by Ashby Jones, Editor, Law Blog, The Wall Street Journal
We here at the Law Blog have been called for jury duty several times (in New York City, it feels like an annual event), but have never been picked to sit. It’s probably a good thing, because, despite our legal training and basic understanding of how trials work, we’d find it excruciating to not be able to use Google to do our own research on issues that arise in the case.
These are, as you may have heard, tough times for newspapers. But they are not the first tough times. In just four years during the mid-1960s, for instance, New York City lost the papers that had come to carry the nameplates of William Randolph Hearst’s American, James Gordon Bennett’s Herald, Hearst’s Journal, the Mirror, the Sun, the Telegram, Horace Greeley’s Tribune and Joseph Pulitzer’s World.
There is a commonly held belief that Helvetica is the signage typeface of the New York City subway system, a belief reinforced by “Helvetica,” Gary Hustwit’s popular 2007 documentary about the typeface. But it is not true–or rather, it is only somewhat true.
If you’re looking for a tech job in the United States, the best place to go is not Silicon Valley. It’s New York. According to a report released Tuesday from AeA, a tech industry trade group, New York and its surrounding metropolitan area leads the nation when it comes to the number of high-tech jobs. Rounding out the top five in order were Washington; San Jose/Silicon Valley; Boston; and Dallas-Fort Worth.
by Jason Perlow, Senior Technology Editor, Linux Magazine, Contributor, ZDNet.com, Between the Lines
Like millions of other Americans and many of New York City’s “bridge and tunnel” crowd, I live in the ‘burbs. While I do a great deal of travel for my full-time job, I am also classified as a “mobile” employee, so I’m not formally attached to an office. Currently, I’m a cable modem subscriber. I pay approximately $65 per month for Optimum Online’s boost plan, which gives you up to 5Mbps/30Mbps in theoretical upstream and downstream bandwidth. In practice, however, I’ve become accustomed to a number of service interruptions, where my broadband can go down for hours at a time, and days where the local XBOX kiddies and torrenters are clearly over-saturating the network.
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