nanog mailing list archives

Re: [OPINION] Best place in the US for NetAdmins


From: Matthew Petach <mpetach () netflight com>
Date: Sun, 27 Jul 2014 10:41:15 -0700

On Sun, Jul 27, 2014 at 9:28 AM, Owen DeLong <owen () delong com> wrote:



On Jul 26, 2014, at 6:01 PM, William Herrin <bill () herrin us> wrote:

On Sat, Jul 26, 2014 at 1:13 PM, Owen DeLong <owen () delong com> wrote:
Bill, on your list of not so wonderful things in DC, you left off:
       Weather
               In the sumer, the DC area is, well, what you’d expect
from a hot, humid, fetid swamp.
               In the winter, you can make ice cream outside without
rock salt (though there’s plenty of
                       salt available on the roads).

Meh. The weather is always temperate indoors. You ARE a computer guy,
right?

Yes and no. I like being able to go outside and enjoy things outside of my
job environment.

To me, weather matters.

I guess if I had grown up or been stuck in the DC area for a long time, I
might not be so focused on the outdoors.

Contrary to Bill’s claims, we have nearly as many data centers
housing lots of interconnect, content providers, etc. out here,
too. We’re also a primary gateway to Asia and the Pacific as
well as Australia.

I wouldn't dream of suggesting that silicon valley lacks for anything
of interest to computer and networking folks. You even have heavy
taxation, heavy regulation and a state government ever on the brink of
financial collapse, all things less prevalent in Northern Virginia.
Though if you really enjoy those things you can always visit DC or the
People's Republic of Maryland.

Meh... I don't think my taxation is that high overall. Yes, I pay a
slightly higher sales tax than VA, but IIRC, our income tax rate is lower.
My property taxes are definitely lower and more predictable.

Owen


Shush, Owen!  It's already crowded enough out
here--the last thing we need is more people
thinking it's a good place to work.   ;P

You wouldn't like it here in the Bay Area.
It's horrible, there's pollution all the time,
the traffic is terrible, there's no reasonable
public transportation, there's no late-night
eateries for when you finish that maintenance
window at 2am.  You definitely don't want to
live here.  :D

And as far as that government data about
salary goes...yeah, that's definitely the mean,
and doesn't represent the full range.  My W2
last year was *mumble*-times the listed mean
for some parts of the country.

Telecommuting can work out amazingly well,
for the right people.  But it takes dedication
and focus, and a relentless willingness to
be accessible to your coworkers.

Matt


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