Talk:Silicon Valley
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Please follow Wikipedia's standards for US city naming. Also, I question that some of these cities, notably Fremont, Union City and Newark, are on the "southern San Francisco Peninsula". -- Zoe
I'm not completely sure and I would hate to be wrong, but it seems a lot of the content on this page has been plagiarised from the book "Silicon Boys", by David A Kaplan. Correct me if I am wrong though. -- J Roberts
- If you look at the "Page history" you can see that it's been built up gradually, except for the history which was added by Maury Markowitz, who really does write that well, check out his other material. Stan 14:07, 17 Dec 2003 (UTC)
I just added a small section listing the three universities physically located in Silicon Valley. It seemed appropriate given that the local institutions of higher education also made contributions alongside the local companies. -- Tobycat
[edit] Cities in Silicon Valley
Subheading edited FelineAvenger 17:12, 3 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Alviso is a district of San Jose, not an independent city. (Apparently was a separate city until 1968, according to current Wikipedia entry) FelineAvenger 18:51, 12 May 2004 (UTC)
Looks like an anonymous user added a whole bunch of cities, including adding back Alviso, which is not a city, and adding cities all the way up the peninsula to Millbrae. I'm going to remove most of them, as they really are not part of Silicon Valley (especially given the location description at the top of the article, as being from Menlo Park south). Campbell definitely needed to be added though, and Redwood City might be worth leaving. Also will revise format of cities section to be consistent with the new format for the companies section. FelineAvenger 17:12, 3 Sep 2004 (UTC)
I suggest adding the following cities in based in order of how confident I am in considering them part of the valley. Redwood City (Oracle, Excite), Belmont, San Carlos, Foster City, and San Mateo (Seibel). Most people living in the valley would consider upto the 92 highway (which goes through San Mateo) to be in the Valley. Another piece of evidence for this is Yahoo who themselves list these cities in this page: http://dir.yahoo.com/Regional/U_S__States/California/Metropolitan_Areas/San_Francisco_Bay_Area/Counties_and_Regions/Silicon_Valley/Cities/
Interwalk 10:49pm, 11 March, 2005.
Union City and Newark are usually not considered part of Silicon Valley due to the relatively small number of tech companies located in those cities. Also, the Santa Cruz mountains is almost universally considered a physical boundary for the tech valley, so neither Santa Cruz nor Scotts Valley should be part of the list eventhough tech companies are located at those places. Similiarly, companies like Dreamworks is based in the North bay. Yet another peeve - why is UC-Davis listed? It's not any more relevant then UC-Irvine, UC-Santa Barbara, UC-San Diego, UCLA, etc. The main contributor to Silicon Valley's success was/is from UC-Berkely for the massive amounts of related research, that's why I added it to the article. Dyl 18:06, 28 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Notable companies
An earlier edit removed Siebel and Veritas because they were "non-notable". I think that "notable" is hard to define. These are certainly large silicon valley companies with influence in their markets, so I put them back in. Elf | Talk 18:31, 25 Jun 2004 (UTC)
- "Notable" is hard to define, but I want to prevent the list from getting too long. I personally, a software engineering professional, have never heard of either company. The addition of them looked like an advertisement to me, something we discourage here (as you probably know, being a WikiVeteran and all). However, everyone, inside and outside the industry has heard of Intel, Adobe, Apple, Google, etc. How significant are the markets these companies have influence in? As an example of the insignificancre of these companies, Siebel Systems doesn't even have an article yet and VERITAS Software's article is just a stub. I don't think they deserve to be on the list. However, I will refrain from removing them without further opinions. — Frecklefoot | Talk 19:10, Jun 25, 2004 (UTC)
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- Re "getting too long"--how's that go, Wikipedia is not paper? ;-) I know what you mean, though, then it turns into a list rather than an article. Both companies deal in products that are used by corporations, not individuals (unlike, say, Apple or Intuit), which probably means that not as many people have heard of them. But I don't think that means they're not notable. They have large customer bases. In the Silicon Valley 150 list referenced in the External Links, Veritas ranks higher than 7 of the 21 that *are* listed in this article. :-) Siebel is not far below it. I'm also in the software business & I encounter these products installed at many companies. You could do an internet search for either of these and find zillions of references. Failing to have an article here by no means means that something is insignificant. It just means the right person hasn't shown up to write it yet.
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- And back on what makes a company "notable"--now having browsed through the top 50 on the 150 list (see, you should never have gotten me started!), I'm surprised that whoever constructed the list didn't include Calpine, Ross Stores, National Semiconductor, LSI Logic, and E*Trade, all of which I'd guess many people, even nontechnical, have heard of, and KLA-Tencor, Cadence Design, VeriSign, and Network Associates, which I would hazard a guess are better known and of more interest certainly to technical folks (which this encyclopedia is bursting with, based on the slant of articles) than, say, Knight Ridder, BEA, or Novellus. (Huh--is E*Trade really in SV? Hmmm...) Elf | Talk 20:09, 25 Jun 2004 (UTC)
- Thanks for not getting combative. I get a lot of that from my responses when I, personally, am not trying to start a flame war. :-) Back to the list, you do make some good points. For example, Ross Stores is a well-known name, but it doesn't have an article. I just wanted to keep the list concise. For a full-blown list, I'd like to break out a seperate article (just a list). For the in-article list, I think less is more. Keeping names that are well-known to most of the general public was the right approach, IMHO. But I don't "own" this article. I'll go with the will of the masses.
- That being said, there are more names that I think should be trimmed from the list:
- Applied Materials: I added this back when the list was tiny and I wanted to beef it up a bit. Real company, real big, real important, not well-known to general public
- BEA Systems: Probably only well-known among Nerds Like Us
- Novellus: Who are these guys?
- Silicon Graphics: Not very important anymore, but probably still recongnizable to general public; I'm on the fence about this one. Could go either way. Historically significant.
- Solectron: Never head of 'em.
- Anyway, this is all just MHO. — Frecklefoot | Talk 21:01, Jun 25, 2004 (UTC)
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- Both Vertias and Siebel are on the NASDAQ-100 and GSTI Software Index. Does that help tip them to the notable category? --ChrisRuvolo 00:38, 14 Jul 2004 (UTC)
- No worries, they're there. Peace. :-) — Frecklefoot | Talk 14:34, Jul 14, 2004 (UTC)
- I'm changing PalmOne to PalmSource. PalmOne is now Palm again, which is already on the list. Feel free to delete PalmSource if you feel it isn't notable. (not joking -- what've they ever done other than lose money?) --Steven Fisher 22:25, 3 August 2005 (UTC)
Was the original Excite based in the Bay Area too? All I know is that Excite@Home was in Redwood City. We could consider adding Excite to the list, since it was once a portal rivaling Yahoo!. Gordeonbleu 18:35, 4 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Trimmed again
I couldn't stand it--people had added tiny companies that no one has heard of. I've said it before: when the list gets too long, it becomes useless. I trimmed the list to more or less companies that are household names or have a big impact on the high-tech marketplace (such as Applied Materials--both Intel and AMD rely on them). If I removed your pet company, sorry. Make a case here. People were using the list to advertise their pet company. I added a note to the list to (hopefully) ward off obscure additions. — Frecklefoot | Talk 15:31, Jul 21, 2004 (UTC)
- In my opinion, these companies ought to be on the page:
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- Solectron (2003 rev - $11B) and Samina-SCI (nasdaq-100) are contract manufacturers for the electronics industy. Solectron was a hot momentum stock during the boom period.
- Etrade is the well known online broker
- Xilinx(nasdaq-100), largest FPGA vendor - bigger then Altera (which you left on the page)
- Juniper Networks (nasdaq-100) - major competitor to Cisco Systems, well-known momentum stock during the 2000 bubble period.
- I agree the following are less well known to the general public (but most are well known to investors):
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- Cadence (2003 rev - $1.1B) & Synopsys (nasdaq-100) are dominant Electronic Design Tools companies - known by every chip designer in the world
- Novellus (nasdaq-100), Lam Research (nasdaq-100), KLA-Tencor (nasdaq-100) are competitors to Applied Materials
- Maxim (nasdaq-100), Linear Technology (nasdaq-100), Intersil (nasdaq-100) are major analog chip makers.
- LSI Logic (2003 rev - $2.2B) was the first ASIC company in the world.
- ALZA is a major pharmaceutical.
- MIPS and Rambus are influential Semiconductor Intellectual Property companies.
- Komag (2003 rev - $456M) is a major components manufacturer for the disk drive industy
Clearly, there are many more high tech companies than I've heard of. I agree that NASDAQ-100 companies qualify for the list, but I didn't intend for the list to be all-inclusive. I just wanted it to give a sampling of some of the high-tech companies headquartered in Silicon Valley. The list has gotten so big that it should be moved from the article into a seperate article of its own. It has gotten too big to be useful. I'd love to trim the article down to about ten companies.
But this is Wikipedia and the will of one does not prevail. Do as you please with the list. I don't own this--or any article--here in the 'pedia. I just developed a paternal interest with the list since I originated it. — Frecklefoot | Talk 17:11, Jul 21, 2004 (UTC)
Ok, I'll restrain myself to adding a few that i) have meaningful internal pages and ii) (hopefully) are well-known. I understand your point, but from my viewpoint, web-pages as this one are "prestige" pages, where the authors are impressing on the reader the importance of a place. Otherwise, why describe the history of the place?. dyl
[edit] New format for Notable companies
Since the "list" is getting so long, how does everyone feel about changing the list to something like this:
Adaptec | Adobe Systems | Advanced Micro Devices | Agilent | Altera | Apple Computer | Applied Materials | Atmel | BEA Systems | Cadence Design Systems | Cisco Systems | Cypress Semiconductor | eBay | Electronic Arts | Google | Handspring | Hewlett-Packard | Intel | Intuit | Knight-Ridder | Juniper Networks | Maxtor | McAfee | National Semiconductor | Network Appliance | NVIDIA Corporation | Oracle Corporation | Palm, Inc. | PalmOne, Inc. | PayPal | Rambus | Silicon Graphics | Sun Microsystems | Symantec | Synopsys | Tivo | Verisign | Yahoo!
I've seen this done elsewhere in the 'pedia for lists that get... well... really long. :-) — Frecklefoot | Talk 20:19, Aug 19, 2004 (UTC)
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- Done. :-) Actually, now I want to do the same thing to the list of cities, but I'll wait for any backlash regarding this change first. — Frecklefoot | Talk 13:49, Aug 20, 2004 (UTC)
Actually the change got me thinking that one issue is the word "notable". So I looked up the Forbes 500 and broke the list into 2 pieces; now the first part isn't arguable. :-) I did NOT look thru the whole 500 list to try to figure out whether there are SV companies that aren't on our list. Someone could do that, but it might be challenging... Also I could argue that any company that has ever been on the Forbes 500 (or Fortune 500, I suppose) should be listed here... because otherwise it would have to be checked every year, and things like PayPal, which I think got bought by eBay, would disappear from the list whereas it's interesting to note that they were started in SV orginally. Elf | Talk 20:37, 20 Aug 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Rant
An anon user just added a rant, which I moved to here (below). S/he cited it, but not very well (who are Pellow and Park?). It seems pretty POV to me. Any comments? — Frecklefoot | Talk 18:13, Dec 28, 2004 (UTC)
- "While typically lauded as the engine of the hight-tech global economy and a generator of wealth for millions, Silicon Valley is also home to some of the most toxic industries in the nation, and perhaps the world. Next to the nuclear industry, the production of electronics and computer components contaminates the air, land, water, and human bodies with a nearly unrivaled intensity.
- The Valley is also a site of extreme social enequality. It is home to more millionaires per capita then anywhere else in the United States, yet the area has also experienced some of the greatest declines in wages for working-class residents of any city in the nation. Homes are bought and sold for millions of dollars each day, yet thousands of fully employed residents live in homeless shelters in San Jose, the self-proclaimed 'Capitol of Silicon Valley'. Silicon Valley also leads the nation in the numbers of temporary workers per capita and in workforce gender inequities. Moreover, the region has an entirely non-unionized workforce and is as racially segregated as the most big urban centers." (Pellow/Park)
Yup, I was just editing the page while y ou were. I looked up Pellow & Park via Google and they're valid researches who have done a lot of publications on the high tech industry & SV. I made the attribution clearer; see if you're comfortable with the change. Elf | Talk 18:18, 28 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Yep, it looks good to me. It is POV, but now it's clear that it's a quote and the opinion of Pellow and Park. :-) — Frecklefoot | Talk 19:09, Dec 28, 2004 (UTC)
The statement about unrivaled intoxination by the nuclear industry, followed by the computer industry is untenable. Just think of the mining industry in Russia or China. What kind of contamination are P&P speaking about? If theirs are "valid researches", it should be possible to find a more specific quote. -- Frau Holle 12:31, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
The entire quote is a study in how to carefully construct sentences to deceive the reader into thinking one fact has to do with another simply because they are juxtaposed. "greatest decline in wages" is due to the volatile nature of the industries - the valley also has the "greatest increase in wages". Lack of unions is actually a sign that wages are good (votes for unionization are mostly rejected by employees). Temps are a reality of a hyper-dynamic economy and the sometimes nearly negative unemployment. It is not the Valley's fault that geeks are generally male, either. Most of the manufacturing has been moved offshore - the photochemical smog is not now what it once was in the 1970s. 207.154.79.131 10:49, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
- This is my first post so I hope I am doing this correctly. The P/P quote re the "toxic" consequences of IT development seems to me hyperbolic and counterproductive to a balanced account of the area. While a critique to the development is necessary, the startling suggestion that pollution is second only to that caused by the nuclear energy industry is not at all backed up in the article and seems on the face of it rather ludicrous. Much more grounded to me would be to give a fuller account of the political backlash to the development, including statements by actual organizations. As any resident knows (I am a life long resident) there have also been numerous studies by local researchers published in the local media documenting the state of the environment, which in general is much improved since the '60s and '70s. To include solely this quote, which leaves lingering images of vast brownfields and shantytowns, does a diservice to the actual economic, environmental and social issues caused by the rapid development. Thanks! —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 69.236.164.173 (talk • contribs).
Is there a reason this quote is still on there, at least the first part cannot be said to relate to Silicon Valley, how much production of electronic and computer equipment, or even assembling is done in Silicon Valley, or even nearby elsewere in the Bay Area? Is this greater than any other major metropolitan area of equal size? Is the claim even true, that nuclear industry is followed by the production of electronicts in terms of contamination created, more than the coal industry, vehicle use, the oil industry, and aviation industry? Just because it is a quote and it mentions Silicon Valley does not mean it is worthy of being in this article, many people of more notable importance have said many things about silicon valley. I thihk if the content of the quote cannot be corroborated by facts, or if it does not involve Silicon Valley it should not be included in the article. Comments about the manufacture of computer components should be made in articles discussing such issues. As the manufacture of electronic components does not seem to be part of the article (except for in the quote) suggest removing the first quote at least. I will do so in the future if discussion on this goes dead, and it still is the case that people are in favor of removing it. --JVittes 22:38, 15 September 2006 (UTC)
- I'm in favor of removing it. Some good observations have been made here for the argument that it is POV and unsubstantiated. And sorry for accidentally removing someone's comments—I don't know how that happened. — Frecklefoot | Talk 16:03, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
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- I'm going to remove the rest of the quote soon if there is no further objections, as that is the concensus here, just a heads up. --JVittes 05:28, 5 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Geenteen - The Censor
I added a link to a "San Jose State" site, using the "California State University, Silicon Valley, name ACTUALLY USED BY THAT UNIVERSITY SITE. "Geenteen" erased it, calling it "propaganda'. Where does this guy get off calling a link to a University site "propaganda" and erasing it? Can he censor anything he wants just because he's an administrator?
- I'm not Gentgeen, but I'll answer. First, the site you linked to has "California State University in Silicon Valley" as a description of the university, not a name. Second, the GoState link was removed because your site is not an offical San Jose State University site, it's just a site for your campaign to rename SJSU and thus is not relevant to this article. I created an article for your campaign at GoState - you can put your links there. NeoChaosX 17:55, 6 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] TerraServer
The first paragraph has a cite link to TerraServer. I think it'd be great if it actually linked to a satellite photo of Silicon Valley, especially since that's what the sentence that links to it describes. But it doesn't, it just links to the base TerraServer web site. Can someone experienced with using TerraServer and who knows the exact bounds of Silicon Valley update that link so it goes to a satellite photo of the Valley? — Frecklefoot | Talk 14:36, Apr 13, 2005 (UTC)
- I switched to Google Maps, and you can get a view by clicking on the link, but please remember to zoom out. Terraserver is somewhat user-unfriendly. — Stevey7788 (talk) 23:42, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Knight Ridder???...
Should Knight Ridder really be included here? I don't think I would consider them to be a tech company. Their article does say that they've quickly adopted new technologies, but they haven't developed any. They're a newspaper company. They don't develope or produce any hardware or software. So I think they should be removed from the list.
- Interesting. You're probably right, but I don't know nuthin' about no K-R except for their media holdings. So I wonder whether someone else has an insight as to why it's listed here when it does state explicitly "high-tech companies". Elf | Talk 20:39, 26 September 2005 (UTC)
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- Well, they were the first to release an online edition of their newspaper, the San Jose Mercury News. They're consistently hailed as the most tech-savvy newspaper available, which isn't surprising considering the location of their headquarters. While they aren't a hi-tech company that develops technologies, I guess they could be called a hi-tech newspaper company. I dunno... — Frecklefoot | Talk 21:52, 26 September 2005 (UTC)
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- Yeah - they're a rapid adopter of new tech, but they're still just tech consumers, not tech producers. If they started marketing web publishing sofware or templates to other newspapers then maybe they could be considered a tech company. I'm gonna move them to other notable companies.
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[edit] Sillicon valley
Ottawa has a Sillicon Valley. It refers to the high technology boom area we have. Should this be mentioned? Anyone? --Pat 04:57, 29 November 2005 (UTC)
- It seems to be mentioned in the "tech centers in the rest of the world" or whatever that section is called. I'm guessing Silicon Valley North is the are you're talking about. --Dante Alighieri | Talk 00:06, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
- Correct. Many new areas have taken on nicknames similar to Silicon Valley. I've seen reference to Singapore as the "Silicon Island" or example. No need to mention any of them by name.Fcsuper 01:58, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Silicone Valley?
"For many years in the 1970s and 1980s it was also incorrectly called Silicone Valley, mostly by journalists, before the name became commonplace in American culture." Is this really true? It sounds pretty bizarre to me. I can see the term used mockingly for someplace like LA with a lot of plastic surgery, but I've never heard anyone think silicon was a misspelling of silicone. KarlM 07:09, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
The confusion of silicon with silicon is prevalent among non-geeks---that is, anyone who didn't learn chemistry at a good high school. --Coolcaesar 05:08, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
Encylopedia's shouldn't be making value judgements ("incorrectly") so I'll revise that sentence a bit in a manner that makes it clear it was journalists and not locals calling it that. Joncnunn 15:47, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Bangalore,Hyderabd-Silicon valley
Bangalore,Hyderabad still have to walk a long road to compete with original silicon valley interms of entrepreneur activities.kundojjala
- Plus India has very serious problems with its legal system and government, which makes it harder for startups to form and do business there. They don't have quite the same level of police and fire services as well as trash cleanup, sewage treatment, and road maintenance that we have in Silicon Valley. --Coolcaesar 05:21, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Map
I'm wondering if there has ever been a map produced of the silicon valley that would be considered credible and accurate and provide visual reference for those not familiar with the area? --Crossmr 21:09, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
- I know there are some good high-quality paper ones out there, but they are all copyrighted and they cannot be used under fair use. We need one of the WP users with cartography skills to draw one and donate it under the GFDL. --Coolcaesar 22:28, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] live in homeless shelters?
what percent of silicon valley IT people really live in homeless shelters?
Probably alot when the tech bubble burst. Hundreds of thousands of people were without jobs when this happened.--Old Guard 22:49, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
- Also, there has always been the Motel 22 or Hotel 22 phenomenon where lots of homeless people in the Valley sleep on the Line 22 bus (see the articles which I added citations to, in Valley Transportation Authority). --Coolcaesar 22:50, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
The news stories about large scale underclass existing in Silicon valley is total media hype. Makes for sensational headlines, but it's pure bunk. Think about it - IT people make good wages, certainly above national norms. If they are employed, they can certainly pay for at least a room, more usually an apartment. Just browse through the wikipedia articles on each particular town in the valley and note the average household income - much higher then the national norm. If they are un-employed, then most likely they would have moved to other areas where they can get a job (how did they get to Silicon valley in the first place? - it's not like there are thousands of computer programming Joads driving to the valley in their on-the-verge-of-breaking-down model-Ts). Dyl 19:19, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
- Your view is too narrow. The problem is not IT people, most of whom make more than enough to buy a decent house. It's everyone else who keeps the economy running: teachers, police officers, technicians, and of course, all those other people who work in retail and landscaping and construction. Talk to them and ask them where they live; a lot of the government employees are in state-subsidized affordable housing projects, and everyone else is commuting ridiculous distances from Hollister or Pleasanton or Los Banos, or they're living with ten other people in an apartment designed for three. Try riding "Motel" 22 (I have when my car was in the shop) and meeting the interesting characters who inhabit the bus line.
- The more I think about it, it sounds like you need to get out more often. I recommend visiting the superior court in San Jose and watching the arraignments; it is open to the public, after all. That's when you will come to recognize the vast disparities in income in Silicon Valley! --Coolcaesar 19:59, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
- In the news recently, San Jose has exceeded San Francisco for the number of homeless within its limits. Other point: In terms of renting, people are often crowding into small apartments in roommate or family situations where the number of people/couples exceeds the number of rooms. Just take a drive into the city streets south of 280 or east of 101. You'll find those beat up cars you are talking about parked on the streets for miles.Fcsuper 02:05, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
- All ture, the interesting thing of course it that teachers and many state employees are not anywhere near poor (High school teachers in CA have a median income of $45k vs. $32 for the average American (age 25+)). In most American cities the thought of a high school teacher living in a "project" would be quite strange. Then again, Silicon Valley is the wealthiest metro area in the US with a median household income of roughly $77,000 vs. $43,000 national median. SignaturebrendelHAPPY HOLIDAYS 20:15, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
[edit] pop culture
I'm going to add places where "Silicon Valley" (california) is referenced or used in Popular Culture. I just need a few more examples --Old Guard 02:01, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
- Silicon Valley is the setting for Totally Spies! episode 10: Silicon Valley Girls
- Accidental Empires: How the Boys of Silicon Valley Make Their Millions, Battle Foreign Competition, and Still Can't Get a Date (1992: ISBN 0887308554; 1996: ISBN 0-14-025826-4, with new material) a book written by Robert X. Cringely
- Please don't add this stuff. It just clutters the article. It's a well-known location—it's going to be mentioned in thousands of places. We don't need it in the article. — Frecklefoot | Talk 15:27, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Silicon Valley of India move proposal
Hi all, please visit the above move proposal discussion - we need further input. thanks Bwithh 14:16, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] History section is all wrong
I just double-checked some of the history section against the Rebecca Lowen book on the history of Stanford through Google Books. The history section is completely wrong. Terman did not participate in the early development of the industrial park and only grasped its importance to the university when it was already filling up with tenants. He was more concerned with developing regional industry and Stanford's reputation by producing high-quality graduates and attracting companies to hire them; it was the trustees who pushed for the industrial park and Terman discovered its relevance to his objectives only after the fact. We need to fix this. --Coolcaesar 17:20, 25 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] History section needs improvement
Coolcaesar, you have some valid points there. The history section could be greatly improved. Some "facts" are ungrounded. Some assessments seem incorrect. There are not enough citations. After the Akron and Macon blimps, Moffett Field was an army base, then a Naval Air training base in the 1940s, and housed several patrol squadrons with P2 and later P3 aircraft in the 1960s-1990s. It was not until the 1999 that the US Navy turned the whole airfield over to NASA. NACA and NASA Ames has a long history.
The early history needs more work, and citations are needed throughout. I've added some early technology history (1910-1912) and some references, more needed. There is a big gap between 1910 and 1939. See How Silicon Valley Came to Be -- GeoFan49 08:14, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] DuBridge invented the vacuum tube?
This paragraph needs citations!
A small marker designates a small house in Downtown Palo Alto as the one-time headquarters of the Federal Telegraph Company, where, early in the twentieth century, Lee Alvin DuBridge developed the first vacuum tube. In the Sixties and seventies, it was inhabited by Stanford students, few of whom possessed a device containing a vacuum tube. (In more recent times, vacuum tubes have become fashionable again, notably in "high-end" audio equipment.)
Nowhere but in Wikipedia is that information to be found!
Lee De Forest invented the triode in 1907, and the first true vacuum tubes were developed in 1915 by Irving Langmuir at the General Electric research laboratory.
-- GeoFan49 05:47, 15 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] External links
I proprose removing the link:
from External links as it should be in the Bay Area article instead, I think since it is about religion in the Bay Area, not about Silicon Valley specifically. If there is no objection I'll remove it in the future. --JVittes 05:23, 30 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Other technology centers
Is it just me, or are the subsections Other technology centers within the U.S. and Other technology centers around the world just disguised spam? They link to other articles on Wikipedia, but they are so huge, that they're really unbalancing the article. I propose either:
- Remove them completely
- Move them to a list of some sort (e.g. List of technology centers)
Right now, I just look at them, and it looks like they're saying "Look at us! Look at us! We can program too!" For that matter, Other industrial valleys should go too. Anyone else support this? — Frecklefoot | Talk 14:26, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
- Well, unless I hear any dissenting voices, I'll make the change in coming days. — Frecklefoot | Talk 18:50, 24 October 2006 (UTC)
- I've been really busy with legal practice recently. But yes, those links have bothered me as well for a long time. I agree with you that all those links should be deleted. None of them is as important as the one and only Silicon Valley, and their relevance is questionable. Silicon Valley generates more patents than any other spot in the U.S. (and probably any other spot on the planet). It's not like, say, in the American entertainment industry where they use the term LA/NY to signify the two cities are equals. The only other major research center in the world that even comes close to Silicon Valley in terms of innovation is Redmond, Washington, but that's only because Microsoft is headquartered there, and Microsoft is still doing a decent job at innovating to keep up with the competition. --Coolcaesar 07:42, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
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- Yes for the top 20 patent producing cities the region produced 14,000 and the next highest, Austin (by itself, has large IBM prescence) produced 1,600, but I thought the Triangle was the largest research center? I may be being prideful but I would think Washington state is useless other than for MS and I don't know much else about the other US tech centers other than that Chicagoland and the DC area(whose tech counties have higher income also) have more tech employment than the Valley and the Bay Area respectively while southern California(all of it) has slightly less tech employment than the Valley. The main reason I think they should stay is because everyone checks the article when they want to find out about a tech region, but might really be looking for a different one.--Old Guard 13:04, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
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- Well then I think a separate list is the next best option. I really think these other links are just trying to springboard off of Silicon Valley. Nowhere else really comes close:
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- The Research Triangle is big, but nowhere as big as the Valley
- I've never heard of "Chicagoland" or DC as being huge tech employers
- Washington is pretty significant because of MS. Other tech companies have congregated there because of MS.
- I used to live in SV and, really, you can't walk 10 feet without tripping over a high-tech company. It really is a geographical phenomena. — Frecklefoot | Talk 15:14, 25 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Trivia secion
That paragraph about James is getting a little long. How about:
In the James Bond film A View to a Kill, villain Max Zorin plans to destroy Silicon Valley by detonating explosives between the Hayward Fault and San Andreas Fault, causing them to flood thereby supposedly allowing Zorin to corner on the chip market.
--71.222.203.7 23:44, 11 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Map
this article needs a map --AW 16:11, 22 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Why I'm fixing the lead
Falconleaf made a bad, bad edit to the lead on 5 January 2007 [1] that I just caught. I am reverting the sentences affected back to how they existed prior to that edit. Note that Falconleaf was subsequently blocked for 40 days on 11 March 2007 by User:Infrogmation (a Bureaucrat) after demonstrating a consistent pattern of article vandalism. --Coolcaesar 07:08, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
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