ThinkGeek
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ThinkGeek | |
Type | Public |
---|---|
Founded | 1999 |
Headquarters | Fairfax, Virginia, USA |
Industry | Retail |
Owner | Open Source Technology Group |
Slogan | Stuff for Smart Masses |
Website | ThinkGeek |
ThinkGeek is an electronic commerce company based in Fairfax, VA as part of the Open Source Technology Group. It sells items that mostly cater to PC enthusiasts and other 'geeky' social groups. Their merchandise consists of clothing, computer hardware, toys for around the office, caffeinated drinks, and candy.
Contents |
[edit] History
Three out of the four founding members started an ISP based in Northern Virginia in 1995. A short while later, the founders had the idea of publishing an online retailer which sold merchandise targeted to electronic enthusiasts, such as programmers, engineers, students, open source developers and the fast growing Internet culture. After a few months of operation, the website was Slashdotted. Promptly thereafter, ThinkGeek was acquired by Andover.net (which would go on to be known as the Open Source Technology Group).
[edit] Website Features
[edit] Products
The navigational panel on every ThinkGeek page contracts and expands in branch format to display subcategories of products.
- T-shirts
- Other Apparel
- Geek Toys
- Gadgets
- Home & Office
- Computing
- Caffeine
- Electronics
- Books
A majority of products sold on ThinkGeek are heavily related to (and sometimes only understood by) Internet culture. Some T-Shirt designs include stick figure with a detached anus, with "LMAO" as the caption, a ROFLCOPTER (an ASCII drawing of a helicopter comprised of internet slang), the Intel Pentium Processor logo replacing "Pentium" with "Geek", and a pixelated 1up Mushroom from the Super Mario Brothers games series.
[edit] Customer Action Shots
Think Geek allows, and encorages its customers to send in pictures of a product in use, or used in some humorus or otherwise interesting way. Examples include: Picturs of creations made with the popular Smart Mass Thinking Putty, long exposure photographs of laser pointers, and photos of customers wearing the various T-Shirts the company sells.
[edit] Geek Points
ThinkGeek runs a points for reward system. The more products a customer purchases from ThinkGeek (provided they're enrolled in the Geek Points program and meet the qualifications), the higher quality of rewards they can claim. The requirements to join this program state participants must be at least 18 years old, must live in the U.S. or Canada, (mainly because the laws regarding reward programs vary in different countries) and must have a ThinkGeek account to accumulate and use Geek Points. Geek Points will expire after 3 years for active customers and cannot be transferred for money, or to other accounts.
[edit] April Fools Day Humor
On April 1st every year, a fake homepage complete with at least four fictional, and generally absurd products are posted, such as: "Surge Stix", cigarette-esqu high potency caffeine delivery systems that, when bent like a glow stick till a snap is heard, deliver 18mg of caffeine per pull, with a capacity for ten puffs, amounting to as much caffeine as five cans of Coke. Also, the site's characteristic subheading "Stuff for Smart Masses", has its M crossed out, so that it reads "Stuff for Smart Asses"
[edit] System
[edit] Software
ThinkGeek runs Linux -- mostly Debian and Gentoo Linux with some Red Hat -- servers using Apache (with mod_perl, mod_ssl and custom modules). Their system was developed primarily in Perl and their "WarpSpeed checkout" is based heavily on the AJAX framework OpenThought.
[edit] Hardware
ThinkGeek utilizes five front-end servers with dual processors for serving content to customers, and a single dual processor web server for administrative tasks. They also run a pair of quad Xeon processor Linux systems for their database servers. A few miscellaneous servers exist to do various testing and to stage content before going live on the site.
[edit] Network
There are dedicated firewalls (mixture of Linux and OpenBSD systems) in front of all the servers. ThinkGeek has access to dual 100 Mbps pipes served from the West Coast. ThinkGeek also shares a 1.6TB SAN with other OSDN websites for near-line backups.