Scott Kleinberg is a nationally syndicated columnist and the social media editor at the Chicago Tribune. He started with the company in 2005 at RedEye before moving over to the Tribune in 2011. Before that, Kleinberg was an editor and designer at the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review in beautiful western Pennsylvania. #OutsideTheOffice, Kleinberg loves to walk, Instagram photos and spend time with his wife, Kelly, and dog, Mac The Puggle.
When Facebook released its Rooms app last week, I, along with just about everyone else, expected the company's answer to Snapchat, Secret and Whisper — an app where everything you do quickly disappears.
Social media is annoying. There's a lot of "I hate it when this happens and when that happens" going on.
If you've never typed analytics.twitter.com into your browser, I'll give you a minute to do that now. But you have to promise me one thing: You have to come back and read the rest of this column, because it's that easy to get lost in a sea of awesome data and forget about everything else.
Thinner than a pencil.
If you've never typed analytics.twitter.com into your browser, I'll give you a minute to do that now. But you have to promise me one thing: You have to come back and read the rest of this column, because it's that easy to get lost in a sea of awesome data and forget about everything else.
There has been a lot of talk about Atlas, Facebook's new ad network. Some is accurate, while some plays on fears and ends up on the side of overexaggeration.