Topics & People
The late husband of Sheryl Sandberg, a beloved figure in Silicon Valley, and revealed to be the creator of the 'fake jamath' Twitter handle.
Historical shipyards from the WWII era, associated with 'Rosie the Riveter,' mentioned as a symbol of America's past industrial might.
A concept for advanced manufacturing facilities that use robotics and AI to achieve high levels of productivity per worker, enabling competition with countries like China.
Referenced as an example of America's historical capacity for rapid, advanced technological development, with the first one being built in just three years during the 1950s.
An iconic aircraft used as an example of rapid American innovation and manufacturing, going from idea to passenger flight in three years.
Used as a historical example of America's past ability to build massive infrastructure projects quickly, having been built in just four years.
The event where Yan Stramic is presenting the California Forever project.
The country in Eastern Europe where Yan Stramic was born in 1987, two years before the fall of the Berlin Wall.
The historical ideal of California as a place of opportunity and innovation, which Yan Stramic found to be tarnished by modern problems like homelessness and lack of infrastructure upon his arrival.
Described as a self-inflicted problem in California, encompassing the lack of new housing, office space, factories, and infrastructure, which California Forever aims to solve.
The largest shipyard in the United States, used as a scale comparison to demonstrate the massive potential of the waterfront land owned by California Forever.
A single shipyard in China that is used as an example of China's immense shipbuilding capacity, which surpasses the entire collective output of the U.S. since WWII.