Lousiana Attempting to Attract Game Industry 43
Academomancer writes "Yahoo reports that Louisiana is trying to lure the game industry with tax incentives and a marketing campaign. From the article: Mark Smith, entertainment director for the state economic development department, said he aims to integrate video gaming into the state's entertainment industry, bringing together music, film and digital production.
I hope this starts a tech boom in LA (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I hope this starts a tech boom in LA (Score:1)
Re:I hope this starts a tech boom in LA (Score:1)
Re:I hope this starts a tech boom in LA (Score:2)
Re:I hope this starts a tech boom in LA (Score:1)
Re:I hope this starts a tech boom in LA (Score:1, Interesting)
To make a long story short, NOLA shot itself in the foot by focusing on tourism at the expense of basic industry -- there was a concerted effort at the time by local development economists and corporations to capitalize upon the Michoud assembly area to lure more high-tech and manufacturing into the area, but
Hi. I'm Troy McClure (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hi. I'm Troy McClure (Score:1)
Lousiana? (Score:2, Funny)
Chickens and eggs (Score:4, Insightful)
For that to work, you need a critical mass of both people and companies in an area. If you don't have that, there's no pool of workers to hire when projects need to ramp up, and nowhere else for those workers to earn a paycheck when projects ramp down.
Louisiana has neither right now. And there's no incentive for one to come unless the other is already there.
Re:Chickens and eggs (Score:2, Informative)
Is it wrong (Score:2)
Seriouisly though, I lived in New Orleans for 4 years (91-95) and it didn't really hit me as a tech receptive culture, though there's a party every night (that no one got the note to clean up after) and avg 100% Humidity. An excellent place to party, not so much to live.
southern culture (Score:2)
Austin, Texas seems to be about as close as you can get to being a geek magnet in the south, and it isn't even really part of the Old South.
If North Carolina can't pull it off, Louisiana sure isn't.
Re:southern culture (Score:2)
Please, there are plenty of us geeks who are in the city who wouldn't mind taking a stab at living in the "Old South" if the right job opening came up.
In your opinion, what exactly is it about "southern cultu
Re:southern culture (Score:2)
Re:southern culture (Score:1)
Re:southern culture (Score:2)
Most of the programmers/IT people I know could care less about art museums. I work in NYC, and I network with a lot of people who are in IT, and many of them like me plan o
Re:southern culture (Score:2)
For the most part, people not interested in red state culture. Many are gay, or non-Christian, or lefty, or some combination of the above.
Re:southern culture (Score:2)
Trust me, it's an issue. Coastal metropoli are frankly more attractive to a lot of this demographic.
And I'm sorry - there are very good reasons to associate social conservatism with the South (and Midwest and Mountain areas). I know a lot of people who've moved to the South for career reasons - and they too note the difference. Sometimes it's even a matter of lega
Re:southern culture (Score:2)
Re:southern culture (Score:1)
Growing up, I always thought everywhere in America the Catholic interpretation of Christianity was the majority.
Re:southern culture (Score:2)
Re:southern culture (Score:2)
I think that is overhyped a bit. Maybe most geeks on slashdot are liberal but I know plenty of conservative people who work in IT. As for "most internet users" I would bet a poll of internet users would favor conservatives more than democrats due to the demographics of the internet crowd nowadays.
I'm not sure what onli
Orlando is the Shiznitz (Score:1)
The super secret plan for an Uber Game: (Score:2, Funny)
Soon you'll have Super Game Developers and they will be unstoppable!
Re:The super secret plan for an Uber Game: (Score:1)
Then why did they cancel their programmingcontest? (Score:2, Troll)
Granted this is just LSU's high school but lets face it, LA is pretty much all high school, scoring 46th (out of 50, for those of you from LA) on their ACT's [act.org] This is an alphabetical list, so you will need to... oh never mind.
Don't get me wrong,
coming in 2005 (Score:2)
Reading too much into it (Score:2)
Here, let me try to make this statement "more correct:"
"Louisiana is trying to lure industry"
There's oil, there's fishing, in New Orleans there's some tourism, and there's not much else. And of what there is, most of the work available is manual and the educational system makes sure it stays that way. On top of that, Baton Rouge has notoriously dropped the ball in recent years: the governor didn't see any point in going to "Japan" to talk to Hyundai (
Niiiiice try... (Score:2)
I love my state, and I love the city of New Orleans; but every time I read about a plan to modernize or to become relevant again, it somehow comes out as laughable at best. Especially when it comes to technological matters.
Louisiana, in economic terms, has four major assets: farming (rice, sugar cane, etc...), proximity to oil (in Gulf of Mexico), tourism (in New Orleans), and the Mississippi River (shipping). Now, the oil
Re:Niiiiice try... (Score:3, Funny)
That's a good place to build a city! It can produce a tank every other turn! Just make sure it has City Walls, and the Mongols and the Babylonians won't stand a chance!
Remember... (Score:2)