For anyone who casually reads yakimaherald.com, you might have noticed several things going on with our site, some good, some not so good.
Over the past 3 months or so we’ve changed our advertising service a few times, added new code and subtracted others from the main site, and are creating new ways to tell stories online with video — all the while building a new CMS (content management system) to publish the news.
Currently, we use a rather pieced together grouping of technology to process and publish news stories for the Web site. The new publishing system (CMS) will use fewer processes and enable us to manage and publish online in a better way.
The new system, known to the Web team as Depot Central, has been an ongoing project for nearly two years. All of the work, from planning to programming will be launched in it’s raw form next week. More on this in a future post…
Experiencing Web news hiccups?
If you’ve noticed slow loading time, graphic or design elements being in the wrong place, or the site being down for a moment, etc… well, you are not alone.
One major hiccup has been the amount of time it has taken the public to load yakimaherald.com. After a few weeks of poking at the site, and a couple days of downright frustration, we think the major load problems have been eliminated.
If you want, please comment, or e-mail us about your load time experiences before Feb. 26 and the present.
Regarding problems with pages appearing funny when you look at them, etc… As we prepare for the new CMS, we are trying out new design and code formats. Most of them work the first time, others require a bit of tinkering to make the site display correctly on most Web browser configurations.
These changes make the site a more ‘organic’ site, than a static, flat Web site that rarely changes. One of the biggest reasons for building the new CMS is to provide flexibility for displaying and publishing the news.
Many Web techies call flexible sites ‘dynamic’, but for me, what yakimaherald.com is becoming is more organic than anything. I think that way because it’s changing in ways the public may not see in one day, unless it experiences a few growing pains (like a bit of misplaced code that breaks the front page,) but is recognizable over time.
To me, ‘organic’ also means that it’s home grown. It has a few difficult days, or weeks as it matures and develops, but it’s made by folks here in the Valley to reflect the community it serves. At least that’s how I like to think about it.
To wrap this up — I will have a lot to say about these new projects, as they come rushing forward to public use. My hope is that the changeover into our new publishing platform has few bumps on its way forward, but we will see. Bear with us and continue watching as yakimaherald.com experiences a major growth spurt in the coming days.
-TJ