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Source:https://github.com/SoraKumo001/next-streaming

⬅️ The case against living in the Bay Area, for ambitious tech people
jnwatson 15 hoursReload
At Google, HR has dictated to our team "no Bay-area hiring" for over a year now. It seems at least one company agrees with "There’s no surplus value in hiring in the Bay Area".

itake 15 hoursReload
There are obvious exceptions to everything. But I’ve lived in Atlanta, Orlando, SF and Seattle.

Moving to SF was a career multiplier. I instantly doubled my salary.

Now, I’m earning 2-5x more than my peers (that were more senior than me) that chose to live in those cities.

Walmart was started in Arkansas. Warren Buffet famously lives in Nebraska.

But the Tier 1 cities create more wealth for more people than Tier 2 or 3 cities.


tdeck 15 hoursReload
This article conflates the notion of being "in tech" with being a CEO for some reason. The vast majority of people "in tech" will be workers, not CEOs. For those people, a statement like "There’s no surplus value in hiring in the Bay Area" should sound like a good thing.

ojhughes 14 hoursReload
As a UK national I would love to move to the US for better opportunities and weather. Getting a visa seems next to impossible, short of marrying an American. I probably missed my chance in the pre Covid tech boom.

bgentry 14 hoursReload
The TV show Silicon Valley lampooned all these ideas a decade ago. The weird thing I’ve noticed is that when Bay Area tech people watch that show, they don’t seem to understand that they’re being made fun of. They think they’re being celebrated. That’s how thick the bubble is.

I've never met a person who didn't understand that this show is satire. Every single tech person I've talked to about Silicon Valley thinks it's funny because of how plausible and yet ridiculous it all is, and because of all the totally accurate details scattered throughout—from golden handcuffs / resting & vesting, down to minor things like which drinks were stocked in the show's office fridges. And I lived in the Bay Area during its entire run, so most of my network is current/former Bay Area tech people.