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If you refuse to work for finance in, say, NYC, then
you'll be unemployed often because that's a lot of what's
out there.
Nonsense. NYC has a blossoming startup scene. Many prominent startups (Tumblr, Etsy, 10gen, Foursquare, Kickstarter, OkCupid, Mashable, BuzzFeed, SecondMarket, ZocDoc, Fab, Birchbox, Gilt, Seamless) are based in NYC, and many large tech companies (Google, Facebook, Twitter, eBay) have growing NYC offices.List of tech companies in NYC: http://nytm.org/made-in-nyc/grid Map of tech companies in NYC: http://mappedinny.com/ |
This is much of why I think the future is elsewhere. Not NYC, not the Valley. It's going to be somewhere where it's possible for a normal 40-year-old to have a career as a programmer (not a manager who occasionally codes) because it genuinely takes decades to become great at this stuff. Most of these "social" apps could be built by anyone, but if I needed a medical device, or an extremely high-performance numeric library, I'd rather the code be written by a seasoned gray-haired guy who understands technology at a deep level than by the sorts of people in charge at a lot of the startups where I've worked.