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Places Where the Silicon Valley Bubble Could Pop 107

waderoush writes: "If Silicon Valley is in a bubble — which it is – how will it finally burst? Where is the bubble's membrane being stretched so thin that it's in danger of tearing open and letting the real world rush in? This commentary from Xconomy picks real places around the San Francisco Bay Area embodying tensions, imbalances, injustices, or dangers that could escalate into a show-stopping crisis for the technology economy. One is Bank of America's former headquarters in the heart of San Francisco's Financial District; another is an elementary school in Oakland that happens to sit on the Hayward Fault. 'If we can identify the fractures that threaten to destroy the innovation machine, we might be able to patch them up and keep the system going for a while longer — and maybe even point it in a smarter direction,' the piece argues."
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Places Where the Silicon Valley Bubble Could Pop

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 02, 2014 @06:54PM (#46903995)

    Honestly, I don't even take these kind of posts seriously anymore. At least the tech industry in general puts out products(as meaningless as some of them are). How about the real estate market, where houses are overvalued tremendously in most cities and real estate agents are making a living from something that can be done more efficiently by yourself online?
    How about the stock market in general, where it's basically reduced to trying to make money from micro trades instead of long term investment? How about when that bubble pops?
    How about any number of other sections of our economy(the over-regulated medical industry, the government protected entertainment industry, etc) that are propped up by things that are seemingly fragile and unstable?

    Don't get me wrong, I'm worried about the tech industry(and silicon valley at it's heart), but not nearly as much as the many sections of our economy which are less productive.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 02, 2014 @07:01PM (#46904045)
    The Romans as a civilization may be gone, but Italians and the beautiful city or Rome are still here. I was there just a few weeks ago.
    Remember London? That city burned to the ground, I think, 3 times in the middle ages? I was there a week before I went to Rome and yeah, still there.
    Those were HUGE events in history that, by all means, should have destroyed them, but they carried on. I am sure we will be saying that about Detroit in a few decades.
  • I get it. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by statemachine ( 840641 ) on Friday May 02, 2014 @07:42PM (#46904365)

    I mean, I've been seeing a lot of columns/op-eds/blogs lately about how California and/or SF & Silicon Valley sucks. This article is tame, but it hits on every single political talking point -- much like a back-handed compliment. When you have to bring up employer-sponsored shuttle buses (remember vanpools?) and a hypothetical future earthquake, you've got nothing.

    California just raised $18 billion surplus in tax revenue from a booming economy and from raising taxes -- and they're arguing about how much debt to pay off. OTOH Kansas cut taxes and is getting close to $500 million in the hole with high unemployment -- and they're arguing about how much more taxes to cut. Missouri's governor just vetoed a plan similar to Kansas' basically saying KS is crazy -- now the legislature wants to impeach him.

    Unemployment is down nationwide and 288,000 jobs were gained this month. If your state is still in a recession, it's your own state's leaders.

    I guess there's a narrative that people have to tell themselves while watching success from the viewpoint of the bottom of the pit they dug themselves.

    It's also campaign season.

  • by russotto ( 537200 ) on Friday May 02, 2014 @10:53PM (#46905499) Journal

    What about Ozymandias?

    He's still dead. Or are you looking for the Humanities at MIT article from yesterday?

    If people still remember the current era of Silicon Valley over 3000 years from now, it would be a miracle. If people care about it so much they restore some of the monuments, it would be a greater miracle.

    Yes, the statue of Ozymandias -- Ramses II -- that Shelley referred to has been restored and re-erected. Not bad for a king dead for millenia. And that's not the only surviving statue.

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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