Double Tall Iced Mocha, Lite on the Chocolate

June 28, 2004

Since when does a Cheese Steak have lettuce, tomatoes and mayo???

Filed under: /food — @ 11:42 pm

When I was in SF last week. Some friends of mine went to a “Philly Cheese Steak”
restaurant. Some opted for what was thought to be the classic cheese steak, while others went for the vegetarian version with substituted seitan for the thinly sliced rib eye steak.

I have only visited Philly once, and admittedly, I did not have an authentic cheese steak while I was there. However having grown up on the east coast, I at some point had the knowledge implanted in my brain that a cheese steak consisted of steak and cheese, possibly onions but nothing else. Matt had the same belief. So you could imagine our dismay when the sandwiches arrived with lettuce, tomatoes, and mayo!

What is this? The devils work? Who could possibly think that a cheese steak requires these horrid accessories? What part of CHEESE and STEAK dont they understand? At this point I wrote it off to a San Francisco thing and moved on with my life. End of story until…

This past Sunday I walked down to Philadelphia Cheese Steak (formerly Philly’s Best) in Seattle’s Central District. Upon my arrival I expected to order a cheese steak to go and be on my merry way. Wrong! I was informed by the counter employee that a cheese steak comes with lettuce, tomato, and mayo. I was also informed that if I wanted what I have come to know as a proper cheese steak, that I was to order it by the name of Cheese Whiz which I was assured didn’t have cheese whiz on the sandwich.

This post is my plea for someone to answer the question that has left me sleepless, Since when does a cheese steak come with lettuce, tomatoes, and mayo?

I have sent a query to Frank Jr. at Pat’s King of Steaks in Philadelphia, PA. This is where the cheese steak originated in 1930 a brainchild of Pat Olivieri.

I went to San Francisco and all I got was the anti-sco T-shirt, not really…

Filed under: /freenetworks, /geek, /seattlewireless, /travel — Ken @ 10:49 pm

Updated to fix broken link to Geocoder.us

So I am in the passenger seat of our rental car as we (Rob, Matt, Myself) pull out of San Rafael and head back to the highway for our 12 hour drive back to Seattle. So what did I do on my four day trip?

  • I determined that the Sirius satellite radio in our rental car sucked, with over 60 audio channels that each had maybe one song an hour that I actually liked. On top of that every time you go under a bridge it loses contact with the satellite. In San Francisco keeping contact with the Satellite was pretty much impossible. So much for Satellite radio.
  • I drove for about twelve hours on the way from Seattle to SF, I gave up to nap and let Rob take over two hours outside San Francisco.
  • I met with a bunch of my old community wireless folk, and met new members of Personal Telco, Third Break.
  • I got to talk to Soren of Soekris Engineering and talked about his up and coming products.
  • I saw Schuyler’s Geocoder.us project for the first time and noticed that he finally has an inside voice thanks to his new wife Jo.
  • I went to the EFF for the first time and got see their office. During our Summit meetings I got to review a document the EFF is working on for providing ISPs with best practices for protecting themselves when users/customers of their networks violate copyright law.
  • I got an Anti-Sco (SCO in a circle with a line through it) and a “Homeland Security” t-shirt courtesy of Petey.
  • In true San Francisco fashion I double parked, however not only did I double park, I parallel double parked! So take that your California freaks.
  • I ate at Truly-Med, a mediterranean place in the Mission that Matt has been raving about for years.
  • I tried for three days straight to train Martha’s (coffee shop in Noe Valley) to make my espresso drink to my liking, at which I failed miserably.
  • I have finally entered the world of Internet advertising and setup google adsense on my websites.
  • I worked on the freenetworks.org box, and upgraded apache, mod-perl, openssh, and installed spam assassin. Which in turn has also resulted in a major overhaul to the Freenetwork’s site.
  • I went out to dinner with a cool female I met in Seattle a little while ago.
  • I didn’t go to the Mystery Spot in Santa Cruz
  • For the first time in my past five trips to the Bay Area, I did not go to Fryes.
  • I didn’t get arrested!
  • June 22, 2004

    The End of an era? Or just the beginning…

    Filed under: /geek, /seattle, /seattlewireless — Ken @ 10:12 pm

    This is a long over due eulogy/ode to C4 space, I warehouse space I rented for two years:

    So around November 2001 I had spent a little over a year working on SeattleWireless as well as acquiring a gang of servers hosting websites, dns, and mail for myself and some friends.

    So I started entertaining the idea of getting a shop space on Capitol Hill for the purpose of providing a more permanent home for the servers, and to also have a meeting/work space for Seattlewireless. Finding a decent sized space on Capitol Hill proved to be extremely difficult and prohibitively expensive.

    By the end of November I had settled on a 1200 square ft. space in the *old* Rainier Brewery. Most people think of the Tully’s building as the old Rainier Brewery (which it is), however before the brewery was there it was in an old brick building on the 5900 block of Airport Way South. The space I selected was in the old “Malt House” and owned the aroma of the fish company that had previously dwelled there. But smells aside I was extremely excited by it all. Georgetown has a awesome community of people and local coffee shop, bar, and pizza place.

    Off I went, scoring old server racks from Boeing Surplus, getting a business class DSL with no rules about hosting servers/services and a grip of static ip addresses.

    My friends were somewhat skeptical of the space, Georgetown being almost 7 miles from Capitol Hill. Around January of 2002 Seattlewireless was hosting the annual Freenetworks summit. I think this is when I really realized what an impact having the space really made. On a Sunday afternoon, the last day of the summit, we had over 200 people that had come to C4 to meet, listen to, and converse with some of the most active people involved in community wireless.

    Among the attendees were people that worked on FreeBSD, Apache, OpenSSL,802.1x, and others. Many people got their first look at the Soekris Boards (brought by Matt Peterson) and the Musenki beta product (brought by Jim Thompson). Of course there were wireless folk from all over the world including:

  • BAWUG - Bay Area, CA
  • Nocat - Sebastapol, CA
  • Consume - London
  • NYC Wireless - NY, NY
  • AustinWireless - Austin, TX
  • BCWireless - Vancouver, British Columbia
  • Personal Telco - Portland, OR
  • Free2Air - Austrailia?From this point things moved along, we started having SeattleWireless meetings at the space (named C4 because of its unit number and the pun on explosives). Other people in the warehouse were using our internet connection, people brought couches, chairs, a pool table, ping pong table, plenty of old machines for spare parts. Even the most alpha of the geeks were amazed at the amount and variety of networking/computer gear housed at C4 space.

    As time went on C4 hosted the weekly Seattlewireless hack night. Where we built many nodes, worked on Airport Linux, argued about node architecture, and had cracked out arguments with various people sometimes until 4 a.m. It was not uncommon for Matt to resolve arguments on the mailing list, by calling someone and telling them to come down so it can be hashed out on the white board.

    As time went on though things happening at C4 slowed down. After leaving my job at Flight Safety Boeing, I was definitely in much less of a position to carry the weight of a second rent, second DSL line etc… Eventually we moved the Seattlewireless.net server, and all of our personal servers out of the space.

    It was pretty obvious at this point that the Salad Days of C4 space were over. In the final months we cleaned it out. Moving every piece of computer equipment, ethernet cable, whiteboard, was like moving a piece of Seattle’s geek history. In a short two year period this damp, fishy warehouse space had fueled a faction of Seattle’s geek community and help put a project and a movement on the books permanently. While I would definitely think twice about doing something like this again, I cant say that I regret it at all.

  • June 19, 2004

    2004 Freenetworks Summit

    Filed under: /freenetworks, /geek, /seattlewireless — Ken @ 12:42 pm

    So this weekend I am in San Francisco at the 2004 Freenetworks Summit. The event is a gathering of Freenetworkers/Community Wireless Groups from various places. The groups represented at the Summit are:

  • Seattlewireless.net
  • BAWUG Bay Area Wireless Users Group
  • Third Break Santa Cruz, CA
  • Nocat Sebastopol,CA
  • PersonalTelco Portland, OR
  • SFlan San Francisco
  • Consume LondonWe are meeting to discuss the following:
  • Freenetworks.org what to do with it
  • Yet again working on the definition of a Freenetwork
  • Various other stuff mentioned on the Agenda
  • Double Dutch

    Filed under: /friends, /seattle — Ken @ 11:41 am

    Andrea has the On The Double Dutch website up and running now. “On the double” is a double dutch jump rope team in Seattle. They are usually performing at First Thursday in Pioneer Square, and they also have a list of places they perform on the website.

    Here is a link to a Double Dutch team in SF (where I am right now).
    Double Dutchess