In tech, N.Y. wants to be king of the hill, top of the heap

by Greg Sandoval June 7, 2012

NEW YORK--There are no tech companies from the Big Apple that compares with Apple.

New York has yet to produce anything on par with Google, Netflix, Intel, eBay, or Facebook. All those companies were either founded or are based in Silicon Valley. But civic and business leaders in New York want to change that. They say that recently, the nation's largest metropolis has become much more attractive to the tech community and more start-ups are here than ever.

At a panel discussion Tuesday in the city's Chelsea District that included venture capitalists, and representatives from the city as well as AT&T, there was much back patting for the progress already made in raising the city's tech profile. Participants also exchanged ideas about how New York can still improve. Sitting in the audience were Raymond Kelly, commissioner of the New York Police Department and Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-New York).

The gathering was sponsored by the Center for an Urban Future and the Association for a Better New York (ABNY), which says that New York has recently surpassed Boston as the country's second largest center for tech start-ups.

But when reminded that New York is still not home to a marquee tech company, some on the panel seemed to get annoyed. Stuart Ellman, a venture capitalist, took up the city's defense and told the audience that had Facebook started today instead of 2004, there's a chance founder Mark Zuckerberg, who grew up in New York state, may have based the social network in the city (forget that Zuckerberg said in October: "If I were starting now, I would have stayed in Boston.")

The truth is New York is a long way from rivaling Silicon Valley as the country's technology capital. Judging from the panel discussion and what's been written, New York has some significant hurdles to overcome before making a serious challenge. The list includes:

Still, Valley boosters would be foolish to underestimate New York. The rents are high partly because so many people want to live here. The city commands vast resources, and Michael Bloomberg, New York's mayor, is uniquely qualified to lead a technology initiative. It was a specialized computer terminal that helped Bloomberg, the nation's 11th richest man, build his financial-data and media empire before he became mayor in 2002.

New York is home to the fastest growing tech hub in the country, according to the ABNY study. The city has nearly 53,000 people working in the information technology sector, up 29 percent from five years ago.

The ABNY study also found that over the same period, nearly 500 technology companies were founded in New York.

Bloomberg is taking steps to making the city more affordable, according to Seth Pinsky, president of New York City's Economic Development Corporation. He noted that the policing and economic policies of the Bloomberg administration are helping to open up new and less expensive neighborhoods. Young people are venturing into areas that only a few years ago were plagued by crime but are safer now, Pinsky said.

Perhaps the city's grandest plan is to set up a tech university on Roosevelt Island, located in New York's East River. Bloomberg chose partners Cornell University and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology to build and operate the school, which will focus on attracting tech talent and fostering entrepreneurship.

Finally, in the competition between the two areas, New York is not without its triumphs. In January, New York flexed some of its tech muscle during the protest against the Stop Online Piracy Act. The city's tech community organized a 2,000-person street rally and generated nationwide press.

A similar protest against the antipiracy bill in San Francisco was able to draw only an estimated 200 people.