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Tag: #TechHubs

The Rise of the Rest?

The Rise of the Rest?

Photo by Hans Isaacson on Unsplash

It’s mid-August and thoughts of back-to-school and returning to work are in high gear. Or at least amping up.

Especially since tech companies are tightening their rules on remote work.

“Zoom, once the poster child for remote work during the pandemic, is now forcing a significant number of its employees back to the office, joining the growing chorus of tech companies pivoting away from remote work. Despite its explosive growth and popularity as a virtual communication tool, Zoom seems to have caught the in-office fever. The company’s hybrid approach demands that employees within 50 miles of an office show up in person at least two days a week, supposedly to foster team interaction,” the New York Times reported. Read More...

Don’t Say Gig: California AB5 & How It Will Affect Tech Globally

Don’t Say Gig: California AB5 & How It Will Affect Tech Globally

Image by Pete Linforth from Pixabay

It looks like California Bill AB5 will be going into effect. To refresh your memory, “Known popularly known as the gig worker bill, it required companies that hire independent contractors to reclassify them as employees,” wrote Investopedia.

Upside: gig workers will now be entitled to minimum wages, health insurance, vacation time and other employee benefits. Downside: they no longer choose their schedules, may be barred from taking other employment. And who ultimately gets the bill for the increased costs? Enactment of the bill was temporarily delayed by trucker protests. “California truckers pledge to continue blockade of Oakland port over controversial labor law,” as it made it difficult for them to work as independent contractors, Fox News reported.

It affects tech, too – big time, so pay attention.

During the lockdowns, some countries required that employers continue to pay their employees, even in cases where the company would essentially need to cease functioning as a result of said lockdowns. If they laid the employees off, they were required to pay three months severance. Both of which drove many companies out of business, especially startups – so everyone was out of a job. Nothing like throwing out the baby with the bathwater. Read More...

Bitcoin2022: The Bull from Miami (Not!)

Bitcoin2022: The Bull from Miami (Not!)

We were recently in Miami for the Bitcoin 2022 conference – the first time we’ve traveled to a conference in years and as a compulsive networker and superconnector, we didn’t realize how much we had missed the serendipity and synergies that only happens at in-person events.

This is a lesson in tech hubs and why they shift. Boston was long the center of technology, but with the advent of the internet, Boston lost it. Boston was set in its ways and had its processes.  A young, unproven sector was not in its purview: Boston was about Real Tech, not a bunch of upstarts with a bold vision of a tech future that might well never happen.

The energy shifted to Silicon Valley and in due time, New York. Other hubs sprung up around the country and the world, although with all due respect, our focus here is the US. The SV and NY hubs quickly took the lead, at least in terms of where the investor dollars were. And how did they become investors? For the most part, they were founders who had enjoyed exits. Boston might still have been in the mix, but as a distant third: it was not an internet hub. Read More...

Build Back Different

Build Back Different

We’ve mentioned Clubhouse before and attention must be paid: it proved to be a game-changer – big time – the likes of which we haven’t seen in a while. Clubhouse has taken social media into a different direction. While Twitter and even Facebook have been something of town squares, CH is not that: it’s the corner pub or sort of unconference  or coffee klatch, where people can wander in and out of ‘rooms,’ at will, and participate, or simply listen and learn.

Although, CH members, take note: Clubhouse Users’ Raw Audio May Be Exposed to Chinese Partner.

So, what’s next? Well, the Twitter and Facebook knock offs, of course. Considering that both platforms are losing users and revenue (Twitter reports $1.14B net loss for 2020 – and that was before CH hit the zeitgeist in a significant way, and Facebook has been hemorrhaging users in its most valuable markets for some time now, what to speak of the face that Apple Privacy Change May Cost Facebook, Google $25 Billion Over Next 12 Months), they still believe that they will forever hold sway as the Masters of the Universe, so why innovate when you can appropriate? Read More...

Will the Real Silicon Valley Please Stand Up…

Will the Real Silicon Valley Please Stand Up…

And thank you, Slim Shady

There’s no doubt that the technology sector has become less tethered to the big cities and major tech hubs – Silicon Valley, New York City and Boston spring to mind – as a result of now long-standing Draconian lockdowns. The exodus from the Bay Area in particular has been well documented. According to The New York Times, They Can’t Leave the Bay Area Fast Enough. After all, The Times noted, “Rent was astronomical. Taxes were high. Your neighbors didn’t like you. If you lived in San Francisco, you might have commuted an hour south to your job at Apple or Google or Facebook. Or if your office was in the city, maybe it was in a neighborhood with too much street crime, open drug use and $5 coffees…But it was worth it. Living in the epicenter of a boom that was changing the world was what mattered. The city gave its workers a choice of interesting jobs and a chance at the brass ring.”

That was then. This is now and precisely to where has the sector gravitated?  “They fled to states without income taxes like Texas and Florida,” said The Times. Read More...