siliconia ( here is the definitive collection of siliconia on the web. siliconia are appropriations...

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Siliconia (http://www.tbtf.com/siliconia.html)Here is the definitive collection of Siliconia on the Web. Siliconia are appropriations of names beginning with "Silicon" by areas outside Silicon Valley. A Siliconium can be promoted by local boosters or it can be assigned to an area in a press account. An ideal Siliconium will capture something unique about the regional character and when first encountered will bring a fleeting smile.

http://www.realtor.com/ searched 29 Oct 2002

http://www.realtor.com/ searched 14 Sept 2006

http://www.realtor.com/ searched 23 Nov 2008

Blue collarWhite collar

Location Quotients in three “high-tech” regions…

Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas of the United States and Puerto Rico, November 2007

http://www.census.gov/population/www/estimates/aboutmetro.html

About Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical AreasStandard definitions of metropolitan areas were first issued in 1949 by the then Bureau of the Budget (predecessor of OMB), under the designation "standard metropolitan area" (SMA). The term was changed to "standard metropolitan statistical area" (SMSA) in 1959, and to "metropolitan statistical area" (MSA) in 1983. The term "metropolitan area" (MA) was adopted in 1990 and referred collectively to metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs), consolidated metropolitan statistical areas (CMSAs), and primary metropolitan statistical areas (PMSAs). The term "core based statistical area" (CBSA) became effective in 2000 and refers collectively to metropolitan and micropolitan statistical areas.OMB has been responsible for the official metropolitan areas since they were first defined, except for the period 1977 to 1981, when they were the responsibility of the Office of Federal Statistical Policy and Standards, Department of Commerce. The standards for defining metropolitan areas were modified in 1958, 1971, 1975, 1980, 1990, and 2000.Defining Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical AreasThe 2000 standards provide that each CBSA must contain at least one urban area of 10,000 or more population. Each metropolitan statistical area must have at least one urbanized area of 50,000 or more inhabitants. Each micropolitan statistical area must have at least one urban cluster of at least 10,000 but less than 50,000 population.

Metropolitan area: 1+ urban area (pop >= 50,000)Micropolitan area: 1+ urban cluster (50,000 > pop >= 10,000)

NAICS

San Jose-Sunnyval

e-Santa Clara, CA

MSA

Boston-Cambrid

ge-Quincy, MA-NH

MSA

Raleigh-Cary, NC

MSADurham, NC MSA

San Francisco

-Oakland-Fremont,

CA MSA

Ann Arbor, MI

MS

31-33 Manufacturing 1.67 0.8 0.65 1.55 0.65 1.18 334 Computer and electronic product manufacturing 12.15 2.67 1.24 ND 1.53 0.95

51 Information 1.81 1.31 1.52 0.66 1.48 1.02 519 Other information services 14.58 ND ND 2.04 ND 2.02( establishments supplying information, storing information, providing access to information, and searching and retrieving information. The main components of the subsector are news syndicates, libraries, and archives.)

54 Professional and technical services 2.05 1.53 1.4 1.51 1.72 1.72

61 Educational services 1.65 2.36 0.84 2.64 1.18 0.98

Location Quotients calculated from Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages Data (2007)

urbanization economies

clustering across sectors (and sharing urban infrastructure, etc.)

Agglomeration Economies

+ =scale economies

Savings due to producing on a large scale (e.g., mass production of a Model T Ford)

“economies” = savings

Spatial dimension

Applying the concept to economic geography

agglomeration economies

Savings due to clustering of economic activity in one place

localization economies

clustering among the same sectors (e.g., apparel)

two parts:

“The agglomeration is back”

• Industrial districts, industrial clusters

• Megacities, global cities

Agglomeration EconomiesCan arise both from increased efficiency and innovation

efficiency

Increased profitability due to lowering the per unit cost of producing the same item

innovation

due to producing existing items in new, better ways (process innovation) or producing new items (product innovation)

Spatial clusterings (e.g., cities, regions) can arise for both reasons.

Some better known “industrial districts”

“Third Italy”

“Research Triangle, NC”

“Silicon Valley”

“Bangalore, India”

Iconic Places in the Restructuring Debate

“Third Italy”

“Research Triangle, NC”

“Silicon Valley”

“Bangalore, India”

Characteristics of “Industrial Districts”

from left: David Packard, Bill Hewlett, Frederick Terman, in 1952. (Source: Stanford News Service)

What lies beneath the parking lots of Silicon Valley?(Aaron W. Sachs. “Virtual Ecology: A Brief Environmental History of Silicon Valley)

“Silicon Valley is probably a good, in many ways. The Valley of Heart’s Delight was a glory. We should have found ways of keeping one from destroying the other.” --Wallace Stegner (1984) quoted in Sachs, 2002: 82.

Silicon Valley/San Francisco: