Categories
In the News

R.I.P. Blinky, the Two-Headed Calf (Who Looks Just Like the Tucows Logo)

(This article was cross-posted to Global Nerdy.)

Boing Boing points to the story of Blinky, the two-headed calf, who was euthanized yesterday.

My co-workers at Tucows and I couldn’t help but notice that Blinky bore a rather uncanny resemblance to our corporate logo:

Blinky the two-headed calf, side-by-side with the Tucows logo

Categories
Uncategorized

Tucows on Canadian Business’ 2007 “Tech 100”

(This was cross-posted to Global Nerdy.)

Business squishy cow and Canadian Business “Tech 100″ logoWhat’s a blog for, if not to toot one’s own horn, or at least the horn of the company for whom he is a spokesmodel?

Tucows, where I’ve worked for four years and where I hold the title of Technical Evangelist, is on Canadian Business’ 2007 “Tech 100” List, their annual listing of Canada’s 100 largest publicly traded companies. We’re right by the median, ranked at number 49 on the “Performance” list.

I like to think that at least a little chunk of that was my doing.

Categories
funny

Disturbing Food Image #1

Sausage snake charmer
Image courtesy of Miss Fipi Lele.

Categories
funny

I Love the Cover of the Latest “Onion Weekender”

(This was cross-posted to Global Nerdy.)

Cover of the “Onion Weekender”: “Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg — We sit down with the Smug Little Shit Behind the Latest Internet Phenomenon”

Categories
funny

Nerd Scrabble

I got this picture from my friend Miss Fipi Lele. It was originally titled Alderaan is a proper noun, assho — OPTIMUS! COOL IT WITH THE LUBE!:

Nerds in Optimus Prime, Darth Vader and Boba Fett masks playing Scrabble

Categories
Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

A Tale of Two Facades

Take a look at this building:

Facade of High Park Manor, on Bloor Street near High Park Avenue, Toronto.

…and then this building:

Facade of Sunny South, on Bloor Street near High Park Avenue, Toronto.

Believe it or not, these buildings aren’t just in the same neighbourhood, they’re right beside each other. I took both photos on the same day, perhaps 15 seconds apart. Good landscaping and decent signage make a big difference.

(I really hate the sign on High Park Manor, from the all-wrong-for-the-building choice of typefaces, to the fluorescent-backlit sign that makes the place look like a convenience store rather than an apartment across the street from the city’s largest park.)

Categories
Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Cluck, Grunt and Low

Neon sign from the Toronto barbecue restaurant “Cluck, Grunt and Low”, featuring a pig, cow and chicken in suits.
Click the photo to see its Flickr page.

A couple of weeks back, the Ginger Ninja and I went to Cluck, Grunt and Low to see if Toronto finally got a barbecue place worth mentioning. I felt that the food could use a little work: the sauce — which comes courtesy of the highly-regarded Thuet — is quite good, but the pork ribs I had that night were a little thin and dry; I’ve had juicier and meatier at Montana’s Cookhouse (which is surprisingly good, considering that it’s a chain). Wendy, who’s used to some of the better barbecue place in the Boston area, said that it wasn’t authentic enough to bill itself as “barbecue”. I think the true test will be to bring my coworkers from Tucows’ Starkville, Mississippi office there. We’ve had a couple of serious discussions of what real barbecue is, and I think it would be interesting to see what they think.

Opinion seems to be divided between the professional reviewers and the word-of-mouthers. The people on the Chowhound discussion board have by and large been disappointed, while Toronto Life food reviewer James Chatto, Eye Weekly’s Kathryn Borel and the National Post review have generally been favourable.

I think part of Cluck, Grunt and Low’s problem is that the food isn’t barbecued or smoked on the premises. The place isn’t large enough — I remember when it was Shakespeare’s Cafe, a student coffeehouse — and there just isn’t enough of the smell that a real barbecue pit and smokehouse has. The barbecuing and smoking apparently takes place offsite and the food is trucked in, where it’s warmed. Those of you who old enough to remember the CN Tower restaurant in the late 70’s and early 80’s may recall hearing that the kitchens were in the basement and the food had to be taken up in the elevator, which was one of the reasons why the Tower’s Revolving Restaurant was also known locally as the “Revolting Restaurant”.

I might give Cluck, Grunt and Low another shot if I start hearing better reviews from friends or the Chowhound crowd, but in the meantime, I think I’m going to get my barbecue during my trips to the States.