Here are some youtube videos, or articles that caught my eye - from the New York Times, Consumer Reports, Popular Science etc.
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Top ten things to do in Seattle
Take a tour:
Three really fun ways to your downtown:
By Segway - learn to ride a Segway, and learn all about downtown while you're at it. About $75 each, but deals on Groupon.
The underground tour - an interesting bit of Seattle history.
Seattle Bites tour - get a taste test of a dozen downtown restaurants.
-tour Lake Union on a hot tub boat http://hottubboats.com/about/ or an electric boat http://www.theelectricboatco.com/ - both are several hundred dollars, but are unusual and fun.
- Take a bay cruise on an Argosy boat. There's a version of the tour that goes through the Ballard locks and you catch a bus back downtown - it's good but it's 2-3 hr and there's not a whole lot to see all the way.
- Take a tour of the Ballard canal locks "Chittenden locks." Watch the fish swimming through the fish- ladder bypass for the locks. Best when the fish are running, of course! Or watch a boat go through the locks - more likely on weekends.
Here's a list of free (or cheap) tours.
Visit a museum:
-Get a citypass (http://www.citypass.com/seattle) for a deal that's worth it if you visit 3 or more of the attractions.
-The Boeing factory tour at the Everett plant: a long way out (about an hour's drive from downtown) but unforgettable to be in the worlds largest building.
- The Museum of Flight at Boeing Field: you can go inside an actual Concorde, and see the stealth SR71 up close.
- Experience Music Project, a contemporary music 'museum' at Seattle Center. An incredibly innovative building (look at these photos!) that people either love or hate. The museum isn't worth the price of admission, but you can walk all around the lobby for free and take in the building, and even see the giant 'Skychurch' screen.
- The Olympic Outdoor Sculpture Park: this is at the north end of downtown, and you'll be close to it at some point anyway. Unusual giant outdoor sculptures.
- The Museum of Glass, in Tacoma is 40 miles away but on weekends they have artists blowing glass in the museum and explaining what they are doing. If you just want to see glass sculptures, go to Chihuly gardens right under the space needle - http://chihulygardenandglass.com
- Gold Rush National Historic Park, in Pioneer Square: this is a hidden downtown gem and really worth the trip: it recreates the feeling of getting a gold rush expedition together.
-Discovery Park is a large public park with a view up and down Puget sound and many half mile trails. -Alki beach is a similar long public beach and great place to stroll and people-watch with an expansive view.
- The Woodland Park Zoo is ok; I'd rather see The Seattle Aquarium
Visit a landmark:
- Pike Place Market: fun to walk around and see food and crafts.
- the revolving Restaurant at the Space Needle and Seattle Center. The food is better than you'd expect for a touristy place, ascend it's fun to dine in the restaurant, which slowly rotates. But it's about $40 a person! At least if you're dining you don't have to pay the $15 a person to ride to the top, so you can factor that into the cost. However, see my suggestion about the Starbucks in Columbia Tower, below.
- Seattle Waterfront - good for a sightseeing stroll. You can take a ferry trip for a nice water view and it's only about $7 to walk on.
- Seattle Public Library - spectacular architecture!
A few hours away:
Tour the Wild Horse wind turbine farm near Ellensburg for free. Tours from April-Nov.
Tour the world's sixth largest hydroelectric dam for free at the Grand Coulee Dam visitors center, open year round.
Now the important part: restaurants. Seattle is known for its fine dining, but here's a list of cheap, interesting, small places.
Go for coffee.
Coffee culture is such a central part of Seattle culture, but where to go to get that unique Seattle take on coffee? Here's a video:
https://youtu.be/iVSFg35NS1w
Slate coffee:
https://goo.gl/maps/3m3oLw2uXPJ2
La Marzocco
https://goo.gl/maps/mZcrhsmR6Kp
Ghost Alley Espresso
https://goo.gl/maps/VEQEtH6gBYt
Mabel coffee (for their bulletproof coffee)
https://goo.gl/maps/YAVBuyiJfBA2
Broadcast Coffee
https://goo.gl/maps/yb6CehDpswL2
Or, take a ferry to Pegasus Coffee
https://goo.gl/maps/uMiN5ikRZt92
- the revolving Restaurant at the Space Needle and Seattle Center. The food is better than you'd expect for a touristy place, ascend it's fun to dine in the restaurant, which slowly rotates. But it's about $40 a person! At least if you're dining you don't have to pay the $15 a person to ride to the top, so you can factor that into the cost. However, see my suggestion about the Starbucks in Columbia Tower, below.
- Seattle Waterfront - good for a sightseeing stroll. You can take a ferry trip for a nice water view and it's only about $7 to walk on.
- Seattle Public Library - spectacular architecture!
A few hours away:
Tour the Wild Horse wind turbine farm near Ellensburg for free. Tours from April-Nov.
Tour the world's sixth largest hydroelectric dam for free at the Grand Coulee Dam visitors center, open year round.
Now the important part: restaurants. Seattle is known for its fine dining, but here's a list of cheap, interesting, small places.
Go for coffee.
Coffee culture is such a central part of Seattle culture, but where to go to get that unique Seattle take on coffee? Here's a video:
https://youtu.be/iVSFg35NS1w
Slate coffee:
https://goo.gl/maps/3m3oLw2uXPJ2
La Marzocco
https://goo.gl/maps/mZcrhsmR6Kp
Ghost Alley Espresso
https://goo.gl/maps/VEQEtH6gBYt
Mabel coffee (for their bulletproof coffee)
https://goo.gl/maps/YAVBuyiJfBA2
Broadcast Coffee
https://goo.gl/maps/yb6CehDpswL2
Or, take a ferry to Pegasus Coffee
https://goo.gl/maps/uMiN5ikRZt92
Breakfast café:
Exquisite pastries and breads
Cheap good, crowded, and fun:
Wholesome, flavorful, interesting converted home setting:
Hi-Spot
Liam's (http://m.yelp.ca/biz/liams-seattle) in University Village, from the owners of Beecher's handmade cheese (best steak, ever)
Liam's (http://m.yelp.ca/biz/liams-seattle) in University Village, from the owners of Beecher's handmade cheese (best steak, ever)
Best Starbucks view ever: Columbia Tower. Take a free public elevator up the tallest building in Seattle with a curved black shape. On the 40tg floor there's a Starbucks with an incredible view.
London Plane: beautiful, yesteryear feel with huge windows, white woodwork, Staff in aprons, and gorgeous food. http://m.yelp.ca/biz/the-london-plane-seattle#
Ethnic:
Indian: excellent almost-too-fussy service, bottomless cups of homemade Chai
This one is close to the Space Needle and has a great cheap buffet lunch
Thai: hole in the wall, cheap, spicy, good, and you watch them cook it just a few inches in front of you.
Cuban sandwich
Incredible, so tender, delicious bread - an unforgettable greasy wonderful spicy meal
BBQ beef sandwich
This ones to die for. Incredible sauce.
Pecos Pit BBQ
Fresh fish:
Eat looking out at the boats of Deadliest Catch. Cheap, noisy, good but not great foo
Ethiopian
There's a large Ethiopian population in Seattle, and plenty of restaurants.
I've tried this tiny cheap place and enjoyed their sampler platter.
You eat with your hands and scoop up curry dishes with interesting ethnic bread.
Cafe Selam.
Southern
I've heard great things about Ezell's Fried Chicken, but haven't been there.
They have several locations.
The original one is now called Heaven Sent Chicken, apparently, but doesn't rate as well as the franchised ones.
http://m.yelp.ca/biz/liams-seattle
A Yelp collection of things to do in Seattle:
https://www.yelp.com/collection/NDC1r-AgvxmBLbq0Trk-tw?ytl_=764887f83b3ac81730e1b75c971bad70&utm_medium=email&utm_source=community_email&utm_campaign=May-07-2021
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Unusual vehicle. Watch from 0:57 to see how "easy" it is to start riding.
It even does tricks -
from treehugger:
It even does tricks -
from treehugger:
As CoolHunting.com explains it, the Solowheel is "geared for the mobile urbanite." It's a "self-balancing electric unicycle" that uses gyro sensors, a 1,000-watt motor and a rechargeable lithium-ion battery.
It charges up in as little as 45 minutes, according to Inventist.com, and lasts for about two hours on a charge. The poor person's Chevy Volt? The unicycle recaptures energy when going downhill or slowing down.
Trisled velomobile Avatar - only $AU 14500
Trisled Avatar is 55 lb and totally enclosed.
Trisled Rotovelo carbon is a remarkable 44 lb, lightest I can find anywhere.
https://trisled.com.au/hpv/rotovelo-carbon/
http://www.trisled.com.au/avatar.asp
Trisled Rotovelo carbon is a remarkable 44 lb, lightest I can find anywhere.
https://trisled.com.au/hpv/rotovelo-carbon/
http://www.trisled.com.au/avatar.asp
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
How Google searches
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2013/jan/19/google-search-knowledge-graph-singhal-interview
That was the time, in the prehistory of about 1995, when our ideas of "search" still carried the sense of the word's Latin roots – a search was a kind of "arduous quest" ...
Until now, Google has been an unprecedented signposter of knowledge. It has not "known" the answer to anything itself but it has had an awfully clever way of directing you to exactly the place you can find out...
"the semantic web", the version that had understanding as well as data, that could itself provide answers, not links to answers...Thus, when you type "10 Downing Street" into Google with Knowledge Graph, it responds to that phrase not as any old address but much in the way you or I might respond – with a string of real-world associations, prioritised in order of most frequently asked questions.
Google has already come closer than anyone could ever have imagined to the "nothing was left to be collected" part of that equation. It is in searchable possession not only of the trillions of pages of the world wide web, but it is well on the way to photographing all the world's streets, of scanning all the world's books, of collecting every video ...This data has been collected not just for the purpose of feeding it back to us as accurately as possible, but also for the wider purpose: of teaching Google how to think for itself.
Search analysis is divided into "long clicks" and "short clicks". ... A short click ...occurs when a user performs a search, clicks through on a result and quickly comes back to the result set to click on an alternative result.
"We are maniacally focusing on the user to reduce every possible friction point between them, their thoughts and the information they want to find." - Amit Singhal
http://www.google.ca/insidesearch/features/search/knowledge.html
http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2011/12/20/norways-fjord-cooled-data-center/
http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/a-bomb-shelter-now-it-produces-green-energy/
That was the time, in the prehistory of about 1995, when our ideas of "search" still carried the sense of the word's Latin roots – a search was a kind of "arduous quest" ...
Until now, Google has been an unprecedented signposter of knowledge. It has not "known" the answer to anything itself but it has had an awfully clever way of directing you to exactly the place you can find out...
"the semantic web", the version that had understanding as well as data, that could itself provide answers, not links to answers...Thus, when you type "10 Downing Street" into Google with Knowledge Graph, it responds to that phrase not as any old address but much in the way you or I might respond – with a string of real-world associations, prioritised in order of most frequently asked questions.
Google has already come closer than anyone could ever have imagined to the "nothing was left to be collected" part of that equation. It is in searchable possession not only of the trillions of pages of the world wide web, but it is well on the way to photographing all the world's streets, of scanning all the world's books, of collecting every video ...This data has been collected not just for the purpose of feeding it back to us as accurately as possible, but also for the wider purpose: of teaching Google how to think for itself.
Search analysis is divided into "long clicks" and "short clicks". ... A short click ...occurs when a user performs a search, clicks through on a result and quickly comes back to the result set to click on an alternative result.
"We are maniacally focusing on the user to reduce every possible friction point between them, their thoughts and the information they want to find." - Amit Singhal
http://www.google.ca/insidesearch/features/search/knowledge.html
http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2011/12/20/norways-fjord-cooled-data-center/
http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/a-bomb-shelter-now-it-produces-green-energy/
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