The site looks similar to the old one, but it's more interactive, he said. "We didn't want a wholesale redesign because we liked the look of the old one," said Rovanpera. "But this one puts us in a whole new level of Web experience."Apparently, even in a tight budget year, the different departments found money to contribute to the upgrade, since each department will benefit, Rovanpera said.
I, of course, will be making much use of the new website, as I dig around for various bits of information on the city and its business, so I’ll be finding out for myself if its search features function better.
If you want to share your experiences with the new site, please do.
8 comments:
Great...as long as they keep the crossing guards at Walnut Acres and we can continue to rely on excellent response time by our police.
Better make sure you're feeling those meters, Soccer Mom, we've got a website to pay for!
I bet the chinese restruant with the flag did the work on this.
I've been leaving feedback (complaining) to Mr. Rovanpera for years regarding problems with the W.C. website. Nothing was ever fixed. How he keeps his job is beyond me, a couple middle school kids could have done that rework for a couple of pizzas.
Reading the CoCo times article I see that now W.C. can track how many users are accessing the site. For $50,000? I'm doing it on mine for free, lots of good stats too. Check out google-analytics instead of what some salesman told you.
I just can't believe WC couldn't find an out of work web designer (I'm sure there are some good ones around.....) to do this for less than 50 grand. Amazing! You would think in today's economic climate they would be holding off or paying less, wow.
I heard last night at a district meeting that WC did eliminate crossing guards, I guess their priority is a bit skewed...
Are these the crossing guards around WCI? Or at a different school? Walnut Acres, in the MDUSD?
Might be something I need to address...
Thanks for the note.
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