Wednesday, February 16, 2005

Guest Post: Bone Lick(in' Good)

A new neighborhood place opened recently (in the West Village) and it turns out to be one of the only legal, authentic BBQ places in Manhattan.  It's called Bone Lick Park BBQ and it's at 75 Greenwich Avenue, between Bank and 11th (just northwest of the intersection of 7th Avenue and 11th Street, for those of you who find Village geography confusing).  My wife and I have been there once (and really liked it, except for the cornbread) on the advice of my dad, Norman.  He and my mom have now gone back a second time and he emailed me this review:

"We had dinner [at Bone Lick] tonite.  Your mother had the back ribs and I had a combo of beef ribs and chopped pork.  I am enormously impressed with this food because of its authenticity.  I asked and was told that the smoker is right in the basement.  I don't know how the hell they get away with this.  Danny Meyer spent two years trying to get the city to allow a smoker at Blue Smoke.  The BBQ style is Tennessee, which means they rely on the rub for the flavor instead of smothering it in sauce.  You can taste the wood smoke in every bite.
 
Although I still insist that the collards are timid and I agree that the cornbread is insipid, we tried two different sides tonite and were extremely pleased with the limas and the okra.  Makes you forget about the collards. 
 
The beef ribs look like they came off an elephant.  There's about a half pound of meat attached to each one.  They serve two on the combo plate and I could only eat one.  No prob with doggy bags.
 
I asked for the Tabasco and the waiter brought the McIlhenny along with a squirt bottle of their home-made.  This is not the stuff that's already out on the table.  Be sure to ask for it.
 
Finally, we shared a slice of key lime pie.  Wow!  The last time we had anything this good was when we were in Islamorada decades ago. They use real key limes (tart and bitter).  There's nothing like this in NYC."

For a neighborhood joint, this place is really good.  Go sample the fare if you have a chance.

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 Tuesday, February 15, 2005

Calling Mozilla's Bluff

Thankfully, Microsoft announced today that there will be an IE7, that it will designed for users of Windows XP, and that there will be a beta version by the summer.  The denialist rhetoric of promising us an amazing new browser, but tethering it to Longhorn without throwing us a bone beforehand is now over. 

IE's a great browser, and its security issues are more a byproduct of its ubiquity and role of high-value target than of deficient engineering.  On the other hand, the product's been in maintenance mode for a long time, remaining largely unchanged (though not unpatched) for years.  This has left Redmond incredibly vulnerable to attack by the Mozilla Foundation, or for that matter any programming team actually getting some substantive work done.  All the FireFox team had to do was catch up to IE, throw in a few easily implemented features (sorry, I'm a bit jaded) like RSS integration and multiple tabbed browser windows, and yee haw! The Browser Wars are back, and the slow news days at CMP and IDG give way to a festival of provocative headlines and a new round of predicting Microsoft's demise.

So Microsoft is fighting back, as it should (and indeed as it should have done more proactively beforehand) and we'll get some new stuff in the browser.  By the time it's all over, I suspect it will be a non-event.  We'll all revert back to our anxiety over the actual release of all the stuff we saw at PDC in 2003 (Yukon, Whidbey, and Longhorn).

But Microsoft will have learned a lesson, or at least reinforced one already learned: don't rest on your past victories, or customers will start getting impatient and resentful.  Even if it's just for effect, keep the new features coming.  The whole PC culture is built around an attitude of entitlement toward new features, and people get very upset when their entitlements are taken away.

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 Monday, February 14, 2005

The Remote to End All Others

When I have more time, I'll discuss Windows Media Center (I own the HP z545 Digital Entertainment Center and x5400 Media Center Extender), with which I have a love-hate relationship.  But no matter what type of home entertainment center you have, you should strongly consider buying a Harmony Universal Remote from Logitech (I have the 680).  If you don't know about these things, they are learning remotes, but the way you set them up is to connect them to your PC via a USB cable, and then connect to a mother ship Web site which has IR codes for virtually all VCRs, TVs, DVD players, PVRs, media PCs, cable/satellite set tops, tape decks, receivers, CD players, tuners, etc. ever made.  You just tell a browser-based Wizard what makes and models you own and how you have them connected and it will set up just about everything for you, including programming and labeling of configurable "soft buttons" at the top of the unit.  Yes, you will want to tweak the default set up a little and yes, you can teach it IR codes the old-fashioned way if you have to.

But when you're done with set up, ONE button for TV, Music, or DVD/VCR operations will turn EVERYTHING on and switch the inputs on everything and ONE button will turn everything off.  And guess what the latter button is labeled?  Yup...it just says "Off."  This remote is 100% spouse-proof and 100% baby-sitter friendly.  It's tactile (no screen based pronto-type stuff here) and it's back-lit and it's WAY smaller (and shaped like the TiVo "peanut" remote) than my two-handed Marantz RC 2000 Mk II was.  Get one!

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Laptop Nirvana

I _love_ my new ThinkPad T42.  I got it (care of my benevolent employer) loaded with 2GB of RAM, a 60MB 7200RPM internal drive _and_ an 80MB 5400 RPM second drive for the "UltraBay."  I'm running all VPC images off the second drive, and this is really amping up my presentation capabilities.  For the talk I gave at today's Microsoft ISV Community Days event, I had two separate VPCs running (one with Whidbey Beta 1/Yukon Beta 2 and the other with the Whidbey December CTP) as well as PowerPoint on the host/physical machine, and I was Alt-Tabbing between everything with ease.  Oh, and the VPCs ran pretty quickly too.

This is my first IBM laptop, and I'm never going back (unless Lenovo really screws up the superior engineering of these things, which I doubt).  I previously used Dell Latitudes (have owned 3 of them in total), and before that a couple of WinBook models (that was ages ago).  The Dells were never great, but the last one was a horror show...I had it serviced more times than I can remember, replacing the hard drive, the DVD/CD-RW combo drive, the keyboard, and the motherboard (three separate times).  The ThinkPad is just leaugues better; the 1400 x 1050 display is lovely and high-res without being illegible, and the UltraBay is especially impressive.  I do think the Dell docking station was easier to use (especially because it was truly front loading), and the icons for the myriad IBM software utilities are ugly as sin.  IBM's continuing refusal to put a Windows key on the ThinkPad keyboards is beyond absurd.  I have mapped the Right Alt key to be the Windows key, but that's far from elegant.

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MS ISV Community Days Event Presentation Slides


Other than a startup glitch with wireless microphone static, today's talk on ADO.NET 2.0 went quite well, all in all.  Thanks again to Sajee Mathew for inviting me and ThinkPath for hosting the event.  Those interested in the slides can find them here.  And I'll be doing the whole talk again on St. Patty's Day.
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