So after about 8 years of various unsuccessful startup attempts I bit the bullet and got a job.
Classical 6 figures tech job in AI for bigtech. Fully remote chill work hours you know the deal.
I used to live for work pouring all my heart into an idea talking to customers iterating working day and night.
Now, I want to work to live travel and most importantly I want to meet as many interesting tech people as possible.
Now my question. Where should I go? Ideally, I want to be able to go back to Germany at least for 3 months a year the rest I am open for suggestions.
Should I move to a digital nomad place like Bali or Portugal? Or a tech hub like San Francisco or Austin?
Time zone wise Hong Kong would be ideal but I am mostly working on my own so it isn't a deal breaker.
Also wherever I am, should I go to conferences ? Meetups? Dm random people on Twitter and Hackernews? Otherwise, il just keep chatting up a bunch of people in co-working spaces.
I feel like nowadays there must be quite a few people in this situation. Would love to hear your thoughts.
I'm not sure about the idea of moving to a place entirely to be around other tech people. If you have an interest in places like Germany you should go there. You will be able to find tech people nearly everywhere. Your interests outside of tech will be what makes you interesting and binds you with other people. You find more quality dates outside of dating apps and singles nights right? It's the same thing.
Also I would say in a tech hub or not probably isn't THAT important unless you are raising money or going through a tech accelerator. A small group of say 5 dedicated tech people (like I found in Taiwan) was much closer to break into than my group in San Francisco.
Publicly responding is better than DMs at the start, I'm not sure why. People get weird about it. Twitter, Hackernews, Meetups, NomadList, Tech discords and slack groups are all fair game.
Austin, or any other "tech hub" is not on the same plane of existence.
It also seems to me that there’s a noticeably growing tech scene in Philly, Boston and London but I’m less familiar with those communities.
You may want to find a place where tech nomads hang out, not the hardcore corporate slavery techies.
From my personal recommendations: Bali (Canggu, Ubud), Mexico City, Portugal, Berlin, London.
Also, Tbilisi, Buenos Aires, Santa Teresa (Costa Rica).
Last three are not very tech-heavy, but very underappreciated from the overall lifestyle perspective.
Edit: also LA and Tel Aviv of course, forgot to mention as these are sort of defaults for me. If I’d pick one, it would be LA.
PS: All these recommendations come from very extensive personal experience!
As a signal for evaluating other places, maybe looking at the no of tech meetups on Meetup dot com might give you an idea.
But to be honest, my first thought was hacker news, twitter to 'meet' the best people. You could end up disappointed after moving to any city if your motivation is meeting tech people.
In general, no offense to the U.S, I think life, specially remote work life, is better enjoyed in Europe.
Any big city will have tech people since so many companies have some kind of tech department.
The other issue is Germany is hilariously hostile to certain kinda of remote work, though if you are a citizen I think it is less of a problem.
Lisbon apparently is the current European hotspot for remote, and Bali apparently is still Bali.
I've been warned off HK repeatedly by friends based on the current political situation and cost.
Any geographic drivers for "travel the world" part? Maybe consider an area where a budget airline can take you to interesting places. I know a person who lives near Frankfurt and loves it. He admits it is not really a fun city, but he has flown on many weekend trips all over Europe for about $50 roundtrip (Friday after work flyout, Sunday night or first thing Monday morning flight home)
You mentioned four sample spots: Bali, Portugal, SF, Austin. Those are very different; try living in each for 2 months and see what rocks your boat.
I wish I knew this deal. My big tech job doesn't let me chill out from Bali :)
I'm not sure you'll meet a high concentration of highly qualified tech people in exotic places. On the other hand, If you have the luxury to work from a developing country, it's hard to justify living in the most expensive places in the world (San Francisco, Hong Kong).
Personally, I've met the most interesting people in my company. I don't have any need to go to various meet ups. So maybe it's a solution. Spend some part of your time working in office and build a network there, and travel a few months a year.
That said, you could do a lot worse than London.
How casually you say "6 figures in AI for big tech" - you are in the 1% of tech people, its going to be hard to "fit in" no matter where you are.
Bay Area, London, Asia (as broad as that is) - anywhere with a major stock exchange will see you right.
Its all about how much you publish / tweet (and get "fan boys") and who you work with.
Its a lonely world, I cant imagine Einstein worrying to much about it - though maybe he did.
It can probably not compare to SF, but when it comes to European cities I believe it’s amongst the best for tech.
Many people will be there for the subject AND away from home so they are willing to talk your tech AND have time to spend time with you.
Sooner or later you will find the place that suits your needs, cultural, social and technical.
you do probably still want to stay near the US as it has more density of interesting tech people than any other country (not at all slighting UK, Singapore, Aus as I have met great peeps in all of them). Better to be within 2-6 hr flight of any interesting tech hub than to pick specifically one city since most cities have something to recommend them.
I see some folks recommending SF/NYC, but having done both, i would also say its possible to overdo them. 1-2 weeks of them every 3-6 months is plenty. if youre based in miami, people are generally happy to come visit you :)
In NYC, check out Williamsburg, Ft Greene, Soho/Union Square.
Have fun!