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by jquery
5339 days ago
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And you've gotten your point across nicely. But that's not the conversation here. It's whether it can catch up to the Valley anytime soon, a different question entirely than whether there are cool little companies scattered around. Here in San Francisco, you end up inside a tech company if you so much as sneeze. Twitter is moving across the street from my apartment. When I walk to get a sandwich I pass by several world-class tech companies and a dozen startups. New York isn't even in the same league. Maybe someday it will be... I hope so! |
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(btw, the other comments seem to focus more on the mythical finance vortex here, which i'd love to debunk someday...hence the sidetrack.)
as for being in the "same league," i guess i dunno know what that means, really - from the perspective of a person trying to get an idea off the ground. (and i write this having started/sold one myself, been an early member of a company that went public, been part of a flame-out...and been through plenty of ups and downs over my startup-oriented tech career).
both have great access to capital...great engineers...pently of startups (not a smattering) and plenty of spots for serendipitous meetings with interesting people (we got plenty 'o those). ...i think the rest is pointless d#ck measuring when it comes down to it. any location is really what u make of it anyway - as long as you're not in a bad one.
don't get me wrong, i'd love to just bump into ron conway or PG at my local coffee spot. perhaps they'd visit the good people of brooklyn someday...over a latte with a side of capacitors at the local hacker collective. ;-)