Apartments for Techies?
thedistance asks:
"I'm wondering if anyone has heard of companies retro fitting any
of the failed telecom hotels for apartment use? It sure would be nice
to find an apartment complex that was designed just for the tech
croud with a fiber/cat5 infrastructure throughout. It sure would make
it a lot easier to setup highspeed internet access, video on demand,
and wlans... not to mention an easy way to borrow the spare NIC from
your neighbor... (we can just leave the sugar borrowing to the rest
of the non-techie world)" If you know of an apartment complex
offering high bandwidth, please post a comment, below. Aside from
bandwidth, what other amenities would make an apartment complex ideal
for the high tech worker in the 21st Century?
Gävle Sweden got a pretty nice infrastructure.
:-)
:-)
100MBit switched net in most of the apartmentbuildings and Gigabit backbone.
The city wide NAT is highpreformance and really nice.
The Uplink to the net is 2x 135MBit which is enough for most needs. The NAT-community offers serveral FTP:s that contains what you need (and don't need). A fresh Linux ISO in 10 min is nice enough for me
When I lived there I used to watch movies from my friends harddrive without problems
My video gets the shakes when the neighbor's AC fan is turned-on on the other side of the wall.
Such a lack of understanding here. You find that many techs don't get out much and talk to their neighbors or meet new people becasue it is very hard to hold a conversation with people who don't understand what your talking about. Not only just that it's embarasing to try and communicate with people when most of what you say is so far over their head you almost ned a translator.
It's been my experience being around people of like minds helps to bring these types out of their "shells" and into more social situations. So this is far from a bad idea for the reasons you gave.
The part that might not make it a huge success is that these types are not a large percentage of the populous. Nich markests with the monies it would take to setup something like this aren't worth going after in general.
Now given the posters request I would think it would be economicly atractive to try something out like this in the given situation. But the likelyhood of it being a big hit is rather small. It would do pretty much as good as any other complex but the clientel would range through several technicly minded areas and might end you up in more trouble than it is worth.
Just my two cents if you don't like it just leave it be and someone else will pick it up.
I live in one (The Enclave, San Jose -- http://www.theenclave.com). CAT5 drops to every room, RJ45 in every wallplate. Two 3Com CoreBuilders and a Cisco 7500 as the gateway to an AT&T fiber drop from their backbone. Only problem is, it's expensive ($2000-$2500/mo. for a 1000 sq. ft. 2-bedroom), and the net feed is currently through ATTBI, even though there aren't any cable modems in use here.
.@.
Late night quake sessions? That new Squarepusher 12" dying to be played at 4 AM? Cut the midrange, drop the bass?
Any good geek hovel must have good soundproofing. Even if you aren't the type to play loud music all the time, common everyday sounds can get annoying (particularly if people are keeping erratic schedules, as many of us like to do). Soundproofing is a must.
Bandwidth's not the most important thing in a geek-friendly apartment by a long shot. In many American cities, you can get a cable modem connection for $40-$50 a month, which is plenty of bandwidth. Having the apartment wired with cat5 is a plus, but it's not hard to do yourself and wireless 802.11b also works pretty well.
What you really need in a geek's apartment is lots of power. Well-placed outlets in every room are key, as is not having to worry about blowing a fuse if you have a whole bunch of equipment running at the same time. Pretty much anything else you can set up yourself if you need to, but if the wiring is lousy and the landlord's not interested in improving it then you're probably screwed.
No, it's funny because it's true. Try dictionary.com for "irony." What's wrong, did it hit too close to a nerve? Maybe you should try getting out more.