Black Friday Deal: Take $250 off any 2024 workshop with code: BF2024
Cyber Week Savings: Take $2,025 off any bootcamp or short course starting before 3/31
Cyber Week Savings, Extended: Take $2,025 off any bootcamp or short course starting before 3/31
Black Friday Deal: Take £250 off any 2024 workshop with code: BF2024
Cyber Week Savings: Take £2,025 off any bootcamp starting before 31 March
Cyber Week Savings, Extended: Take £2,025 off any bootcamp starting before 31 March
Black Friday Deal: Take $250 off any 2024 workshop with code: BF2024
Cyber Week Savings: Take $1,500 off any bootcamp or short course starting before 31 March
Cyber Week Savings, Extended: Take $1,500 off any bootcamp or short course starting before 31 March
Get ahead of 2025's biggest tech talent shifts. Register for our December 11th webinar.
For more than 50 years, Silicon Valley has remained the global epicenter of technological innovation. Almost all of the major disrupters of the last several decades (Intel, Apple, Oracle, Salesforce, Google, Facebook, Twitter, Tesla, Uber, Airbnb and many others) were founded in Silicon Valley. Importantly also, Silicon Valley is becoming stronger, not weaker, over time.
Companies and policy makers around the world are seeking to emulate or recreate the Silicon Valley experience in their local area.
But is this possible? How can it be done?
General Assembly & WeWork have put together a panel of experts to answer these questions, and to delve deeper to see if and how China could be the first successful country to do so.