Silicon Valley as Platform-Cluster Region (1990)
commerce pace layer · 1971–ongoing
lifespan: 70 yrs · motor: push
Class card for Silicon Valley as the canonical DM-era productive-cluster Place, modeled at the 1990 operational configuration (the Tim-Berners-Lee WWW-proposal 1989/1990 threshold + Cisco IPO 1990 + Linux-kernel 1991 prelude + Netscape/Yahoo 1994-95 crystallization imminent). The Stanford-to-San-Jose corridor (~2.5M population; roughly Palo Alto south to San Jose, East Bay spillover) is the world's densest co-location of semiconductor fabrication, software engineering, venture-capital allocation, and platform-design capability in the DM era. Unlike the Braudel hub succession (Venice→Amsterdam→London→NYC), which are commercial-city-state command nodes, Silicon Valley is a NEW Place-form: the DM platform-cluster-region — a productive territory whose OPP is not clearing or redistributing flows but *generating* platform-capitalism products for global deployment. Saxenian (Regional Advantage, 1994) establishes the SV-vs-Route-128 comparison: SV's open labor-market, horizontal-network culture, and Stanford talent-recycling engine enabled faster iteration than Boston's vertically-integrated Route-128 corporations. O'Mara (The Code, 2019) traces the Stanford-industrial-park 1951 → Fairchild 1957 → Intel 1968 → Apple 1976 → Oracle 1977 → Sun/Cisco 1980s → WWW 1990s lineage as a continuous DARPA-funded + VC-funded trajectory. Castells (The Informational City, 1989; The Network Society, 1996) positions SV as the paradigm node of the Informational Mode of Production. Carlota Perez (Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital, 2002) maps SV as the Irruption-to-Frenzy node of TEP5 (ICT). The card explicitly distinguishes SV from Sassen's global-city framework: SV is a productive cluster (Sassen's category for manufacturing/high-tech specialization) rather than a global-city command-and-control hub. GAWC tier Alpha is assigned to reflect SV's command-function dominance in DM tech-platform-capital-flows even though the framework was designed for cities not regions. Substrate: [social, cognitive, semiotic] — the engineering culture and talent network (social), the technical-knowledge-base and design-pattern apparatus (cognitive), and the VC-term-sheet + patent + stock-option-legal-code + startup-narrative semiotic complex (semiotic). Physical/corporeal substrate (semiconductor fabs, office parks, Stanford campus) is noted but decentralized; TSMC-Asia fab-outsourcing was already underway by 1990 (Intel still fab-integrated, but the fab-lite/fabless-semiconductor model was emerging). [STUB-substrate-enum-gap]: institutional substrate (Stanford university + Sand Hill Road VC firms + NDA + stock-option + at-will-employment + CA-UCC legal complex) is load-bearing but the enum lacks an 'institutional' value; encoded as [social, semiotic] with this note. Motor=push (DM default; small-scale independent firms driven by competitive push) with motor_secondary=flywheel for the platform sub-machines that develop network effects (Apple, Cisco, Oracle, Google-in-formation). Apogee window: 1971 (Intel 4004 microprocessor; Don Hoefler coins "Silicon Valley") to 2020 (COVID-WFH + Tesla/Oracle/HP Texas migrations mark geographic concentration decay). Modeled at 1990 = mid-trajectory.
Machine type
corporeal
Plasticity
plastic
Substrate
Wave source
synthesized-dm-silicon-valley-place
Inputs
- Federal R&D grants (DARPA, NIH, NSF) — primary substrate for SV's foundational research
- Venture capital fund inflows (Sand Hill Road LPs — East Coast, global endowments)
- Immigrant and foreign engineering talent (H1B + F1 OPT + naturalized engineers)
- Electrical power (PG&E grid + California WECC imports) for fab and compute operations
Outputs
- Technology products (microprocessors, routers, workstations, software platforms) exported globally
- IPO shares and equity capital returns to global investors (Apple, Oracle, Cisco IPO 1980/86/90)
- Platform-capitalism paradigm template (VC + equity-comp + at-will + startup-form model exported globally)
- Talent re-export (boomerang engineers to India, Taiwan, China — Saxenian brain circulation)
Landscape pressures
- Route 128 / Boston-Midwest vertically-integrated corporate competition (eroding at 1990) (35% intensity)
- Japan MITI semiconductor assault (DRAM market; Intel exits DRAM 1985) (60% intensity)
- Housing cost explosion and talent cost inflation (Bay Area housing 1985-1995) (42% intensity)
- PG&E electrical grid constraints and California energy deregulation (1990s) (30% intensity)
Intra-era couplings
- contains Joint-Stock Company (Platform form, 1980) · 0.92 CANON
- contains Apple Device-Services Complex (1984) · 0.88 CANON
- contains Linux / Open-Source Ecosystem (1991) · 0.80 CANON
- instruments ICANN / IETF / W3C Internet Governance (class, 1986–ongoing) · 0.78 CANON
- rivals New York City as Global-City Hub (2000) · 0.60
- zombie_dependency Federal Reserve (QE-Era Operations, 2008) · 0.65 CANON
- adapted_inheritance Joint-Stock Company (Industrial form, 1850) · 0.75 CANON
Cross-era couplings
- substrate_provision Bell System / AT&T (1876–1984) · 0.88 CANON
- substrate_provision Federal Reserve System (1913) · 0.72 CANON
- substrate_provision National Electrical Grid (Insull / US Grid, 1882–ongoing) · 0.78 CANON
- sublimation_coupling US Railway Land Grants (Pacific Railway Acts, 1862–1872) · 0.60
- sublimation_coupling Ford Motor System (Fordism, 1908–1980) · 0.65
- adapted_inheritance Cooperative Platform (LM-Dawn class) · 0.52
- substrate_provision LLM Public-Good Cooperative (LM-Dawn class, 2022–present) · 0.65
- adapted_inheritance Capture-Resistance Protocol (LM-Dawn class) · 0.48 EXTRAP
State variables
Phase snapshots
Notable instances
- Silicon Valley, Santa Clara County / Bay Area, California (1971–present) (1971) — The class card IS the instance: SV is simultaneously the class (DM platform-cluster region) and the canonical singular i…
Sources
- Saxenian (1994). Regional Advantage: Culture and Competition in Silicon Valley and Route 128
- O'Mara (2019). The Code: Silicon Valley and the Remaking of America
- Castells (1989). The Informational City: Information Technology, Economic Restructuring and the Urban-Regional Process
- Castells (1996). The Rise of the Network Society (The Information Age, Vol. I)
- Perez (2002). Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital: The Dynamics of Bubbles and Golden Ages
- Sassen (1991). The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo