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  • 12
    Dec
    2012
    5:59am, EST

    Giampiero Sposito / Reuters

    A combination picture shows Pope Benedict XVI posting his first tweet using an iPad tablet after his Wednesday general audience in Paul VI's Hall at the Vatican on December 12, 2012.

    The Pope sends his first tweet

    NBC News reports — After days of expectation and buildup, the leader of the world’s billion-plus Roman Catholics finally did it: He tweeted.

    “Dear friends, I am pleased to get in touch with you through Twitter. Thank you for your generous response. I bless all of you from my heart,” he said on his English-language account.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

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    1 comment

    We gonna send da tweet to show da flock weeza comin up toadate wizza de gizmos. Blessa you all anna herez a little emoticona jus for you :-)

    Show more
    Explore related topics: vatican, pope, christianity, pope-benedict, twitter, tech-science
  • 4
    Oct
    2012
    11:43am, EDT

    New World of Work -- Share your workplace with us

    NBC News

    By Jon Sweeney, NBC News

    Work is an important aspect of our lives and over the next several months, NBC News will tell the stories of "The New World of Work" in an ongoing series, but we also want to see your stories.

    Whether you’re looking for a job, or love the one you have, we want to know about it. Take a picture of your workplace, show us the tools you use, the people you meet or the things you see, and share them with us.

    How do you participate?

    If you’re on Twitter or Instagram, tag your photo posts, #WorldOfWork. You can also upload pictures in the box below.

    • Follow @NBCNewsPictures on Twitter
    • Follow @NBCNews on Instagram
    • Follow World of Work on Facebook

    See some of our favorites

    Two weeks ago, we got a great response from our Instagram followers, responding to our #WorldofWork Instagram #NBCNewsHashtagCollection challenge, but we didn't want the fun to end. So, our photo editors will continue to select their favorite images and keep updating the following photo gallery.

    Click on images below, to view larger.

    If you want to see more images, click here.

    Bookmark this page or like us on Facebook at NBC News Business, New World of Work, and see if we feature your photos.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBC News Photos Newsletter

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: business, us-news, featured, twitter, instagram, your-photos, work-business, world-of-work
  • 3
    Aug
    2011
    7:05am, EDT

    Peacock flies the coop, returns -- and tweets!

    By Mish Whalen

    This peacock went rogue on Tuesday, Aug. 2, taking its perch on a window sill in Manhattan. The Central Park Zoo said in a statement to local media this morning that it would retrieve the male bird if it did not fly home on its own and that the peacock is not a threat to anyone. The peacock is the third animal is a few months to have escaped from the zoo. A peahen and a cobra were returned without incident. 

    At 6:45 a.m. the peacock took flight and is now, apparently, tweeting from somewhere in Central Park (digitally, not just in the birdly sense). The peacock has more than 1,700 followers on its @CentralPeacock Twitter feed. Check out the video below to see the peacock take flight and hear the TODAY anchors' get punny about their new feathered friend.

    Frank Franklin II/ AP

    A peacock on the loose after it escaped from the Central Park Zoo stands on a window ledge above Fifth Avenue Tuesday, Aug. 2, 2011 in New York.


    A male peacock wandered away from the Manhattan zoo and made its way to an apartment building on Fifth Avenue, where he perched on a window sill. The incident spurred a flurry of tweets.


     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: peacock, twitter, central-park-zoo, animal-returns-to-zoo
  • 2
    Aug
    2011
    4:25pm, EDT

    Mood meter tracks smiley tweets and frowny tweets

    Andrew Burton / Getty Images

    A billboard for JELL-O stands at the corner of Grand Street and West Broadway on August 2 in New York City. The billboard acts as a mood-meter by analyzing Twitter and gauging the number of happy and sad emoticons used at any given moment, causing the billboard's face to change between a smile and a frown.

    By Rich Shulman

    This is pretty silly . . . click here to see the nation's mood, according to Twitter.

    Will this become a classic like the famous smoke ring billboard (video below) in Times Square? Only time will tell.

     

     

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: twitter, tech-science, jello-puddingface, mood-meter
  • 6
    Jul
    2011
    4:13pm, EDT

    Twitterer-in-chief takes questions at White House 'townhall'

    By Rich Shulman

    President Obama doing the first presidential Tweet didn't exactly make exciting television. And I wonder why they felt the need to cover up the computer logo with a Presidential seal.

    Full story.

    The townhall can be found here.

    Charles Dharapak / AP

    President Barack Obama tweets during a "Twitter Town Hall" in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, July 6.



    Charles Dharapak / AP

    President Barack Obama answers a tweet from House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio during a "Twitter Town Hall" in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, July 6.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: technology, politics, barack-obama, twitter
  • 6
    Feb
    2011
    5:00pm, EST

    Is the role of social media in the Egyptian crisis overblown?

    Felipe Trueba / EPA

    Egyptian protesters sit outside a window shop with the word "facebook" marked on it as demonstrators are still gathered in a protest called 'Sunday of the martyrs', Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt, Feb. 6. Anti-government protests entered its 13th straight day in Egypt, as solutions were being mulled to bring about a power shift to end the country's political paralysis. Thousands of protesters slept in Cairo's central Tahrir Square, camping out in tents and defying a curfew, while many others streamed to the area in the morning, refusing to relent on their core demand that President Hosni Mubarak step down.

    By Rich Shulman

    Frank Rich of the New York Times had a fascinating opinion piece about the role of Facebook and Twitter in the recent Arab uprisings.

    Perhaps the most revealing window into America’s media-fed isolation from this crisis — small an example as it may seem — is the default assumption that the Egyptian uprising, like every other paroxysm in the region since the Green Revolution in Iran 18 months ago, must be powered by the twin American-born phenomena of Twitter and Facebook. Television news — at once threatened by the power of the Internet and fearful of appearing unhip — can’t get enough of this cliché.

    He went on to quote NBC's Richard Engel:

    Richard Engel, who set the record straight on MSNBC in a satellite hook-up with Rachel Maddow. “This didn’t have anything to do with Twitter and Facebook,” he said. “This had to do with people’s dignity, people’s pride. People are not able to feed their families.”


     

    Tara Todras-whitehill / AP

    Anti-government protesters take pictures of protest art in Tahrir Square, the center of anti-government demonstrations, in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Feb. 6, 2011. Egypt's vice president met a broad representation of major opposition groups for the first time Sunday and agreed to allow freedom of the press and to release those detained since anti-government protests began, though Al-Jazeera's English-language news network said one of its correspondents had been detained the same day by the Egyptian military. The Arabic on the ground reads "We are the Men of Facebook".

     

    1 comment

    Photo #1: "DeFace look"

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    Explore related topics: egypt, world-news, facebook, social-media, twitter
  • 3
    Sep
    2010
    5:07pm, EDT

    Google; Jonas Bergler

    Before and After; Earthquake damage on Victoria St. in Christchurch New Zealand

    Michael Madman

    Earthquake damage in Christchurch, NZ

    Michael Madman

    Earthquake damage in Christchurch, NZ

    First pictures of earthquake damage in New Zealand

    More than two hours before images started moving to us on the wires of the earthquake near Christchurch, New Zealand, we started contacting locals that were posting images to Twitter and getting their permission to run the image with the lead story of our site.

    The first image we ran was a before and after, using pictures people were posting from Google streetview compared with images they were shooting and sending to Twitter of the damage to their neighborhoods in the early morning hours ( like @jbergler and the image he shot, above, which was the first NZ image to lead msnbc.com today).

    Several people were tweeting that with power out, networks like Twitter were where they were getting most of their news. Two days in a row, breaking news has shown us that citizen journalism isn't just a concept anymore.

    16 comments

    Horrible thing happen to such gentle people, My prayers are with the NZ people.

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    Explore related topics: earthquake, new-zealand, world-news, citizen-journalist, twitter, eqnz

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Jon Sweeney, NBC News

Multimedia producer for NBC News, father of three, and newly transplanted to New York City.

Mish Whalen

TODAY.com. senior multimedia editor

Mish Whalen Blogroll

  • NYT: Lens
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Rich Shulman

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com. Before that, he was a picture editor at Corbis and the Director of Photography at the Everett, Wa. Herald.

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Carissa Ray

is the Supervising Multimedia Producer for TODAY.com, editing and producing photos and video.

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