A Name Is Just A Name
First and foremost I would like to welcome you to the new site which by now you know encompasses our new brand. While i am certain there are a lot of die hard Hydra fans freaking out, (Especially those of you with it tattooed on your body!) rest assured that this change is truly in the best interest of the longevity of our company and our service offerings to you. We will continue to rock your socks off with some of the hottest digital goodness found on the web. The truth be told a name is just a name its the charisma of the people behind that name that truly makes it a movement. As Hydra becomes Nostalgia on our walls and in our memory, I truthfully hope your new experiences with Purple, Rock, Scissors is as equally rewarding.
Where to begin? I seriously have so much to talk about, from my thoughts on the new brand, our new site, and even our new offices! Its all about change these days, and in a post election season i am sure we can all think of some nifty slogans that embodies the fundamental reasoning of change. While for the most part i am a huge advocate of change i will also agree that sometimes change is downright disruptive. Its finding that balance of being to comfortable and by my definition of to comfortable i mean stagnant and leading your team into the oh sh** is this really going to work territory. And right now i feel like we have achieved that balance. I am not going to lie and say the last 90 have been a walk in the park especially the move. The move alone is like an unbelievable tale of tales straight out of a war-zone, from the hours we were held captive demoing, painting, and building what not only felt like but was actual Uhaul loads of IKEA furniture, to the logistics of our IT infrastructure headed up by our one and only Christopher Burdick. Jump over to our flickr to see more!








Comments
loopmob (not verified) says:
Published on Dec 3, 2009 @ 11:23am
Any information on your sources though?
Andrew A. Sailer (not verified) says:
Published on Dec 15, 2009 @ 18:23pm
Internet search engines, such as Google and A9, maintain a very large database of Web pages and available files. To do this, they devise a program called a web crawler, or spider. This software automatically and continuously surfs and hunts content in the Web. Pages that the spider finds are retrieved and indexed according to text content, giving more weight to titles and paragraph headers. Spiders never stop navigating the web from page to page, to index the relevant content of the Internet. Besides looking at the text of titles and headers, some programs are able to identify default tags and keep a library of these page keywords or key phrases in the index.
cul baiser (not verified) says:
Published on Dec 26, 2009 @ 09:55am
Maybe you should write on the whole thing more often
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