About
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.
Howard on the Web
Recent Comments
- Anthony jhon on Ten things journalists can do to reinvent journalism, the new list
- Carmen Bojanowski on Ten things journalists can do to reinvent journalism, the new list
- Anonymous on Chris Tolles brings some stats to the anonymous vs. registration debate
- Anonymous on Chris Tolles brings some stats to the anonymous vs. registration debate
- A Weekly Roundup of Small-Business News - NYTimes.com on Paywalls create opportunities for local news entrepreneurs
Archives
Tags
Advertising Audience Growth blogging blogs Books Business comments Community disruption ethics film Gadgets GateHouse Media history Home Towns Innovation Journalism local news Media Movies MP3 of the Day Music news newspapers online Paid Content participation Patch Personal Appearances photography point-and-shoot publish2 Reinventing Journalism reporting Site Design Society Sports Strategy Tech topix Video Web-First Publishing web2.0 web navigation WritingShare
Meta
Daily Archives: December 31, 2006
MP3 of the Day: Vigilantes of Love – She Walks On Roses
| Artist: | Vigilantes of Love |
| Song | She Walks on Roses |
| Source | Paste Magazine |
NOTE: My goal with “MP3 of the Day” is to find great, free, non-DRM MP3 downloads. If you have a tip for a good source, leave a comment. Continue reading
Tagged Media
4 Comments
Blocking low-paying AdSense ads
Publishers who run AdSense should know about this: A service that blocks low-paying contextual ads called AdSense Blacklist. There’s a real problem with AdSense in that a lot of low-quality ads are running with increasing frequency (the built-for-AdSense-only business that bid high, but aren’t necessarily delivering a real service). If you’re interested in serving readers well with AdSense (advertising is, after all, content), then you want to block these sites from your AdSense rails. Continue reading
Welcome to Along Came Jones
When Along Came Jones becomes a world famous blog, just remember who christened it.
Oh, and get what JJ says about the overused word, “bako,”
For me the word Bako conjures up images of being stuck in a tar pit and dying in the sun while birds tear at my flesh, I dunno that’s just me, so bakojones was out of the question. Don’t get me wrong I like the word Bako I have it as part of an email address and one of my dear friends from back in the day was the first person I ever heard use the word Bako in reference to Bakersfield like calling San Francisco “Frisco� or some such.
Yeah, but not call it “Frisco” the the face of anybody from Frisco, or you’re likely to lose your face. Friscoians hate the word for some reason. Maybe it’s time to retire “bako” in a similar fashion. Whadda say, Jones? Continue reading
Tagged Home Towns, Media
3 Comments
Don’t put a grave stone on social media just yet
The is shocking: Social media is no mo. In the post, Steve Rubel proclaims that social media is dead. This has caused a stir in the blogosphere.
But you have to read the post to get what Rubel is saying.
There’s no point in differentiating any more. The story that Dan Gillmor chronicled in his landmark 2004 book We the Media has only accelerated. We are all one and it’s silly to classify us into two different species.
Rubel’s point is that with established publishers joining the conversation, and conversational publishers evolving into going business concerns, Packaged Goods Media and Conversational Media are converging.
There’s some truth there.
But it’s worth noting that what we now call social media is nothing new. Back when I was a young buck just starting out this business (11 years ago), we called social media virtual community. The web, with its hyperlinks and personal-publishing frameworks is by design social. In a way, you can’t enter web publishing without joining the conversation. It’s foolish to try and be a PGM publisher on the web. What 2006 wrought was a lot of light bulbs going off in a lot of publishers’ heads: “Well, hell, I ain’t growing audience no more with my shovelware. Guess I better get me a blog or two.” (And really, for most newspaper publishers, the thinking hasn’t gotten much more beyond that so far).
So Rubel is only half right. In a way, we’ve always been converged. In another, PGM publishers still only see through a glass darkly and haven’t fully grasped what it means to participate in the online world. In that last respect, Rubel is overly optimistic. It gives PGM publishes way too much credit for getting it and doing it.
The other key factor to 2006 was the vast improvement in conversational tools and models. The thing to keep in mind here though is that the web is yet but a mere decade or so old. The personal computer didn’t really become a household appliance until 20 years or so after is introduction. If that is the adoption rate of the web, what we know of the online publishing is probably only about half of what it will be. It’s a little early yet to say it’s all figured out and PGM and CM are so intermingled that there is essentially no difference. Continue reading
Tagged Media
Leave a comment
