Hi good people!

In a huge dilemma (partly because I'm very passionate about Foster but also looking at brand value).
International with a background in tech PMM, looking to continue in tech PMM (or PM). Not a career switcher by any means. At a high level, I'm torn between McCombs and Foster, since Marshall is not really a tech powerhouse and is EXPENSIVE! Is the Texas brand+T20 rank a huge differentiator versus Foster? Also, am I missing something by completely overlooking Marshall?
McCombs (net tuition: 67,500)(+) Very strong marketing program/electives/experiential learning, aligns with my career interests
(+) UT Austin Brand - Public ivy - Stronger than UW?
(+) Higher rank than UW, more consistent T20 than USC
(+) Low cost of living, low taxes post-graduation
(-) McCombs tech jobs seem to feed mostly into legacy tech (Dell, HP etc.). How strong is recruitment for MSFT, Adobe, Salesforce, Apple etc?
(-) Will be stuck in Texas long term - not very passionate about that
Foster (net tuition: 55,000)(+)It's the cheapest among the three, will graduate with nearly zero debt
(+) Seattle = tech haven, strong PMM hiring from Microsoft, VMWare, Adobe etc.
(+) Balanced program with great electives and experiential learning opportunities
(+) Have moderate connections among UW Alumni who are now in senior tech positions in the US
(-) T25 rank, has the weakest brand among the three within the US and outside it
(-) I will have zero recruiting backup options if tech recruitment remains ice-cold until 2025
Marshall (net tuition: 72,000)(+) Strongest parent university brand within the US and back home in India
(+) Access to California recruiting scene/Silicon beach (is this even a big deal?)
(+) Trojan network seems widest and strongest among the three
(-) Weak program in terms of tech focus, experiential learning, and recruiting
(-) Extremely expensive due to CoL. Not passionate about attending, only applied for the brand and negotiating power
(-) Its California advantage is diluted by much stronger programs (GSB, Haas, Anderson)