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1. pbar+(OP)[view] [source] 2021-02-18 18:06:13
It’s always surprising to folks, but true, that Houston has a wealth of arts/culture/dining, and even a modicum of public transit (the metro rail, heh). Entertainment could be better, but the rest blow Austin out of the water!
replies(2): >>cwdegi+Yc >>rendan+uY2
2. cwdegi+Yc[view] [source] 2021-02-18 19:07:28
>>pbar+(OP)
As a transplant to Houston, I will never understand why Austin became a tech center and Houston has not. There is a lot of raw tech talent here, incubators, etc. No matter what policies are in place or what investments are made, it never seems to take hold.
replies(2): >>nilkn+cF >>CPLX+b42
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3. nilkn+cF[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-02-18 21:26:24
>>cwdegi+Yc
As someone who's spent time in both Austin and Houston, I'd agree with the sentiment that Houston is pretty objectively a much better place to live. These phenomena are probably more driven by superficial appearances, though, and that's where Austin has always had an edge. It's hilly, it's perceived as a college town, and on the surface it has a lot of access to nature. It looks better on the surface than Houston to an observer who hasn't lived in both places. Really, it's just like the Bay Area -- it looks good, but it actually is a very rough and empty place to live for most folks.
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4. CPLX+b42[view] [source] [discussion] 2021-02-19 09:37:17
>>cwdegi+Yc
A lot of this stuff is just sensitive dependence on initial conditions.

I think a huge element has to be the success of SxSW. That has given a lot of people the personal positive exposure to Austin that makes them think moving there is plausible.

5. rendan+uY2[view] [source] 2021-02-19 16:23:13
>>pbar+(OP)
Wouldn't surprise me, only because the Houston metro is >3x bigger than Austin
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