| Ignoring the first 14 years of life, I've lived in 1) Kansas City for high school 2) Annapolis for college 3) Rhode Island for six months 4) San Diego for four years 5) Annapolis for two and a half years 6) New Orleans for 5 weeks to start medical school 7a) Lived with my parents for one year in College Station, Texas after Katrina 7b) Attended classes in Houston for that year 8) Back to New Orleans with trips to San Antonio, Houston, College Station, Washington, DC, Norfolk, Virginia, and New Haven, Connecticut. If I were going to move to one of those places for the purpose of starting a start up, first, I wouldn't. Second, I'd prioritize the list like so 1) College Station (couldn't study for all the people talking about setting up this or that, whether they had set up their S corp, when the fiber would be laid down, etc). These people are definitely still engineers. 2) San Diego 3) Washington, DC, including Annapolis (home of Wonkette) 4) New Haven (mainly due to proximity to both Boston and NY) 5) Norfolk, VA (lots of military contracts) 6) San Antonio 7) Rhode Island 8) Houston 9) Kansas City 10) New Orleans Why is New Orleans last? I mean, I'm here, and clearly I've learned more about programming and system admin here than anywhere. I can't believe I'm saying it, but there really is an element of old world culture down here that I will miss when I leave. And it's sort of a city within a city: you meet the people you know all over the place. And really, I've learned more from the programmers I've met here than from anyone (except my brother, who lives in San Antonio). But there are two overwhelming factors working against ever trying to do a start up here: 1) Who would ever put a server in New Orleans? 2) Tulane dismissed their entire engineering college after the storm. No hacker I know is here because it's a good place for hacking. In some ways, it awesome. But there's virtually no one here. I think I've identified all the XOs in the city, and it adds up to about 6 (it was 5 until someone in Texas mailed me a spare). Why would I rank Houston below San Antonio? Houston is much larger, 4th largest city in the US. Surely there is a greater absolute number of hackers in Houston. But having lived in Houston, you would be hard-pressed to get me to move back. It's so huge and spread out and the public transit system is so non-existent that you end up spending your life in a car. And I get the sense that most people would rather live in Austin or, if they want to stay close to the engineering, they go to College Station. |