Have you tried to search by neighborhood today? Have you been told that you’ve selected more than 51 locations, when you’ve selected only 6? Have you been unable to deselect the “All Brooklyn” box without getting a “You much choose one location” error message? Have you wanted to march down to the Times building, find out who the genius was who created this redesign and just start choking him?
I have!


Comments

  1. Wahhhhhaaat? The New York Times web site is one of the most brilliant. My only regret is they can’t enable comments on all the stories. (Because they don’t have enough editors to handle the volume.)

  2. If you head over there for the choking of the web team…let me know. I’d love to join you. This is the dumbest website I’ve EVER seen.

  3. Regarding the neighborhoods I got this response from the Times:
    “Thank you for contacting NYTimes.com.

    You should try clearing your Web browser’s cache of temporary Internet files which
    usually fixes problems such as you’ve described. Because most people’s
    Internet Service Providers (ISP’s) and Web Browsers come in many
    different versions, we can only provide generalized instructions.

    If they do not help you, please refer to either your ISP’s technical support center or
    your browser’s Help documentation.

    Since our Web site is constantly updated, you set your Web browser so
    that it will not cache articles.

    The purpose of a cache is to prevent the browser from reloading each
    page, and instead require it to use a version stored locally on your hard
    drive; using a cached page will prevent you from seeing the most current
    pages we offer.

    To make sure you are not viewing a cached page, first try pressing the
    “Reload” button to refresh the page.

    If the same page reappears, you need to “clear the cache”. To do so,
    first make sure you are not currently on our home page; go to
    another Web page while you change the following settings:

    For Internet Explorer (I.E.):

    Internet Explorer 7.0: choose Tools | Internet Options | General,
    and under Browsing History, click on Delete Files.
    Select the “Delete Files….” button to the right of Temporary Internet Files.

    Internet Explorer 6.0: choose Tools | Internet Options | General,
    and under Temporary Internet Files, click on Delete Files.
    Select “Delete all offline content.” Click OK to confirm.

    For Firefox:

    Choose Tools | Clear Private Data
    Check the box next to “Cache” and click “Clear Private Data Now”

    For AOL 6, 7, 8, 9:

    From the AOL menu, choose Settings.
    In the Preferences window, under Organization, click Internet Properties.
    In the General tab. Go to the Temporary Internet Files area.
    Press Delete Files. Select “Delete all offline content.” Click OK to confirm.
    Choose OK to exit the AOL Internet Properties window, and you’re done.

    For Safari:

    From the Safari menu, select Empty Cache. When prompted, click Empty
    and confirm that you wish to empty the cache.”

    That’s a whole lotta instructions to run a simple search!

  4. the people from the interactive news division at the times are answering questions from readers this week. why not ask them about changes in the real-estate section?

  5. As long as we are test driving the NYT real estate section, FYI to the Times editors: Bushwick and Bed Stuy are vastly different neighborhoods covering huge areas of Brooklyn and should not be included in the same search. DUH. They don’t combine Tribeca and Chinatown. Or Park Slope and BoCaCa.

  6. Sorry I only look at Cocorean’s site when I am in the mood for reading something funny. You would think that the brokers that work in Cocorean smoke some really good stuff with the prices they still try to get. I don’t think they understand that housing prices are going down- way down.

  7. The old search was pretty bad as well, but what was the point to change it without improving it?
    In my opinion, the worst part is that the Times lets advertisers pick their own categories, so that if you select “condo” or “multi-family houses” for “Fort Greene”, you may still get coop listings in Park Slope or Gravesend. It really devalues their search engine.