Tag Cloud
|
Sacramento Press staff
Geoff Samek
GenderMale OccupationFounder, The Sacramento Press NeighborhoodPoverty Ridge |
Personal Tag Cloud |
|
About MeI spend my working day thinking about how to improve The Sacramento Press, the future of our business and reading about anything and everything relevant to my industry (and a few things that are not). And of course I keep up with local news on our site, and on sacbee.com as well since we do what we do best and link to the rest. If you want to get a feel for what is going on in media, from my perspective follow me on Twitter, @gsamek. |
||
10 articles featured on the front page
Front page comment
One comment featured on the front page
Front page article
One article featured on the front page
Notice anything different about the site today? Yup, our article page got a facelift. You’ll notice if you look closely that we haven’t changed any of the buttons that were there, just moved stuff around. We did this in order to accommodate for a new ad space and a brand-new advertising product we just launched, AdGlue. You can read all about AdGlue here, but I want to give you a short overview. The basic idea is if you are a small business advertiser, anytime you see an AdGlue ad that doesn’t have an ad already “glued” in place, you can click a simple button (only visible to participating advertisers) and glue your ad right in that place. That ad then stays there for 30 days. We think i
As an owner of Macer Media, publisher of The Sacramento Press, I have never made a political statement on this site. Today I will, out of self-preservation, and a concern for what is just and good for this site, and the people of this community in general. Wikipedia went black Wednesday due to its strong opposition to the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). Google also voiced its opposition with a link on its homepage. Many other Interenet companies took similar steps. So the first question is: What is SOPA? SOPA is a piece of proposed legislation in the House of Representatives aimed at, you guessed it, stopping piracy. The main proponent of the bill is the Motion Picture Association of Ame
As of today The Sacramento Press has an official mobile site. The great thing about this mobile site is that it can be found at the same location as our regular site, it's way more readable on your average smartphone. Our great development team optimized most of the pages on our site for the mobile browsing experience and those pages include: Sign-up Log in Front Page and Tag Pages User Profiles Search The other big feature we are launching is a developer API. An API or Application Programming Interface is a way for someone to interact with our site programatically. So if someone wanted to make an application for a phone or the Web that used our publicly available data, now they c
You know who you are, but when you write for The Sacramento Press, our readers might not. That’s part of the impetus behind today’s site update concerning disclosures. We have added a new section to our “write article” page that pokes and prods everyone from staff to community contributors to disclose personal and professional affiliations to anything discussed in stories. This update goes hand-in-hand with an update to our terms of use policy, which now requires a disclosure in any circumstance where a contributor has a “personal or professional interest in the subject matter of such article.” The interface is clean and simple and is just a text area that allows you to add a short des
It’s been nearly two and half years since we launched The Sacramento Press, and today we released a few changes (more than just the temporary purple color), one of which is removing the beta stamp from our navigation. What is a beta stamp, you ask? Well, since you can no longer see it on our site, I grabbed this screenshot of what it used to look like. Beta generally indicates that a company is still working out the kinks in their core product. But we finally are happy to say we feel pretty happy with what we have, so no more beta! Does this mean we stop working on new features? Absolutely not. We will in fact bring new and increasingly cool features to The Sacramento Press over the co
I imagine it working like a current visitor pass, which is good for two years. Over two years $75 would be quite a nominal fee for two additional passes. Currently you can only get one visitor pass per residence (http://bit.ly/JCGDYX), so this would be something that was unavailable before. Thank you for your feedback Mark.
I have an idea. It is not fleshed out at all, it just popped into my head but seems quite relevant. Why not allow residents, property owners or tenants, to purchase additional visitor passes beyond the first one they receive for free. Each additional pass could cost more. Perhaps start at $25 for the first additional one, then maybe $50 for the 2nd one? From there who knows. Again this idea just popped into my head and undoubtedly will have flaws or not work at all, please feel free to reply and tear it apart or suggest amendments.
Fantastic that if a business fails we are lucky enough to have an immediate replacement and not a vacant building for weeks, months, or years on end, as is the case with many buildings downtown. That warrants an exclamation point for me.
Also I just had brunch at Iron Steaks and thought it was quite good. Also it wasn't packed and the ambience is quite nice inside and on the patio.
Conversation about: Opinion: Parking Paranoia in Midtown Sacramento
The purpose of charging would be to have a price disincentive, to limit obtaining visitor passes, and curb potential abuse of obtaining additional passes. The money could be used to fund additional street lights, which I believe are sorely needed in the city. They could also be divvied up by neighborhood to be spent at the neighbors' discretion for other infrastructure improvements, much the same way the Neighborhood traffic Management Program works (http://bit.ly/K6FuHj). In general I feel that as a resident I get implicit and often hard to measure value out of people from the suburbs or out of town parking and spending money in midtown, where I am a homeowner. That, should it not be clear, is entirely my opinion and not substantiated by any numbers.