New York Times Invents a Conference Table That Takes Notes for You; The Ramones Guide to NYC
- When hip-hop first went corporate: to rappers in the early ’90s, starring in a malt liquor commercial “was a sign of cultural legitimacy and upward mobility.” [The Atlantic]
- The New York Times has invented the Listening Table, a conference table that not only transcribes meetings, but knows when they’re important. [Fast Co. Design]
- From a small East Village community garden to CBGB, here’s where the Ramones left their mark on NYC. [Scouting NY]
- Listen to the new, speedier subway announcements that the MTA is testing out. [Gothamist]
- In the late 19th century, a female Irish immigrant was so good at robbing houses she got the nickname “cleverest woman in America.” [Ephemeral NY]
- A new photo book by/of “It Girl” Chloë Sevigny is also “a window into a less-networked, less-corporate New York with particular appeal to a new generation.” [New Yorker]
Images: The Listening Table via NYT Labs (L); The Ramones (R)