Published July 22 - 28, 1999
Best Geeks
BY SEATTLE WEEKLY STAFF
best of seattle 1999
critics' choice: geeks
Best typical statement from
a Microsoft millionaire
Scott Oki, after spending
almost four years building a beautiful, graceful, sweeping Eastside golf
course, the Golf Club at Newcastle, announced green fees at his labor of
love would be $125 because "compared to resorts in Arizona and Palm Springs,
we have a much better product.''
Best
used-computer shop
If you're the kind of person
whose computer case is held on by all the original screws, please move on
to the next capsule. You will be not only unhappy but possibly frightened
at RE-PC (1565 Sixth, 623-9151). If you are, however, the kind of person
who isn't disturbed about buying a box with nothing but DOS 5.0 on it, RE-PC
will be traumatic only for your credit card. The Sixth Avenue shop lies hard
by the transit bus yards and has the air of a place where much of the merchandise
has arrived by strange and circuitous routes--and it has, for you have entered
the Computer Casbah. Treasures lie all around you: A friend of ours picked
off a complete SPARCstation IPC with a 19-inch monitor, keyboard, and assorted
extras for $400 (and boy, are we jealous). Whether your taste runs to the
similarly high-octane or down the well-trodden PC road (or even to restoring
more antique computers), you're bound to find something you suddenly need
desperately here. Best of all and all too uncommonly, the staff actually
knows what they're talking about--and will tell you honestly if they, or
you, do not.
Best URL registered from Puget
Sound
Are you alone in loving the
alien? No one alive (no one we want to know, anyway) can abide George Lucas'
uber-annoying Jar Jar Binks, but give Auburn resident Jeremy Mueller credit
for being ahead of the curve. Mueller felt the Force and had his site, www.jarjarmustdie.com,
online four days before Phantom Menace opened, which not only allowed him
to catch the 12:01am show at the Neptune on May 19 (Day One, if you've already
forgotten the fuss), but gave all of us somewhere to vent our frustrations
131 minutes later. Since then he's been deluged with international press and
attention, collected over 200,000 site hits, and started auctioning off cool
vanity addresses (such as "DarthMaul@JarJarMustDie.com") for charity, all
with the hope that Lucas and company will see past the humor and "return to
the ways of the original Lucasian Saga." Meesa hooped, yessa!
Best search site
The butler did it. As recently
as last winter we were still functioning Net adults, in control of our fact-tracking
faculties. Whipping Yahoo into shape? We grew up in libraries: Taxonomy is
second nature, and we might as well have the Dewey Decimal System tattooed
to the inside of our eyelids. Cutting to the chase on AltaVista? Give us enough
AND and NOT and NEAR operators and we could find Amelia Earhart, never mind
Web Page X on Topic Y. But that's all over now. In our dotage, we turn instead
to the friendly real-language search faculties at Ask Jeeves (www.ask.com),
exhibiting all the querulousness and vagueness we plan to exhibit when we
really are old women and men. Jeeves, did AMC cancel the TV show Remember
WENN? (Yes, but an enterprising fan wrote a "script" resolving the season-ending
cliffhanger.) Jeeves, how are pundits Freeman Dyson and Esther Dyson related?
(He's her father.) Jeeves, does Hello Kitty have a birthday? (Yes, November
1.) The only thing Jeeves won't tell us is how we got like this, and if we'll
ever be equal to facing down lists of 10,000-plus search results again. Now,
get out of here, you rotten kids--Matlock's on!
Best crowd-control device
for free-range weirdos
The lunatic is on the ASCII:
Over the past year or so, Usenet has made a surprising comeback from the
brink of spam overload and general irrelevance. One of the most appealing
aspects of this renaissance is the use of newsgroups as community bulletin
boards and sources of local information, something that Web sites like Sidewalk
and CitySearch tried (and failed) to make obsolete. When it works, it's a
beautiful grassroots thing--and admittedly, sometimes seattle.general does
work, and there are good people participating in it. So why is it home to
such a lot of knee-jerk right-wingers, knee-jerk left-wingers, gun nuts,
tree huggers, not-so-covert racists, and obnoxious Rain City stereotypes
of every stripe? Why must every casual "gee, I'd like to move to Seattle"
note bring down a hail of anti-growth (and pro-rudeness) crap from the Unwelcome
Wagon? Why do three-quarters of all threads degenerate into screaming matches
about gun control or abortion or other talk-radio chestnuts? Why are we still
reading this thing? Look on the bright side: If they're online, these folks
aren't wandering the streets unattended.
Best geek refuge
TCP/IP, therefore I am: You
were expecting maybe an offline refuge? Until your options vest and you can
retire from the IS department, the place to be is Slashdot (www.slashdot.org),
an online cauldron of discourse and dissent, a collaborative-journalism experiment
that presents summaries and links for most of the news that's fit to print
and then encourages the readership to comment. And comment. And comment. Topics
range from serious (the open-source movement, Microsoft's legal saga, bugs,
and hacks) to seriously odd (did alien beings hack the SETI site and leave
a picture of TV alien Alf on the front page?). Since the readers are smart
and often wildly opinionated, arguments can be both unspeakably nasty and
extremely informative, sometimes simultaneously. For a perspective on the
world beyond, media critic Jon Katz occasionally weighs in (and, as a non-geek,
is regularly flamed). Constant reader submission of news items makes Slashdot
a top-notch tech digest; the quality of conversation (both ridiculous and
sublime) makes this a blessed gathering of like minds when you, the office
Dilbert, need to get away from the cluelessness of your pointy-haired boss.
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