I have done some work with a good friend and his company which is located near Naples.
No, this won't happen.
That place is pure chaos. It is closer to a so-called developing nation (ethiopia, guatemala) than a "European Country". It is filthy, garbage everywhere, chaos drivers, mafia infiltrating everything; Nothing really works as well as it should; absolute corruption at every level of society.
Sure, Naples has a beautiful city center, and there are some impressive technical universities around. But this is not enough.
> It is filthy, garbage everywhere, chaos drivers, mafia infiltrating everything; Nothing really works as well as it should; absolute corruption at every level of society. Sure, Naples has a beautiful city center, and there are some impressive technical universities around.
This is excessively downbeat. Napoli is not Ethiopia, come on; at the very least, it is under EU jurisdiction, which means access to EU grants and markets. Italy has its problems and Napoli adds some more on top, but it’s not a third-world city.
Napoli is considered to be "the black sheep" in Italy (disclaimer: I'm italian).
People drive on sidewalks, 3 people (full family on scooters) without helmet (that was the first thing I saw while getting in).
It's also much more terrible at mafia level than you can think of.
Only city in the EU that I've felt unsafe in, granted I was only passing through so that feeling was probably just a manifestation of the city's reputation.
I'm not saying Naples is the least safe city in the EU, or in western Europe, by all means, but it does have a reputation for being 1) unsafe for tourists due to petty crimes like pickpocketing and 2) being run by the mafia.
This reputation might be undeserved, at least as far as technologists and startups are concerned, but it is still something that would influence my decision on whether I'd move there or not. Other tech hubs in Europe, such as Berlin and Amsterdam, does not have that kind of reputation.
They might not have that reputation, but they surely have no-go neighborhoods, unless you happen to know people living there as safe conduit, including Berlin and Amsterdam.
>To all those concerned about mafia: mafia is also in Germany, driven by Arabic families. If you follow local news, you'll find out that they control all the drug traffics and robberies. In Berlin they can be seen driving big cars (all men driving Mercedes AMG, Lamborghini or Ferrari have Arabic origins).
Sounds just like the sort of "quality statistic" you would expect from local tabloids everywhere.
I wonder how important Naples's local issues really are for a tech startup. Naples has a pretty bad reputation, but it's mainly about public services like waste collection, sanitation, water and infrastructure.
If I were starting a construction company or a restaurant there I might be concerned about mafia involvement, but as a tech company I worry more abut Italy's general bureaucracy and its broken legal system.
The somewhat baffling political situation doesn't exactly inspire confidence either (although I suppose I shouldn't be throwing stones from my UK glass house in that respect)
One of the reasons that Berlin is so popular is that everything works smoothly (everything is relative, of course), and it has a great, multicultural social life.
The first applies for sure, but if you think Naples isn't multicultural and social then you haven't spent much time here or aren't paying attention to the faces and habits of people in the city. There are people from everywhere here, and lots of them.
This city is hypersocial to the point that it exhausts visitors from places like Berlin and the states. Thousands of people gather together spontaneously any night of the week in the public spaces in the city center. You cannot walk two minutes without the chance of talking to someone.
You are underestimating italian talent. Italy is fully of hungry minds and determined people and that applies even more in Naples where opportunities are scarce.
Is it possible that instead of underestimating Italian talent, parent is carefully considering the immense power, value, skill, hunger, and determination of Italian talent? Especially when those incredible people have ready access to a sizable number of other places that pay better!
I've personally met more than one absolutely brilliant Italian engineer... who lives in London.
* >The University of Naples, the first university in Europe dedicated to training secular administrators,
* >Naples became part of the Kingdom of Italy in 1861 as part of the Italian unification, ending the era of Bourbon rule. The kingdom of the Two Sicilies had been wealthy, and as many as 443.2 million ducats were taken from the old kingdom's banks as a contribution to the new Italian treasury.
* >by 1884, Naples was still the largest city in Italy with 496,499 inhabitants, or roughly 64,000 per square kilometre (more than twice the population density of Paris)
I had no idea that Naples had been that advanced. Building on that history, they should have a huge potential. Unfortunately, I don't see how they can recreate their strategic advantage the way they do.
The Mediterranean Sea was the Internet before the industrial revolution. Naples is an expression of that network effect. Which network can they offer today? Won't they suffer the same problem as India, that they educate programmers who will take the first opportunity to move to Silicon Valley?
Sure, I wasn't thinking about SV. Europe is big and has a lot of opportunities with better salaries. London, where I live, is just around the corner for an Italian (at least for now).
Such a pointless story. Saying that startups can only succeed in SV, London or Berlin is myopic.
There are plenty of startup successes (around the US and around Europe) proving this wrong.
Every location has its advantages and its disadvantages - you play the best cards you get, and the only sure way not to win is to not play at all.
Yes, but not by companies investing. This is a great place to live, and if you have remote work you will live really well with minimal costs. It is just too corrupt and anarchic to be a good target for investment. The idea of a company headquarters here is simply impossible. It would have to be placed out in the middle of nowhere.
Naples can be a tech hub, but in the leftist anarchist community sense rather than the big business sense. People will have to choose to do so. From what little I've seen this does seem to be happening already.
the main things, i think, necessary to make somewhere a great location for a startup are public infrastructure and talent, i dont know anything about naples, but i wonder first and foremost how good the local talent is, and second how well it can attract talent. is the airport accessible to direct flights to say sfo, etc. are there incentives to place datacenters, although not a hard requirement because of aws, gcp ovmh, but it helps, i imagine it’s a volcanic zone, so probably not. look at all the great startup cities in the world and you’ll find strong universities that have great talent, the univiersities help to lure the talent, the companies help to keep them.
obviously this has lots of ties with government where they could make things easier.
from the first picture, it looks like a great place to live on the mediterannean, but the crime and filth sounds bad.
i would add to this, the culture must embrace entrepreneurialism, like tokyo is a great place in terms of infrastructure, but the society is more bent on having salarymen that have stable careers, so the startup scene is more stagnant than other places where the schools/talent arent as good and access to sfo, other places are great.
Italy has a problem attracting talent, capital, and companies even in the "better" and more developed areas. How can Naples fare? The article mentions student academies, which is the only way it can manage since salaries would be way too low for experienced workers.
The city would only benefit from more thinkers, technologists, scientists, and artists. You are right that the dream of attracting them may be the seed of a folly that will undermine the culture of the city, which is dazzlingly beautiful and shockingly ugly at the same time.
There are some deep cultural problems here, but gentrification is only going to make these worse. They are related to being ruled by many invaders and monarchs basically since forever. The tech lords seem no different to me. Investment is good, but if it is driven through local channels it will only entrench the current system, whose most powerful participants, who are completely uninterested in improving the quality of life locally.
That, and the fact that the government has decided to keep giving away EU visas to people from geographies that are notorious for corruption (e.g. Brasil, Angola, China) in exchange for meager (500K€) real estate "investments" [1]
More questions for headlines. Just clickbait pretending to be a news article. You would think that the BBC would be immune to this form of "journalism" since they are an established news company backed by taxpayer money.
But since the BBC asked, I'll apply Betteridge's Law and simply answer no. Did I pass?
No, this won't happen.
That place is pure chaos. It is closer to a so-called developing nation (ethiopia, guatemala) than a "European Country". It is filthy, garbage everywhere, chaos drivers, mafia infiltrating everything; Nothing really works as well as it should; absolute corruption at every level of society.
Sure, Naples has a beautiful city center, and there are some impressive technical universities around. But this is not enough.