Silicon Valley boom or bust? It depends on who you ask
By - January 30, 2005
Three very human stories illustrate the economic disparities that characterize Silicon Valley as the region struggles to bounce back, in today's San Jose Mercury News.
Chris O'Brien writes:
Ask K.B. Chandrasekhar, 44, about the Silicon Valley dream, and he'll tell you it's alive and well.Since arriving from India in 1992 with almost nothing, he is now on his third start-up, Jamcracker. His company is growing. His venture capital investments in India are going strong. It may not be the boom, but the view from the seven-bedroom house he built in Saratoga still looks good.
Ask Doroteo Garcia, 40, and he'll tell you the dream of prosperity is further out of reach than ever. Nine years after arriving from Mexico, Garcia spends his days cleaning the Stanford University art museum before pedaling his bike to a part-time job washing dishes. From the studio apartment he shares with his son in East Palo Alto, he laments that he has less money to send home since he lost his second full-time janitorial job.
Ask Steve Clough, 39, a former technical support worker who fell from Chandrasekhar's world to Garcia's during the tech bust, and he'll tell you the transition is jarring. Since losing his job in 2003, Clough has struggled to pay bills while piling up debt. From his part-time job as a high school math teacher, Clough wonders if the doors to high-tech prosperity have closed for good.
All three men are right. By the numbers, the economy is getting better and worse -- depending on who you are. Silicon Valley has developed two separate economies that have drifted further apart ever since the dot-com bubble burst in 2000.
In the valley's technology economy, profits, revenues and average pay are up dramatically. But fewer people are sharing in the good fortune because tech companies are doing more with less -- they have cut tens of thousands of jobs and continue to do so, boosting the productivity of their remaining workers....
Links:
A tale of two valleys: Three workers' stories illustrate widening economic gap in area by Chris O'Brien, San Jose Mercury News, 30 January 2005
What's the story? Doug Millison also edits OnlineJournalist.org, "on a need-to-know basis"
By - January 30, 2005 | Permalink
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Comments
kral oyun on Web 2.0 Is On The Ropes. . . Kleiner Perkins Halts Investments
Anyway, a good balance between what I do online (my user generated content) and what the experts put out there (in the form of content, news, advertising, portals whatever) is how i want to use the internet, so the term 'web2.0' is so vast and the copmanies lumped under it are so diverse it'd be hard to just with one swoop disregard them all.
Andrew on Fishwrap: Fortune: We like to get it right the first time . . . [correction]
I once caught a teenager urinating on a shrub underneath my window. After he zipped up, he got on his bike, gave me the finger, and then, all of the sudden, his handlebars crossed and he face planted on the sidewalk. Ironic design doesn't get any better than that.
kenekaplan on Intel Seeks to Move PC Architecture into Billions of Connected Gizmos
Very cool take and I like your push for more. I'm glad you explored the specialized purpose-built questions a bit more, showing possible implications. Would it be worth the extra work/cost?
I liked the idea of a billion people on the mobile Internet, each of us with a billion transistors in our pocket.
Tom Foremski on Intel Seeks to Move PC Architecture into Billions of Connected Gizmos
Yes, Intel tried to get into markets beyond the PC with its XScale architecture, which was ARM-based. The advantage it has with its Atom - PC architecture is the tremendous number of software developers and tools available for creating apps--which is a key cost in new digital devices. But ARM and MIPS based SOCs will be competitive and have large user bases.
Matt McGinnis on Intel Seeks to Move PC Architecture into Billions of Connected Gizmos
Intel has made several forays into markets outside the PC. Will this be the time they do it successfully? Will they be able to use their deep pockets and manufacturing heft to move into markets dominated by TI, ARM, MIPS, Freescale and others? Changes in the kinds of devices we use to connect will open that door for them.
Ben on Top Blogger Pay Controversy - Pat Phelan
Yes...if you are doing some paid review, news etc you should mention it. Blogging is a profession nowadays..
Matt on FishWrap: The First Rule of PR . . . Kevin Maney's Briefs . . . Fortune's Brainstorm
Tom,
Look forward to catching up at FORTUNE Brainstorm.
Matt
Mike Lizun on Sam Whitmore at Night: Media Struggling with Media Formats . . . and Leaving the Blogging Life
Thanks for the SW interview. Big fan of Sam's and the service he provides; always insightful, always ahead of the curve.
Mike
http://www.gregoryfca.com
Tom Foremski on Wanted: CMO for Startup - Must Have a Good PageRank
Nope: Yes, you are right, commenters do have to read the article, so they are self-selected.
I'm not sure I understand how blogging will make you unemployable.
Elliott Ng on Foremski's Take: MSFT Powerset Aquisition is not about Search
Tom, I think you are absolutely right. Although I have never heard bpell talk in these terms publicly. have you? I always thought the takeout plan was to get bought out by Yahoo! to save them from their contextual advertising problems, but obviously they have other things on their mind now.
Nope on Wanted: CMO for Startup - Must Have a Good PageRank
Uh ... is it just me, or are the comments for this piece necessarily an exercise in self-selection in that those who most buy this line of thinking are those most likely to a) read the article and b) reply to it with florid paragraphs of agreement?
Given what I've seen on most blogs, for every one person with a directly related career win, you have two who have made themselves practically unemployable. Not great, on balance.
alena on Searching for search on the iPhone - where is it?
Really this drawback of search function in apple iphones will kick out these Latest Mobile Phones from market. This is good information for the people who planned to buy it.
Latest Mobile Phones on SVW On-The-Go: Smaato's News Reader for Mobile Phones
i like this service. i am using it on my smartphone.
Tom Foremski on Anderson Defends Investing in the Long Tail
Scott: I like the shoulder concept!
Scott Rafer on Anderson Defends Investing in the Long Tail
Hear, hear, regarding the terrible economics of the tail. However, startups can't start in the head which is where the incumbents are already profitable and the buyers are risk-averse. The "shoulder" is the place and corresponds nicely to the entry point highlighted in Clayton Christiansen's model, where new entrants do a good-enough product built on a cheaper infrastructure and steal away medium-sized customers.
Vincent on Searching for search on the iPhone - where is it?
iPhone 3g contact search magnifying glass window:
You can have the search Contacts feature work on your contacts, but for some reason Apple has it hidden. I got it to appear by sliding my finger from the top of the screen downward.
As far as I know, Apple does not have a Search Calendar feature yet. If anyone knows of one please let me know.
Vincent
Tom Foremski on Friday News Watch: Die! iPhone Mania! Die! Die! Die! . . .
Kristen: My cable company cut me off a few days ago so I haven't seen the Apple commercials. Comcast complained about my bill I complained about their content.
I'm Hulu and Youtube focused right now. It's not bad but I miss my couch.
Kristen Nicole on Friday News Watch: Die! iPhone Mania! Die! Die! Die! . . .
Admittedly I was overwhelmed myself! So what do you think, in the iPhone launch aftermath? I've also been pretty amused with their television commercials.
Michelle on Google's nonexistent YouTube problem
What is going on with youtube? everything is messed up and things are being erased without people knowing, such as our bulletins. Even messaging is becoming harder to do because things get lost. Are you trying to get people to delete their accounts?
Partners in Grime on Tim Ferriss: Technology is a Great Slave but a Terrible Master
Great interview. Ordered the book from Amazon.