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gold's avatar

Trying to replicate Silicon Valley is kind of a fool’s errand. Why? Turn the clock back sixty years. Would you like to live in what is now Silicon Valley? Weather? Not terribly challenging. Pretty? Well, yeah. Mountains? Yup. Beaches? Uh-huh. And before it became the present with all that entails (traffic, off-the-chart housing costs, all that) it was the *future* — it was the place where a postwar generation was going to do something *new* dammit!

Of course the vibe has darkened with the specter of a shift in the nature of success, but the allure remains.

The US can’t replicate that series of attributes. It’s been done. Pick a nice spot and folks are already there. Future hubs will be different. In fact one of the things we continually ignore is that one of the necessities of a future hub is the opportunity to fail. For things to not go as planned. That garage where the magic happens is not so interesting when it costs ten grand a month.

But if the US suffers from “nah, that neat place is already occupied”, in Europe you have to add on the phrase “for many hundreds of years”. So it would have to be a different model from the start.

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Cat Alecu-Drăgoi's avatar

I partly disagree with your first point, mostly for reasons other comments have already pointed out. But I totally agree with your second. EU funds are a different kind of nightmare and, on the other hand, European investors, angels and VCs alike, are VERY conservative. My point being, if you're like me and want to become an entrepreneur, have the skills, a small team, an early product and some traction, but was born + reside in one of the so-called "lesser" EU countries like Romania, you essentially have little to no chance of getting any kind of funding other than EU funds, at least at seed stage. So you're more or less doomed to fail even before you begin. I can't even imagine the situation in European but non-EU countries.

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