I honestly think the most productive 11 h that @SupplantCompany ever gets out of me are on LDN to SFO ๐ซ
All I need is a chair, a laptop and red wine.
And also good WiFi
3 cheers for @britishairways on that front! ๐
(3 boos for @VirginAtlantic)
Honoured to be a speaker at the @NutritionOrgUK "Nutrition Science and Innovation - Powerful partnerships for the future webinar" on June 4th alongside: Anthony Warner at @newfoodteam, Jeff Brunstrom at @BristolUni, Philip Calder at @unisouthampton and Josh Sauer at Zya
11) Lisbon has a long way to go to be Europe's Silicon Valley though.
SV's lifeblood, venture capital ๐ฐ, is more than ~30x greater there than in Lisbon.
Even in Europe, Lisbon is ~10x below the amount of venture invested in London ๐ฌ๐ง, Europe's primary VC destination today.
10) Though the skylines of each are today of course dominated by modern skyscrapers.
๐ต๐น Left: Vasco da Gama Tower
๐บ๐ธ Right: The Transamerica Pyramid
Lisbon๐ต๐น aspires to be Europe's๐ช๐บ Silicon Valley.
Right now, it certainly has some way to go.
But I travelled to Lisbon recently and was surprised at the number of similarities.
Here's a list of my observations.
๐๐งต
https://t.co/yKsbAzTRYq
7) But even the bridges that span the middles of the bays look spookily similar:
๐ต๐นLeft: The Vasco da Gama Bridge connects Lisbon with Montijo
๐บ๐ธRight: The San Mateo Bridge connects San Mateo with Hayward
6) Lisbon famously has a carbon copy of the Golden Gate Bridge across the mouth of its bay - the '25th April Bridge'
๐ต๐นLeft: The 25 de Abril Bridge
๐บ๐ธRight: The Golden Gate Bridge
5) Both Lisbon and San Francisco sit at the mouths of large bays facing large oceans.
๐บ๐ธ The San Francisco Bay on the Pacific
๐ต๐น The mouth of the Tagus river on the Atlantic
This has driven the economic history of each.
4) Both also lie at one end on densely populated coastal stretches with another major global city at the other end (Porto ๐ต๐น and LA ๐บ๐ธ respectively).
3) The continents they are part of are dominated by large single market economies: ๐ช๐บ and ๐บ๐ธ
This means both cities/regions can easily trade with 100s millions of people and 10s trillions GDP.
2) They have very similar Mediterranean climates ๐characterised by mild-to-cool winters with occasional rainfall and warm-to-hot and dry summers.
So, from that perspective, they're amongst the nicest places in the world to live.
1) Both Lisbon and San Fran are major cities on the Western coasts of large advanced industrialised continents: Europe and North America.
This means both are in the vicinity of large numbers of highly developed trading partners.
@eric_is_weird Would make an interesting study as there is a direct control population. I think student-run law journals are basically a uniquely North American phenomenon.