The suicide article is just one part of a very interesting series that I wouldn't have even known about had wfgodot not linked to the above article. The series starts here:
http://recode.net/2014/09/29/downtown-las-vegas-is-the-great-american-techtopia/
PART 1 of the LAS VEGAS SPECIAL SERIES
BY NELLIE BOWLES
Tony Hsieh, the charismatic CEO of Zappos.com, invested $350 million into turning Las Vegas into a startup. Buying 60 acres, setting up his own school, his own medical clinic, his own venture fund and restaurants, Hsieh is creating an innovation city in his own image. It is strange. And it is struggling. But it's the most ambitious experiment in building a 21st century utopian city in the U.S. In this Re/code special series, we explore what it means to live there -- and why its startups could flourish, or fail.
We could create our own adult version of a college dorm and build our own community. It was an opportunity for us to create our own world. It was perfect.
TONY HSIEH DELIVERING HAPPINESS
"the new downtown Las Vegas, the medical clinic is also a co-working space. The church knows to step in when founders lose funding. A mens hotel is now offices, a Bikram yoga studio and an artisanal donut bakery. The rundown casino with seedy upstairs rooms is reborn as an entrepreneur dorm.
And in the new preschool, which took over a church that had been a senior service center, entrepreneurship training begins at 6 weeks old.
How does that work?
Connie Yeh, a former Citibank trader, nows runs an entrepreneurship preschool.Vjeran Pavic for Re/code Connie Yeh, a former Citibank trader, nows runs an entrepreneurship preschool.
Its mostly about teaching them that its okay to fail, said Connie Yeh, a former derivatives trader at Citibank, and now the founder of the 9th Bridge School in downtown Las Vegas. Yeh said that one of her preschoolers already has a website.
If all that seems strange if it comes across as a startup fantasia straight out of science fiction thats because it is.
Tony Hsieh the enigmatic, shy yet hard-partying 40-year-old founder of Vegas-based shoe-sales site Zappos, which he sold to Amazon for $1.2 billion could have a lot of toys. He chose a city."
More, more, more ...