<![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, david pogue]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, david pogue]]> http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/davidpogue http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/davidpogue <![CDATA[David Pogue Gets Modest Title of 'Visionary']]> David Pogue does not call himself a journalist; that much he made clear during the controversy over his positive New York Times pieces on Apple's buggy operating system and obfuscating CEO. So what is he, then? A "Visionary." (Updated)

NYTPicker found this bio for Pogue on the website for an upcoming tech conference:



So what is a New York Times Visionary, other than something you get demoted to when everyone realizes you're not actually a journalist? That's unclear. Maybe it involves being able to see past the flaws in an operating system, like endless crashes of key software, to call it a "sleek upgrade." Or to call a notebook computer a "slice of heaven... not underpowered by any means" and then later tweet that the same machine is "too slow for Photoshop, video even Word sometimes." Or not! (We've put in an inquiry with the Times and Pogue.)

UPDATE: Pogue wrote us back:

That's definitely not a title I would ever use for myself. (I usually go by
"Consumer Tech Columnist"). And it is, obviously, not a title The Times
selected.

It sounds to me like something that panel's organizer, Warren Buckleitner,
made up, for the sake of more interesting brochure copy. Maybe you should
ask him?

We've corrected our headline accordingly.

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<![CDATA[David Pogue: 'I Am Not a Reporter, I Have Never Been To Journalism School']]> David Pogue's taken fire from all sides: Both bloggers and the New York Times columnist's own public editor challenged the tech reviewer over his conflicts of interests. He's finally unloaded with both barrels, at friend and foe alike.

The forum was Leo Laporte's influential podcast, This Week in Tech, which has devoted large chunks of not one but two episodes to skewering Pogue over his oddly positive review of Apple's latest operating system, which just might have been influenced by the fact that Pogue has a book coming out on the OS.

The gist: Pogue copped to a conflict of interest, but said he isn't and has never claimed to be a journalist, and besides all his competitors have huge conflicts of their own, including archrival Walt Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal who runs a conference where people pay $4,500 each to hear live interviews with the people whose products Mossberg reviews. How refreshing to hear Pogue finally talk about this very real conflict of Mossberg's, which is normally left unspoken within the genteel club of tech writers.

Beyond that, Pogue said Times editors repeatedly rejected his past entreaties to disclose his conflict of interest in his column. And he cited instances where he's been critical of Apple products.

Also: "I like my interview subjects to like me."

An edited clip of Pogue's comments about being a journalist are above; about his competitors, below. The full interview is here, and a transcript is here. NYTPicker has a longer summary.

We thought Pogue's comments about never calling himself a journalist were odd. First off, the Times' public editor clearly considers him one, as NYTPicker points out. Also, judging from past Pogue writings our own John Cook dug up on Nexis, the columnist sure likes to hang out at places where "journalists" are invited:

"Apple revealed its answer Tuesday to an invited audience of journalists at a half demonstration, half U2 rock concert here..."

"The result of his brainstorm was Demo, an annual two-day conference attended by 800 analysts, executives, reporters and investors, their belts clanking with pagers, cell phones and Palms."

"When I shared my plans with representatives of the Big Three — Duracell, Eveready and Rayovac — they told me, with the weary sighs of people who explain this point to journalists every day, that battery run-down tests are terribly misleading."

"APPLE doesn't send out greeting cards very often, especially by FedEx. So when the company mailed cards to reporters last week, too soon for Christmas and too rushed for Halloween, some curiosity was understandable."

And Pogue isn't above adopting the disdainful tone of a top-shelf reporter when he's feeling superior:

Still, I think very little of the bloggers who are keeping Microsoft's bribe laptops.

Clearly, they're exploiting the lawless, Brave New World of the blogsophere, where, since they're Not Quite Journalists, they don't feel constrained by any of those pesky journalistic ethics guidelines. Like the one that says, "You don't keep $2,200 gifts from the subject of your review. You might think you can still write an impartial review, but it's highly unlikely-and either way, nobody will believe it."

Nevermind that Pogue accepted a $2,000 gift of his own; he's now freely admitted that he's Not Quite a Journalist himself.

UPDATE: Non-journalist Pogue recently gave the keynote address at a conference put on by the Columbia Journalism Review, at Columbia University's School of Journalism, entitled "Opportunities and Dangers for Journalism." Now does that sound like something a journalist would do? (Hat tip to Fake Steve Jobs.)

(Pogue pic: Randal Schwartz)

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<![CDATA[Photo Evidence Steve Jobs Misled the New York Times]]> It's going to take more than six months medical leave to reform Steve Jobs. On his very first day back before the media, the Apple CEO apparently told a whopper to the New York Times.

Hoodwinking the press is an old tradition for Jobs, and reporters were immediately suspicious when Jobs told Times columnist David Pogue he decided to omit a much-anticipated camera from the iPod Touch in order to keep the cost down. Jobs said "we were focused on... reducing the price to $199. We don't need to add new stuff." But an Apple rumor site then heard that the camera was delayed because it was too buggy, leading Fortune to ask if Jobs had been lying.

Now comes tangible evidence he probably was: Hardware website iFixIt took apart the new iPod Touch Jobs was talking about, only to discover a conspicuous gap at the top of the device just large enough for the camera Apple is using on its other new iPod, the Nano:



It took months for the facts to catch up with Jobs' misleading spin about his health; in this case, the turnaround has been reduced to just five days. If Jobs has no moral qualms about dissembling in the press, this acceleration should at least instill some practical concern.

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<![CDATA[Warring Twitter Books in Publication Race]]> First came former Valleywag Nick Douglas' Twitter book deal with HarperCollins, followed within a month by New York Times columnist David Pogue and his similar compilation of tweets for O'Reilly. Now Pogue is trying to leapfrog.

According to a press release from his publisher, reprinted below, Pogue's book now has a publication date of August 12, nearly a full month ahead of Douglas' book (Sept. 8), despite the writer's late start.

Douglas was mostly polite about the competition in an email conversation — "I'm sure both his book and mine will do well," yadda yadda — but we did manage to elicit one underminey quote:

I'm impressed with how quickly Pogue and his publisher turned out their book, since I started working on mine last fall and only just this week approved the absolute final draft. I'm pretty thankful for the long process.



With less time, I couldn't have gotten contributions from Jimmy Fallon, Ashton Kutcher, Susan Orlean, Eugene Mirman, Michael Ian Black and Michael Showalter, or Sarah Silverman.

Zing! (In fairness, we'll be happy to print a reply from Pogue. Feel free to go way over 140 characters, David!)

Though Douglas may have the big names, Pogue has a decided PR advantage. The high-profile columnist and TV commentator has a head start, and thus a pretty good shot at sucking up all the available press for a book of witty tweets. He's also got claim to calling his book the first of its kind, as he does in the press release below.

Now Douglas' publisher HarperCollins has to scramble to catch up. An old-line publishing house moving at Twitter speeds? Stranger things have happened.

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<![CDATA[David Pogue Latest Victim of Twitter-Book Rage]]> The idea of a book of microblogging "tweets" really bugs some people. Our own Nick Douglas, author of the forthcoming TwitterWit, already knows that. Now a New York Times columnist is feeling the hate.

David Pogue, who makes those surprisingly entertaining gadget-review videos for nytimes.com, also has a joint book venture with technical publisher O'Reilly. Through this imprint, he plans a book of funny tweets from his Twitter followers. Sounds familiar.

Also familiar-sounding: A blogger is flabbergasted — utterly baffled! — that Pogue thinks he can make money off other people's online ephemera. Cue Russ Marshalek, a book-industry publicist with a blog on Creative Loafing:

This sort of attempt at an of-the-minute cash-grab really irks me. While publishers, authors and other various incidental folk in the book business are actually working, diligently and full of heart, to discover what it's going to take to turn the sinking ship of books around, Pogue's trying to ramp up excitement for 200 pages of @SomeGuy tweeting "hey I really like dogs."

Marshalek won't be buying the book then, presumably. Especially after Pogue blasted back at Marshalek's "nasython" in the comments:

So, let's see: my book project is an "of-the-minute cash-grab," meaning that I'm going to get rich off the book...

And yet… you're predicting that the book will tank!

Kind of a good point. Also: If a book of Twitter posts is vapid and unredeeming, what is a blog post trying to gin up outrage about such a book? You're just going to end up looking like a hypocrite, Russ. (Don't take it personally, it took us a couple of posts to figure that out ourselves.)

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<![CDATA[David Pogue, Better Late Than Never]]> Why NYT gadget reviewer David Pogue succeeds despite always being late to the game.

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<![CDATA[Oh, So, You Twitter? Bully for You!]]> The future's so bright for Twitterer Matt Cooper, he had to adjust his shades. Things looked darker for bullied gadget reviewer David Pogue, while CBS's Natali Del Conte got unwelcome stares at Starbucks. Today's tweets:

Talking Points Memo blogger Matt Cooper admitted to being in the dark.
Unduly sexy ABC newsman Jake Tapper taunted his bosses.
Huffington Post survivor Rachel Sklar admitted to shopping at Diane Von Furstenberg knockoff vendor Forever 21.
CBS geek explainer Natali Del Conte dealt with a Starbucks stalker.
New York Times gadget dude David Pogue confronted a bully on Facebook, several decades too late.

See something worth noting on Twitter? Please email us your favorite tweets — or send us more Twitter usernames.

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<![CDATA[The Twitterati Are Alive and Lazier Than Ever]]> Why work when you can Twitter? David Pogue from the New York Times played copy editor, Tina Fey contemplated cookies, and Internet-celebrity expert Paul Carr was just glad to be alive.

Self-described "new media whore" Paul Carr wanted everyone to know he was not dead.

David Pogue upheld the standards of the New York Times.

Politico's
Patrick Gavin learned how to say "bruschetta."

Brian Chen at Wired crowdsourced his latest assignment.

Tina Fey thought about the sweetness of fame.

Anyone else's tweets we should keep an eye on? Send us more Twitter usernames, please.

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<![CDATA[Twitter's Famous-People Diet]]> The media's most fervid Twitter users have a style: simultaneously vain and self-deprecating. It's like they don't even realize they're microcelebrities! Witness how unaware they are of their self-awareness:

Time writer Karen Tumulty fumed at the stultifying media elite.

Guardian writer Bobbie Johnson thought about adding to his film collection.

New York editor Jessica Coen promoted a new diet.


New York Times gadget columnist David Pogue tweeted to his tweeps — "Twitter peeps," get it? — about how he planned to talk about Twitter on Twitter, which is the best reason to use Twitter.

BusinessWeek's Spencer Ante saw someone famous.

Anyone else's tweets we should keep an eye on? Send us their username.

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<![CDATA[Timesman David Pogue is a fragile flower]]> All those years in the theater on Broadway among catty drama types didn't thicken the skin of New York Times technology writer David Pogue much. Geek Out New York blogger John Teti wrote a clearly satirical piece wondering just how technology-savvy Pogue. His latest column described how you can use Google to search individual websites. Teti didn't even point out the misspelling of Facebook as "Facebok!" (Which I hear is the leading social networking site among South African antelopes.) The pile-on-Pogue post was clearly facetious, but that didn't stop Pogue from emailing Teti to complain. And then emailing again. And again. Pogue's initial, angry missive in full after the jump.

John, since you don’t permit comments (why?), I’ll have to answer your blog by email.

The problem is, you completely missed the point of my tip (or you’re deliberately ignoring it to make me look stupid).

The tip is this: Use Google INSTEAD of the sites’ internal Search boxes.

This is not something that’s obvious, as you can see by the 80 comments for that post. ” You are SO right… Not only is this tip both so obvious and so overlooked, but it works like a charm,” says one.

I imagine that most people, when they want to search Amazon, NYTimes, Facebook, eBay, or whatever, go to that site FIRST and use ITS search box.

My point is that you can save time and get better results by NOT doing that.

In your post, you totally mischaracterized the point of my tip.

Dp

(Photo by macinate)

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<![CDATA[Happy birthday, David Pogue!]]> The New York Times tech columnist-cum-singing sensation turns 45 today.
(Photo by realmerlyn)

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<![CDATA[David Pogue blacklists Google, sings uplifting show tune]]> I tried to send an email to New York Times columnist David Pogue, but I failed. It appears that Google's Gmail has been blacklisted by the Sorbs spam-blocking system. At the moment, Sorbs claims to be in a "maintenance period." Pogue's email provider could be blocking all mail because it can't reach Sorbs — but why would it be down for maintenance in the middle of the day? See the full error message after the jump and tell me if you can figure it out. In the meantime, David, call me? Everybody sing! Let the sound of your voice turn winter to spring.

Delivered-To: jlgolson@valleywag.com Received: by 10.78.198.2 with SMTP id v2cs346280huf; Wed, 27 Feb 2008 13:32:22 -0800 (PST) Received: by 10.142.88.20 with SMTP id l20mr5814001wfb.72.1204147941025; Wed, 27 Feb 2008 13:32:21 -0800 (PST) Return-Path: <> Received: by 10.142.88.20 with SMTP id l20mr9735271wfb.72; Wed, 27 Feb 2008 13:32:21 -0800 (PST) Message-ID: <00504502c79604472a8a48285026d3b@googlemail.com> From: Mail Delivery Subsystem To: jlgolson@valleywag.com Subject: Delivery Status Notification (Failure) Date: Wed, 27 Feb 2008 13:32:21 -0800 (PST)

This is an automatically generated Delivery Status Notification

Delivery to the following recipient failed permanently:

xxxx@xxxx.com

Technical details of permanent failure:
PERM_FAILURE: SMTP Error (state 16): 550 5.7.1 Your server (209.85.200.175 [wf-out-1314.google.com]) is in the dnsbl.sorbs.net block list. See http://www.dnsbl.us.sorbs.net/cgi-bin/db?IP=209.85.200.175 for more details.

——- Original message ——-

Received: by 10.142.88.20 with SMTP id l20mr5813971wfb.72.1204147939537;
Wed, 27 Feb 2008 13:32:19 -0800 (PST)
Return-Path:
Received: from ?192.168.1.41? ( [141.157.168.194])
by mx.google.com with ESMTPS id 24sm13001017wrl.35.2008.02.27.13.32.16
(version=TLSv1/SSLv3 cipher=OTHER);
Wed, 27 Feb 2008 13:32:17 -0800 (PST)
Message-Id:
From: Jordan Golson
To: David Pogue
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=WINDOWS-1252; format=flowed; delsp=yes
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Mime-Version: 1.0 (Apple Message framework v919.2)
Subject: nyc meetup?
Date: Wed, 27 Feb 2008 16:32:15 -0500
X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.919.2)

David, thinking of coming down to New York next week. Meet for a cup =20
of coffee?

Jordan Golson
Valleywag — Gawker Media
jlgolson@valleywag.com

——- End of message ——-

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<![CDATA[David Pogue signs contract with CNBC, is more extra-specialer than you]]>
New York Times gadget reviewer David Pogue has signed a new contract with CNBC and is very proud of this. Here's our 100-word version of his video introduction:
I'm David Pogue. I hope you're having a happy holidays. I sure as heck am! Hear that? That's the sound of opportunity. I have just signed a contract with CNBC. Isn't that brilliant!?
David, you'll remember us little people now that you're a big TV star, right? Right?

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<![CDATA[The name is "Fark," have you farking heard of it?]]> Gadget reviewer David Pogue of the New York Times has run so short of ideas that he's recycling a decade-old idea: Criticizing the absurdity of today's Web 2.0 domain names. But in rehashing what everyone else already knew, Pogue reveals just how far behind he is. "These are all actual Web sites that have hit the Web in the last year or so: Doostang. Wufoo. Bliin. Thoof. Bebo. Meebo. Meemo. Kudit. Raketu. Etelos. Iyogi. Oyogi. Qoop. Fark. Kijiji. Zixxo. Zoogmo." Fark? Last year or so? Drew Curtis's Fark.com as a collection of interesting headlines has been around since at least 1999.

Pogue, holed up in Connecticut, proves as out of touch as those wraparound-sunglassed hipsters who never seem to leave SoMa. The cheeky news site — based in Lexington, Kentucky, not San Francisco — has had its own Jeopardy category and is featured annually in Reader's Digest. The popular site's name was originally meaningless nonsense, sure, but it has come to mean the "crap," as Curtis puts it in his new book, that fills so much of the mass media.

By including Fark in a list that could otherwise go on without end, Pogue reveals how little he knows about Internet culture. Or maybe he's just hoping to attract some traffic from enraged Farkers. Too bad Fark users' informal rules forbid links to the New York Times.

Update: After multiple readers commented on the inclusion of Fark in the list, Pogue has conceded his error.

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<![CDATA[OS X Leopard reviews — the 100-word versions]]> Got 30 seconds? Read my summaries of the early reviews of Apple's new operating system in Thursday's papers. Wall Street Journal columnist Walt Mossberg, New York Times reviewer David Pogue, and USA Today's Ed Baig agree: Time Machine backups, yay. See-through menus, boo.

Walt Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal: Faster, easier than Vista. For me, the marquee features are Time Machine that automatically backs up your entire computer in the background; Cover Flow and Quick Look, for rapidly viewing the contents of files; and new techniques that allow you to access other computers on your network or over the Internet with no technical expertise. The menu bar is now translucent, which can make it hard to see the items it contains. The new folder icons are less attractive than their predecessors.

David Pogue, The New York Times: Sleek, modern-looking desktop. Time Machine, Quick Look. Having virtual-screen software built in with so much polish makes a huge difference. A more polished Boot Camp lets you restart in Windows. Screen sharing lets gurus assist newbies from afar. iChat blue-screen effect. It also lets you display documents, presentations or movies to your videoconferencing buddies. The most serious misstep: See-through menus.

Edward C. Baig, USA Today: Time Machine. Cool video chat. Pretty e-mail: more than 30 stationery templates — baby announcements, party invitations — with integrated photo browser. You can create Notes and To-Dos inside Mail. It can detect addresses, phone numbers and dates inside a message. If you join the $100-a-year .Mac online service, you can access your machine remotely. I ran into snags trying to remotely connect from a hotel.

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<![CDATA[Pogue agrees — advance gadget reviews are bogus]]> davidpoguelounging.jpgNew York Times gadget reviewer David Pogue got into an email back-and-forth with Valleywag after he was tricked into writing an article by advance misinformation on a pre-launch product. In theory, it's good for reviewers to test and write up products before release day, so consumers can make informed choices. In practice, Pogue and we wish the industry standard would change.

The problem with tests based on advance access to carefully doled out "review units" is obvious: It's in the gadget maker or service provider's interest to provide a few well-placed reviewers like Pogue with hand-picked, flawless gear and overly helpful support. The real customer's storebought or online experience is sure to be different.

For example, my own Macs have a lot more hardware failures than Walt Mossberg's do at the Wall Street Journal lab. And I've frequently been given misinformation from the Genius at the Apple Store counter. He can't grab a senior product manager to answer my questions, as the company's publicists do when I'm working on a Wired review.

In Pogue's case, he reviewed an overseas phone calling service whose super-low rates — the feature that sold him — turned out to be three, four or more times higher when the service went live.

Pogue observed to us that the Times' restaurant and theater critics do their reviews incognito, buying their own tickets and meals on the company expense account to avoid special treatment or pricing. Yet gadget reviews are traditionally done — by the Times and everyone else — on equipment loaned by the maker. Reviewers are under pressure to seek early access so they can meet deadlines and beat other publications, rather than wait for the product to hit stores or the site to go live.

The shining exception is nonprofit Consumer Reports. All tested products are purchased at retail by its staff, and no free samples are accepted from manufacturers. But who's going to wait around for CR to pronounce that "Our tests of Apple's new iPod Touch confirm that it is indeed essentially an iPhone without the phone?" By the time early buyers learn, as CR did, that the iPod Touch's screen can be dimmer than an iPhone's under the same lighting conditions, it's too late.

I don't expect David Pogue to stop accepting advance products and services, nor the special treatment that comes with them. It would be career suicide unless all other journalists stopped at the same time. But when readers' experiences turn out different than that provided to reviewers, hopefully more writers will do what Pogue did: Stand tall and warn everyone, rather than letting the issue die quietly on a Corrections page.

(Photo by realmerlyn)

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<![CDATA[David Pogue writes whatever you tell him to]]> davidpoguelounging.jpgDavid Pogue of the New York Times wrote a humiliating column today correcting a huge pricing error in his last piece. He wrote about cellphone startup Cubic Telecom, which carries international phone calls over the Internet to give really cheap rates. Pogue listed off a bunch of rates to places like Greece or Iraq and excitedly wrote that "the appropriate world traveler's response ought to be involuntary drooling." Except the prices he quoted were just plain wrong. That'll stop up your salivary glands.

Ordinarily, I conduct my own tests of products and write my own conclusions. But on a product whose primary feature is its price, I have to rely on the company that makes it — especially when I'm writing the review before the product is available to the public, as often happens in my business.
So Pogue wrote what the company told him to. This is the trouble with exclusives. Pogue wrote a glowing review, ahead of the product's launch, and then looked like a fool when the company's website — which Pogue hadn't seen, since it was scheduled to launch the same day as his exclusive review came out — posted very different prices than were in print.

In his correction, Pogue says that the prices are still much lower than using, say, your AT&T cell-phone service overseas, so Cubic is still a good deal. Um, no thanks — I'll stay far away from a company that flat-out lies to a reviewer, especially one as well known as David Pogue. Still, I give Pogue credit for coming clean and apologizing rather than just sticking a correction on some back page somewhere.

I'm not exactly sure how the problem could have been avoided — in 20 years of reviewing tech products, nobody has ever deliberately misled me on hard facts like prices — but I thought you should hear about it from me.
(Photo by realmerlyn)]]>
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<![CDATA[David Pogue Hearts The Hot Electric Car Action Of GM's Bob Lutz]]> It's good to see that we're not the only journos with the severe man-crush on GM's Vice-Chairman, "Maximum" Bob Lutz. It seems David Pogue, the gadget-obsessed tech writer at The New York Times also has a heavy dose of the Lutz love as he spent some time with Bob and GM's new 'lectric concept sled, the Volt. Pogue describes Bob as "a funny, smart, engaging guy." We wish he'd also noted the "Maximum" man-musk emanating from him, but whatevs, maybe he was just overcome by it. Regardless, Pogue got...

... the same info we got out of the "Maximum" main-product man earlier this week on the Chevy Volt / Opel Flextreme / E-Flex platform. The result was different than we expected — we mean, who knew the NYT could write so glowingly about a US automaker? It would seem the GM PR machine's officially working "on all cylinders" now. Ha! We love hackneyed automotive analogies. (Hat tip to Thaddeus!) [NYT Pogue Blog]

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<![CDATA[David Pogue of the New York Times questions...]]> David Pogue of the New York Times questions the need for the popular business-oriented social network: "What I don't understand is: If somebody knows me well enough to e-mail me with an invitation to join, why doesn't he just e-mail me directly with whatever his problem or offer is?" [Pogue's Posts]

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<![CDATA[Outraged that his New York Times salary funds...]]> Outraged that his New York Times salary funds four separate family vacations a year, David Pogue's readers engage in class warfare in the comments of an otherwise innocuous, if anachronistic, blog post about hotel check-in kiosks. [Pogue's Post]

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