Has Halifax becomes the hot, new high-tech centre in North America? The city certainly has to be feeling pretty good after convincing Research in Motion Ltd. to create 1,200 jobs there over the next five years. These aren't low-paying call-centre jobs but "technical service" positions where people handle problems that the carriers' customer reps can't resolve. The Halifax facility will also take care of RIM's top15,000 corporate customers. So why Halifax? Aside from C$19-million government aid,  the province of Nova Scotia has a strong post-secondary education system, lots of people who want to stay in the province rather than "go away" to Ontario, and close proximity to the Eastern Seaboard. I suspect Nova Scotia will also bend over backwards to ensure RIM has everything it needs to start doing business without any bureaucratic  hurdles. Still, it's a big coup for Halifax given RIM must have been swamped with attractive offers from Canadian and U.S. cities for the new facility. (RIM already operates similar centres in Waterloo, Asia and Europe). It's also a major public relations/goodwill coup for RIM, which scores huge points with Canadians and the federal government.