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$ALEX Masmej
@alexmasmej.eth
@dwr.eth said at a dinner that SF is the place for serious founders to be if they want to be successful. That opinion is deeply unpopular among founders, yet these same people tell me how helpful it must be that I’m connected to Naval. Most SF first-time founders I know have some kind of tech superstar connection.
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Domino
@dominosmusic
how does that translate to livingthere? ease of access?
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ian
@iandaos
I’ve been struggling with this question a lot with this since covid. It’s definitely the case if you’re in AI or many areas of tech. It was the case with crypto in 2018, but now it’s not as clear since so many companies are remote (including ours). Might be over thinking it but am staying in SF (for now)!
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meesh
@meesh
I completely agree. Beyond the fact that there are so many experienced mentors to meet, tech spaces to explore + a strong founder community, many of the friends you make will likely someday become industry leaders and founders. The opportunities to network, meet mentors + form authentic relationships are endless.
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Joe Blau 🎩
@joeblau
People really struggle with this…
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@alexpaden
what is the difference between naval there or @pmarca here?
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Ian Place
@ians-place
I don’t disagree that SF is still one of the hubs of innovation but to discredit NY as a legitimate comparison is just off base in every way imo
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maksim ↑🐹🎩
@baseddesigner.eth
so that basically means that SF is a place where you’ll surely get money after hanging out for some time regardless of what you’re doing, kind of makes it seem inauthentic and capitalistic vs free and focused on value for people, not just for VCs
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