Blogging, Old Media & Change

So I’m going to try to not get into the Old Media/New Media thing too much, but I was just reading a post by Kent Newsome over on his blog. In it, he talks about how some “old media” writers/journalists keep predicting the passing of blogging popularity, and how they believe interest in blogging is waning.

Now I understand that over the last several years the buzz about blogging has reached a fever pitch and has some media types running scared. That the trends in readership of information of many types is moving to new media outlets – namely blogs. Tie that in with Richard Edelman’s recent discussion about the Me2 Revolution, and you can see how traditional media types could be concerned that what they have to say is not being heard the way the would like it to be.

Like many industries in our modern age, digital publishing is facing the same comoditization and automation of their product that so many other industries have already experienced. What is hard to see for everyone who goes through this initial phase of change is that the end-product will be better for everyone involved. The writing of all participants will improve, the content of the writing will improve, the thinking behind what we all say will improve, the conversation will improve, etc…

Similarly, look at how the RIAA views digital music as a threat instead of a new distribution model that they could leverage to their benefit (give me $.10/track downloads and a premium “offline” CD-type product option). Or how the traditional telephony companies are running scared at how VoIP is rendering their decades-old voice lines obsolete (don’t worry about content, just sell me the cheapest, fastest internet pipe – do what you do best). What it simply means to these industires, and “old media” alike, is that they need to change. To think anew – come up with a new way to leverage the opportunity in front of them. Realize that the increased competition is worth their effort to change and improve what they currently offer.

Change is a scarry thing – especially when it has the potential to hit the bottom line, but it is also one of the most exciting events that can occur to any industry – how else can anyone improve & expand without going through some sort of change? And how many of us would like a static unchanging world anyway? Change, whether small or large is what keeps us all interested. What keeps us all coming back for more.

RickMahn.com

Come visit me at my new permanent Blog on the net at RickMahn.com. I’ll problably not be updating this space regularly as I’ve consolidated all my blogging efforts into one site. You can see some of the latest post headlines below.

RickMahn.com

Rough Going…

Sorry for the past 12 hours here – I was finalizing some parts of the site that made RickMahn.com a little messed up. Should all be corrected now – along with the RSS feed through FeedBurner as well. Sorry for any inconvenience and thank-you for your patience.

Oops…

Well that didn’t work.  Ok, note to self… don’t try to change the base domain name for your web site when you are transfering it from one registrar to another.

Seriously, when I say it to myself that way, I realize how stupid it really was.  You may have noticed that this site actually resolves to rickmahn.net, I own rickmahn.com as well and have it forwarding here.  Its in the process of being transfered to my new hosting service, and well, I thought I could do a few things that just didn’t work.

The short of it is that it’ll just have to be forwarding to rickmahn.net for another few days until the domain has been transfered, then I’ll move the site from rickmahn.net to rickmahn.com.

Sorry for any confusion!  Just my stupidity showing itself :).

Dave Winer: “Blogging is part of life”

I agree with Dave Winer’s analysis about blogging is a part of life.  The notion that an enabling technology being the news is misleading – the technology is just a mechanism for each of us to communicate our thoughts and ideas, in an easier, faster cheaper way.

Each new enabling technology (PCs, Email, Internet, MP3s, Digital Photography, Digital Video, etc…) is just another tool for everyone to leverage in their day-to-day lives.  Saying that blogging is “dead” makes no sense, as there are millions of new blogs created each month.  While some of this may be a fad that draws people in, I for one have become intrigued by the blogosphere and the conversations within it.  Just like I was drawn into using the Internet as a research and communications tool.  Of course, blogging may not be for everyone, just like Instant Messaging isn’t for everyone.
And Dave is correct when he says that new businesses will spring from blogs – the communication & collaboration is what drives new ideas and concepts.  What do you think new businesses start from?  Nothing?  Ideas are what change industries and the world, and when you have clear, simple communications (i.e. Naked Coversations – see Scoble), you have the necessary foundation to build on.

Via: Scripting News

Pin It on Pinterest