Downtown San Jose is now poised for a housing renaissance that was hard to imagine back in 2015, when Leslye Corsiglia first formed SV@Home.
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Life in the Crash Zone: What’s Next for San Jose’s Largest Homeless Encampment?
A city cleanup of the Crash Zone just south of Norman Y. Mineta San Jose International Airport on June 24 blindsided housing advocates and the 250 to 600 unhoused residents, raising questions of what's next.
Mental Health Resources Online Helped Students During Pandemic
We may be on the path toward normalizing the subject, but even as we have transitioned to remote schooling it is hard to ignore when students display signs of distress, anxiety and depression.
Silicon Valley’s Tech Giants Reluctantly Plunged Into Spying Controversy
The number of Justice Department and other police requests has soared in recent years to thousands a week, putting Apple and other tech giants like Google and Microsoft in an uncomfortable position between law enforcement, the courts and the customers whose privacy they have promised to protect.
Outage at San Francisco’s Fastly Inc. Crashes Websites Worldwide
Websites for Hulu, Reddit, Twitch and The New York Times crashed for about an hour this morning, after failures at the internet company.
Why All the Fury at Apple?
Some developers are sick of Apple being a dictator. Apple says it’s protecting us. Let’s dissect this.
Opinion: Can California Fix CEQA?
Former Councilman Johnny Khamis suggests CEQA reforms to keep businesses in California and address rising housing costs.
Gov. Gavin Newsom Allows Outdoor Dining and To-go Drinks Statewide until Dec. 31
The governor's announcement includes the use of sidewalks and converted parking spaces for outdoor dining and the sale of alcohol to-go. Bars will also be allowed to continue partnering with food trucks, restaurants and catering companies to sell food with alcohol even if they don't have an on-site kitchen.
Deputy Assessor David Ginsborg Leaves After Quarter Century as Larry Stone’s Heir Apparent
Santa Clara County Assessor Lawrence Stone announced that his right-hand-man, David Ginsborg, will retire on July 1 after 24 years, just as Stone gears up for a contested reelection campaign.
The Real Faces of Silicon Valley
As the valley’s tech companies have driven the U.S. economy since the Great Recession, the region remains one of the most unequal.
San Jose businesses reopen cautiously
San Jose businesses, like emerging butterflies, slowly began unfolding out of their cocoons this week. Like their fluttering counterparts, the retail, service and hospitality sectors have a new look and are still cautiously testing their wings. Some didn’t survive the metamorphosis, and various observers said it is too soon to tell what the pandemic’s final business survival rate might be in San Jose.
Stanford Professor Wins ‘Nobel Prize’ of Computer Science World
The announcement set off a controversy that may change how the A.M. Turing Award honoree is vetted and chosen in the future.
Q&A: Derrick Seaver’s Big Plans as the SVO’s New President
Seaver takes the helm at the regional chamber of commerce May 17, but first he sat down to talk about his priorities, economy and even Google.
San Jose’s Poor House Bistro Preps for Move—Building and All
Downtown San Jose’s iconic Poor House is moving, fleeing the path of development proposed in Google’s Downtown West project.
Clubhouse’s Allure and Pitfalls as the New Social Media Sensation
The Clubhouse app became a social media sensation by evolving the art of conversation. Will it end up an echo chamber?
For Children of Immigrants, DACA Challenges Persist No Matter Who’s in the White House
Though DACA is safe under President Biden, pent-up demand, depleted advocacy resources and uncertainty still plague the program.