And you've gotten your point across nicely. But that's not the conversation here. It's whether it can catch up to the Valley anytime soon, a different question entirely than whether there are cool little companies scattered around. Here in San Francisco, you end up inside a tech company if you so much as sneeze. Twitter is moving across the street from my apartment. When I walk to get a sandwich I pass by several world-class tech companies and a dozen startups. New York isn't even in the same league. Maybe someday it will be... I hope so!
good points...i definitely get chills (in a good way) going down 101 or walking around soma, etc., feeling the energy of the tech companies all around me. it was definitely a motivating factor when i worked there. (lo those many years ago.)
(btw, the other comments seem to focus more on the mythical finance vortex here, which i'd love to debunk someday...hence the sidetrack.)
as for being in the "same league," i guess i dunno know what that means, really - from the perspective of a person trying to get an idea off the ground. (and i write this having started/sold one myself, been an early member of a company that went public, been part of a flame-out...and been through plenty of ups and downs over my startup-oriented tech career).
both have great access to capital...great engineers...pently of startups (not a smattering) and plenty of spots for serendipitous meetings with interesting people (we got plenty 'o those). ...i think the rest is pointless d#ck measuring when it comes down to it. any location is really what u make of it anyway - as long as you're not in a bad one.
don't get me wrong, i'd love to just bump into ron conway or PG at my local coffee spot. perhaps they'd visit the good people of brooklyn someday...over a latte with a side of capacitors at the local hacker collective. ;-)