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Tarrant County Republican Party Selects THINQ to Develop New Site

The Tarrant County Republican Party has selected THINQ to develop a new site. The goal of the site is to position Tarrant County on the forefront of thought leadership for how political sites will evolve. The site will integrate TCGOP’s presence on Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, Flickr and other social networking sites as well as create a platform for easy news posting and content management. The site will launch at the beginning of May, 2009 with plans already in the works for mobile versions as well as an online community.


NationSports.org Selects Thinq to Develop New Sports-Focused, Social Networking Website

NationSports.org approached THINQ with a unique concept for a sports social networking site; empower the fans. The whole notion behind the site is not to be informational, but to be topical, opinionated and encourage people to harness the spirit of competition to fuel their passion for their sport, their team(s) and their player(s). THINQ is creating custom content management system, points reward system for participation and included features such as organic groups, blogs, forums, video support and created an advertising system and strategy for monetization of the site to subsidize future growth.


Thinq Completes Programming for New Witherspoon Website

Thinq design recently completed a completely updated, standards compliant, SEO optimized, CSS/XHTML reprogramming of the forthcoming Witherspoon Advertising and Public Relations website redesign. Witherspoon supplied the creative and we supplied that programming know-how and implementation of their new site that ensures maximum speed performance and still allows for durability on the back end so that the client make changes and updates on their own. Look for the new Witherspoon site to launch later this month.


Google’s Mayer: Staying Innovative In a Downturn

Great Article from Business Week…

When Larry Page and Sergey Brin co-founded Google (GOOG) 10 years ago, few people imagined the kind of influence it would wield today—not just on the Internet, but increasingly in such established industries as media and software.

Since then, Google has come to dominate the most lucrative piece of online advertising: the text ads placed next to its search results. Armed by an expansive mission to “organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful,” the company has used its rapidly growing profits to fund forays into online software applications and even radio and television advertising. No wonder Google shows up as one of the 10 names on BusinessWeek’s list of the World’s Most Influential Companies (more…)


Mets’ pizza patch the laughingstock of baseball uniform world

Who says that the details don’t matter. Another case of design gone awry…from Yahoo!

If you’re the type of person who doesn’t spend much time thinking about sleeve patches on uniforms, don’t worry.

Neither do the Mets.

The team recently unveiled the logo to celebrate their upcoming first season in Citi Field and to say that it’s being mocked worse than an oblivious American Idol contestant would be an understatement.

At its best, it’s being said to resemble the logo of a certain pizza company that once featured the ‘Noid. At its worst, it’s being categorized as the biggest affront to Mets fans since John Rocker’s sermon in SI.

Here’s what UniWatch’s Paul Lukas, a lifelong Mets fan, had to say:

“Compare (anything) to this, and the Mets’ effort comes off looking like amateur hour. Or maybe amateur minute. It looks like one of those cheapo generic marks you see in commercials or movies when the producers couldn’t afford the licensing fees for the real logos.”

Though some conspiracy theorists are saying that this is the Mets way of distancing the team from CitiGroup, that isn’t the case here. MLB doesn’t allow commercial logos on uniforms, so that wouldn’t even be an issue. More likely, it’s a case of the Mets being as dull and uninspiring as their ’08 bullpen. They could’ve held a coloring contest among preschoolers and still ended up with a better design than the one above.

Luckily, if the Mets decide to answer the outcry by taking another stab at the design, they won’t have to look far for a few pointers. Here’s the patch the Yankees will be wearing for their inaugural season at new Yankee Stadium this year: