What is a startup environment?
Yahoo have their London office on South East tip of Soho. Sometimes I like to get a coffee in one of the better Soho coffee shops. While I can’t complain about the coffee (just the opposite actually) sometimes I’m a little disappointed about the lack of a startup hacker community that is available to me. It’s not like there is a shortage of internet companies in the area with Osmosoft, MSN, Tiscalli, and others in the area.
Is London just too big to have a community where I’m going to bump into other web geeks? People talk about the Valley and the Bay Area like it’s a Mecca for tech and web cultures, is that really true? While I know plenty of people I can arrange to have coffee with, and often do, I just want more chance encounters.
So here is my line in the sand. I like the Milk Bar on Bateman Street in Soho. There isn’t free open wifi (yet) but there is a BT Openzone. It’s the sister site of Flat White so the coffee is awesome. Like Flat White it’s run by Aussies so the atmosphere is trendy and funky. London, especially Soho, geeks make this your coffee shop. Let’s have more random chance encounters because we choose to commune in a place we can make our community.
Update: Funny I should write this in the morning on the tube and then find this post with some thoughts about Cities by Paul Graham in the afternoon.
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startup, community, coffee, flat white, milk bar, bateman street, soho












May 30th, 2008 at 2:36 pm
[…] Moo, which was pretty interesting. My friend Mitch and his wife were there. I was enthusing about my recent thinking about startup environments especially after reading Paul Graham’s short essay on […]
May 30th, 2008 at 11:38 pm
As I was saying at the GeekDinner Jyri did something like this back in Finland: http://www.zengestrom.com/blog/2005/04/im_off_to_redmo.html