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Silicon Valley is a region in the southern part of the San Francisco Bay Area in Northern California that

serves as a global center for high technology and innovation. It corresponds roughly to the geographical
Santa Clara Valley.[1][2][3] San Jose is Silicon Valley's largest city, the third-largest in California, and the
tenth-largest in the United States; other major Silicon Valley cities include Sunnyvale, Santa Clara,
Redwood City, Mountain View, Palo Alto, Menlo Park, and Cupertino. The San Jose Metropolitan Area
has the third-highest GDP per capita in the world (after Zurich, Switzerland and Oslo, Norway), according
to the Brookings Institution[4] and, as of June 2021, has the highest percentage of million-dollar (or
more) homes in the United States.[5]The word "silicon" in the name originally referred to the large
number of innovators and manufacturers in the region specializing in silicon-based MOS transistors and
integrated circuit chips. The area is now home to many of the world's largest high-tech corporations,
including the headquarters of more than 30 businesses in the Fortune 1000, and thousands of startup
companies.
Silicon Valley also accounts for one-third of all of the venture capital investment in the United States,
which has helped it to become a leading hub and startup ecosystem for high-tech innovation. It was in
Silicon Valley that the silicon-based integrated circuit, the microprocessor, and the microcomputer,
among other technologies, were developed. As of 2013, the region employed about a quarter of a
million information technology workers.[6]

1. As more high-tech companies were established across San Jose and the Santa Clara Valley, and then
north towards the Bay Area's two other major cities, San Francisco and Oakland, the term "Silicon
Valley" has come to have two definitions: a narrower geographic one, referring to Santa Clara County
and southeastern San Mateo County, and a metonymical definition referring to high-tech businesses in
the entire Bay Area. The term Silicon Valley is often used as a synecdoche for the American high-
technology economic sector. The name also became a global synonym for leading high-tech research
and enterprises, and thus inspired similar named locations, as well as research parks and technology
centers with a comparable structure all around the world.
Silicon valley is home to some of the larges industries such as :
1. Apple- 188,000+ Employees
2. Hewlett Packard- 186,000+ Employees
3. Google- 184,000+ Employees
4. Oracle- 169,000+ Employees
5. Intel- 128,000+ Employees
6. Cisco- 91,000+ Employees
7. Facebook- 60,000+ Employees
8. Broadcom- 45,000+ Employees
9. Adobe- 24,000+ Employees
10. eBay- 24,000+ Employees

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