Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IT person here. NoVA has been this already for the last 20 years, just not in the consumer-focused, headling-grabbing companies you have in SV. The Fed gov't is the largest purchaser of IT software and services in the world, and that's not new.
The industries here are cybersecurity, cyberdefense, and various technologies around that. And then a lot of datacenters -- it's the datacenter capital of the world (Loudoun county). None of this is new -- it was the same 20 years ago.
So there's no big change coming -- that happened during the AOL days and has continued at a steady pace.
And this is why NoVa won't be the next SV. This area doesn't draw in cutting edge, creative talent because it's heavily government focused, which is the opposite of cutting edge and creative. Like I stated, it's too staid. Not even Amazon Hq2 will fix this.
PS... and we all know what happened to AOL
Uh, except DARPA is here. Pretty much every SV company is wholly dependent on the innovations that came out of DARPA directly or were seeded by DARPA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IT person here. NoVA has been this already for the last 20 years, just not in the consumer-focused, headling-grabbing companies you have in SV. The Fed gov't is the largest purchaser of IT software and services in the world, and that's not new.
The industries here are cybersecurity, cyberdefense, and various technologies around that. And then a lot of datacenters -- it's the datacenter capital of the world (Loudoun county). None of this is new -- it was the same 20 years ago.
So there's no big change coming -- that happened during the AOL days and has continued at a steady pace.
And this is why NoVa won't be the next SV. This area doesn't draw in cutting edge, creative talent because it's heavily government focused, which is the opposite of cutting edge and creative. Like I stated, it's too staid. Not even Amazon Hq2 will fix this.
PS... and we all know what happened to AOL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again with this?
+1 give it a rest op. NoVa is too staid to be the next SV.
You have never lived in SV have you? It is tracts and tracts of suburbs between the occasional office park and small-ish downtown areas with 8-10 restaurants. It is like 90% of DC burbs. As someone who grew up in Palo Alto, it is boring as well.
That it is. But it's also near Stanford and Berkeley, in a state that has long attracted those doing cutting-edge work. NoVa is where businesses go after they've already reached critical mass and need an East Coast presence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again with this?
+1 give it a rest op. NoVa is too staid to be the next SV.
You have never lived in SV have you? It is tracts and tracts of suburbs between the occasional office park and small-ish downtown areas with 8-10 restaurants. It is like 90% of DC burbs. As someone who grew up in Palo Alto, it is boring as well.
Anonymous wrote:IT person here. NoVA has been this already for the last 20 years, just not in the consumer-focused, headling-grabbing companies you have in SV. The Fed gov't is the largest purchaser of IT software and services in the world, and that's not new.
The industries here are cybersecurity, cyberdefense, and various technologies around that. And then a lot of datacenters -- it's the datacenter capital of the world (Loudoun county). None of this is new -- it was the same 20 years ago.
So there's no big change coming -- that happened during the AOL days and has continued at a steady pace.
Anonymous wrote:Give it a rest..."data centers and the cloud" =/= the Next Silicon Valley.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again with this?
+1 give it a rest op. NoVa is too staid to be the next SV.
You have never lived in SV have you? It is tracts and tracts of suburbs between the occasional office park and small-ish downtown areas with 8-10 restaurants. It is like 90% of DC burbs. As someone who grew up in Palo Alto, it is boring as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again with this?
+1 give it a rest op. NoVa is too staid to be the next SV.
Anonymous wrote:Again with this?