San Francisco.

> People may stay in trailers for some time but that's it

Isn't tech approach the same? You wait for your big break and then move out.