the silicon puszta

July 15, 2003


The promised cold front has not come through yet so the heat goes on. By the time I get to the Botanical Department on the overcrowded hot train and almost as hot metro my little bag lunch gets almost cooked. The apricots are ripe to begin with and banging around in the heat is turning them to juice before I get to eat them with my lunch. Peaches are starting to be in season too, though they don't seem on the verge of world domination like the apricots.

One change in Budakeszi, the town not the herbarium, that I didn't mention yesterday is the new rotary and huge gas station under construction. Last time I was out there the sides of the road were dug up because the phone company was laying fiber optic cables. This previously small suburban almost rural town is modernizing faster than Budapest. István told me that some developers are planning to create the "Silicon Valley of Central Europe" in Budakeszi. There are even plans for a big highway. Not such good news for the forest or the arboretum.

There's already a concentration of high-tech firms on the outskirts of Budapest: Axelero, IBM, HP, etc. I pointed that out to István and said "There's already a Silicon Valley here." "But where's the valley?" he asked. Hmm... "silicon flat place... no, I've got it the Silicon Puszta!" We laughed for quite some time over that. But seriously, those developers are in for a rude shock if they think some kind of silicon puszta is going to be a great economic boon to Budapest (or Budakeszi). Information technology jobs are on the decline in the US, and will soon be on the decline in Europe because the work can be done so much more cheaply in India and/or in Russia. Pretty soon we can add China to that list. Even though labor is cheaper in Hungary than in the US, it's not cheaper than India, Russia, or China. Oddly, just as I'm having those thoughts, there's an article on the CNN website about IT jobs migrating to India. Evidently greater minds than mine have thought of this.

Today's Reading
The Orchard by Adele Crockett Robertson

This Year's Reading
2003 Book List

Photos:

Skyline


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Copyright © 2003, Janet I. Egan