Am I missing out in my 20s living in South Bay instead of SF?
I've been living in South Bay for work (tech/AI) and family/relative (cheap rent, lower cost of living, convenience). I want to eventually settle down and get my own house in the Bay because my family lives here but torn between living and working in SF short term vs South Bay.
SF pros:
- Bigger AI scene, younger people, more cool network and job opportunities at the frontier of AI
SF cons:
- Low WLB, 996 culture, most likely I get paid in paper money, low safety, higher cost, further from family, traffic and parking sucks, SFH prices are insane.
South Bay pros:
- Very good WLB and family first culture, a lot safer neighborhoods, still in Bay Area, decent selection of AI opportunities, lower cost, close to family.
South Bay cons:
- Less young people, further from the heart of AI, more stable Big Tech opportunities also mean slower career and network growth, traffic sucks, SFH are also pricey.
Anyone with experience in both areas can comment? Is my FOMO justified?
6 comments
[ 4.1 ms ] story [ 30.7 ms ] threadI had jobs in Sunnyvale and Palo Alto and when I got a Berkeley job, moved to the east bay. During my stay there, I had jobs in Berkeley, San Francisco, and Pleasanton (Sun had a nice office there).
I later joined a startup whose CEO kept moving the office every time he moved his home. Count that as a mistake.
But from the east bay, I BART'ed to both Berkeley and San Francisco, which beat the daylights out of commuting by auto.
Having a family, SF was never an option. Now that I'm retired, I might just wait for the "AI-Pocalypse" and move to SF. (yeah, beware of that. Those billions have not produced revenue, and who knows if they ever will?)
> But from the east bay, I BART'ed to both Berkeley and San Francisco, which beat the daylights out of commuting by auto.
Would you say this is more true for hybrid arrangement or also for full RTO?
Let's assume you work 8 hrs/day, sleep 8 hrs/day, and do everything else in the remaining 8 hrs/day. So work is half your waking hours. Decide which is more important to you: the 8 hrs of work or the 8 hrs of everything else, and choose your location accordingly.
You're never going to be with fewer obligations and responsibilities than in your 20's, so now is the best time to experiment. When I was in my 20's, my job and location changed every 2 to 3 years, so anything I decided didn't turn out to be permanent anyway.
Don't overthink it, and do what makes you happy.