Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Properties or Areas › Are people Rancho Santa Fe really snobby?
- This topic has 135 replies, 16 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 9 months ago by
paramount.
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AuthorPosts
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June 12, 2009 at 1:58 PM #415414June 12, 2009 at 2:03 PM #414703
sunny88
ParticipantWhy do you care how the people in RSF are? You live your life, have your friends and go about your own business. Teach your children common sense and tell them not to take anything for granted. I think you’re doing the right thing, live below your means and stay out of financial trouble.
June 12, 2009 at 2:03 PM #414942sunny88
ParticipantWhy do you care how the people in RSF are? You live your life, have your friends and go about your own business. Teach your children common sense and tell them not to take anything for granted. I think you’re doing the right thing, live below your means and stay out of financial trouble.
June 12, 2009 at 2:03 PM #415196sunny88
ParticipantWhy do you care how the people in RSF are? You live your life, have your friends and go about your own business. Teach your children common sense and tell them not to take anything for granted. I think you’re doing the right thing, live below your means and stay out of financial trouble.
June 12, 2009 at 2:03 PM #415264sunny88
ParticipantWhy do you care how the people in RSF are? You live your life, have your friends and go about your own business. Teach your children common sense and tell them not to take anything for granted. I think you’re doing the right thing, live below your means and stay out of financial trouble.
June 12, 2009 at 2:03 PM #415419sunny88
ParticipantWhy do you care how the people in RSF are? You live your life, have your friends and go about your own business. Teach your children common sense and tell them not to take anything for granted. I think you’re doing the right thing, live below your means and stay out of financial trouble.
June 12, 2009 at 2:07 PM #414717UCGal
ParticipantThe OP mentions Olivenhain… That’s not the same as Carmel Valley is it?
June 12, 2009 at 2:07 PM #414957UCGal
ParticipantThe OP mentions Olivenhain… That’s not the same as Carmel Valley is it?
June 12, 2009 at 2:07 PM #415211UCGal
ParticipantThe OP mentions Olivenhain… That’s not the same as Carmel Valley is it?
June 12, 2009 at 2:07 PM #415279UCGal
ParticipantThe OP mentions Olivenhain… That’s not the same as Carmel Valley is it?
June 12, 2009 at 2:07 PM #415434UCGal
ParticipantThe OP mentions Olivenhain… That’s not the same as Carmel Valley is it?
June 12, 2009 at 2:11 PM #414732Allan from Fallbrook
Participant[quote=flu] New money does interesting things to people. Post-IPO but Pre-BubbleBurst NorCal people can get pretty bad [/quote]
FLU: I had a job at Apple during high school (1982), cleaning printed circuit boards (back when Apple fabbed their own computers, the IIc and IIe). This was right after the Apple IPO and, pretty quickly, folks there started trading the VWs in for Porsches. That was about when the attitude really started changing up there.
This may be before your time, but I remember the days of Steve Wozniak, Steve Jobs and the rest of the nerds hanging out at the Byte Shop in Mountain View with Paul Terrell and talking computers. That’s where it all started and, back before the money, it was just computer jockeys, engineers and programmers. There were some big players, like Lockheed M&S, IBM, Raytheon and Ford Aerospace (where my dad worked), but nothing like today.
June 12, 2009 at 2:11 PM #414972Allan from Fallbrook
Participant[quote=flu] New money does interesting things to people. Post-IPO but Pre-BubbleBurst NorCal people can get pretty bad [/quote]
FLU: I had a job at Apple during high school (1982), cleaning printed circuit boards (back when Apple fabbed their own computers, the IIc and IIe). This was right after the Apple IPO and, pretty quickly, folks there started trading the VWs in for Porsches. That was about when the attitude really started changing up there.
This may be before your time, but I remember the days of Steve Wozniak, Steve Jobs and the rest of the nerds hanging out at the Byte Shop in Mountain View with Paul Terrell and talking computers. That’s where it all started and, back before the money, it was just computer jockeys, engineers and programmers. There were some big players, like Lockheed M&S, IBM, Raytheon and Ford Aerospace (where my dad worked), but nothing like today.
June 12, 2009 at 2:11 PM #415226Allan from Fallbrook
Participant[quote=flu] New money does interesting things to people. Post-IPO but Pre-BubbleBurst NorCal people can get pretty bad [/quote]
FLU: I had a job at Apple during high school (1982), cleaning printed circuit boards (back when Apple fabbed their own computers, the IIc and IIe). This was right after the Apple IPO and, pretty quickly, folks there started trading the VWs in for Porsches. That was about when the attitude really started changing up there.
This may be before your time, but I remember the days of Steve Wozniak, Steve Jobs and the rest of the nerds hanging out at the Byte Shop in Mountain View with Paul Terrell and talking computers. That’s where it all started and, back before the money, it was just computer jockeys, engineers and programmers. There were some big players, like Lockheed M&S, IBM, Raytheon and Ford Aerospace (where my dad worked), but nothing like today.
June 12, 2009 at 2:11 PM #415295Allan from Fallbrook
Participant[quote=flu] New money does interesting things to people. Post-IPO but Pre-BubbleBurst NorCal people can get pretty bad [/quote]
FLU: I had a job at Apple during high school (1982), cleaning printed circuit boards (back when Apple fabbed their own computers, the IIc and IIe). This was right after the Apple IPO and, pretty quickly, folks there started trading the VWs in for Porsches. That was about when the attitude really started changing up there.
This may be before your time, but I remember the days of Steve Wozniak, Steve Jobs and the rest of the nerds hanging out at the Byte Shop in Mountain View with Paul Terrell and talking computers. That’s where it all started and, back before the money, it was just computer jockeys, engineers and programmers. There were some big players, like Lockheed M&S, IBM, Raytheon and Ford Aerospace (where my dad worked), but nothing like today.
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