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36 Hours in Austin, Tex.

November 27th, 2009 No comments

36 Hours in Austin, Tex.
Erich Schlegel for The New York Times


At the Broken Spoke.
credits

THE city’s unofficial motto, “Keep Austin Weird,” blares from bumper stickers on BMWs and jalopies alike, on T-shirts worn by joggers along Lady Bird Lake and in the windows of independently owned shops and restaurants. It’s an exhortation for a city that clings to eccentricity, even in the face of rapid development — downtown Austin, for one, is being transformed with a fleet of high-rise condos and a W Hotel, scheduled to open late next year. But this funky college town, known for its liberal leanings and rich music scene, has little to worry about — at least as long as its openhearted citizens, with their colorful bungalows and tattoos, do their part to keep the city endearingly odd. As one local put it: “As long as Austinites keep decorating their bodies and cars, we’re going to be fine.”

Friday

4 p.m.
1) DRESS THE PART

If you forgot to pack your Western wear, make a beeline for Heritage Boot (117 West Eighth Street; 512-326-8577; www.heritageboot.com), where Jerome Ryan and his team of “boot elves” fashion fanciful boots out of exotic leathers like shark and caiman alligator, using vintage 1930s to ’60s patterns. With colorful stitching, hand-tooling and puffy, butterfly-shaped inlays, they’re instant collectors’ items — and priced accordingly, from $295 to $1,800. Next, stop by the new location of Cream Vintage (1714-A South Congress Avenue; 512-462-3000; www.creamvintage.com) for vintage Western shirts and weathered concert tees, customized to your dimensions by an on-site tailor.

6:30 p.m.
2) MEAT MECCA

Barbecue is a local sport and there are a lot of competing choices. For a classic pit experience — meaning you can smell the smoke and sauce as soon as you pull into the state-fair-size parking lot — drive 25 miles southwest to the Salt Lick (18300 Farm to Market Road 1826, Driftwood; 512-858-4959; www.saltlickbbq.com), settle into a communal picnic table and order the $18.95 all-you-can-eat platter, piled high with brisket, ribs and sausage. If you prefer to stay in downtown Austin, check out the newcomer Lambert’s Downtown Barbecue (401 West Second Street; 512-494-1500; www.lambertsaustin.com). Carved out of a brick-walled general store that dates from 1873, it is raising the bar (and provoking outrage among purists) with its newfangled “fancy barbecue” — think brown-sugar-and-coffee-rubbed brisket ($14) and maple-and-coriander-encrusted pork ribs ($16).

8 p.m.
3) CULTURAL ANCHOR

Just off the south shore of Lady Bird Lake is the world-class Long Center for the Performing Arts (701 West Riverside Drive; 512-457-5100; www.thelongcenter.org), opened in early 2008 after an epic $80 million fund-raising effort. It has one of the largest, most acoustically perfect stages in Texas, home to the Austin Symphony, Austin Lyric Opera and Ballet Austin. There’s also a smaller black box theater spotlighting local musicians, improv troupes and theater companies. Even if you don’t attend a performance, it’s worth stopping by for a glimpse of the glittering skyline views from the building’s front terrace.

Saturday

10 a.m.
4) BIKE STRONG

Explore the city at a leisurely pace by renting a bicycle from Mellow Johnny’s Bike Shop (400 Nueces Street; 512-473-0222; www.mellowjohnnys.com), opened by Lance Armstrong, a native son, in May 2008. In addition to selling and renting bikes (from $20 for four hours), the shop stocks accessories like wicker baskets, Chrome messenger bags and colorful racing jerseys. An adjacent cafe serves protein smoothies and organic coffee. If you ask, staff members will chart an appealing route along Austin’s 20 miles of urban hike-and-bike trails.

1 p.m.
5) LUNCH ON THE GO

Some of Austin’s best grub can be found in parking lots and vacant lots, dished out of Airstreams and food trucks by both amateur and professional chefs. You’ll find them all on www.austinfoodcarts.com, but here’s your shortlist: tarragon mushroom crepes with goat cheese ($6.75) at Flip Happy Crepes (400 Jessie Street; 512-552-9034; www.fliphappycrepes.com); slow-roasted green chili pork tacos ($3.25 each) at Torchy’s Tacos (1311 South First Street; 512-366-0537; www.torchystacos.com); and the hot, crunchy chicken-and-avocado “cone” with coleslaw and mango aioli ($5.95) at Mighty Cone (1600 South Congress Avenue; 512-383-9609; www.mightycone.com).

3 p.m.
6) VINYL TO DUCKS

South Congress is an appealing neighborhood for window-shopping, or shopping-shopping. Pick up rare and collectible vinyl, from 99 cents to $1,000, at Friends of Sound (1704 South Congress Avenue; 512-447-1000; www.friendsofsound.com), down an alley off the main drag. Quirky souvenirs, like a duck decoy ($28) or antique beaver top hat ($95), abound at Uncommon Objects (1512 South Congress Avenue; 512-442-4000; www.uncommonobjects.com), a sprawling emporium with a flea market aesthetic.

7:30 p.m.
7) BATS!

Early spring through late fall, the Congress Avenue Bridge hosts a Halloween-worthy spectacle: at dusk, more than a million Mexican free-tailed bats pour out from under the bridge and head east to scavenge for insects. The best spot for viewing the exodus is from the park at the southeastern end of the bridge, so you can see their flitting forms backlit by the glowing sky. To hear an estimate of the bats’ flight time on a particular evening, dial the bat hot line, operated by The Austin American-Statesman newspaper and Bat Conservation International (512-416-5700, extension 3636).

8:30 p.m.
8) FRENCH CONNECTION

There’s something almost Felliniesque about driving down a dark road lined with industrial warehouses, and stumbling onto Justine’s (4710 East Fifth Street; 512-385-2900; www.justines1937.com), a new, pitch-perfect French bistro. Outside, a family plays pétanque on the driveway; inside, groups of friends and couples sit on Thonet chairs at candlelit cast-iron-and-marble cafe tables, as a turntable, manned by the owner, Pierre Pelegrin, plays old jazz and reggae tunes. With atmosphere this good, the meal — Parisian comfort food, and delicious — is just a bonus. Order the duck confit ($15) or the steak frites with pepper sauce ($18).

10 p.m.
9) PERFORMANCE ANXIETY

The sheer quantity and variety of music in Austin on any given night can be daunting. Step one: consult Billsmap.com, which lists every gig in the city, highlights recommendations and includes links to previous performances on YouTube. Two spots that reliably deliver a good time are the Broken Spoke, an old-time honky-tonk dance hall (3201 South Lamar Boulevard; 512-442-6189; www.brokenspokeaustintx.com), and the retro red-walled Continental Club (1315 South Congress Avenue; 512-441-2444; www.continentalclub.com), which dates from 1957 and has roots, blues, rockabilly and country music.

Sunday

10 a.m.
10) TAKE A DIP

Wake up with a bracing swim in the natural, spring-fed Barton Springs Pool (2101 Barton Springs Road; 512-476-9044; www.ci.austin.tx.us/parks/bartonsprings.htm), a three-acre dammed pool that maintains a steady 68-degree temperature year-round. There’s sunbathing (sometimes topless) on the grassy slopes, a springy diving board and century-old pecan trees lining its banks. Then, park yourself on the patio at the new Perla’s Seafood & Oyster Bar (1400 South Congress Avenue; 512-291-7300; www.perlasaustin.com) for a decadent lobster omelet ($16) and an oyster shooter spiked with rum and honeydew ($7).

2 p.m.
11) EXPLORE OUTSKIRTS

Hill County beckons to the west and south of Austin, with rolling limestone hills, wildflower-filled meadows and dozens of wineries. Get a closer look by driving 30 minutes to Bastrop State Park (3005 Highway 21 East, Bastrop; 512-321-2101; www.tpwd.state.tx.us/bastrop), for a hike along the 8.5-mile Lost Pines Trail, which takes you past a creek and a toad pond, and through rock outcroppings, mini-gorges and wooded ravines filled with oaks and loblolly pines. Channel your inner cowboy, especially if you’re breaking in new boots.

THE BASICS

American, Continental and JetBlue fly into Austin from many major cities; a flight from Kennedy Airport in New York in early December on JetBlue runs about $300. Public transportation is lacking — though a light rail is planned — so you’ll need a car or bike to explore the city.

An appealing home base is the lively and pedestrian-friendly South Congress neighborhood. Hotel Saint Cecilia (112 Academy Drive; 512-852-2400; www.hotelsaintcecilia.com), which opened last winter, has nine modern studios and bungalows, and five rooms in a converted Victorian house, starting at $275.

More affordable are the 40 rooms at the Hotel San José (1316 South Congress Avenue; 512-852-2350; www.sanjosehotel.com), which are airy and simply adorned with Indian bedspreads and framed vintage concert posters. Doubles with shared bath from $95; doubles with private baths from $160.

Nearby is the year-old Kimber Modern Hotel (110 The Circle; 512-912-1046; www.kimbermodern.com), where six minimalist rooms, from $250, open onto a hammock-strung patio shaded by a giant Texas live oak tree.

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36 Hours in Austin, Tex.

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Microsoft debuts Vine in Seattle: Twitter+Facebook on steroids

May 2nd, 2009 No comments

Microsoft debuts Vine in Seattle: Twitter+Facebook on steroids

Posted by Brier Dudley

It’s been awhile since Microsoft introduced a game-changing social Web application, but Vine — a service that’s debuting today with a beta test in Seattle — could be a contender.

Vine is a hyperlocal, personalized message and alert system. It’s intended to be a dashboard that people can use to keep tabs of their family, friends, activities and major events in their community.

The dashboard — which appears as a widget on a PC screen — displays a map of the user’s community and the status of their contacts. It also has buttons to send alerts or reports, which can be sent and received on the PC or as text messages on a cellphone.

dashboard_01.jpg

Vine could be used by families, schools or soccer teams to notify people of schedules and changes. Individuals could use it as a central hub to keep track of local news and data feeds and updates from services such as Facebook.

But Microsoft’s main emphasis now is providing Vine to emergency management officials, who are intrigued by a new tool that could be used to broadcast and receive information during a disaster or other major event.

“I think long-term this is probably going to be a very valuable tool to help people keep connected, not only during times of crisis but on a daily basis,” said Hillman Mitchell, the city of Tukwila’s emergency management coordinator.

Mitchell, who has reviewed the product and will participate in the public testing, said emergency management officials are already trying to glean information from services such as Twitter and Facebook, but it’s challenging because they’re basically sending limited streams of text. Vine “provides an avenue to consolidate some of that information and analyze it in a more comprehensive way.”

“The underlying technology, where it provides a more structured data form, will long-term be a very valuable asset, whether it’s generated from Microsoft or others,” he said.

Seattle is the first place Vine will be publicly available. During a testing period that begins today, people can sign up at www.vine.net to be among more than 10,000 testers the company hopes to enlist. Similar tests will begin shortly in a rural community in the Midwest and an isolated island community, the locations of which haven’t been disclosed yet.

Inspiration for Vine came from the confusion during Hurricane Katrina. Tammy Savage, a Microsoft manager who has led experimental Web efforts for the company, spent two years researching technologies for communities to communicate and prepare for emergencies. That led to a concept Microsoft calls “societal networking.”

dashboard_03.jpg

Then she spent two more years developing the product and the business, which is an experimental venture under the guidance of Chief Research and Strategy Officer Craig Mundie. That means it’s not allied with any particular product group, giving Savage’s 25-person team leeway to easily blend technologies from across the company.

It’s a little hard to see how Vine will stand out from the multitude of networking and communication services available already, not to mention the carcasses of similar projects such as Seattle startup Trumba, an online calendar and notification service..

But Savage still sees a need and an opportunity for a comprehensive service like Vine, which is designed to become a hub or console for various services that people use.

“We don’t want to re-create things that already exist,” she said. “We’re looking for the opportunities that are particularly appropriate for Microsoft to bring its resources to bear.”

For example, the service is debuting with data feeds from more than 20,000 media sources and public safety organizations, including NOAA and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

Vine could end up competing with local media outlets, which are among the primary places people go for local information during a disaster or emergency. Microsoft is offering government agencies a way to directly communicate with residents during these events, but I wonder if users will be overwhelmed by the flow of data from emergency response agencies and miss the context, analysis and filtering of media sites.

It’s unclear where Vine could end up within Microsoft when it graduates into a full blown business, but it’s mostly likely to complement Microsoft’s suite of e-government software and its Sharepoint collaboration server.

Local officials who have seen the project are enthusiastic about what they’ve seen, but they’re waiting to see how it works and whether it’s widely accepted. Another big question is the cost, especially if Microsoft charges a significant amount for every home and business in their jurisidiction that uses the system.

“They’ve been talking about a few dollars per user ID for a period of time, maybe a month or a year,” said Seattle’s chief technology officer, Bill Schrier. “That doesn’t sound like much but if you spread it out across 300,000 premises, that’s a fair chunk of change.”

Schrier, an avid user of social networking tools such as Twitter and Facebook, said Vine has “really intriguing potential” for community communications and disaster preparedness. After talking to Microsoft about Vine for about five months, he’s planning to see how the service could work with Seattle’s block watch and neighborhood emergency management programs.

UPDATE: A few commenters asked about locking into a proprietary system.

I asked the public officials interviewed about this and whether it was appropriate for municipalities to use a system that requires using Microsoft’s platform and Live ID registration.

Tukwila’s Mitchell said Vine is probably part of “a new wave of technology that we’re going to see from a variety of vendors.”

Schrier said Seattle is particularly concerned about using a system that displays advertising, such as Facebook, because it could appear the city is endorsing advertisers.

Advertising is just part of the equation though. The bigger question surround propagation of Live ID registration/customer acquisition through governments.

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Verizon Web Phone Targets Home Users

January 24th, 2009 No comments

Verizon Communications Inc. will market a snazzy Internet phone that works with any high-speed Internet service.

The new home phone, called the Hub, aims to retain existing landline customers and attract other carriers’ customers, the company said. The phone will deliver streaming video services and work with Verizon Wireless text messaging and location services.

[Verizon Communication's Internet phone] Verizon Wireless

Verizon Communication’s Internet phone for the home offers streaming video and a location-finding service for Verizon Wireless customers.

Verizon Wireless, a joint venture of Verizon and Vodafone Group PLC, will sell the phone in its retail stores beginning Feb. 1. It costs $199 after a $50 rebate. Customers must sign a two-year contract with a monthly charge of $35.

Internet calling has been available for several years, with providers such as Vonage Holdings Corp. offering equipment and services to route calls over the Internet. But the Hub adds a new level of sophistication, offering a range of video and information services beyond calling.

The cordless handset sits in a docking station with a 7-inch touch-screen display for streaming video with news, sports and traffic information. It can also display movie times and facilitate ticket purchases through Fandango. A voicemail feature presents voice messages similar to an email inbox.

It will also come with several features that integrate Verizon cellphones, including the ability to send text messages and Verizon’s Chaperone locator service, which lets users ping their children’s phones to see where they are on a map. In the future, the phone may also work with wireless services from other carriers including Sprint Nextel Corp. and AT&T Inc., executives said.

Mike Lanman, chief marketing officer of Verizon Wireless, said the company isn’t concerned about selling the device even as consumers are tightening their belts. “People want access to information and media content,” he said. “I think it’s an investment families will be willing to make.”

Telecom providers don’t generally design and sell landline phones themselves, but they have started making their own sophisticated handsets in a bid to keep customers from dropping home phone service. AT&T’s HomeManager, a phone made by Samsung Electronics Co., has a similar look and feel to the Hub and many of the same information services, but it offers traditional phone service rather than Internet calling. Verizon has been slow into the Internet calling market. The carrier has had a limited Internet calling service called VoiceWing, but hasn’t marketed it extensively. It has, however, aggressively asserted its patents in the area, suing Vonage in 2007. The companies eventually settled.

Write to Amol Sharma at amol.sharma@wsj.com

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Verizon Web Phone Targets Home Users

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