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IT Technology

Tech Workers Think Silicon Valley and Startups Are Losing Their Luster (qz.com) 163

An anonymous reader shares a Quartz report: The job site Indeed.com found Silicon Valley's hold on tech workers is slipping as opportunities, and the cost of living, changes the equation for living and working in one of the priciest places in the country. "There is more opportunity for tech professionals in more places than ever before," wrote Terence Chiu, vice president of Indeed Prime by email, citing cities such as Austin, Boston, Seattle, and New York City. "Obviously the San Francisco Bay remains the largest tech hub [but] what has made it so attractive has also made it expensive." Indeed's most recent survey of professional tech workers found more than 66% of tech workers say living and working in Silicon Valley is either "not that important" or "not at all important" for a career in technology. Just 12% consider it "very important." Opinions were split on generational lines. About half of millennial tech workers say it's important (26.5%) or very important (19%), but the number declined to 10.2% among the Boomer generation. "Seasoned talent is often searching for opportunity elsewhere," stated the report. New employees may see the high cost of living as an acceptable tradeoff for building up a reputation and experience in the Bay Area, but that seems to fade over time.Recently, Google co-founder Sergey Brin advised people to not come to Silicon Valley to start a business for the very same reasons.
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Tech Workers Think Silicon Valley and Startups Are Losing Their Luster

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  • by Fire_Wraith ( 1460385 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @09:04AM (#52488633)
    When you're fresh out of college, cost of living really isn't on your mind, or at least it wasn't for me. I wanted to live in the area where I knew there were all the things I wanted, from food to entertainment to job opportunities. Fast forward a bit, and I realized that the area I was in was ridiculously expensive for no good reason, had insane traffic that would never get better, and that I could get 90-95% of the things I wanted in a far, far cheaper area, cutting my housing costs all but in half.

    It should be no surprise that the older people get, the less they're willing to put up with the kind of things you have to suffer through in the SF Bay area. Living 4 to an apartment is fine in your early 20s, but when you get older, you want a place of your own, nevermind the space to have a family.
    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday July 11, 2016 @09:12AM (#52488679) Homepage Journal

      Thing is, these companies don't want to hire anyone over thirty anyway. So really, it makes sense for them to stay in expensive places that adults want to move away from.

      • by Drethon ( 1445051 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @09:33AM (#52488799)

        Thing is, these companies don't want to hire anyone over thirty anyway. So really, it makes sense for them to stay in expensive places that adults want to move away from.

        Probably explains why so many startups struggle to profit. Their workers don't have the experience to tell the non-technical entrepreneur they are an idiot.

        • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @10:01AM (#52489043)

          no one listens to 'workers'. the execs are full of ego and can do no wrong.

          what they all have gotton used to: hiring a bunch of chair-warmers who are almost universally from south east asia, h1b mostly, and all are young. the exact formula for 'dont make waves, dont challenge the boss'.

          the bosses are not used to hearing anyone voice opinions! we have the worst engineering now, walking the hallways of cisco, intel, you name it. they hire 'to a price' and you get monkeys if you pay peanuts.

          they go out of their way to hire 'diversity' but that means NOT hiring the real minority, the US-born person who is over 35 and HAS the experience.

          silicon valley is a sweatshop, becoming more like what we had 100 years ago when the US finally got fed up and 'did the union thing'. that changed history. things got better for a while.

          now, they're back to being company-owned - the world, that is. people don't matter. companies do. and you just better do what you are told. there are 1000 more indians waiting to take your job, here or elsewhere, if you dare say 'no' to a boss.

          similarly, raise issues of safety or product design and you won't be continuing there much longer (personal experience on that one).

          fuck sillicon valley. it stopped being a place of innovation when it became a place to concentrate chair-sitters from across the world. quantity is all that matters. do we have 'body count'? did we save a lot on it? then we're good (that's how they think).

          if you are young, sure, come here. but you won't be able to stay long-term. just be aware of that. and be aware of the fact that companies laugh behind your back when you are gullible enough to believe this 'loyalty' shit they want you to swallow. don't believe it, though. eventually YOU will be replace by someone even cheaper. my years are numbered, but then again, so are yours.

          no one is safe in the bay area, job-wise. it stinks here.

          love the weather and the culture (well, the old culture, that some people still remember). but the days of the 'hp garage' is long gone. now, its stupid social bullshit, twits and disgracebook lead the pack. ie, no product at all, just hot air and advertising.

          • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

            by ubrgeek ( 679399 )
            > the execs are full of ego and can do no wrong.

            I remember one dot-com where I was GM. We were waiting for a meeting to start when the CEO came in and sat down. A minute later the CFO came in and sat down next to him. Finally the CTO came in and sat down next to the CFO. Our lead engineer turns to me and says, "And so, the cluster forms." Funniest damn thing I had heard all day.
          • by Natales ( 182136 )
            Mod parent up. I've seen *exactly* the same you point to virtually everywhere. But one thing I'd like to add is the perspective of the "startup", not only the large companies. They are great in luring you with big promises and massive amounts of stock options while offering crappy salaries. This also unfavorably caters to the young who can afford the gamble, and who are too naive to understand the downsides. They are not necessarily in the H1B game, but their way to keep you "at bay" is with their "at will"
          • by Grishnakh ( 216268 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @11:37AM (#52489833)

            but the days of the 'hp garage' is long gone. now, its stupid social bullshit, twits and disgracebook lead the pack. ie, no product at all, just hot air and advertising.

            It seems that the primary industry of the USA these days has become advertising, rather than anything useful.

            Very sad.

          • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

            by m00sh ( 2538182 )

            no one listens to 'workers'. the execs are full of ego and can do no wrong.

            what they all have gotton used to: hiring a bunch of chair-warmers who are almost universally from south east asia, h1b mostly, and all are young. the exact formula for 'dont make waves, dont challenge the boss'.

            the bosses are not used to hearing anyone voice opinions! we have the worst engineering now, walking the hallways of cisco, intel, you name it. they hire 'to a price' and you get monkeys if you pay peanuts.

            they go out of their way to hire 'diversity' but that means NOT hiring the real minority, the US-born person who is over 35 and HAS the experience.

            silicon valley is a sweatshop, becoming more like what we had 100 years ago when the US finally got fed up and 'did the union thing'. that changed history. things got better for a while.

            now, they're back to being company-owned - the world, that is. people don't matter. companies do. and you just better do what you are told. there are 1000 more indians waiting to take your job, here or elsewhere, if you dare say 'no' to a boss.

            similarly, raise issues of safety or product design and you won't be continuing there much longer (personal experience on that one).

            fuck sillicon valley. it stopped being a place of innovation when it became a place to concentrate chair-sitters from across the world. quantity is all that matters. do we have 'body count'? did we save a lot on it? then we're good (that's how they think).

            if you are young, sure, come here. but you won't be able to stay long-term. just be aware of that. and be aware of the fact that companies laugh behind your back when you are gullible enough to believe this 'loyalty' shit they want you to swallow. don't believe it, though. eventually YOU will be replace by someone even cheaper. my years are numbered, but then again, so are yours.

            no one is safe in the bay area, job-wise. it stinks here.

            love the weather and the culture (well, the old culture, that some people still remember). but the days of the 'hp garage' is long gone. now, its stupid social bullshit, twits and disgracebook lead the pack. ie, no product at all, just hot air and advertising.

            The young complain that everyone wants experience. The old complain they only hire the young.

            The execs says nobody tells them anything and the workers say nobody listens to them.

            US workers say H1Bs are undercutting them. H1Bs says the enormous cost and complications of the H1Bs gets them stuck in undesirable low-paying jobs.

            The white guys say minorities and women are being preferred for diversity. Minorities and women complain that they have no connections and no way to even get into jobs.

            My point i

            • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday July 11, 2016 @12:36PM (#52490209) Homepage Journal

              The young complain that everyone wants experience. The old complain they only hire the young.

              End result, they hire young liars.

              The execs says nobody tells them anything and the workers say nobody listens to them.

              Nobody wastes their time telling execs anything if they don't listen to workers. I've talked to an exec before and had good results. I've also talked to an exec and essentially been told to fuck off about six months before the company folded and proved me right — apparently he was in on the scam. He got his final paycheck, and I (along with most others) didn't, so that backs that up pretty solidly. I've been ignored more than listened to, though.

              US workers say H1Bs are undercutting them. H1Bs says the enormous cost and complications of the H1Bs gets them stuck in undesirable low-paying jobs.

              And yet, both things are true. There's no conflict there at all.

              The white guys say minorities and women are being preferred for diversity. Minorities and women complain that they have no connections and no way to even get into jobs.

              The truth is that those job requirements are designed to disqualify everyone who is not a H1B who can be treated like a slave.

              My point is that it's hard for everyone and everyone faces unique challenges. Nobody has it easy. Let's figure out how to get what we want out of life rather than blaming everyone else for why we are not getting what we want.

              The fact is that a tiny percentage of the population holds the vast majority of the wealth, and they are not spending it. If they were, the rest of us would have money, because it's the "little people" at the bottom who have to act in order to make things happen. We need to take steps to force them to spend their money, and not just by shuffling it around between corporations that they (or their cronies) control.

              • At that level, you don't 'spend' money, you 'invest' it. Otherwise inflation will eat it.

                • At that level, you don't 'spend' money, you 'invest' it. Otherwise inflation will eat it.

                  Or you park it in an overseas tax haven where it only benefits criminals laundering their money, so that you don't have to pay taxes on it.

              • by lgw ( 121541 )

                The fact is that a tiny percentage of the population holds the vast majority of the wealth, and they are not spending it.

                Wealth is not money; money is not wealth. If you had an even share of all the stock in all the publicly held corporations in the US, it would pay about $1k/year in dividends. Yay? You can't "spend" wealth. You can sell it, at which point you no longer have wealth, and presumably as everyone starts doing that it ends up concentrated in the hands of just a few people again (though it might take a while).

                The fact is, the majority of Americans are stockholders, and the median American retires with a reasona

        • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @10:55AM (#52489513) Journal

          Yep! I know this might come across as a "slam" against younger workers -- but I agree without meaning it that way.

          Younger I.T. workers bring a lot of things to the table, but a rich experience working with older technologies is not typically one of them. I see a lot of "re-inventing the wheel" going on with new web-based services many startups keep trying to launch. Sometimes they're a success, but a lot of older people in I.T. look at the stuff and just shake our heads. We've seen other ways the same thing has been implemented before, and can't see why it's worth all that money to rehash it with a pretty new web front-end.

          I deal with this all the time with supporting a lot of younger professionals in marketing and creative work. They're always struggling to figure out ways to get very large files transferred to clients, when the attachments are too big to email. They resort to paid web services that aren't all that reliable, and then we field dozens of support tickets asking why someone can't get a download to start when they click the link, or why they were never emailed the invite to get the file.... on and on. All along, we had a secure FTP server set up which gets the job done quickly and reliably. But it's a battle to convince them that the person on the other side really *can* install a free FTP client easily and successfully log in to grab the needed files.

          Almost every time we get that process going though? Everyone involved loves it and there's no more heartburn about getting files to or from that client. Whaddya know? Sometimes the decades old solution still works the best!

          • Yep, new perspectives are just as valuable as old perspectives but sometimes a problem isn't a matter of technology but engineering that has existed for some time.

          • by NotAPK ( 4529127 )

            Go one step further, make it even easier and open up some temporary slush folders on your website. Simple HTTP auth can be set to protect sensitive files. As easy as clicking a link. Manually delete within the week, or set a scheduled task/cron job to clean up any files more than a week old. Anyway, it's what we do.

          • by mlts ( 1038732 )

            It can be odd how places hire. Last year, I had a job interview with a firm where the skinny jeans, white earbuds, full beard and the shaved side haircut was pretty much the standard with everyone in the building. When the interviewer asked me when I was going to grow a full mane to fit in to their team, I knew that my chances of getting the job was nil... so, my response was "because gas masks don't seal over facial hair."

            Some tech companies hire on things nothing related to actual competency.

            • by AuMatar ( 183847 )

              That was what is known in colloquial circles as "a joke". The interviewer didn't literally want you to grow a beard, he was trying to make light conversation to prevent things from being awkward and build rapport. You didn't lose the job because of lack of a beard, you lot it because you either flubbed the interview or you acted like an asshole in response to said joke.

            • Some tech companies hire on things nothing related to actual competency.

              Robert Half sent me to biotech firm to interview for a tech position, told me to dress up a suit. I sat in the empty lobby for 90 minutes, watching people go on by and fielding phone calls from the recruiter asking where the hell I was. Someone that I've seen several times walked through the lobby asked me who I was and he introduced himself as the IT manager. After the interview, I met the CEO who was dressed in a t-shirt and jeans. Everyone, including the passing scientists in white coats, thought I was a

            • That's why Hitler had such a short mustache lol
          • by imgod2u ( 812837 )

            Convincing people to have to download a client to download a file is kinda cumbersome. That's a legitimate complaint. I see a lot of "seasoned IT workers" posting about how these young kids just want to re-invent the wheel and don't know about .

            FTP has a lot of flaws when it comes to modern, high-volume file-sharing. It's either password based (insecure) or RSA based (cumbersome for one-off file sharing). While it doesn't necessarily require a client (most web browsers support sftp) you need to send a link

          • free FTP client? I think IE can do FTP so it's not that hard even in locked down systems where it's a big deal to get IT to install even a free FTP software.

          • " Have you tried turning it off and on again? Uh... okay, well, the button on the side, is it glowing? Yeah, you need to turn it on... uh, the button turns it on... yeah, you do know how a button works don't you? No, not on clothes."
      • they also want people to dumb to know that they are being ripped off with the 60-80 hour work weeks with no OT.

        • they also want people to dumb to know that they are being ripped off with the 60-80 hour work weeks with no OT.

          They are not doing it because they are "dumb". They are doing it because they are making $125k/yr plus stock options.

        • they also want people to dumb to know that they are being ripped off with the 60-80 hour work weeks with no OT.

          My IT support contracts for the last 10+ years state that I'm prohibited from working more than 40 hours per week. No one wants to pay overtime. If I want to work more hours, I need to get a weekend job.

    • Surely by now with cloud computing & remoting Silicon valley is just massively expensive piece of real-estate that nobody actually that bothered about anymore.
      • Surely by now with cloud computing & remoting Silicon valley is just massively expensive piece of real-estate that nobody actually that bothered about anymore.

        I have worked for several companies where everyone worked from home. They were all dysfunctional and ultimately failed. Letting workers telecommute one or two days a week can work okay if it is managed carefully. But go for weeks or months at a time without meeting face-to-face, and you will have major miscommunications, people working toward different objectives, and high turnover. If you propose a major change using a whiteboard in a meeting room, you can see the lead programmer cross his arms and fur

      • by TWX ( 665546 )
        By now?

        In the 1980s my father had a GRID laptop assigned to him. He'd work from home on the System 370 or would use it when on-call and something would come up, dialing-in to the S370 via modem.

        I have a serial terminal sitting on my desk at work plugged into a network switch's serial port. I can administer the entire WAN through that terminal if I have to, no actual computer involved. I could take that terminal and hook it directly to a modem with a null-modem cable and dial-out to connect to other
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      [...] had insane traffic that would never get better [...]

      The only time traffic ever got better in Silicon Valley was when a million people moved out of Silicon Valley after the Dot Com Bust in 2001. That lasted a few years. Saw a similar dip in traffic after the Great Recession in 2009 and 2010, where half my apartment complex stood empty and the leasing office forego its annual rent increases. These days I take the express bus into work to avoid the traffic hassle by paying someone else to drive.

    • Back in the late 1990's during the .COM boom a lot of workers rushed out of school, (sometimes skilling degrees) to get jobs in the tech sector. To only have it crash in a few years. As economy 2.0 failed. These "kids" rushed to high paying jobs and invested in Silicon Valley with homes and infrastructure which raised the cost of living. After the crash while some moved out, however the housing bubble came in, then that popped a new tech economy came back. Making Silicon Valley just too expensive. Now I

  • Telecommuting FTW (Score:5, Interesting)

    by DoofusOfDeath ( 636671 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @09:23AM (#52488743)

    I've been telecommuting for the past two years, for a virtual company, and I hope I never need to give it up.

    There are some things I miss, in particular (a) my wife not needing to keep our kids somewhat quiet during school vacations, and (b) having a ready-made social life due to being cooped up with coworkers.

    But after working out some of the kinks, and with a just a little extra self-discipline, it's so, so worth it.

    Even if an employer needs to pay and $5k/year to cover telecommute-specific costs (such as decent video conference equipment, etc.), it seems it must be a win-win for just about everyone involved. (At least for software development jobs. Not sure about other kinds.)

    • I've been telecommuting for the past two years, for a virtual company, and I hope I never need to give it up.

      There are some things I miss, in particular (a) my wife not needing to keep our kids somewhat quiet during school vacations, and (b) having a ready-made social life due to being cooped up with coworkers.

      But after working out some of the kinks, and with a just a little extra self-discipline, it's so, so worth it.

      Even if an employer needs to pay and $5k/year to cover telecommute-specific costs (such as decent video conference equipment, etc.), it seems it must be a win-win for just about everyone involved. (At least for software development jobs. Not sure about other kinds.)

      $5k/year for telecommute costs? Maintaining a VPN and having decent conferencing equipment shouldn't cost that much. And if it does, the savings in office space(have you seen what SV office space costs?) more than makes up for it.

      • $5k/year for telecommute costs? Maintaining a VPN and having decent conferencing equipment shouldn't cost that much.

        You're right, it doesn't. I was just trying to be conservative, because my main point was not that it was a cost-savings from the employer's perspective. (Although it almost certainly is, considering the saved money on office-space.)

        Also, there's no need to price the cost of commuting into my salary, which is just a net win all around.

    • Telecommuter here as well and it is so, so worth it. With mostly everyone and their grandmother having a decent Internet connection, it doesn't make sense to have to sit in hours of traffic just to get to work. Granted, some places need a warm body on site, but if you can telecommute even for a few days, I highly recommend it. If you want to sit at home and fuck off all day, telecommuting is not for you. If you have a shred of self-discipline (as mentioned above), you can definitely be successful at it.
    • Re:Telecommuting FTW (Score:5, Interesting)

      by bzipitidoo ( 647217 ) <bzipitidoo@yahoo.com> on Monday July 11, 2016 @11:06AM (#52489589) Journal

      I love telecommuting, saves a lot of time and hassle fighting rush hour traffic and maintain a car. Not to mention that it can be far away so one doesn't have to move, a very expensive and life disruptive process. I'm willing to accept quite a bit less pay for a telecommuting position. But it is against most employers' religion, even progressive seeming technology employers such as Google.

      Many cling hard to the mindset that workers are lazy slackers who have to be closely monitored to ensure they're working instead of goofing off. Instead of leading and inspiring workers, they use the slave driver approach and push and prod workers. Much harder to push telecommuters, so they simply don't allow it. No doubt many workers would abuse the situation. But it wouldn't last. If the telecommuter doesn't do any work, this is going to be noticed pretty fast. Telecommuters can't get away with much more slacking than office workers, often even less because of the necessity to counter the higher levels of suspicion by working harder.

      Then there are the managers who believe a work environment and the close communication it enables is necessary to be highly productive. And, yes there are environments, home environments especially, where doing any work is very difficult thanks to loud, needy family members. But it's hardly an insurmountable problem.

      • I've seen that approach far too many places. Usually it was just one symptom of an overall bad manager, or a bad management culture. To be sure, I've seen cases of people who ruined it for others, but on the whole, the true metric should be whether or not work gets done, and done to standard/on time, because that's not going to change regardless of whether someone is in the office or remote.
    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      Ditto for my current 1 year and 26 days old remote 100% contract job even though I am missing fringe benefits and missing seeing people and fun in person events. No more commutings, strict hours, don't need to dress up, etc. It rocks!

  • Are the percentages the same or different from ten, twenty, or thirty years ago? If they are different, is it a significant difference?

    Articles like these are frustrating since without the above sort of analysis, it's hard to think of them as anything other than propaganda pieces.

  • Of course... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by EmeraldBot ( 3513925 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @09:33AM (#52488807)

    Well yeah, of course. Look at the situation of a young college grad today; they're entering the workforce loaded on with $80,000+ dollars of debt, in an extremely cutthroat environment that pays minimum wage on entry, and for companies that lower pay and outsource year after year. Silicon Valley is frankly just not really viable for starters anymore, it's too expensive and cutthroat, and I wouldn't move to San Francisco in that kind of a climate either. Furthermore, Silicon Valley is dominated by experienced people who've worked numerous high profile projects, and often have a whole rainbow array of certifications and degrees.

    If you're just starting out, you're hammered between the minimum wage jobs in China and India that take away your entry level positions, and you can't compete with the existing crowd because they outclass you in experience, titles, and existing reputation in almost every way (even after accounting for the whole age thing). Honestly, young people in many jobs face a similar problem - it's not exclusively a tech industry problem, we just see it to the strongest degree at the moment - It's a serious issue, and if we don't start to do something about it and soon, we are going to slowly but surely strangle off our workforce.

    • I don't blame them. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 11, 2016 @09:45AM (#52488913)

      Look at the situation of a young college grad today; they're entering the workforce loaded on with $80,000+ dollars of debt, ...

      You must go to "top" schools to get a job these days. Anecdotal:

      At a July 4th party, and someone was complaining about how there is a shortage of CS grads and the bidding war over them. After having been at a recent graduation at a state uni and seeing half the class stand up when the college of computer science was called, I was a bit incredulous. So I asked.

      The response was "we only recruit from top colleges."

      "MIT, Stanford, ... ?"

      "Georgia Tech."

      So some really sharp hard working kid who commutes to say Kennesaw State to save money and get the most out of his HOPE Scholarship and not end up in debt for most of his life, will be passed over. I think SHE/HE's the goddamn genius!

      Employers are fucking stupid.

      I have another ancedote about my 60 year old neighbor who was fired because he didn't go to Stanford and he was "too old to be a programmer" - (lawyer said he couldn't prove it so no case.)

      There's a lot of snobbery in this profession now. Even when I started in the 90s, if you didn't have a college degree you were discounted and not hired at many places.

      • There's a lot of snobbery in this profession now.

        A recruiter submitted my resume and a half-dozen other resumes to a law firm in Palo Alto for a contract tech position. The hiring manager rejected all the resumes out of hand for "lacking tenure" (i.e., 3+ years in each of the last three positions). The recruiter was incredulous. Following the Great Recession, contractors had to work multiple assignments and/or positions to stay afloat. If anyone had 3+ years in each of the last three positions, they wouldn't be applying for a contract position.

        AFAIK, the

        • Maybe they want some who say worked for same base firm aka robert half / SmartSource / etc for years.

          • Maybe they want some who say worked for same base firm aka robert half / SmartSource / etc for years.

            Those are the kind of people who weren't looking for a new job at the time.

      • by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @10:19AM (#52489171)

        "There's a lot of snobbery in this profession now."

        Agreed -- almost no one without a degree is even considered, and you might as well not even try getting hired at a Silicon Valley startup as a new grad unless you went to Stanford, MIT, etc. even if the work you're doing doesn't have anything to do with CS.

        I do think that businesses are using the pedigree as more of a filter than anything else. Investment banks and white shoe management consulting firms hire almost exclusively from the Ivy League. A new lawyer has no chance of success unless they get hired by a big corporate law firm, and those jobs _only_ go to the top grads of the top 14 law schools in the country. As in, you've wasted your law school money if you can't get into the Top 14 and graduate at the top of your class. These more traditional professions use their filter to keep the old boys' (and girls') club going. Getting into one of these companies is a guaranteed ticket to riches for life. Tech companies? Probably not...I think they're just trying to beat off a massive pile resumes with a really short-sighted stick. The state university grad is smarter for not blowing their money on an overpriced private school degree, but state universities also graduate a range of students. Some skated through with barely any work, and some worked their asses off to make sure they mastered the material. It's stupid that firms pass on people just because of where they went to school, but when you have thousands of new grads looking for work, what else are they going to do? Interview them all?

        • get rid of unlimited student loans / no bankruptcy.

          If the schools / banks had to bear some of the risk we will see real change in the school system and no more schools saying law / etc is the ticket to big bucks. It's about time for the schools / banks to hit the whammy!

      • I have another ancedote about my 60 year old neighbor who was fired because he didn't go to Stanford and he was "too old to be a programmer" - (lawyer said he couldn't prove it so no case.)

        There's a lot of snobbery in this profession now. Even when I started in the 90s, if you didn't have a college degree you were discounted and not hired at many places.

        Just an put X for why we passed over the US guy so we can get the H1B.

      • by imgod2u ( 812837 )

        I've worked for 3 household-named tech companies now. The interns we get every year have been from good, well known tech schools but definitely not exclusively Ivy League. Off the top of my head:

        Good mix of UC's, not just Berkeley or LA. SD is pretty engineering heavy but so is SB, Davis, Santa Cruz.
        Michigan State, NC State, USF, UT Austin, Oregon State, UW.

        There are just as many from any of those schools as from MIT, Stanford or Georgia Tech. And places like Harvard/Columbia get passed up more often than n

      • I dont have a college degree. I have been working full time since the mid '90's. I have no problem getting a tech job (Linux Admin currently, Software Engineer for 10+ years, system engineer for 5 +) and for the record i am 45. Not sure if that means im young enough to hire and have enough experience...or if there really are a lot of US companies hiring US citizens. I have choose to never work on the (North) East coast (i worked in Sunrise FL for awhile) or the west coast. The midwest, southwest dont seem t
  • It's nice to see that recycling between the various forum sites works well. I don't really mind, I don't even ever complain about reposts unless they are too frequent, but here's the link to the long discussion of the exact same article:

    https://news.ycombinator.com/i... [ycombinator.com]

  • by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @09:59AM (#52489033)

    The famous quote "those who don't remember history are doomed to repeat it" is very applicable here. This exact scenario played out in the late 90s during the build-out of the Internet and the web. The things that are different this time are phones and social media are the primary focus, and the bubble is almost entirely in Silicon Valley this time. (Last time, New York City had a part in this because of the financial ties and the fact that traditional publishers and broadcasters were throwing money at the Internet.)

    I think that people are starting to see the top of the bubble and opting not to join startups. Startup culture isn't for the young either; you really have to have the fraternity/sorority member personality type to work there so as people age they're less likely to trade salary for beer pong or free dinner. This will be the third recession that I've been on the sidelines doing "boring" work in old-school companies watching the startup mania from a distance. No one with a family or other responsibilities is going to do startup work as their first choice unless they have massive amounts of savings. Very few people (should be) willing to put up with the terrible commutes, traffic and real estate prices in the Bay Area. (That's coming from a New Yorker, we have the second-most insane housing market and I think it's crazy...$1 million+ for a tiny house a 2-hour one way drive to work? $4500 a month for a 2-bedroom hipster loft in San Francisco? Nope, sorry.)

    I think, just like last time, it'll all come crashing down, we'll pick up the cool new stuff that came out of the last bubble (not much this time...), and it'll inflate all over again. I just hope something more useful than advertising algorithms comes out of the next bubble.

  • by JohnFen ( 1641097 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @10:08AM (#52489089)

    Being in Silicon Valley makes sense if your goal is to obtain VC money. If your goal is to make a successful tech business, though, Silicon Valley hasn't been the place to be for a very long time.

    • Being in Silicon Valley makes sense if your goal is to obtain VC money. If your goal is to make a successful tech business, though, Silicon Valley hasn't been the place to be for a very long time.

      ... except that a lot of the infrastructure a startup needs (office furniture, law firms, accounting firms, pr companies, &c) is in the valley and is used to dealing with startups. In a lot of cases your VC can steer you to a pr firm or a leasing firm that will rent you office space -- and you often can pay at least partially with warrants. You can't get that same level of support elsewhere. Yet.

      The other point is that most of the top-tier VC firms are in the valley. If you are just down the road fr

      • Was this a rebuttal? Because aside from your point about infrastructure (which is easy to find guidance about in most areas without involving VCs), it sounds like you're supporting my assertion.

  • Fine we only want people with level 25 or higher luster and we can't find any us workers with that so we need more H1B's!

  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Monday July 11, 2016 @11:34AM (#52489815) Journal

    When you are young and don't yet have a family, you typically want to seek "fame and fortune" and be where the action is. Even if you don't strike it rich, it's where you get experience with the latest trends (or sometimes fads).

    When you have a family, or just want stability and convenience, you are happier with something relatively mundane. You worked your ass off for a while, and want to settle into more of a cruise mode as you mature. Working long hours will burn you out eventually. You will have at least one of weight problems, marriage/relationship problems, and/or physical problems like back and hand issues, or just shear boredom from doing the same thing for so long.

    The high churn-and-burn rate, and cost of living of the Bay Area and start-ups can wear one down.

  • Personally, you almost couldn't pay me enough to live anywhere in the Bay Area. I mean sure, there's some number at which I could put up with it for a couple years and then retire elsewhere, but it's crowded, expensive, and I find generally unpleasant. I dread any time I have to go work in SFO, SJC, or OAK. About the only place I'd want to live in CA is out along the eastern edge - think Inyo County - or maybe anywhere north of Redding (east or west).

    Then again, I generally loathe humanity other than a

  • Tech Workers Think Silicon Valley and Startups Are Losing Their Luster

    The cost of living in the valley is so ridiculous now that one has to make double (or more) than what you could make in Dallas or Denver just to afford a townhome in a decent zip code. This has always been a serious consideration for couples, and it has started to be for the new wave of college grads who are more financially conscious than their predecessors (yes, there is a measurable change in spending habits among younger people.)

    Then there is the snobbery of the hiring process. By God, the snobbery

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