Great post, the excitement pops off the page, it wants to make you leave your cube right now, drive to the nearest airport and fly to the Valley, without even getting your coat (which would be awkward in Chicago's miserable weather today).
I've been in the SF area many times and seen many of the things he mentions, so why does it effect me so, I thought? It must be the excitement of just venturing into the startup world, meeting all those people, and just having that awesome feeling that things are finally happening to you. It must feel like your first kiss ... you can watch people kissing on TV a million times, like reading about companies on HN, but it's a total different thing when it happens to you.
I have to say I wish my first 72 hours in Silicon Valley were anywhere near that exciting. Great report, shows that if you time it well - and know people - you can really get a lot out of even a few days here.
A startup is made of two kinds of people: hackers and businessmen. Often it's got people who are both.
This post is about going around meeting the businessmen. It misses out on the hackers. They're not hard to find! At least visit Hacker Dojo in Mountain View. It's near Google.
I've been in the SF area many times and seen many of the things he mentions, so why does it effect me so, I thought? It must be the excitement of just venturing into the startup world, meeting all those people, and just having that awesome feeling that things are finally happening to you. It must feel like your first kiss ... you can watch people kissing on TV a million times, like reading about companies on HN, but it's a total different thing when it happens to you.