JC / Railbird

Notes for 2009-03-12

– New York Times turf writer Joe Drape (@joedrape) has joined the mindcasting masses on Twitter, and although it appears he’s still settling into the amorphous medium, his feed has the potential to become an interesting glimpse into how one reporter covers his beat. Drape’s already proven capable of engaging his followers and sparking micro-debates — not a bad start.

– Seattle Post-Intelligencer publisher Roger Oglesby said on Wednesday that Hearst would announce its plans for the newspaper, which has been up for sale and is expected to shut down all operations but its online presence, sometime next week. All 170 employees of the paper have been notified that their jobs will end between March 18 and April 1, including veteran turf writer Larry Lee Palmer, who filed his last column on Monday. Bizarre and despicable, writes Marks Potts of the vague situation.

– Post Parade broke the news earlier this week that turf writer Gary West has been laid off. 3/13/09 Update: West remains employed. “Apparently we still live in the age of miracles,” said the Star-Telegram writer. Guess that means Post Parade won’t become Texas racing’s publication of record on March 21.

– Another Twitter mention, this time for NYRA, which is doing a bang-up job sending out scratches, links and photos, updates on inquiries and spills, etc. through its @NYRAcomm and @NYRAnews feeds. What is the funny little service good for? Anything that can be delivered in 140 characters — Twitter is broadcast, micro-blogging, chat, live search. More tracks would do well to follow NYRA’s lead. (That may be first time I’ve said such a thing — go NYRA.)

– I’m looking for a web developer with strong programming and database skills, experienced in building web applications, to work with on a project. Racing knowledge would be nice, but isn’t required. Please email for details.


3 Comments

Twitter seems to be hitting a tipping point. Some will call it jumping the shark, however it looks to me like hockey stick growth time like we have seen with so many new things.

http://searchengineland.com/twitter-traffic-rise-of-social-search-16910

Posted by PTP on March 13, 2009 @ 12:00 pm

Thanks for the link. There is sense of shark-jumping in all the recent Twitter talk, but the service is so simple and flexible I see the concept lasting and spreading. Sort of like blogging … once very platform-dependent and fringe, now everywhere.

Posted by JNC on March 13, 2009 @ 2:41 pm

I blogged about Twitter yesterday and mentioned NYRA as an organization that is using it well. NYRA used to be behind in marketing, now they are really moving forward and I love the Twitter feed

Posted by Robert on March 13, 2009 @ 3:57 pm