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Where the Highest Paying Tech Jobs Are

prostoalex writes "Where would you look for a high-paying tech job? If your answer is Silicon Valley or Research Triangle, Forbes magazine suggests some other destinations. When you take the cost of living and consider the net pay adjusted for that cost, places like Montgomery, Ala., Idaho Falls, Idaho, and Fort Smith, Ark. suddenly seem quite attractive."

94 of 574 comments (clear)

  1. What about... by flooey · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...after factoring in the personal cost of having to live in Alabama or Idaho?

    1. Re:What about... by John+Hasler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Some might see Silicon Valley and Research Triangle as carrying the personal cost.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    2. Re:What about... by SIGALRM · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, Seattle falls under the same category. I live and work near Redmond, and it's typical that TFA doesn't mention the greater Seattle area at all. Most people seem to forget we're here, which is fine w/me.

      --
      Sigs cause cancer.
    3. Re:What about... by tylernt · · Score: 3, Informative
      ...after factoring in the personal cost of having to live in Alabama or Idaho?
      Yup, that's right. Stay right where you're at. We Idahoans don't want any more Californians here anyway, thank you very much... our quiet state is rapidly turning into Little California.
      --
      DRM 'manages access' in the same way that a prison 'manages freedom'
    4. Re:What about... by gwhenning · · Score: 4, Informative

      As a Californian who moved to Idaho, I would agree. Housing in my area has shot up about 50% in the three years since we've moved here and they're still building hundreds of new homes each year catering to the waves of immigrants into the state.

      That being said, I enjoy the ~$80/mo home utility bills (That's all total water, sewage, electric and gas.), ~$2.75/gal gasoline, 5% sales tax, skiing (water in the summer, snow in the winter although since I took out 3 of 4 ligaments in my leg last season I like that one less.), hiking, and boating.




      If only they would raise the takes to fund a fence to keep the rest of you out. :)

    5. Re:What about... by mantar · · Score: 2, Informative

      :-) Agreed. I was born in Twin Falls and last time I was back home I couldn't believe the cost of housing. It's the same way here in Reno, too.

      --
      # man tar
  2. cost of living. by oyenstikker · · Score: 4, Informative

    Taking into account cost of living, try India.

    --
    The masses are the crack whores of religion.
    1. Re:cost of living. by josepha48 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure you can get a bigger house and stuff, but what about the 'quality' of living. I like the restaurants in bigger cities personally. That and the fact that there are more jobs AFAIK.

      --

      Only 'flamers' flame!
      Does slashdot hate my posts?

    2. Re:cost of living. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I've considered India, but I'm seriously looking at Mexico and Costa Rica. I'm partial to Mexico because I love Mexican culture (and I already have many friends there), but Costa Rica is really an up and coming high tech nation.

      It's possible to have a very high standard of living for less money in these countries. And if your material needs are not great, you can live incredibly cheaply, save up a bunch of money and retire early.

      The other thing is that, depending on how you work it, you might not be taking a cut in pay at all. All many of us need is to be at the one end of a wire. These countries have internet infrastructure, at least in the bigger towns and cities. Last time I was in Mexico, I met two people that were living there and making a living this way. One was a daytrader (remember those?) and the other had a web development company he had basically started in the U.S. When he moved to Mexico, his clients hardly noticed. He's making even more money now because he's found a lot of local talented designers and coders that work for lower pay, but he's still getting paid the same. And because he pays at the upper end of the prevailing local wage, his workers love him.

      Moreover, he told me that because he lives in Mexico, he's much less likely to have to go to a day long meeting to discuss what exact shade of green should be used to maximize the branding of a particular website. Clients are less likely to fly him in to discuss trivial shit. Or they fly out to him because it's an excuse to visit Mexico.

      Anyway, if you can work at the end of a wire, seriously consider some of the developing nations. I can't guarantee that you'll prosper, but I can guarantee you'll have a very interesting time.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    3. Re:cost of living. by runcible · · Score: 2, Informative

      What is it with people and Costa Rica?

      If you don't do too much research, it looks good, but the truth is it's got some pretty serious problems -- they are in dire need of tax reform, they have some nice corruption issues in their executive ( couple of presidents arrested for corruption in the past five years or so ). Plus they have a big drug transshipment thing going, and domestic production is quite the cottage industry as well -- if they don't do anything effective about it, they're gonna be another Columbia.

      Plus, the high tech sector is *electronics manufacturing*, mostly microprocessors...and it's only there because chip fab is so hellishly toxic, and what the hell, it's the third world...

      Oh *and* IIRC if you want good Internet connectivity ( if you work on the wire, it's more of a need than a want ), you're pretty much stuck in San Jose -- so tack a couple of active volcanoes and a growing crack problem onto the list.

      Interesting time indeed.

      --
      remember the wisdom of Mahatma Gandhi: If enough peasants die horribly, someone will probably notice
    4. Re:cost of living. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm not totally up on the ins and outs of this, but, with a few exceptions, travel to Cuba is illegal for U.S. citizens. I know a lot of people who manage to travel there just the same, usually routing through Cancun. If anybody tries this, make sure not to have your passport stamped! You cold face a hefty fine if caught!

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    5. Re:cost of living. by phantomfive · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My brother lived in Costa Rica (and I lived in El Salvador), and I would guess the biggest thing you are going to have to put up with are the bugs. One or two inch long cockroaches are pretty common down there, and occasionally you will see a 6 inch long cockroach or grasshopper. You might want to check out Baygon or Permethrin. Ants are crazy too, there are so many kinds of ants. But you will learn how to store your food and how to spray so they don't become a problem. There are some nice cheap houses down there, and nice rain forests. But in spite of what that AC said, the girls down there are not hot at all. At least, according to my brother.

      --
      Qxe4
    6. Re:cost of living. by phantomfive · · Score: 5, Funny

      Oh, and I would like to mention, COCKROACHES FLY!!!! I just tell you that to lessen the shock that we all feel when we see one of those monstrosities flying straight at us. They don't fly well, but the shock of seeing that the first time is something that can give you nightmares. And don't drink the water. Get bottled water from a reliable company. You might even want to test your bottled water. I am serious with this one, get bottled water. For a while I was purifying my water with chlorine, then I found out that the town water had LEAD in it, and I was drinking lead. I found out that no one in that town drank the water. So boiling water and stuff isn't good enough. Get the bottled water. Also, the two most important things that will keep you from getting mugged: learn to pay attention to your surroundings, what is going on, etc; and secondly, learn to look in someone's eyes and understand what he is feeling/thinking. Be careful with what you communicate with your eyes, too though: I know someone who got beat up and nearly died because he looked at someone funny (I am dead serious on that one, although it happened in Hawaii not Costa Rica). But if you do those two things you can avoid a lot, and react to things that do happen sooner. Also, if you like soccer, and get in a game of gringos against latinos, work as a team, and you will have a good chance of beating the latinos who will all want to show off and not work as a team.

      --
      Qxe4
    7. Re:cost of living. by Johnny5000 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      But in spite of what that AC said, the girls down there are not hot at all. At least, according to my brother.

      I've been to Costa Rica, and your brother is full of crap.
      Or else he just wants to keep you away and keep the girls to himself.

      --
      The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
    8. Re:cost of living. by davidsyes · · Score: 2

      It's shameful that the US makes it hard for people here with money to do business over there. I don't know that ALL Cubans are destitute, but if legal cashflow (hopefully Castro's regime won't TAKE it or TAKE it ALL) from the US could improve living conditions there. It's not as if Castro or Cuba could incite an insurrection in the US, but it is or seems all too regularly an agenda for the US to hold Cuba up as an evil regime, a rogue state, and backwards.

      Well, we've got homophobia here; drug addictions fueled by those who want, transport, or allow them to get them here; we've got BAZILLIONS of dollars to spend making and fighting enemies that needn't exist, just to give those with power a pretext to kick ass or behave imperiously; we've got millions of homeless, 10's of millions of uninsured (I'm one of them, been uninsured since March 2001 when I lost the job that was paying my salary so I could pay my mortgage on a home the likes of which I'll NEVER, EVER be able to afford... while I was just a line item to the CEO's mandate...); we've got buildings and construction going on left and right, yet... well...

      It's stupid, vengeful, idiotic and childish for economically (for now) militarily (for now), but morally and pilitically vapid presidencies (both parties are Hydras, so I won't vote until the assholes are revamped and augmented by up to 4 or 5 other power-sharing parties), most weak-willed (can't feed it's poor and clean up the streets for all the money we have... just walk around Tenderloin, SF... shit-smeared streets, homeless.. yet DHLS & other government employees and officials get new patrol SUVs, shiny equipment... office building upgrades) nation has to make it illegal to travel to Cuba. MAYYYYBE I could see SOME other countries, but what has Cuba got that is dangerous the US?

      Hmmm. Oh, yeh: "DEFIANCE!". The ONE thing they have that is courageous and in short supply in OTHER countries: D-E-F-I-A-N-C-E (Say it like R-O-L-A-I-D-S). One day the arrogance to quash defiant, small countries will come back with an even BIGGER bite...

      Anyway, what ELSE has Cuba got? A president who has outlived many of his US polit-level counterparts. Cigars so good the HAVE to be banned for the public, but smugglable by diplomats mules....

      Meantime, anyone with a fat check and who loves ANY (but particularly THIS) administration will be quick to pounce me with flamebait, I am fair certain.

      Just to be different, I hope Castro outlives the next TWO SEE-Lek-tehd US presidents. He needn't remain in power. Just outlive them. Must be something in the genes... staying power, longevity, hardiness, even at his age. OTOH, he might have a stroke in 6 months....

      --
      Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
    9. Re:cost of living. by notoriousE · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The problem with Costa Rican women is that they are hot until about 27 and then start turning into some of the ugliest human beings ever.

      --


      And then there was E
  3. Not attractive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Living in Montgomery AL and installing Office on every PC in the air force does NOT sound attractive, thanks.

    1. Re:Not attractive by DeltaHat · · Score: 2, Informative

      I did a stint in that hellhole. Montgomery Alabama is hell on earth. Period. The only reason the adjusted income for tech jobs there is so high is due to the incredibly depressed state of the city. Also, the Air Force is the only real consumer of tech there, so you have almost no choice but to work for the military. Take that for what its worth to you. The government bureaucracy is hip deep and most systems are antiquated at best. Avoid it like the plague.

  4. See how many correspond with 'Best places to live' by mergy · · Score: 4, Informative

    'Best Places to Live' according to Money Mag/Rag

    http://money.cnn.com/magazines/moneymag/bplive/200 6/top100/index.html

    1 Fort Collins, CO 128,000
    2 Naperville, IL 141,600
    3 Sugar Land, TX 75,800
    4 Columbia/Ellicott City, MD 159,200
    5 Cary, NC 106,400
    6 Overland Park, KS 164,800
    7 Scottsdale, AZ 226,000
    8 Boise, ID 193,200
    9 Fairfield, CT 57,800
    10 Eden Prairie, MN 60,600
    11 Plano, TX 250,100
    12 Eagan, MN 63,700
    13 Olathe, KS 112,100
    14 West Bloomfield , MI 65,000
    15 Richardson, TX 99,200
    16 Gilbert, AZ 178,100
    17 Parsippany-Troy Hills, NJ 51,600
    18 Santa Clarita, CA 172,500
    19 Carrollton, TX 124,700
    20 Henderson, NV 232,100
    21 Bellevue, WA 117,100
    22 Newton, MA 83,200
    23 Sandy, UT 89,700
    24 Westminster, CO 105,100
    25 Ann Arbor, MI 113,300

  5. Gotta love RTP (Research Triangle) by RichMeatyTaste · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unemployment in the Raleigh/Durham area is sub 4% (statewide is sub 5). Forget the pharm and biotech companies; we have Cisco, Symantec, Red Hat, Microsoft, GFI, and countless others. There are constantly tons of houses for sale because some many "northerners" (of which I am one, an Ohio transplant from last year) are moving down here, and cost of living is more than fair.

    There are tons of tech jobs of every kind out there, especially programming positions. My wife is a teacher and the market for her is evening better than it is for me (as a network engineer/admin type).

    I love Ohio, and I bleed scarlet and grey, but there is just no comparison between RTP and any major area in Ohio)

    And for you elitest types (I keed!), RDP is home to the second highest percentage of PHD's (per capita) outside of Silicon Valley.

    --


    Ever feel like you are driving the getaway car?
    1. Re:Gotta love RTP (Research Triangle) by DerekLyons · · Score: 2, Informative
      And for you elitest types (I keed!), RDP is home to the second highest percentage of PHD's (per capita) outside of Silicon Valley.

      And sadly, because of this, the Triangle is following Charlotte and Atlanta in becoming Just Another Metropolis - it's Southern identity and charm lost forever. My sister, who lived in Durham from 1982 to 2002, said she didn't realize how bad it had gotten - till they moved to Irvine (CA.) and found the differences less than expected.
       
      Even worse - my beloved Triad (I am a native)[1] seems to be going down the same path.

      [1] NC can be a little confusing as it has both the Triangle (Raliegh/Durham/Chapel Hill) and the Triad (Winston-Salem/Greensboro/High Point).
  6. Outsourcing by owlman17 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In other third world countries where these tech jobs are being outsourced to, $USD400-$600/month is very high. I live in Manila, and the minimum wage is roughly less than $USD 6.00 daily. Those who work in outsourced tech-support call centers make $300 monthly and they're very happy about it. I had a short web-design stint making about $450 monthly and I was really really happy about it, to say the least. Single people here could live like kings on that.

  7. My views on Idaho Falls and Alabama in general by Tink2000 · · Score: 4, Informative

    As someone who lived in Idaho Falls, Idaho, I strongly advise against it unless you think man-made falls are cool and love a few of the Temple at night, and like the idea of living in a city that has nothing around it for miles except scenery, where the tallest building is nine stories tall and it's a hotel.

    I lived there for a year and pretty much loathed every moment of it. Of course, I came there from Atlanta, Georgia, so ... it was a bit of culture shock for me.

    If you're going to live in Montgomery, you might as well consider Huntsville as well. Although it might be slightly harder to get a job there as everyone has some sort of technical background for the most part, it's a fairly agreeable city and not at all representative of the rest of Alabama.

    1. Re:My views on Idaho Falls and Alabama in general by Burdell · · Score: 5, Interesting

      As someone who lives in Huntsville (born and raised here) and also does some business in Montgomery, I'd have to agree. I'm not aware of a whole lot of tech jobs available in Montgomery; there's always demand in Huntsville (especially as another 7-12 thousand Army and contracter jobs come to Huntsville in the next few years). I don't know how the cost of living compares (Huntsville is a good bit lower than the Atlanta area though). The "metro" areas around Montgomery and Huntsville are about the same size IIRC, but Huntsville has a lot more "outside" influence (German rocket scientists in the 1950s and people from all over the world since).

      Huntsville can be an odd place sometimes; mixing rocket scientists and rednecks has interesting results.

    2. Re:My views on Idaho Falls and Alabama in general by mpaque · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ah, yes, the water cascading over the concrete barriers and gently splashing into the concrete-lined culvert below. I remember going to sleep to the sound of 300 car trains hauling potatoes out of town.

      Many of the software engineering jobs aren't in Idaho Falls itself, but out at 'The Site', the Idaho National Engineering (and Environmental) Laboratory. It's a convenient 75-90 minute bus ride out of town, just north of Atomic City (Quonset hut with a bar, gas station, and post office).

      INE(E)L is located so far from town so as to provide a buffer zone in case of a little mistake in one of the engineering projects. Interesting place, if you ever find out what went on in some of the widely separated facilities out there. (Hint: the original name was Reactor Testing Station...)

      http://www.idptv.state.id.us/buildingbig/buildings /ineel.html
      http://nuclear.inl.gov/52reactors.shtml

    3. Re:My views on Idaho Falls and Alabama in general by oudzeeman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have a buddy who is a UK citizen, has lived in several contries, and spent his teen & college years in the US (Maine). He recently took a job in Provo, Utah and works in a small tech company with mostly Mormons. He is a big partier and drinker, so I don't know if Utah is really the place for him, but he has no complaints about how he is treated by Mormons. His company is opening up a branch in England and they asked if he'd be willing to be transfered out there and he jumped at the chance, so it worked out good for him.

    4. Re:My views on Idaho Falls and Alabama in general by weiserfireman · · Score: 2, Informative

      Idaho native, born near Idaho Falls, have relatives in Idaho Falls. I like Idaho Falls, but most of you wouldn't. Yes, the falls are artificial. Built for recreation and to increase tourism. The town is bordered by a large desert to the north and west, farmland to the east and south. The desert to the north is home to the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory. Home to a lot of Nuclear Power Research. At one time, had around 200 nuclear reactors there. That is still the largest employer, and it is a 60 mile commute on two lane highway. They do have buses for commuting though. If you are into outdoor activities, hunting, fishing, camping, skiing, snowmobiling, you might really like it. If you are into nightlife, clubs, movies, bars, you will hate it. The town is over 50% LDS (mormon).

  8. "...and Fort Worth, Ark..." by DreadfulGrape · · Score: 2, Informative

    Without having RTFA I can tell you that's probably Fort Smith, Arkansas (or Fort Worth, Texas, though that seems less likely).

    --
    sig has been sent away for a few small repairs...
  9. Highest paying yes, but highest growth?? by osho_gg · · Score: 5, Insightful
    There are interesting questions here. One could go for one of these highest paying jobs in obscure locations where few companies are there. However, what is the growth potential in such locations? How many companies are there to work for in such locations that can pay high salaries for specialized skills? How many companies can pay more than 100k in places like Idaho Falls, ID? And, what happens if that company goes bust/one is laid off in such areas?

    I dislike the high cost of living, traffic, unaffordability of houses etc. in places such as Silicon Valley. But there are lot more companies where one can work for with decent salary. One's chances of finding another job with close to maximum salary in one's field are lot higher there without having to move.

    These are not just idle concerns. I have been asking many such questions to myself recently as I am not in high-tech area such as Silicon Valley. There are no easy answers to such questions. These become even more difficult once one has family, house etc. and has established roots in one place.

    Osho

    1. Re:Highest paying yes, but highest growth?? by notshannon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      At 33, I am in the earlier part of my career.

      As a younger person, living in a cheap locale
      commits me to living on that economic scale for
      the rest of my life.

      My "money scale" is roughly proportional to my income.

      If my salary in Central New Jersey is double that in
      Cortland, NY, then my company contribution of 5% of my
      salary or so to retirement is, well, double in NJ.

      Ditto with the cost of a lot of things. The slosh in
      my budget is larger, too. (Unfortunately, real estate
      purchase is more than double.)

      Once I've saved my war chest, at least the bulk of
      what I'll submit to the angels of compound return,
      then I could move to a lower cost of living area
      and be ahead of the game. But the reverse direction
      is not affordable.

  10. Collateral Damage by NoHandleBars · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I once oversaw moving a firms's HQ and IT functions from Silicon Valley to San Antonio, TX because of the "math" some white collar genius put together like this Forbes nonsense. Sure, the "average" wage was one-half of what it was in Palo Alto, but because of the "quality" of local talent, we ended up hiring THREE TIMES as many staff to do the same amount of work. (For the math-challenged, that meant productivity sucked by 50%.) This wasn't just a drain on company resources, but on the few people who DID know their chops and had to hoist it in for the dullards. Those that made the move and saw the disaster had to in turn move completely out of the area to restore sanity to their careers. And the "icing on the cake" is that San Antonio is the only place I've stood hip deep in mud and had sand blow in my face. No thanky-thanky.

    --
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+ "I don't know what's wrong with you, but I'm quite sure it's hard to pronounce."
    1. Re:Collateral Damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It cracks me up to read that people think that Silicon Valley has better local talent than San Antonio.

      Sure, MAYBE the cream of the crop is better (and I say Maybe), but are you going to be hiring Steve Jobs or Larry Ellison or Scott McNealey (or Bill Hewlett, RIP)?

      Stanford was a great producer of educated people, but educated people don't necessarily equate to talent on the job. And the gold rush of the late 90s brought a lot of VERY untalented people out of the woodwork and into silicon valley.

      The average silicon valley wonk is far below the talent of what you can find in middle America if you just conduct a reasonable candidate search. And the average wonk in silicon valley is paid 40% more.

      My experience? I used to interview and hire people across the country for a MAJOR silicon valley-headquartered company. Hiring in Silicon Valley was the hardest spot I had to hire in - not because there wasn't some talent there, but because there were so many wanna-bes who job hop to rack up their salary and hide their deficiencies.

    2. Re:Collateral Damage by kabocox · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I once oversaw moving a firms's HQ and IT functions from Silicon Valley to San Antonio, TX because of the "math" some white collar genius put together like this Forbes nonsense. Sure, the "average" wage was one-half of what it was in Palo Alto, but because of the "quality" of local talent, we ended up hiring THREE TIMES as many staff to do the same amount of work. (For the math-challenged, that meant productivity sucked by 50%.) This wasn't just a drain on company resources, but on the few people who DID know their chops and had to hoist it in for the dullards. Those that made the move and saw the disaster had to in turn move completely out of the area to restore sanity to their careers. And the "icing on the cake" is that San Antonio is the only place I've stood hip deep in mud and had sand blow in my face. No thanky-thanky.

      This just tell's me that your firm doesn't know how to hire people. There are plenty of talented people in Texas. Heck, there are plenty of talented homegrown people in the Litte Rock, AR area. If your company can't find them, don't blame the area. I personnally believe this applies to all of the US. There are plenty of trainable college grads in most major US cities. If you think the talent/gurus are much better in a tech hot spot, then you are willing to pay a premium for equal talent not better talent. I'd think that most businesses that move to area's where the cost of living is lower end up hiring more people not to do the same amount of work. They hire more people because its cheaper and can get more done if the organization is properly run.

    3. Re:Collateral Damage by DaFallus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's odd. Southwest Research Institute is based in San Antonio and although they primarily do a lot of government funded research they have a lot of talented people working for them. There are also a large number of smaller technical companies based in San Antonio. I have a number of friends who still live there working in various tech jobs.

      San Antonio is a great place to live if you don't mind the slow pace of the city. It is one of the few cities I've lived in where you can do pretty well for yourself making around $30k. There is also a lot of cultural diversity, and I'm not just talking about the hispanic influence.

      I myself would have been happy to stay there after graduating but I just couldn't handle the slow pace that everyone lives at there. Also, the city itself is pretty poor and the roads are in horrible condition, there is a large gap between the rich all bundled away in Alamo Heights, Olmos Park, etc and the rest of the population. The crime there is also relatively high compared to what I've experienced while living in Houston and parts of Southern California. I've had my car broken into at least twice, witnessed a robbery at a gas station, and saw my friend get pistol whipped in the face and pulled out of the window of his car by would-be theives. So, if you're thinking about moving there, buy a gun and stay in well lit areas.

      --
      No one cares what your captcha was

      Houston TX, USA
  11. Re:I live in Fort Collins by eln · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Denver?

    Seriously, the problem with these communities is one of the major reasons the cost of living is so low is because the vast majority of jobs there pay very little. Sure, there might be some relatively high-paying tech jobs, but the problem is there are only 5 tech jobs in the whole city.

  12. Re:See how many correspond with 'Best places to li by fishbowl · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Some of the places on this list could be fairly okay for an educated, liberal, free-thinker type.
    But a lot of those places are damn scary.

    Also, it doesn't make sense that Richardson TX would draw less than half the salary of Plano TX.
    I mean seriously, these are both actually the same place for anyone who would be living in that part of the Dallas metro area, and for that matter, so is Carrollton. There may be a factor related to commuting on I-35 as opposed to Central Expressway, but come on... these are all the same damn place.

    Also, pointing out Gilbert Arizona as if it's really distinct from Phoenix is pretty stupid too.

    $226 for Scottsdale AZ (yes, it's a separate township, but snobs like to point out that it's *Scottsdale* to avoid saying they live in Phoenix)... That is a joke. Scottsdale median home price is in the $250's still, and most of the housing that a mid-career professional would be happy with are well over the $million mark.

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
  13. Re:I live in Fort Collins by atomic-penguin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well they must work at the bank, at the church, or they are in construction.

    --
    /^([Ss]ame [Bb]at (time, |channel.)){2}$/
  14. Or 'Best public schools in America'? by mosel-saar-ruwer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Apropros a previous poster who wanted to dis 'Bama & Idaho, how many correspond with the best public schools in America?

    1 Talented & Gifted Dallas Texas
    2 Jefferson County IBS** Irondale Ala.
    3 BASIS Charter Tucson Ariz.
    4 City Honors** Buffalo N.Y.
    5 Stanton College Prep** Jacksonville Fla.
    6 Eastside** Gainesville Fla.
    7 Suncoast Community** Riviera Beach Fla.
    8 Science/Engineering Magnet Dallas Texas
    9 International Academy* Bloomfield Hills
    10 Academic Magnet North Charleston S.C.
    11 Science Academy of South Texas Mercedes Texas
    12 North Hills School** Irving Texas
    13 H-B Woodlawn Arlington Va.
    14 Eastern Sierra Academy Bridgeport Calif.
    15 Richard Montgomery** Rockville Md.
    16 Myers Park** Charlotte N.C.
    17 Classen School of Advanced Studies** Oklahoma City Okla.
    18 Highland Park Dallas Texas
    19 Clarke County** Berryville Va.
    20 Little Rock Central Little Rock Ark.
    21 Hillsborough** Tampa Fla.
    22 San Diego High School of International Studies* San Diego Calif.
    23 John Miller-Great Neck North Great Neck N.Y.
    24 Wilson Magnet** Rochester N.Y.
    25 Atlantic Community** Delray Beach Fla.
    ETC.


    Flyover country seems to be mighty well represented on some of these lists...

    1. Re:Or 'Best public schools in America'? by servognome · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The criteria for the list is flawed. Looking at the number of AP tests students take doesn't indicate the quality of education, just that kids are encouraged to take AP exams. Look at the E & E% score of the #2 school. Even though the school averaged almost 10 test taken/senior, only 50% of seniors passed a single test!

      My biggest issue is how the scoring ignores the truly best schools. From the FAQ: "The Challenge Index is designed to honor schools that have done the best job in persuading average students to take college-level courses and tests. It does not work with schools that have no, or almost no, average students."
      When I looked at the list I was surprised I didn't see my old high school on the list, then I went through the FAQ and saw schools with average SAT scores over 1300 were excluded (I thought the list was for the top schools?). Even with that I think my school would have been artificially low on the list, since many students skipped some AP exams simply because they would not receive credit (eg MIT does not give credit for AP Chem or CompSci)

      I do agree with some of the reasoning behind the list: "Studies by U.S. Department of Education senior researcher Clifford Adelman in 1999 and 2005 showed that the best predictor of college graduation was not good high-school grades or test scores but whether or not a student had an intense academic experience in high school. "; but there has to be better criteria.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
  15. How about Iraq? by Digi-John · · Score: 2, Interesting

    According to a reliable friend of mine, the starting salary for IT jobs in Iraq is around $100,000 a year. He says you don't really need much training, you just need to be good with computers and willing to take risks. Of course, working in Iraq is pretty certain to end up more unpleasant than working in Idaho or Arkansas.

    --
    Klingon programs don't timeshare, they battle for supremacy.
  16. Intriguing by glwtta · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Lets see: cheaper housing + cheaper food/necessities + NOTHING ELSE TO SPEND MONEY ON = lower cost of living.

    Sad as it is, the expensive places to live are often expensive for a reason - people want to live there.

    --
    sic transit gloria mundi
    1. Re:Intriguing by vertinox · · Score: 2, Funny

      Lets see: cheaper housing + cheaper food/necessities + NOTHING ELSE TO SPEND MONEY ON = lower cost of living.

      Oh come on... We are nerds... We buy everything online and don't need to go out to buy stuff... As long as we can get borad band we'll be fine...

      We can get broad band at these places right?

      What? We can't... Well to hell with them!

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
  17. Move to Idaho... and Get Stuck There by razvedchik · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The biggest factor for me is to consider the possibility that if your job goes south (project ends, company folds, you don't like your boss), then you are stuck in the middle of nowhere. If you are relocating, you need to understand that at some point you will need to move again.

    If you are used to an environment where you can lose your job today and have a new one by the end of the week, then you will be shocked when you spend 6 months unemployed.

    Now don't get me wrong, I grew up in Idaho, but you need to realize that it is a complete backwater. =)

    --
    I do what the voices on my console tell me to do.
  18. Re:I live in Fort Collins by AaronPSU777 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "I have no idea where the people here work if they can afford to shop at all the new places. But above all, there are only two kinds of buildings under construction here. Churches and banks. Where do these people work???"

    I live in Ft. Collins also. Try HP, Poudre Valley Hospital, Eastman Kodak, Anheuser-Busch, Agilent, Celestica and Colorado State University for starters. Within a half-hour drive or so your will find IBM, Ball Aerospace, NOAA, the National Center for Atmospheric Research, Lockheed Martin, and the University of Colorado to name a few. All this is in a town within an hour or two of some of the best skiing, hiking, camping, climbing and biking in the country and a very affordable cost of living. Oh and did I mention there are several great microbreweries right in town :)

    Seriously, the only people I hear rag on Ft. Collins are the ones that have lived there their whole lives and don't realize how good they have it.

  19. Re:None here... by kaufmanmoore · · Score: 2, Funny

    just bide your time, football coach will have to open up eventually.

  20. Re:I live in Fort Collins by AaronPSU777 · · Score: 2

    Yep Boulder is much better, if you don't mind paying twice as much for your house ;)

  21. Montgomery? by siwelwerd · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The article's selection of cities seems random at best. Huntsville by far has the largest tech industry base in the state, and is roughly the same cost of living as Montgomery. Growing up here, roughly 40-50% of the kids I knew had at least one parent in some form of engineering. The defense/aerospace industry is huge here, so there are plenty of SW Engineering opportunities.

  22. Take it from some that lives in Montgomery... by jascat · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This place sucks! The job market is bad and you're going to be pretty much stuck working for either the state government or the DoD if you can find someone that has the right connections to get you a job. If you don't have a secret clearance, your chances seriously go down. Tech here just ain't it. Most places in Texas have lower costs of living with larger populations and better job markets. That's why I plan to head there in 2008.

    I've GOT to get out of this redneck filled, racist, little freaking town!

  23. I missed out by r00t · · Score: 3, Funny

    They are damn fine though.

    The defective kid rate is 3%. The normal defective kid rate is 1.5%. Not good, but not hopeless either.

    You can keep property in the family this way. You already know the in-laws. There are fewer screwy traditions to deal with, since you already share some grandparents. In general, bad surprises are unlikely.

  24. Re:See how many correspond with 'Best places to li by Hazelrah · · Score: 2, Informative

    I live in the Columbia/Ellicott City area, and I can tell you that it is not really a great place to live, so I do think the list is credible to me. The cost of living is extremely high - there are a ton of government workers and government contractors, so yes there a lot of tech jobs that pay more money than other areas of the country. I should know; I work in one. There are a lot of service based industries to serve all those people too - restaurants, strip malls, and every chain store you can imagine. But the extra salary does not begin to make up for the high cost of living - restaurants cost 10-20 more for a dinner for two, grocerries cost 20-50 me more than they did when I lived in PA. Taxes are a big pay killer - about 5% higher here than in PA for local taxes and let's not forget that my bigger salary is taxed high by the federal government too. Homes in Columbia/Ellicott City are out of reach for young professionals starting out in life. Oh and depite the rich service based industry I previously mentioned, restaurants are still packed, stores are always crowded, and the roads are clogged. The Federal government's Base Realignment and Closure will bring 20 some thousand new families to the area in the next few years, but Howard County (the county where Columbia/Ellicott City is) will not approve the necassary permits for new housing to accomdate the influx. It's a bit of a mess and it's not going to be get any better. The city may have ben hot 10 years ago, but is on the decline as far as quality of life goes. There are too many people chasing too few resources.

  25. Re:See how many correspond with 'Best places to li by ptbarnett · · Score: 2, Informative
    Also, it doesn't make sense that Richardson TX would draw less than half the salary of Plano TX.

    The numbers in the GP posting are population, not salary.

  26. Cost of living in AL is CHEAP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    You can laugh about Alabama. I did, until I came down for a job interview. Huntsville, AL is a great place. Because of the research park, there are people from all over the country. NASA and the Army's Redstone Arsenal have need for 30K to 50K high tech jobs.
    Huntsville is a very high tech city, it has the 2nd largest research center in the US.

    Brick houses (new) for under $100 a square foot. A brand new 4 bedroom, 3 bath 2500 square foot brick rambler on 1/3 of an acre in a new neighborhood for $240K. And it's not ramshackle construction.

    Overall, AL has the lowest taxes in the US. Good schools, thanks to NASA and the rocket scientists at the Redstone Arsenal.

    Insurance is a fraction of what I used to pay. Property taxes are less than 1/2 what I used to pay in a top 10 city for a house half that size. Electricity is cheap, thanks to the Tennessee Valley Authority. Gas is about the same as anywhere else, but there's no commute! No traffic! No crime! Do you know why there's no crime? Most of these people go to church! They have morals! It's not like NY City or Chicago, where you have to have Police on every street corner to keep the peace.

    On top of all this, I'm making more than I was in the big city! It is 3 hours to Atlanta, 5 hours to the Gulf Coast. 90 minutes to Nashville, Birmingham, or Chattanooga. 3 hours to Memphis. It's 4 hours to the Smoky Mountains.
     
      Winters are really mild, summers can get hot, but aren't as bad as Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, or Florida. It's not as humid as Florida or the other neighboring states. It's not as dry, or as hot, or as polluted as Southern California or Phoenix.

    The only bad thing... no Pro sports of any type unless you like the Atlanta teams.

    1. Re:Cost of living in AL is CHEAP! by Skreems · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Going to church has nothing to do with crime. I'd bet you just about anything that several of the Enron guys were regular churchgoers. It's all a matter of need and opportunity. It sounds like you live in a relatively low population density area, in which pretty much everybody is relatively well off. Those two things are really all you need to make the crime rate plummet.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    2. Re:Cost of living in AL is CHEAP! by moro_666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Do you know why there's no crime? Most of these people go to church!

      Most spanish people go to church at well, try to lose the sight of your backpack for a second in Barcelona, you'd be surprised ...

      I think it's down to the people themselves, not where they go or what absurd religion they believe in. AL has nice and smart people, the weather is too iffy for the `bad people`. They prefer Florida (godspeed and stay there...) :)

      --

      I'd tell you the chances of this story being a dupe, but you wouldn't like it.
    3. Re:Cost of living in AL is CHEAP! by avasol · · Score: 5, Funny

      "...Most of these people go to church! They have morals!........"

      Damn. I knew there was some reason not to move there after all. Thanks for pointing that out.

    4. Re:Cost of living in AL is CHEAP! by TommyMc · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Do you know why there's no crime? Most of these people go to church! They have morals! It's not like NY City or Chicago, where you have to have Police on every street corner to keep the peace.

      There is absolutely no way that the relationship between morals and church-going is causative and it is contentious whether it even has a correlative effect. Please stop propagating the myth that religion makes people better, it doesn't. This has been proved historically time and time again and continues to be proved in strongly secular countries across the world.

      --
      Stupid people think it's cool. Smart people thinks it's a joke; also cool.
    5. Re:Cost of living in AL is CHEAP! by Flibz · · Score: 3, Funny

      You've done it now!

      1. Find place with low crime rate (so relaxed police)
      2. Go on a crime spreee.
      3. ???
      4. Profit

      You just commpleted step 1.

    6. Re:Cost of living in AL is CHEAP! by nelsonal · · Score: 4, Informative

      There are very wide differences between locales in the US (which was the real point of this article).

      $4k/month would be difficult to survive comfortably on in NYC or San Francisco where taxes eat a good $1250-$1500, rent starts at $1000+ (for your own place in a dive), and utilities/regular bills would take another $200-300 (again in your own place). A decent cheap lunch is $7-10 or so in Manhatten. A beer is usually starts at $5.

      $4k/month doesn't go very far in a large US city (LA, DC, Chicago) where taxes are a hair lower (say $1000-$1250 you can rent places for $750 and up (these won't be nice but they will be ok) and bills are again $250+/-50. Decent lunch is $6-10 depending on how adventurous you are. Beers in a nice place are $4-5.

      $4k/month is a kings ransom in a the rural west or south (if you can find a job). Taxes will still eat $1000 or so, but there you can rent a nice 1 bedroom for under $500, a good cheap lunch will run $5-$6 and beers top out at $3.

      $4k a month would be a very good salary for a young professional there. Asr as fun money goes you'd have more than you would making $6k in one of the bigger cities, but there won't be as many young people in the smaller areas (because they weren't smart enough to look at cost of living when they got that job offer for $5k/mo.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
  27. Huntsville, AL by everphilski · · Score: 5, Informative

    Huntsville is a northern city transplanted in the south.

    Read what the AC said in this post. I'd write everything he said but I'm lazy. I'm an engineer, I work on Redstone Arsenal here in Huntsville, AL. Housing is cheap. Taxes are cheap. Utilities are cheap. While I was in college (I went to UAH) I was paying $350 a month for a 1-bedroom apartment. My wife and I just purchased a brand new brick home for $80 a square foot. Other homes in town, new, brick are going for $51 by reputable builders. My utilities bill is averaging $150 a month, including getting the lawn started (lots of water) and kids. Summers are freaking hot, being from Wisconsin, but the air conditioning is good and the house is well-insulated. Get a DirecTV so you can watch "real" sports :)

    Huntsville has more PhD's per square mile than anywhere in the world, except Silcon Valley. Second biggest research park in the US, fourth in the world. Tons of R&D goes on here, both NASA and all aspects of Defense, biotech, etc. Benefits for most companies that I've seen are exceptional and educations (masters, PhD's) are admired. Most companies will put you through school if you want them.

    1. Re:Huntsville, AL by CRCulver · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Huntsville also has no real public transportation and requires that one use a car to get anywhere at all. Factor in the cost of petrol. I grew up in Huntsville, but I'm glad that my family moved out of there before I finished school and that I was able to discover a world where one doesn't have to pay a an arm and a leg and massively pollute just to get some milk from the store or visit the post office.

    2. Re:Huntsville, AL by fredistheking · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You forgot to mention the fact that Huntsville is heavily religious, conservative and their entire engineering industry is government funded defense.

    3. Re:Huntsville, AL by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I had to travel to Huntsville a few times for NASA work. It got barren pretty quickly when you drove anywhere and it was brutally hot. People who lived there said it was too hot in the summer to do much of anything and the lack of any pedestrian features (like sidewalks) encouraged a lot of the waistlines I saw. One local even said he felt safer visiting Boston than being in downtown Huntsville after dark. Most of the jobs and companies down there are dependent on government $ which means that they are at the mercy of politics. The focus on the military also means there is little variety in the types of jobs available.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    4. Re:Huntsville, AL by 8ball629 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is off-topic and maybe a pitiful pitch but your company's website doesn't seem to be 100% functional in Firefox, seeing how I work at a software company that specializes in website development... yeah :).

    5. Re:Huntsville, AL by __aatjxn8377 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Most spanish people go to church at well, try to lose the sight of your backpack for a second in Barcelona, you'd be surprised ...

      Most people in Spain do *not* go to the church, even if they say they are catholic. Less in Barcelona (there are other things to do). Much less the ones taking your backpack (I don't think they go to the mosque, either).

      This does not mean that high church attendance implies less crime, only that you don't know what you are saying.

    6. Re:Huntsville, AL by cdrudge · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And of course mass transit is green and has zero pollution as well. I live in an averge sized town and while we don't have subways, we do have a decent bus system. Based off of the amount of smoke they spew at every intersection, I'm not sure how much better public transportation is over driving yourself in a well maintained vehicle.

      Even once you factor in the cost of vehicles, it's still cheaper where I live then in Silicon Valley. I use a tank of gas a week ($40) to get to work and errands. Insurance is $500/year. The vehicle itself is an old 97 Cavalier that I have probably $2500 in. Maintenance is $1000/year. Using a little common sense, you can combine trips so that you aren't wasting gas.

      You comment about going out and discovering a world. How exactly does one do that when they are reliant on mass transportation to do it? Last I checked, most mass transit systems don't cover more then a relatively small geographical area.

    7. Re:Huntsville, AL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      You forgot to mention the fact that Huntsville is heavily religious, conservative and their entire engineering industry is government funded defense.

      I'm a software engineer living in Huntsville, and I'm an atheist. I've lived in several other places, and I haven't noticed the religious influence in Huntsville being any more overbearing here than anywhere else. We have our share of bars, strip clubs, and other fun activities for us sinners.

      You're right that most of the engineering jobs are DoD funded, but there are still others that are pure commercial. Everyone's favorite VoIP Linux application Asterisk is developed in Huntsville at Digium. I'll see Mark Spencer around town fairly often.

      If you're interested in the number of engineering companies in Huntsville, check out this link here.

      As with anything, your choice of location is going to be a compromise. Is Huntsville as cool/fun as San Francisco? No. But, my mortgage on a 2200 sq. ft. house is less than $1K a month, and I have a 12 minute commute to the office.

    8. Re:Huntsville, AL by plague3106 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh? So you have deer, pheasants, foxes, hawks and other assorted wildlife for neighbors?

      Why would I want wild animals as neighbors? But yes we do have fox and hawks around.

      Fishing on a lake with no one else in sight?

      I find fishing an mindnumbing waste of time. But I do have a lake which I can go boating on, or a beach which I can even walk to. The larger beaches may be crowed, but the smaller ones are empty or have only a few people.

      Woods to ramble in?

      We also have trees here, believe or not. There's a wildlife preserve, so you can't go in it, but there are woods nearby, with a bike path through some. If you mean a huge forest, I had that growing up; there's only so much you can do in the woods by yourself..

      Hunting within walking distance?

      I don't hunt, so its not a big deal. Hunting seems rather pointless to me anyway; I fail to see how stalking something to shoot it is fun, especially if there's no chance of you really being in danger..

      Neighborhoods where you know everyone personally, and their back door is always open for visitors?

      Most people suck, why would I want to know them personally? Why would I want to visit them, I have everything I want in my own home. If I want to visit someone, I visit my friends, not someone that just happened to move in next to me.

      Don't automatically assume that what /you/ want is what everyone wants.

      Where did I say that I was speaking for everyone? I wasn't, and my post was trying to illistrate that yes, some people DO like living in a city.

  28. Just do it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just do it, take off, travel a bit, see what you like, look for a job there or create one (or two). I did it a few years ago, just got tired of major urban living. Girlfriend came home in tears and told me she couldn't get gas for her car because of all the winos and crackheads hanging around the station near our house, they were harassing her. I said fuck it, we're moving! A month later or so we had sold off most of our junk-and that is all furniture and whatnot is is junk, easily replaceable. We stuck the stuff we really wanted to keep in a storage unit, then took off camping. Within a few weeks we had found a nice rural area we liked, not terribly wilderness, no way serious urban, an in between kind of place. Two weeks after that had a full time job. I kept my (still small) net work going the whole time hitting public libraries for access. Now, we're happy. Got plenty of space, nice little cozy house, whole comfy rural scene. Walk out on the porch see hummingbirds hitting the flowers, it's *nice* Lack for nothing. Trust your instincts, "go with the flow", look until it feels "right", settle in. Camping is cheap, gas is still affordable, just take off! if you wait for it to be perfect you'll never do it. Ya, less money, but less expenses, quality of life so much higher. Now the two or three times a year I am forced to go to "the big city" I can see how absolutely termite mound dismal it was, how dirty loud and stinky major urban areas are, and kick myself for waiting so long to make the move. That crap about big cities being "better" is consumerist bullshit. About the only thing "better" about big cities is how much you have to work to feed the pigs money habit as they suck your wallet dry. A traffic jam to me now is someone stopped next to the mail carrier to talk about something for a minute, big deal.

    Make the move before millions more get the urge, the real estate bubble pop is right around the corner and all those exploiters/grifters pushing that get rich quick crap will be branching out looking for new areas to trash out with their greed. That and the morons running the foreign policy, they could screw the pooch and really bork stuff out in the middle east, better to get rural where life is more sustainable for the long haul and you can actually develop "neighbors" and local ties. Big cities can go to pure hell in one day as soon as anything gets turned off, electricty, water, food deliveries, etc. We got a well, a garden, and a generator and a firewood lot, screw it, let that other stuff back in town rot. Let them enjoy their "ambience". See if "starbucks" will support them.

    Anyway, if you needed a nudge, take this as an official big NUDGE;) Good luck!

  29. I'm in Vietnam by wisebabo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Good Morning Vietnam!

    Well that's the time here as I post this. Anyway, it's very interesting living in Ho Chi Min (rated the #12th best major city in the world to live in and the best in Asia)*. I've got to say that, in a country that has a per capita GDP less than a tenth that of the United States a dollar goes a long way.

    The key is how to make it. If you can make it by working for a major foreign corporation here (read: oil company) and get a Western salary, you will live like a king. Unfortunately local opportunities to make that kind of money are otherwise almost nil. Even if you can speak Vietnamese you will find that even a very high salary here (doing a job like coding) in not much relative to the U.S. Also you may find yourself thought of being overqualified; I do very high end media and some people here told me they were afraid to contact me after seeing my CV because they thought I'd charge a fortune.

    While you can make a good living here teaching English I doubt that would appeal to the skilled professionals that make up Slashdot's readers. No, the best job is one in which you can work "at the end of a wire", that is live here but work for some U.S. company via the internet. The internet infrastructure is just sufficient to do that (which is one reason why I can't live in Cambodia). Internet telephony here is good (at least from my location). If your job is portable so you don't have to physically see your clients more than once or twice a year then this might "work" for you!

    By the way, the cost of living here is not going to be one-tenth that of the U.S. unless you live like a native. Instead if you insist on all the perks of the U.S. it's probably about half the U.S. cost of living (more if you want a car!). On the other hand, wealth is relative; compared to the natives you WILL be very rich and will be treated as such. That has its own perks. ;)

    * this recent study (which, to my travelled eyes cannot possibly be true) was based on a bunch of factors including how much (or little) the average person "impacted the environment". Since Vietnamese people are still very poor they don't impact the environment very much which led to a inflated score. Still Ho Chi Minh City has its charms; zero violent crime (it's a police state), pace of life (you can actually meet people and develop friendships), scale of the city (more like one giant neighborhood than a forest of skyscrapers). But act soon, things are changing fast and in 5 years it'll be unrecognizable. In that case you'll:

    Miss Saigon.

    1. Re:I'm in Vietnam by wisebabo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Prostitution is illegal in Vietnam although I've never seen a foreigner being arrested/prosecuted. Recreational drugs is DEFINITELY not permitted, that'll get you in prison for sure. Finally private armies are ludictrous when the country is a police state, all power remains with the government (not the people, or constitution for that matter), even the local mafia/gangsters exist solely at the grace of the authorities (and they don't do much anyway, there was a bust where a bunch of them were just rounded up and summarily executed).

      No if that's what you're into, Cambodia is the place to go except I don't know if prostitution is officially sanctioned (there is an active campaign against child prostitution thank god). Singapore(!) surprisingly has legal prostitution (probably to give gum chewing addicts something to do).

  30. Relative vs. Absolute Pay by janzen · · Score: 2, Insightful
    OK, we've heard that in Manila you can be happy with $450; in Canada with $3900. In New York or London you'd probably need lots more, etc. All relative, right? Well, not quite.

    First, there's travel. If our friend in Manila wants to go skiing in Whistler, then he's going to have to save his spare cash for a long time. On the other hand, if the Canadian guy goes diving in the Philippines, he's going to be amazed at how far his money goes.

    Then there are imported goods. If you have a taste for French wine, or Japanese electronics, or Italian furniture, the price may vary a bit due to shipping, exchange rates, import duties, etc., but there's a fixed minimum amount that you're going to have to pay, no matter how low the rest of your cost of living may be.

    Finally, you have to ask whether you're really planning to stay in the same place forever. That may be the case for a lot of people; but if you dream about living in another country one day, then you also need to consider the cost of living there. It works both ways, obviously: plenty of North American retirees move to Mexico, Singaporeans go to Malaysia, and so on, partly in order to make their savings go farther. But if you're picturing a villa on the Côte d'Azur, you won't get there by working at a relatively well-paid job in a less expensive country.

    1. Re:Relative vs. Absolute Pay by owlman17 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      True. Some things are absolute, some relative. The Canadian guy you replied to said you could live on $900/mo in Canada but your quality of life would suck. With $900/month in Manila, I could retire by age 45 or sooner.

      An iPod, or a decent MOBO, or even a mid-range graphics card would cost me half a month's wages, on that $450/mo figure. Yes, I've had to save up for those. I've also had to save up just to tour next-door countries. I personally know a lot of people from North America, Japan, Singapore, etc, who've come over here to retire. Of course, my 'wants' are somewhat different from a 1st world person's, but that's another story. Anyway, if one has (relatively) simple wants and needs, a 3rd world person having an outsourced 1st world job can live pretty well.

  31. Try Charlotte NC by alshithead · · Score: 2, Informative

    Charlotte is a great area. You have to search a little bit for jobs because the VLB's (very large banks) are outsourcing to India but I got my current gig because of that fact. The customers don't like dealing with people who don't speak English as their primary language or people who's accents are mostly indecipherable so I get to help them migrate to a new version of an application they consider very important to their business. It's a well paying contract position, which is new to me having worked 8 years for my previous employer in DC and 10 years for my employer before that. It's kind of cool being able to be focused on one main task instead of wearing way too many hats on a daily basis because of the historical knowledge I had gained over the years. The job market looks really good here for the future. Big banking isn't going to suddenly go away from Charlotte and there is starting to be signicant bleed over from the Raleigh area in other IT centric businesses. Other Charlotte benefits are good schools, real estate where you can get twice the house for half the price of the DC metro area, people who are mostly civilized (unlike the uptight pricks in the larger metro areas to the north), and almost none of the crappy winter weather of the north but still get the change of seasons. The mountains are an hour to the west and the beach is a few hours to the east. There are plenty of larger city type recreational opportunities in Charlotte while a lot of the negatives of major metro areas are absent. Crime isn't too bad and despite locals' complaints the traffic isn't nearly as bad as the DC or areas further north. You also have all of the rural type recreational activities failrly close to civilization. Life is good here. Don't screw it up for me. ;)

    --
    I reserve the right to think for myself. Others' opinions are optional. Puppy on lap = typos...not illiteracy.
  32. What Is "Cost Of Living"? by nick_davison · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Job A:
    $50,000/year, $10,000 annual rent.

    Job B:
    $100,000/year, $40,000 annual rent.

    Relative to the cost of rent, Job A is phenominal: You're making five times the cost of rent. Job B sucks: you're only earning 2.5 times rent. By this measure, job A is far and away the better option - by a factor of 2.

    The thing is, once you've paid the varying rent, where do you spend the rest of your money? The decent spec new PC will be $2,000 in Rancho Santa Fe, Manhattan or BFI. The new $25,000 car will be $25,000 wherever you buy it. The big TV is the same price wherever. And, most important of all, the internet porn subscriptions run the same wherever you are too.

    At that point, would you rather the job that's 5 times "cost of living" but only leaves you with $40,000 or the one that gives a sucky 2.5x but leaves you with $60,000 extra.

    Next, on the simple level, let's look at that cost of living. Assuming you get on, buy and pay a mortgage off, in 20 years time the place with the poor salary relative to cost of living will leave you with a $500,000-$1,000,000 home vs. the $200,000-$250,000 place in the "better" area. Now, aged 40, you can up and move to the cheap place, selling your home, buying one of the nicest places in the cheap area and having a nice large nest egg lfet over to let you get to retire early. My in-laws have just done exactly that and apparently a lot of people in Texas are getting seriously pissed at all the Californians coming in, buying huge homes after selling up smaller places in CA and pushing up the Texan cost of living for people who're still paid no more.

    And, finally, there's a reason rent and property are so expensive in some areas. Go to California and look out of the window. Rumor has it that other parts of the world have a condition called Seasonal Affective Disorder. Land is expensive in California because you never shovel snow, you rarely deal with crazy humidity, you rarely have the insane heat of Arizona, you rarely get mosquitos the size of Volkswagens and you can sit on the beach on New Year's Day. In short, supply and demand means that when there's a crazy price, there's generally a great reason for it.

    So, yes, some areas have high costs of living and lower salaries in relation to that cost. But I.T. is famous for the fact that we out earn most other professions and, once you get past earning about three times cost of average rent, everything else is gravy. Sure, you reach that point faster elsewhere - but once you do reach it (and you do in I.T.), you keep going even further when the numbers are bigger.

    I've watched a lot of friends leave California because they're in other fields and it's just too expensive to live here if you don't earn well. But once you get to the kind of salaries I.T. tends to pay, the cost of rent becomes a relatively minimal part of the total cost of living a great life.

    1. Re:What Is "Cost Of Living"? by Atario · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The thing is, once you've paid the varying rent, where do you spend the rest of your money? The decent spec new PC will be $2,000 in Rancho Santa Fe, Manhattan or BFI. The new $25,000 car will be $25,000 wherever you buy it. The big TV is the same price wherever. And, most important of all, the internet porn subscriptions run the same wherever you are too.

      At that point, would you rather the job that's 5 times "cost of living" but only leaves you with $40,000 or the one that gives a sucky 2.5x but leaves you with $60,000 extra.
      I so wish I still had that last mod point I lost overnight. That's exactly what I came in here to say.

      Then again, maybe I should hide this clear thinking from others -- leaves more for me.
      --
      "A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
    2. Re:What Is "Cost Of Living"? by Overzeetop · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Insightful, indeed, however there are still dangers in that water. I lived in SoCal and couldn't wait to get out. To many stupid people to deal with. And I grew up in DC, so that's really saying quite a lot. It was nice not to have rain, but unless you lived on the coast the weather was stifling for a good bit of the year and the air made your throat and lungs hurt in the summer months.

      If you're going to stay and ride the housing price wave, remember that prices can (and do) stagnate from time to time. Even while I was there, I saw some people's houses values stagnate, while others hit the lottery (one coworker bought a house in a neighborhood for $150k in January, and by May his development was considered "hip", and his next door neighbor sold a similar house in the low $400s). Think of it as investing in the stock market in the early 90s, and selling your portfolio and retiring in 2000. Everyone should do it because you can now live on the cash and not work again. Except, of course, that you happened to hit a nice ride, and everyone who jumped into the market in 2000 isn't quite so happy with the results. Housing prices are still speculative.

      You're point that living in a high-dollar housing place will get you a nice sale and cash-out when you leave is true - that money does add up over time. Worse, if you live in a cheap, normal growth (which is about 6%/yr* before expenses, repairs, and taxes) and have to end up moving to the big cities, you're royally hosed. Houses really do drive the cost of living, but there is a certain investment quality to them, so its not all cost. The other big one is taxes. They can vary quite a bit, and are affected by RE price. I have a cousin who pays as much or more in taxes on her 5BR house in Jersey than I pay for the entire mortgage on my house in Virginia. That's money gone forever. And it's not necessarily proportional: I paid about $.20-$.23 per $100 of actual value in a rural county in VA, vs ~$2.40/$100 in Maryland.

      Not saying that you aren't correct - your plan has merit if you can stand the atmosphere

      *Data point: $130k house ~15m north of DC beltway in 1978 sold for $700k in 2003. Super hot area, McMansions galore, very desirable (large) lot with a horse barn, stone arena, fencing all put in since the original purchase. Realtor's "market value" was $540k (average from three good local agents), but the owners decided to advertise themselves instead. Increase over that 25 years: 7% per year actual, 6% by the "Realtors' Market Value" estimate. I think the realtors would have been on target if it hadn't been for the horse barn & amenities.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  33. Problem with Small Cities by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The problem with the smaller places is that they tend to be one horse towns. They usually have one big employer (like Micron in Boise) and a few much smaller companies that rarely hire and that is it. If you moved there to work for the big company and got sick of it or they had a layoff you'd basically have to sell the house and move. Your choices are just too limited in those places. Also the cost of living might be lower but so would your pay. Ok you say? But the cost of cars, plane tickets, computer toys, etc doesn't go down for you. You generally pay the same as the guy in NYC. They aren't going to sell you that cool new car at half price just because you live in East Belch MO.

    Now if I could get a job in, say, Grand Junction CO so I could hike in some incredible terrain every weekend I might be willing to make an exception.

    --
    It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
  34. Supply and demand by nick_davison · · Score: 4, Funny

    Wait a moment, what am I saying?

    The more people realize this, the more they'll be encouraged to move here, the more demand for the same supply of housing and the more I have to pay.

    Iowa is the shiznit. It's the coolest place ever. I'm in California and it's awful here. We have to walk up hill both ways and the hills are steeper here (the land's scrunched up by our daily earthquakes). And hot? Like you wouldn't believe. Don't believe that stuff about coastal areas being cooler - it's hell here. No one should ever move here because, high salaries or not, life's too expensive. Iowa's the place. Des Moines is just super awesome. Off you go!

  35. Go to Alberta by Easy2RememberNick · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you want to know where high paying jobs are go to Alberta, Canada it's insane!

      McDonald's workers are getting $15/hour, signing bonuses and $100 extra pay if you show up for all your shifts that week.

      Housing is a bit of a problem, there's a booming business finding old homes, ripping them off their foundation and dragging them to Calgary.

      Calgary is sprawling outward at an incredible rate, it's bigger in area than NY city.

      It's all from oil, tar sands that is, Canada exports oil since we make more than we use. The US gets about 10% of its oil from Canada and that will probably increase due to the US public's of growing concern about "foreign oil".

      People are going there by the thousands every day, it's crazy!

  36. cost of living vs. MacBook Pro by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One problem with cost of living arguments is that many items nowadays are priced nationally, not locally. If I want a brand new MacBook Pro, for example, its going to cost the same whether I live in New York City or Frostbite Falls, Minnesota. Same for HDTV sets, and many other things that we geeks like to buy at a much higher rate than the "typical" family whose needs are used to figure cost of living.

  37. As a Des Moines resident, I take offense! by aduzik · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I know you meant "Des Moines is just super awesome" as a jab, but it really is a great place to live. Granted, it has terrible weather just like the rest of Iowa, but if you can get past that, it's wonderful. And, I'll have you know, that as of 2004 Des Moines officially employs more people in the insurance industry than any other US city -- Hartford, CT is now the Des Moines of the east. Mind you, that only employs tens of thousands of information technology people, but no worries. Wells Fargo is moving 30,000 jobs here over the next few years. Terrible life for a programmer, I know. Sadly, each year, my salary just keeps going up and up as competition for talented IT people increases.

    Really, though, it's a great size (about 400,000 people), has fantastic restaurants for a city its size, great shopping and attracts great entertainment (the Iowa State Fair excepted) Oh, and did I mention that you can get wherever you want to go in a matter of minutes? That's right; the city is spread out enough that traffic is rarely a problem. Well, OK, traffic won't be a problem as soon as they finish the vastly new and improved Intersate 235 through town.

    And, if you're smart like me, you live in one of the bigger nearby suburbs (ahem... Ankeny) where the housing is cheap, plentiful, and largely new construction. If that's not your thing, you could live in one of the dozens of new lofts they've built in downtown Des Moines.

    It annoys me when people who live on the coasts, and have never lived anywhere else, can't imagine that life in the square states could be anything but hellish. I've got firends and family who live in California, and you couldn't pay me enough to live there. Mind you, there's nowhere else in Iowa where I'd want to live, but Des Moines is, in my estimation, the shiznit. Living in sunny California is not without its problems too. What's that you're paying for gas there? And it takes you how long to get to work? My house has an attached garage, a big yard and is twice the size of your place and you pay three times as much?

    Both of the jobs I've had while living in Des Moines have paid quite well relative to the cost of living. I've actually turned down job offers elsewhere -- you know, in the "good" part of the country -- because I simply couldn't live as well there.

    But wait! What am I saying? People are going to want to live here and increase the demand for the same supply of housing and then I'll have to pay more! California is the shiznit. Coolest place ever. I'm in Iowa and it's terrible. We have to walk uphill both ways -- in the snow, mind you -- we have blizzards every day. Even in the summer! California's the place. Los Angeles is just super awesome. Off you go!

    --
    If it's not one thing it's your mother.
  38. Re:I live in Fort Collins by mgabrys_sf · · Score: 3, Informative

    HALF HOUR DRIVE FROM FT. COLINS?

    In a Testerrosa perhaps! You're right on the Wyoming border for shit's-sake!

    You're describing Jobs in Boulder and Greeley was more than an hour north of there - and Ft. Colins is another hour north of Greeley. Please stop yanking people's chains!

    I lived in Colorado off and on since 1984, and the tech jobs there were always in a state of downward flux. It only took a few companies to flood a ton of skilled workers into the marketplace - followed by a continual influx of people into the state from places in CA which would drive up the cost of living to levels akin to Seattle. Between 1994 and 1996, the same identical apartment that I rented came on the market 2 years later at 225% what I rented it for.

    Pay levels did NOT increase to meet those cost of living increases. And housing? The whole of the southern suburbs of Denver went through the ROOF in housing costs. But hey - getting Quark, Echostar (and the markers of the Dish Network wasn't a small enterprise) would only give up more than 35k if you pulled on all molars. Most of Echostar's jobs were manning the call centers anyway. Real high-dollar work there. AB? Um most of their tech work is at HQ which is 876 miles east of you in St. Louis. IBM - always downsizing, Storage Tech - on the rocks, HP - oh there's a stable one of those, Kodak - another stable one of those - NOAA - no shortage of govt jobs in the fields of science, and the application time is so short too for high-end research. Aerospace is ok now that we're killing people again, but these aren't standard IT jobs unless you're ready to check stress-dynamics on dynamic peak loads within an airframe right after you finish that firewall you're putting on that intranetwork hub.

    The biggest downfall of any midwestern tech market is that once the company runs through a round of cutbacks you're going to be hard-pressed to find someone else to pick up the slack. I know plenty of suckers hurting after Sprint ditched them in the middle of bumfuck Kansas with no other options for work elsewhere.

  39. Telecommute by BenjyD · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Get the best of both worlds - telecommute from a cheap area to a job in an expensive area. Works for me, and means I might actually be able to afford to buy a house before I retire.

  40. And Seattle is the most overpriced city. by Dogun · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You know, Forbes put out an article about a year ago saying Seattle was the most overpriced city in the USA. As I had just started working when this article came out, I was mildly concerned about that statement.

    Turns out Forbes is a rag. Seattle is cheaper than any other city I have ever lived in. Rent is cheaper. Wages are about the same. Gas is just as bad here as anywhere. Fruit is decent quality and only slightly worse than california prices. There's no state income tax.

    Considering the rather 'innovative' reporting they've done on the SCO v. IBM matter as well, I really do wonder if there's a substantial difference in quality between New Scientist and Forbes.

    I'm not saying THIS article is crap, but quality of life and cost of living can be very different matters and are not easy things to sum up. I'd advise that nobody use an article like this to make a life-altering decision.

  41. quality of life. by Shivetya · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The quality of life than many Americans does not require public transportation. In fact I would be a good number actually see public transportation as a sign of where NOT to live.

    Some of course will take that and run off spouting racism,bigotry, or whatnot. The simple fact is that at the end of the day many aspire to nothing more than being away from it all. Stand alone housing and visual separation from the "business world - read: minimarts/gas stations/grocery stores" is key to the happiness of many. Sure we want them to still be convienent and a short hop in the car isn't an impediment.

    I'm even moving further out simply because where I bought has changed so much in 9 years that its no longer the area I desired to live in. Lots of good people are here but the little businesses have creeped down the road to where its no longer "open".

    As for your "pay and arm and a leg to massively pollute". Yeah, whatever. Three dollar, heck even 5 dollar a gallon gas isn't going to change my behaviour and I doubt that it will change that of others who live where I do. Cars are far better today than ever and that simpleton slight of yours is just silly. If I want massive pollution I will go to the big city with its public transportation because even there in the land of so called "enlightened" thinking a great many of them seem to not use that very public transportation they deem "good for others". I can go see the trash piled in alleys and cigarette butts lining the sidewalk. Oh yeah, massively pollute. Cities have no ground to stand on.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:quality of life. by MadJeff451 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Public transportation is about energy efficiency. How much energy is required for me to drive to work, cool my car. There are ~150 other people on my floor who might drive to work as well. That's a lot of energy. Comare that to a bus, and you'd see a bit of savings - lugging more people about in a less energy-efficient vehicle results in a net gain. Comare that to a train, and ... well you get my point.

      Now about cities. Don't think of a city as a cesspool of garbage (I lived in NY for awhile, I know it can be). Think of a city as giving citizens better energy eficiency per person. For instance, when you heat your house, even if it's well insulated, heat will leak out. Multiply that by the number of people on your block and you get quite a bit of wasted heat per person. Now imagine an apartment building, which differs from a house in that when heat escapes it doesn't all go to waste, much of it will drift up into the upper levels, providing more heat to the unit above, allowing persons on upper levels to turn down their furnace.

      The amount of energy you or I waste per person may be minimal, but when you think about how all that adds up the argument that living in less populated areas is more eco-friendly becomes less plausable. We might *feel* closer to the earth with nobody else around, but we increase our impact.

    2. Re:quality of life. by admiralh · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Leeching off of the city dwellers" means that the extra infrastructure costs of urban sprawl are typically shared across the entire population (in the form of income taxes, sales taxes, gas taxes, higher insurance rates, and higher utility costs), rather than assigned directly to the people that choose to "get away from it all" and live out in the sprawl.

      Essentially, the "sprawlers" are subsidized by the people who stay in the cities or existing suburbs.

      The sad fact is that urban sprawl is unsustainable. Not only are we covering up prime farmland with McMansions, but the energy cost is unsustainable, especially considering the dual problems of Peak Oil and Global Warming.

      Jared Diamond's book "Collapse" would be an excellent first step in your education.

      --
      Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
    3. Re:quality of life. by vinn01 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well said.

      Most of the spawler's leeching will be done off of future generations. Future generations will inherit McMansion subdivisions instead of rich farmlands, a road system that costs a huge amount to maintain, little low cost mass transit (like European trains), a crushing national debt , and soaring energy costs.

      To repeat the parents point: "urban sprawl is unsustainable". There will come a point to there are simply not enough tanker trucks (and petrol to fill them) to meet the energy demands of the spawlers.

      I think in the not so distant future dense suburban subdivisions will be converted to small towns by the integration of goods and services. Other subdivisions will be abandoned because of their access make it too hard to move goods/services/people to and from their location. Or the integration of goods and services is too hard because of their low density.

    4. Re:quality of life. by CRWeaks23 · · Score: 2, Informative
      Oh yeah, massively pollute. Cities have no ground to stand on.

      Your opinions on where you want to live and how much you mind paying for gas are fine, they are your opinions. However, saying that "Cities have no ground to stand on" is somewhat ignorant. Read this when you're bored, titled "NYC is the Greenest City in America." At least read the bold line from the passage below...

      http://www.walkablestreets.com/manhattan.htm

      An Excerpt:
      Most Americans, including most New Yorkers, think of New York City as an ecological nightmare, a wasteland of concrete and garbage and diesel fumes and traffic jams, but in comparison with the rest of America it's a model of environmental responsibility. By the most significant measures, New York is the greenest community in the United States, and one of the greenest cities in the world. The most devastating damage humans have done to the environment has arisen from the heedless burning of fossil fuels, a category in which New Yorkers are practically prehistoric. The average Manhattanite consumes gasoline at a rate that the country as a whole hasn't matched since the mid-nineteen-twenties, when the most widely owned car in the United States was the Ford Model T. Eighty-two per cent of Manhattan residents travel to work by public transit, by bicycle, or on foot. That's ten times the rate for Americans in general, and eight times the rate for residents of Los Angeles County. New York City is more populous than all but eleven states; if it were granted statehood, it would rank 51st in per-capita energy use.
  42. Basic Economics?? by Yad · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think a lot of people have been missing something here. If you work in I/T in Silicon Valley, your wages may be lower, but you also have a low switching cost. On the other hand, if you work in Montanta in I/T your wages may be higher, but there is also a higher switching cost. Example: If you get layed off in Montana, it will take longer to find another job in the I/T field, and if you get laid off in the Silicon Valley, it won't take you as long. This is basic economies of agglomeration. So while it may seem wages are higher/lower in one area or another, what is really happening is that firms in Montana have to pay more because of the high switching cost associated with finding a new job in the field. More than likely the person will end up having to move and/or spend some time unemployed.

    --
    The distance between insanity and genius is measured only by success. -Elliot Carver
  43. Re:Not Entirely by plague3106 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Who cares what your neighbors believe?

    It matters if you kids go to the same school, and they start trying to push ID. Or ban alcohol sales on Sunday. Or prohibit just about anything else they find 'unethical.'

  44. Birmingham, AL IT Guy Checking in by dmcooper · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I do pretty well here... housing outside of the main city is extremely affordable. For a 20+ year old with a wife and two kids and low personal debt - can't be beat.

    --
    "To work for libertarianism -- to oppose the growth of government and aid the liberation of the individual -- used to be
  45. Don't forget income taxes by AnalogDiehard · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I turned down a great job in Long Island. While the pay was attractive, it put me in a higher tax bracket and took away the ability to pay for the outrageous cost of real estate. Not to mention higher cost of insurance, auto maintenance, utilities. It all added up to higher expenses and too little money to put away for savings. And if I lost my job, unemployment would not begin to meet the cost of rent. Monster.com has a tool that lets you find the cost of living in an area where there is a job opening.

    Too many people neglect to check salary offers against income taxes - you'd be shocked how much of a bite they take out.

    --
    Eternity: will that be smoking, or non-smoking? I Corinthians 6:9-10
  46. There Are Reasons For High Cost Of Living by tompatman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I always see these comparisons of the best places to live, how to get the most value for your dollar, etc. In most places where the cost of living is very high, it's usually because a lot of people want to live there. Why? Because it's a great place to live. Places like San Diego, San Francisco and Boston are beautiful cities which offer a style of living and things to do that can't be found in Idaho or Alabama. If all you want to do is save your pennies and have a big house, then these are good places to live. But money is most definately not everything.