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Beirut’s Bright Future as a Tech Hub for MENA, If Its Politicians Will Allow It

20 pointsby cnicolaouabout 10 years ago

2 comments

eastbayjakeabout 10 years ago
I had no idea this stuff was going on in Beirut, but I&#x27;m excited to visit. If anyone from the Beirut tech community is reading this, I had two questions:<p>(1) Do you agree with the author that the startup community is primarily held back by internet speeds? (It&#x27;s painful to Skype or share a YouTube video with friends in Lebanon, so I know it&#x27;s a problem -- just wondering about how you&#x27;d rank it with other concerns.) Are there any gaps in desired engineering skills? Are people bringing experience with large-scale web architecture or hardware design from working outside of Lebanon?<p>(2) What&#x27;s the competitive advantage for these companies? Some ideas -- like music streaming or health tracking or Hulu for the Middle East -- seem easily deflated if an already-at-scale competitor decides to focus on Arabic internationalization. What do Beirut&#x27;s tech startups understand about Middle East consumers that Western tech companies are missing?
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vonnikabout 10 years ago
I don&#x27;t think Beirut&#x27;s politicians are the only political risk the city is exposed to. Anyone familiar with the recent history of Lebanon knows that it is the pawn in a bloody geopolitical game being played by the US, Israel, Syria and Iran, among others. All of those countries have the power to destabilize Lebanon and its capital in a variety of ways. Many local politicians are tied to one or more of those interests. Anyone who thinks Lebanon will be stable any time soon should read Robert Fisk&#x27;s &quot;Pity the Nation.&quot;