Drinkmore Cafe
The Drinkmore Cafe was a coffee shop on Capitol Hill in Seattle, Washington.
History
Opened on April 1, 2000, as the Bit Star,[1] it was reported by InfoWorld to be the first commercial business to offer free wireless internet Wi-Fi services. Although few had the equipment necessary to take advantage of this, free wireless internet became a major component of the small coffee shop business model across America.
The Drinkmore was owned and run by software executive and Seattle mayoral candidate Scott Kennedy. It was the headquarters of Seattle Wireless and was the Howard Dean meetup spot during his 2004 presidential campaign.
The cafe's original location, a 1905 "Dye Works" warehouse at the corner of Bellevue Avenue East and Thomas Street, was demolished in 2014 by the property owner to make way for new condominiums.[1]
References
- ^ a b Robert Hathaway, "The end of the line for The Drinkmore", Queen Anne & Magnolia News Archived
External links
- Official website at the Wayback Machine (archived 2017-09-23)
- v
- t
- e
- ʔálʔal Café
- Analog
- Anchorhead
- Artly
- Bauhaus
- Black Coffee Northwest
- Boon Boona
- Café Allegro
- Café Avole
- Café Hagen
- Caffe Ladro
- Caffè Umbria
- Caffé Vita
- Cherry Street
- Coffee Equipment Company
- Drinkmore Cafe
- Eastern Cafe
- Elm
- Espresso Vivace
- Fuel
- Fulcrum
- Ghost Alley Espresso
- Ghost Note
- Hello Em
- Kaladi Brothers
- Kitanda
- Last Exit on Brooklyn
- Monorail Espresso
- Moore
- Mr. West Cafe Bar
- Overcast
- Pegasus
- Phin
- Seattle's Best
- Seattle Coffee Works
- Starbucks
- Original Starbucks
- Reserve Roastery
- Storyville
- Top Pot Doughnuts
- Tully's
- Victrola
- Wunderground
- Zeitgeist
This US-based restaurant or restaurant chain article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e