{"id":1304,"date":"2018-10-04T04:00:46","date_gmt":"2018-10-04T14:00:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/thecurbkaimuki.com\/2018\/10\/04\/cell-phones-robots-frozen-espresso-at-adas-discovery-cafe\/"},"modified":"2018-10-12T08:48:03","modified_gmt":"2018-10-12T18:48:03","slug":"cell-phones-robots-frozen-espresso-at-adas-discovery-cafe","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thecurbkaimuki.com\/2018\/10\/04\/cell-phones-robots-frozen-espresso-at-adas-discovery-cafe\/","title":{"rendered":"Cell Phones! Robots! Frozen Espresso! At Ada\u2019s Discovery Cafe"},"content":{"rendered":"
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In the future\u2014not long from now, surely\u2014each and every telecom data replenishment node will sport a far-out high-end cyber modified coffee experience. But here in 2018 there is Ada’s Discovery Cafe<\/a>, a first-of-its-kind high-flying collaboration between Seattle local indie Ada’s Technical Books<\/a> and multinational telecommunications conglomerate AT&T, open now at Broadway and East Thomas.<\/p>\n It’s a match made in Seattle, or at least the Seattle of today, where rising rents and influx of new money tech culture make successful cafe\/bookstore\/event space\/coworking hybrids like Ada’s so very important. Founded in 2010\u2014roughly an eon ago in the Seattle time scheme\u2014Ada’s is the work of Danielle and David Hulton, an enterprising couple with deep connections in the international informations security and cryptoanalysis scenes. David co-founded a leading information security conference, ToorCon<\/a>, in 1998, and sold his company Pico Computing to a larger technology firm in 2015. Danielle is a Seattle Pacific University graduate in the field of electrical engineering and manages day to day for Ada’s growing team including bookstore, events, co-working, and cafe staff.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Those operations now include Ada’s Discovery Cafe, opened in late September a block from the iconic Broadway strip running north-south through the heart of Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood. Once synonymous with the city’s bohemian music scene and LGBTQ community, not to mention coffee culture, today it’s a neighborhood in flux, with construction everywhere and a rapidly changing social milieu. (Walking to the cafe I passed a gentleman in skin-tight neoprene gym clothes and wraparound sunglasses, hitting his Juul vape and checking his iPhone, balanced\u00a0atop a\u00a0Segway MiniPro<\/a> just so.<\/em>) The Hultons are ardent advocates for Capitol Hill: they’ve lived here for 15 years and owned a business there for around half that time. “We’re passionate about the neighborhood,” says Danielle, and they see the newly opened Discovery Cafe as a way to further serve it.<\/p>\n I asked Danielle Hulton how it happened in the first place, that Ada’s would come to partner with AT&T, and the story is something like a corporate meet-cute. “They contacted us out of the blue,” she tells me, “and at first our event coordinator met with them\u2014he meets with everyone\u2014but very quickly he realized this was something more.” From there Ada’s had the opportunity to pitch their vision to the team at AT&T, and they swung for the fences. “We pitched this really ambitious concept,” says Hulton, “with coffee robots, super high-end third wave coffee, and a focus on being approachable to customers using storytelling. It was a two-page pitch with a few pictures, and a month later they called us back and said yes.”<\/p>\n