This quickly fell off the top of the list at HN, and rightfully so.
There haven't been many recent super-exits out of NYC. The only one that comes to mind is Quidsi, which was acquired by Amazon, but they weren't even actually in the city, they were in Jersey City.
This is the NYTimes doing it's job of tooting the city's horn by citing a couple of examples (I give them credit for leaving foursquare out this time), and a "recent report from the Center for an Urban Future, a New York-based public policy organization" (ok, if the name of this institution itself doesn't suggest an incredible amount of bias i don't know what would). The mayor has fallen in line as well, so his legacy will not be a collapsed financial services industry(not his fault) but instead, he hopes, a tech startup paradise. And still not quite sure what the point of this Tech school on Roosevelt Island is. Stanford isn't a tech school, it just has a solid tech offering.
MIT is a tech school yet Boston has failed to become a tech mecca on the same scale as the Valley.<p>What matters it the culture of a city or environment. NYC's culture is not tech startup, it's finance and media. It's foreign investors buying large buildings and apartments to park their black money. It's gritty and boisterous, which can be fun, but it's not nurturing.<p>Sure there will be a few hits, but there will be a few hits from many cities around the country. That doesn't mean they are going to become the next tech mecca and take down the Valley.