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Once I bank enough cash I plan to leave here. Too expensive and I much prefer socal or south florida. Lower cost and more white bread not Chindia which as a white guy annoys me.
White bread and socal and south florida??? Alabama and Mississipi maybe.
Latino and white mostly in south florida. I have no problems with latinos since I am fluent in Spanish and they are far easier to deal with than most racist Chindians.
Latino and white mostly in south florida. I have no problems with latinos since I am fluent in Spanish and they are far easier to deal with than most racist Chindians.
Silly SJ, don't you know that only white people can be racist? Did you not get the Political Correctness instruction manual when you moved to the Bay Area?
Latino and white mostly in south florida. I have no problems with latinos since I am fluent in Spanish and they are far easier to deal with than most racist Chindians.
Silly SJ, don't you know that only white people can be racist? Did you not get the Political Correctness instruction manual when you moved to the Bay Area?
No need to get your knickers in a twist and spew your own projections. I am simply pointing out that if you want a white only place-socal is not your best bet. Having lived in so fl-it has its own culture -certainly not your white bread expectations.
It's called outsourcing. Outsourcing IT to India, payroll to The Philippines, finance/accounting to Malaysia, call centers to wherever, etc.
I've worked with some of these Indian IT contractors. Talk about clueless. But they always try to play nice with you to cover up their lack of technical knowledge.
One simple reason. All housing in this country right now is subsidized housing.
I have no problems with latinos since I am fluent in Spanish and they are far easier to deal with than most racist....
You don't have to go all the way to Southern Florida for that. You only have to leave The Fortress.
SJ, I commute into a tech job every work day, but I don't live in The Fortress. It ain't no 100-mile commute. My office mates almost all live in The Fortress, except for a few local kids like me, who also live in East San Jose. With the Latinos and the Vietnamese and the white trash. I only interact with those people that you find objectionable, at the office.
No need to get your knickers in a twist and spew your own projections. I am simply pointing out that if you want a white only place-socal is not your best bet. Having lived in so fl-it has its own culture -certainly not your white bread expectations.
Sorry, it was sarcasm.
I've only ever been to Orlando, so it isn't like I have toured FL extensively...but I would certainly not classify FL as white-bread territory. Generally speaking, white-bread country requires snow, at the least. The South is another thing all of its own and I don't really consider it white-bread country, at least not an the same way.
With the Latinos and the Vietnamese and the white trash.
Although those areas DO have their own sets of problems, I do find that those places are actually worthy of the label, "community". People seem to know each other a little more and be friendlier, as opposed to the sterile upper-class areas where everyone secretly loathes their neighbors for buying a new M-Class before they did.
Honestly, I don't know why anyone in the Bay Area doesn't follow Adobe out to their new giant expansion campus in Utah County, Utah. Yes, it snows there. Yes, you have to put up with Mormons (like me).
The mountains look just like southern California (except, no palm trees). There are killer deals on houses ($300k buys you a small mansion). Houses in Utah come with full basements, at basically no extra charge, which means you get DOUBLE the house you would in CA or OR. Salt Lake City is only 40 minutes away (with traffic), and quite a bit of stuff to do. The schools aren't dysfunctional. You aren't going to get shot. You car (most likely) won't disappear from your driveway.
Yeah, it's no SFO. But honestly, if you're trying to raise kids, why does anyone even BOTHER with the Bay Area anymore?
And if you hate snow, I hear Austin, Texas is a bubbling tech hub, too.
(Don't get me wrong ... I love SoCal and the Bay. But the state gov't, unemployment, and crumbling infrastructure are so infuriating... The days I'm working in SLC really are much less stressful than the ones down here)
Oh come on Sanders, look at these deals!!
http://www.redfin.com/CA/Santa-Clara/3010-Ryan-Ave-95051/home/1167211
I had to drive to Sunnyvale this weekend to pick up something. Needless to say, for some reason I've never really liked much of the Silicon Valley environs. Not sure why but it feels almost entirely suburban yet its got this weird "Exclusivity" factor going on. It appears to be just about any other boring suburban landscape but with a semi-luxury veneer slapped on top.
The Bay Area is strange in that even though its all one area, people from SF- or "The city" imagine that they're the center of the universe but then again so too do the Silicon Valley folks, and so on. When I tell people I live in the east bay they look at me as if I'm from another planet.
Houses in Utah come with full basements, at basically no extra charge, which means you get DOUBLE the house you would in CA or OR. Salt Lake City is only 40 minutes away (with traffic), and quite a bit of stuff to do.
Before we bought here we at least looked at Salt Lake City. The weather is apparently pretty awful with very cold, snowy winters and extremely hot summers. The air quality is also a big issue there because of the geography of the city as it sits in a large depression- sort of like LA.
What $825k buys you where I live:
Amenities: 6 br, 4 full baths, 3 partial baths, 7000 sq ft, 2 acres, no bullets (except from deer hunters with poor marksmanship)
Cons: no sunshine for 6 months, high property taxes
http://www.trulia.com/property/3054824598-2465-Morningstar-Trl-Corning-NY-14830
I lived at 165 S Bernardo for a couple of years. Left that place last may. I have seen few changes: apartments are renovated with double pane windows, and increase in rents to force out low income tenants. 3 years ago, next to the apt complex I lived, new townhouses were built (cortez x s bernado). So, eventually, gentrification will take place by tearing down many small apartment complexes and building townhouses in their stead.
What $825k buys you where I live:
You should see what around 200k buys where I used to live: Rural NC. You can seriously get a very nice place with acres of land for under 200k, easy.
You should see what around 200k buys where I used to live: Rural NC. You can seriously get a very nice place with acres of land for under 200k, easy.
I believe it!
Honestly, I don't know why anyone in the Bay Area doesn't follow Adobe out to their new giant expansion campus in Utah County, Utah.
My team is based Utah (Adobe) and I work in SF. My allergies were horrible when I travelled there. Air quality was worse than usual due to forest fires in the state. The people are nice and my co-workers are great, but there isn't nearly as much to do as there is in the bay area. Also we have family and friends in the bay area. There is actually quite a bit of tech in that area, but it's definitely not for everyone.
What $825k buys you where I live:
What does it cost to heat/cool that mansion?
Darrell, I agree with most of what you post and i love when you bust Roberto Trump's balls, but I think $825K is doable for that house and if I lived in the area I'd be all over it. Plus, I could shoot my rifles off the balcony. And the whole backyard offers plenty of acreage for yams.
What $825k buys you where I live:
freak,
what's the freakin' utility bills like on a place like that in a place like that?
What does it cost to heat/cool that mansion?
freak,
what's the freakin' utility bills like on a place like that in a place like that?
I'm sure it's not cheap, especially in winter! The property taxes would also eat you alive.
But I'm assuming anyone with that kind of money isn't too worried about it. :o
Seattle area: Absolutely beautiful and outstanding recreation ...about 60 days a year. Houses are big, and that's because you'll spend most of your time indoors.
People are borne there, schooled there, work there, and die there...in the same communities..., and seem frightening of anything beyond the borders.
It's a very challenging place for Californians to move, and that's why they typically last 2-3 years before running for the golden hills.
Seattle area: Absolutely beautiful and outstanding recreation ...about 60 days a year. Houses are big, and that's because you'll spend most of your time indoors.
People are borne there, schooled there, work there, and die there...in the same communities..., and seem frightening of anything beyond the borders.
It's a very challenging place for Californians to move, and that's why they typically last 2-3 years before running for the golden hills.
LOL!! So true. I lasted a few months-couldn't deal with the weather. I am a sun perosn-just need the sun. But beautiful place though. Do they still have free coffee at the rest stops??
It's a very challenging place for Californians to move, and that's why they typically last 2-3 years before running for the golden hills.
I moved there (first the east side, then Seattle proper in Belltown) from Colorado and lasted 18 months. I'd have left sooner except that would mean reimbursing my employer for $60K in relocation costs.
Silicon Valley is still fine after four years.
If there was a better software startup scene (very few combine interesting technical problems, a viable business plan, and are at a good spot in their life cycle at a given time and a small percentage of a much larger number really helps) in Boulder, CO I wouldn't have left after 15 years and would have racked up 21 years in one place. 300+ days of sunshine a year, not much precipitation (alpine desert), better fine dining in one place, lower cost of living.
Oh come on Sanders, look at these deals!!
http://www.redfin.com/CA/Santa-Clara/3010-Ryan-Ave-95051/home/1167211
ROFL!!! Most my life CA prices were, at worst, double the prices in Salt Lake City. These days it's 3-4 times. $700k for a house like Marty McFly's in Back to the Future? That would be $190k in SLC. And it would have a full basement.
Even out here in the Inland Empire, I bet that house would go for $300k max.
Before we bought here we at least looked at Salt Lake City. The weather is apparently pretty awful with very cold, snowy winters and extremely hot summers. The air quality is also a big issue there because of the geography of the city as it sits in a large depression- sort of like LA.
It's not horribly bad. Salt Lake City summers aren't as hot as Phoenix or Las Vegas. Maybe one week in the 100s, two months in the 90s. It's similar to Riverside, CA from June through September. Winters get cold, similar to Denver, Colorado, but much milder than Buffalo, Minneapolis, Chicago, etc. There's very little humidity, which makes the cold more bearable.
The smog gets pretty bad. It's very similar to the San Gabriel Valley. Our inversions happen in the winter, opposed to the summer. Still, the air is generally much cleaner in SLC than it is in the Inland Empire.
My team is based Utah (Adobe) and I work in SF. My allergies were horrible when I travelled there. Air quality was worse than usual due to forest fires in the state. The people are nice and my co-workers are great, but there isn't nearly as much to do as there is in the bay area. Also we have family and friends in the bay area. There is actually quite a bit of tech in that area, but it's definitely not for everyone.
True. More to do in CA. That's why I bounce between SoCal and SLC. Much easier to meet a girl for a date at Santa Monica Place and walk the pier and 3rd Street than it is to meet a girl in SLC and ... well ... um ... eat at Crown Burger and walk The Gateway?
Still, SLC ain't Boise or Cheyenne. I'd say it's similar to Kansas City or Denver in terms of being able to "find" things to do, if you look hard enough. But not nearly as easy as Los Angeles or San Francisco where cool stuff to do is on every corner.
If you like to ski or do "outdoors" stuff, there is PLENTY to do ... and it's all 30 minutes away.
(Anyway, I'm hijacking the thread now ... in short, there are alternatives to the Bay)
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I went for a walk today in Slummyvale aka Sunnyvale and even in the ghetto areas around S Bernardo Avenue and Mathilda the homes are selling for 800k plus! What gives? Crappy homes in crappy area way overpriced. Why?