Vitesse98 wrote:I can't believe anyone actually took seriously my totally silly joke of a suggestion that people go in period attire. If, at any time during this restaurant's lifespan, I encounter someone in period garb, I will never come back again, no matter how good the food is or gets. I mean, come on. Save it for the Ren Faire.
Independent George wrote:Vitesse98 wrote:I can't believe anyone actually took seriously my totally silly joke of a suggestion that people go in period attire. If, at any time during this restaurant's lifespan, I encounter someone in period garb, I will never come back again, no matter how good the food is or gets. I mean, come on. Save it for the Ren Faire.
Really? Men's fashions really haven't changed in 100 years, and I can think of a few women who would totally rock that look. I'd be all for it.
Being a student of history, I forsee a romantic Valentine's day theme of Chicago 1929. Or maybe London, 1888 in late October.
Sounds like a lottery to me, nice.fusionfan wrote:Hi Nick...Have you checked out the Sundance Film Festival model? I have used this in the past and it's pretty seamless, and pretty fair. The key is assigning a randomly generated timeslot over a period of time to the user in order to purchase the ticket. Also, they're explicit that "first come first served" is not in their policy. I think some of the theater organizations in New York (I need to check) follow a similar model. I think the "best practice" models are in the arts organizations because ticketing is such a critical part of their "business model".
I've attached the Sundance instructions below
http://www.sundance.org/festival/tickets/how/
happy_stomach wrote:Vitesse98 wrote:I can't believe anyone actually took seriously my totally silly joke of a suggestion that people go in period attire. If, at any time during this restaurant's lifespan, I encounter someone in period garb, I will never come back again, no matter how good the food is or gets. I mean, come on. Save it for the Ren Faire.happy_stomach wrote:But maybe this setting is too stiff for that?
So, I guess to answer my own question...very yes.
Dmnkly wrote:I, for one, will be rocking Hong Kong 2036.
yellow truffle wrote:Sounds like a lottery to me, nice.fusionfan wrote:Hi Nick...Have you checked out the Sundance Film Festival model? I have used this in the past and it's pretty seamless, and pretty fair. The key is assigning a randomly generated timeslot over a period of time to the user in order to purchase the ticket. Also, they're explicit that "first come first served" is not in their policy. I think some of the theater organizations in New York (I need to check) follow a similar model. I think the "best practice" models are in the arts organizations because ticketing is such a critical part of their "business model".
I've attached the Sundance instructions below
http://www.sundance.org/festival/tickets/how/
but I disagree completely with anyone who wants to dictate what someone else can or can't wear
jesteinf wrote:Hey, anyone else eat at Next yet?
nick.kokonas wrote:
The other issue was that we had a weird charset problem. We would send out a password that looked like xk#$kdow and the user would copy/paste it in and the system would kick it out as invalid. It looked identical on screen... and on the permission side on the back end. But in fact, it was different because of the charset. About 5% of users -- and ironically anyone we entered from an early spreadsheet -- had this issue. It was truly baffling and not something we had known about before or could test for. It should be fixed completely at this point if people generate a new password.
Townshend wrote:Since I am going there are a few questions I had.
1. Is there a dress code? Would jeans and a nice shirt be sufficient?
2. When I purchased the tickets I opted for the water. Is it possible to add on wine or no?
3. Is wine from the outside allowed to be brought in? If so, is there a corkage fee and how much?
David Hammond wrote:Townshend wrote:Since I am going there are a few questions I had.
1. Is there a dress code? Would jeans and a nice shirt be sufficient?
2. When I purchased the tickets I opted for the water. Is it possible to add on wine or no?
3. Is wine from the outside allowed to be brought in? If so, is there a corkage fee and how much?
Townshend, I believe questions like these are probably best answered by Next.
Townshend wrote:Since I am going there are a few questions I had.
1. Is there a dress code? Would jeans and a nice shirt be sufficient?
2. When I purchased the tickets I opted for the water. Is it possible to add on wine or no?
3. Is wine from the outside allowed to be brought in? If so, is there a corkage fee and how much?
Ursiform wrote:Townshend wrote:Since I am going there are a few questions I had.
1. Is there a dress code? Would jeans and a nice shirt be sufficient?
2. When I purchased the tickets I opted for the water. Is it possible to add on wine or no?
3. Is wine from the outside allowed to be brought in? If so, is there a corkage fee and how much?
They have answered these questions on their FaceBook page if you check there, but it appears that you cannot add wine after selecting water and you cannot bring outside wine in. You should check FB to be certain however.
Also, someone just posted their reservation on FB at face value as they had a change in travel plans, it's a 4 top for May 12th if anyone is interested. Hopefully there is more of that sort of thing that will occur in the future.
I'm still dreaming of that duck - yowza!
*edited to add a link to the FB page, that might be helpfulhttp://www.facebook.com/pages/Next-Rest ... 3845229862