The jobs in IT are now the best jobs on the board. These It jobs are also many, many companies needs programmers well prepared and with a lot of experience .
Silicon Valley is the southern region of the San Francisco Bay Area in Northern California, in the United States. The region, whose name derives from the Santa Clara Valley in which it is centered, is home to many of the world's largest technology corporations as well as thousands of small startups. The term originally referred to the region's large number of silicon chip innovators and manufacturers, but eventually came to refer to all the high-tech businesses in the area, it is now generally used as a metonym for the American high-tech sector.
Despite the development of other high-tech economic centers throughout the United States and the world, Silicon Valley continues to be the leading startup ecosystem for high-tech innovation and development, accounting for one-third (1/3) of all of the venture capital investment in the United States.[2] Geographically, Silicon Valley encompasses all of the Santa Clara Valley including the city of San Jose (and adjacent communities), the southern Peninsula Valley, and the southern East Bay. However, with the rapid growth of technology jobs in the San Francisco metropolitan area, some commentators now argue that the traditional boundaries of Silicon Valley have expanded north to include the rest of San Mateo County and the City and County of San Francisco, as well as parts of Marin County.
According to a 2008 study by AeA in 2006, Silicon Valley was the third largest high-tech center (cybercity) in the United States, behind the New York metropolitan area and Washington metropolitan area, with 225,300 high-tech jobs. The Bay Area as a whole however, of which Silicon Valley is a part, would rank first with 387,000 high-tech jobs. Silicon Valley has the highest concentration of high-tech workers of any metropolitan area, with 285.9 out of every 1,000 private-sector workers. Silicon Valley has the highest average high-tech salary at $144,800.[16] Largely a result of the high technology sector, the San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area has the most millionaires and the most billionaires in the United States per capita.
The region is the biggest high-tech manufacturing center in the United States.[18][19] The unemployment rate of the region was 9.4% in January 2009, up from 7.8% in the previous month.[20] Silicon Valley received 41% of all U.S. venture investment in 2011.
A lot of programmers are needed here and the jobs opportunity is very big.
Thousands of high technology companies are headquartered in Silicon Valley. Among those, the following are in the Fortune 1000:
Adobe Systems
Advanced Micro Devices
Agilent Technologies
Apple Inc.
Applied Materials
Cisco Systems
eBay
Facebook
Google
Hewlett-Packard
Intel
Intuit
Juniper Networks
KLA Tencor
LSI Logic
Marvell Semiconductors
Maxim Integrated Products
National Semiconductor
NetApp
Nvidia
Oracle Corporation
Salesforce.com
SanDisk
Sanmina-SCI
Symantec
Western Digital
Yahoo!
Additional notable companies headquartered (or with a significant presence) in Silicon Valley include (some defunct or subsumed):
Additional notable companies headquartered (or with a significant presence) in Silicon Valley include (some defunct or subsumed):
- 3Com (acquired by HP)
- A10 Networks
- Actel
- Actuate Corporation
- Adaptec
- Aeria Games and Entertainment
- Akamai Technologies (HQ in Cambridge, Massachusetts)
- Altera
- Amazon.com's A9.com
- Amazon.com's Lab126.com
- Amdahl
- Ampex
- Antibody Solutions
- Aricent
- Asus
- Atari
- Atmel
- Broadcom (headquartered in Irvine, California)
- Brocade Communications Systems
- BEA Systems (acquired by Oracle Corporation)
- Business Objects (acquired by SAP)
- Chegg
- Cypress Semiconductor
- Dell (headquartered in Round Rock, Texas)
- Electronic Arts
- EMC Corporation (headquartered in Hopkinton, Massachusetts)
- E*TRADE (headquartered in New York, NY)
- Fairchild Semiconductor
- Force10
- Foundry Networks
- Fujitsu (headquartered in Tokyo, Japan)
- Groupon (headquartered in Chicago, IL)
- Hitachi Data Systems
- Hitachi Global Storage Technologies
- IBM Almaden Research Center (headquartered in Armonk, New York)
- IDEO
- Intuitive Surgical
- Kerio Technologies
- Logitech
- LynuxWorks
- Maxtor (acquired by Seagate)
- McAfee (acquired by Intel)
- Memorex (acquired by Imation and moved to Cerritos, California)
- Micron Technology (headquartered in Boise, Idaho)
- Microsoft (headquartered in Redmond, Washington)
- Mozilla Foundation
- Move Inc
- Nokia (headquartered in Espoo, Finland)
- Nokia Siemens Networks (headquartered in Espoo, Finland)
- Netflix
- Netscape (acquired by AOL)
- NeXT Computer, Inc. (acquired by Apple)
- Ning
- NXP Semiconductors
- Olivetti (headquartered in Ivrea, Italy)
- Opera Software (headquartered in Oslo, Norway)
- OPPO
- Palm, Inc. (acquired by HP)
- PalmSource, Inc. (acquired by ACCESS)
- Panasonic (headquartered in Osaka, Japan)
- PayPal (now part of eBay)
- Philips Lumileds Lighting Company
- Playdom
- PlayPhone
- Qualcomm, Inc. (HQ in San Diego, CA)
- Quanta Computer
- Quantcast
- Quora
- Rambus
- Riverbed Technology
- ROBLOX
- RSA (acquired by EMC)
- Redback Networks (acquired by Ericsson)
- SAP AG (headquartered in Walldorf, Germany)
- Siemens (headquartered in Berlin and Munich, Germany)
- Silicon Graphics
- Silicon Image
- Solectron (acquired by Flextronics)
- Solstice (headquartered in Seattle)
- Sony (headquartered in Tokyo, Japan)
- Sony Ericsson
- SRI International
- Sun Microsystems (acquired by Oracle Corporation)
- SunPower
- Synopsys Inc.
- Tata Consultancy Services
- Tibco Software
- Tesla Motors
- TWiT
- Tellme Networks (acquired by Microsoft)
- TiVo
- VA Software (Slashdot)
- Valin Corporation
- VeriSign
- Veritas Software (acquired by Symantec)
- VMware
- Vocera
- WebEx (acquired by Cisco Systems)* Xilinx
- YouTube (acquired by Google)
- Yelp, Inc.
- Zoran Corporation
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