Posts Tagged ‘City Room’

Welcome, Twitter Users

May 31, 2009

[Note to new visitors: You may be interested in this post about Twitter: "The Public Editor Joins the Cocktail Party."]

Updated March 13, 2011. Hello, and thanks for visiting my personal blog, which is mostly about coffee, with a little bit about social media and technology.

It is likely that you arrived at this welcome page by clicking the link on my Twitter profile. This post is my primitive method for tracking traffic from Twitter.

My name is Patrick LaForge. I have been an editor at The New York Times since 1997, after a dozen years as a reporter and editor at newspapers in upstate New York, Maryland and Pennsylvania. I started using Twitter in early 2007, when Sewell Chan and I created the City Room blog for The Times. In May 2009, I left City Room and the metro desk to become the editor in charge of the copy desks.

How I Use Twitter

I generally post updates about Web content I am reading, watching or thinking about, not what I had for lunch. I follow hundreds of people who use Twitter the same way — a collection of active linkers, journalists, bloggers, New Yorkers, Times staffers and readers.

You can see what Twitter looks like to me by viewing my Twitterstream list of the 800 or so accounts I follow and read every day. I find it hard to follow more people than that and read every tweet. If you are interested in a high-signal list that is mostly links and retweets, try my list “Linkers”, the people I rely on to recommend the latest, best content on Twitter and the Web.

I do not automatically return follows, but if you engage with me and provide interesting content, the odds are I will add you to my twitterstream.

And if you are not among the people I follow directly, but you seem nice enough (and not a spammer or commercial bot), I may add you to the few thousand accounts on The Mighty List, when I get a chance. (For some reason, Twitter allows me to go above the 500-account cap on these lists, and I’m not sure why — perhaps it’s a glitch, or perhaps it’s because I was a lists beta-tester or have a verified account.)

If you are relatively new to Twitter, you might be interested in this post, “Basic Twitter Links for Journalists.”

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Analyzing an Experiment in Blogging

February 21, 2009

monthlychart

Since October I’ve been experimenting here with some personal blogging. Why, you might ask, when I already blog at my job? Isn’t that a busman’s holiday? Perhaps. But I had plunked down money for this domain, and I had some ideas and obsessions to explore that didn’t fit in with my work. And I also wanted to conduct a few experiments.
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What My Smart Playlists Showed Me (3)

December 16, 2008

Name of iTunes Playlist: The Older Faves

Rules: Rating is greater than *** (3 stars). Last played is in the last 12 months. Last played is not in the last 6 months. Date added is in the last 24 months. Play count is greater than 5 times. Skip count is zero. [See all lists.]

Top 10 From the List

1. “Sirena” by Calexico on “Convict Pool” Playcount: 8.

2. “Summersong” by The Decemberists on “The Crane Wife.” Playcount: 8.

3. “Story of an Artist” performed by M. Ward on “The Late Great Daniel Johnston: Discovered Covered.” Playcount: 8.
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‘Old’ Media, ‘New’ Media, on Twitter

December 11, 2008

I jumped into an esoteric debate Wednesday evening: What is the most effective way mainstream media can use social media like Twitter? Should they never post RSS feeds automatically? Must every tweet be crafted by human hands?

Notice that I don’t say “old media,” because I happen to think that term is bull. Plenty of supposedly “old media” outlets have been on the Web since the earliest days and produce innovative multimedia content that is as good as or better than anything found elsewhere in the “new media.” But that doesn’t make for a good story. (Yes, plenty of old media practitioners still have their heads in the sand. And I don’t claim to have figured it all out — my point is, nobody has figured it out. The Web is 20 minutes old. Nobody knows anything.)

Anyway, the first thing I re-learned was how hard it is to have an extended discussion on Twitter. My Tweets are in one place, under my updates. The other person’s replies are somewhere else, and I can’t even link to them easily on Twitter. I have to use this search tool. Messages are limited to 140 characters. We’re surrounded by a cloud of unrelated tweets by others, in varying degrees of engagement, who also might get annoyed if you’re posting every 30 seconds.
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Bumpy Election Day in N.Y.?

October 28, 2008

img_7699Nobody expects New York to be in play in the presidential race, but even so a large turnout and long lines are expected here next Tuesday. And that apparently means problems for the city’s elections operation.

Jim Dwyer of The Times has been documenting registration problems related to Rock the Vote. Read the rest of this entry »

Failure-to-File Syndrome

October 24, 2008

The top aide to New York’s governor has quit in a scandal over his failure to file his taxes since 2001. His lawyer says he suffers from something called “late-filing syndrome.” A paper by a lawyer and a psychiatrist says people with the syndrome are perfectionists and workaholics, who have difficulty talking about their problems with others and cannot ask for help until their secret is exposed. Furthermore:
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Neveah Must Be Missing Some Angles

October 22, 2008

City Room has posted a chart showing the most popular baby names in New York City in 2007. Most of the popular names have the whiff of daytime dramas (Madison? Justin?), even among those from non-European backgrounds. The No. 1 name for Asian boys? Ryan. For Hispanic girls? Ashley. But, I wondered, what happens when you dig deeper into the health department’s full list [pdf]?
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Rich People, New York. Any Questions?

October 20, 2008

This week on City Room, John Steele Gordon, the author of “An Empire of Wealth: The Epic History of American Economic Power” will be answered readers’ questions about the history of wealth in New York. Post a question here. Index to answers here.

Phantom Phone Booths

October 12, 2008

City Room readers are discussing David W. Dunlap’s report of a phantom Bell Atlantic phone booth. One even claims there’s a phone out there with a rotary dial. David much prefers the descriptive name “Bell Atlantic” to Verizon and even Nynex. Back when it was all Ma Bell, my mother was an operator — yes, the lady who answered at 0 and connected your phone — in New England, in Orange County and far upstate.

Cheap Vegetarian Food in New York

October 5, 2008

This week, the author of “Frommer’s NYC Free & Dirt Cheap,” Ethan Wolff, answered selected City Room readers’ questions about where to find bargains and free events and how to live cheaply in New York.

Here’s his tip on cheap vegetarian/healthy eating:
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