Home › Forums › Housing › Apple (AAPL) has announced it’s bringing 1,200 employees to a San Diego office.
- This topic has 5 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 5 years, 10 months ago by Coronita.
-
AuthorPosts
-
March 7, 2019 at 8:30 AM #22678March 7, 2019 at 8:40 AM #811999spdrunParticipant
Less than 0.1% of the county population with the majority being local hires? Not really.
Apple’s jumped the shark anyway — I suspect when the Macs go ARM, they’ll fully embrace the computing-as-a-prison model. No unsigned apps, maybe nothing from outside the App Store.
Not to mention that their hardware has generally become unrepairable, crippled junk. Great keyboards, right. Batteries that swell and break Macbook keyboards and touchpads. Cracking touchbars. The “one port wonder” base Macbook.
March 7, 2019 at 8:55 AM #812000The-ShovelerParticipantI am not sure all will be new hires or even local currently.
Anyway they pay good money, could boost a hyper local area like CV and surrounds etc…
If they import people each new apple job maybe – 1.75 jobs locally.
anyway IMO
March 7, 2019 at 9:54 AM #812001CoronitaParticipantYou do realize why they are doing this right?
They are building their own 5G modem in house and intentionally setup shop here to poach talent from Qualcomm. They already have an ARM solution on the phone and it’s just a matter of time before they move that over to the laptop and desktop and cut x86 out. Most of these jobs will probably be chip design jobs, though probably some supporting embedded SW jobs will open up too.
Google is doing the same thing. They are here also, you just don’t hear too much about them, but they are also working on 5G modem an an internal SoC to my understanding, and they have been poaching folks from Qualcomm, Broadcom, and Intel.
Intel is already out here in Rancho Bernardo trying to poach people from Qualcomm and former Broadcom (folks call them the leftover engineers)
On top of that Amazon is expanding their footprint, and Walmart Labs just added a large footprint in Carlsbad right next to the GoPro office.
Qualcomm employs roughly 13,000 people in San Diego, so there’s plenty of lateral movements that can happen. even if local talent is already limited, that’s ok… I am sure there are plenty of people in the Bay Area that would gladly move back to San Diego after moving there for opportunity. I already have a few buddies checking the opportunity. When you get paid an top comp package of $300k as an engineer up there and still have problems finding housing…you end up working there 3-4 years and GTF out of there and move back here, laughing all the way to the bank. And now, they will have opportunity awaiting.
Great news for tech workers that will have even more choice and better pay. Bad news for startups that want to try to get away with paying peanuts for a hairbrain idea….No one works for free..Things are looking pretty swell in the tech community here. At least for now for workers….Probably also good news for landlords and property owners near the tech hubs here Carlsbad, Sorrento Valley, RB, and to a lesser extent, downtown.
March 7, 2019 at 10:13 AM #812003The-ShovelerParticipantTo a lesser extent I think TV, OceanSide and Fallbrook/bonsall are getting spill over effect from what is happening in Carlsbad and surrounds.
Oceanside is gentrifying very quickly.
SD lost > 2-billion-W2 money to TV.
March 7, 2019 at 10:55 AM #812004CoronitaParticipant[quote=The-Shoveler]To a lesser extent I think TV, OceanSide and Fallbrook/bonsall are getting spill over effect from what is happening in Carlsbad and surrounds.
Oceanside is gentrifying very quickly.
SD lost > 2-billion-W2 money to TV.[/quote]
yes… I think this is a net positive for the community.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.