stlgasm wrote: ↑Jul 22, 2017
Man, what would it take to get some press like THIS for St. Louis:
https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/07/22/s ... e=Homepage
I feel like there are so many parallels between Pittsburgh and St. Louis (our exorbitant crime rate not withstanding). No doubt this positive coverage is powerful wind for Pittsburgh's sails. Another glaring reminder that St. Louis' self-described "tech boom" is actually just keeping pace with every other city.
Interesting article. I'd say St. Louis' tech scene is doing a little better than just keeping up, maybe not a lot better, but at least keeping up. The Pittsburgh comparison is a little unfair in my opinion because as the article states:
"Where the tech world is going — self-driving cars; personal A.I. concierges; robot workers — is where Carnegie Mellon’s faculty and students have been for decades".
This is very true. And having one of the top comp-sci/robotics institutions in the country (world?) can't just happen overnight no matter how hard you try. Carnegie Mellon is definitely top shelf.
Wash U's comp-sci program is definitely held in good regard, maybe second in the state only to Rolla, but it's just not on the same level as Carnegie Mellon. St. Louis, and the vast majority of other cities, just don't have comparable institutions. This isn't a knock against St. Louis or other cities, hey, there can only be one #1, right?
I do think St. Louis should be proud of what it has done the last 5+ years or so with tech though, in particular T-Rex. I consistently hear nothing but good things coming out of it. Expanding beyond software, etc, of course Cortex is something to be very proud of.
I don't have an *great* handle on what exactly is going on in all other cities, but my general feeling (and it seems others I talk to) is that St. Louis is at least keeping up.
What I found hopeful in this article was the the cost of living / livability aspect. I have family who live in San Francisco proper. I'm surprised how expensive and gentrified its become. I'm no expert on the city, but it feels starkly less organic and diversified as it did maybe 10-20 years ago. To put it more bluntly - it feels more boring than it used to.
I'm very interested in the coming years to see if the younger generations start to feel this way too and start to become disillusioned with paying a premium for boring when organic and real can be had at such a discount.