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Howard Owens is a digital media pioneer. He started publishing local news online in 1995 when very few local news outlets had web sites. The header image on the site depicts the film camera he used early in his career and the press pass from his year on the staff of the Carlsbad Journal. For more on Howard's professional background, read his LinkedIn profile.
HowardOwens.com is the personal web site of Howard Owens and covers his range of interests -- political localism and libertarianism, music and personal interests, as well as his professional interests.
Howard is currently publisher of The Batavian and lives in Batavia, N.Y.
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Daily Archives: June 20, 2006
E-mail still rules
Jeff Jarvis is arguing with Jakob Nielsen over comments Nielson made in support of e-mail newsletters.
Jarvis writes:
… Nielsen sticks to his guns pushing email newsletters (I haven’t subscribed to once since about 2002, myself and not being able to get rid of half of them that I no longer read I now mark them as spam and never open them) over these newfangled RSS feeds and blogs …
Nielsen responds that Jarvis arguments are invalid because they are based on personal experience and not data. Of course, Nielsen doesn’t offer any data either.
Here’s a real simple test for a site with both newsletters and RSS — how many people subscribe to feeds vs. newsletters? I currently don’t have access to those numbers, but I’ll bet bytes to buffers that newsletters remain more popular than RSS feeds at most general-interest sites.
To put it in usability terms, I go back again to “Don’t Make Me Think.” RSS makes users think. E-mail doesn’t. RSS may one day over take e-mail, but so far the adoption rate seems pretty damn slow. For the average user, e-mail remains so much easier to understand.
Other than that, Nielsen’s site in inexplicably ugly and hard to use. Jarvis and I agree on that much, at least.
UPDATE: Jay Small has his say.
Something I forgot to mention: For newsletters, number of subscribers isn’t a reasonable metric, even if you’re daily deleting bad addresses. The only meaningful measurement is open rates. For RSS, the best thing to track is downloads. If you’re using a measurement tool like Omniture, this becomes problematic, as far as I understand how Omniture works — it measures downloads based on clicks from pages with the Omniture tags installed. That means downloads via an RSS reader (or for video and audio, downloads by direct links from other sites, e-mail or IM) are not measured. To measure these downloads (not necessarily with 100 percent accuracy) you need a good old fashioned serve log analyzer.
Every news site should have both e-mail newsletters and RSS, and should be tracking both closely. If RSS really is the superior technology, it will eventually overtake e-mail, at which time sites can safely abandon e-mail newsletters.
I should also mention, I get a couple of e-mail newsletters — my favorites are on gardening from Home Depot and HGTV. They work for me, in part, because I use Gmail, which has a great spam filter. The point is: Spam hasn’t necessarily killed e-mail yet, and as Spam filters improve, the better for e-mail newsletters.
Tagged Media
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Vote to hit and run
Can a smart mob manage a baseball team? We’re about to find out. For the second half of its season, the Schaumburg Flyers will be managed by fans. I associate myself with Business Pundit’s predictions. Continue reading
Tagged Business, Sports
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What’s your hardiness zone?
For all you gardeners out there, HGTV has launched a gardening zone finder, based on the USDA hardiness zones. It’s build in Flash and with a little glitch or two, it’s basically well designed and well conceived. You type in your zip code and a little box pops up that tells you your hardiness zone. It’s more accurate than just looking at the USDA map. For example, I always thought we were in zone 9b, but it turns out we’re actually in zone 8b. The best part is you can then view lists of various plants that do well in your region. As Paul James would say: “Cool.”
Two quibbles: The zone popper box opens two low on the screen, so you can’t see it unless you scroll down, and its plant recommendations doesn’t include succulents, as far as I can tell.
Tagged Media
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Knoxville520.com
Knoxnews.com is launching a cool new events/music site. (via Jay Small). It could use more user-generated content, but the basic calendar and search app is well executed. Also from Jay, I learned that my the man I’ve known the longest online, Jack Lail, has a blog. Jack ran the SPJ-L e-mail discussion list when I first got online more than a decade ago.
Tagged Media
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Sutcliffe drunk on air
I’ve never liked Rick Sutcliffe. For one thing, he’s an ex-Dodger, but more importantly, during his first year as a Padres broadcaster (I never understood why he was hired), he dissed one of my favorite Padres, and a friend, the late Eric Show. Sutcliffe made a couple of insulting comments about Show (remember, this wasn’t long after Show died), and that really bugged me at the time.
Bakersfield blogger Dusty, a Padres fan, has the tape: Sutcliffe making a drunken fool of himself while visiting the Padres booth recently. At least this time, Sutcliffe apologized. Continue reading
Tagged broadcasting, padres, Sports, Sports
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