People have been writing about ThnLnk, which is a Good Thing. Hands-down, as you can see, people can't say enough good things about us!
Here are just a few select comments, mostly for my own self-deprecation, from the Internets.
(On the other hand, ThnLnk is ranked #14 on Listible's List of Web 2.0 Products. Web 2.0? OK, I'll take it!)
Cool New Technology: ThnLnk - Semantic URL: "While this service may have limited use, it does it's job very well."
semantic URL redirecting service: "ThnLnk tags URLs in a readable format so you know where you're going before you click. It is nice to use ThnLnk when sending a link to a friend so they know what they're getting"
Semantic urls, not domain: ThnLnk.com: "[ThnLnk] takes a long URL and makes it more sensible, thus making some really short URLs longer. Confused? It's not that bad. The idea is curious, having URLs that actually tell you what they mean, for example all the MakeYouGoHmm URLs are just dated and do not tell you what, but actually when."
Generador de "URLs semánticos": "Ahora que está de moda lo de usar "URL semánticos" (esos largos, con todas las palabras del tÃtulo) no podÃa faltar un web que te permita crear los tuyos. Por ejemplo: http://thnlnk.com/meneame/Noticias.ridculas.pero.votadas/Bj9. Como era de esperar, falla con cualquier caracter con acentos."
ThnLnk - No, really that's the name: "[T]he idea here is just as stupid as the name. A way to hide those really ugly URL's. Isn't that the idea of a hyperlink? For example, if you want to link somewhere on this really new thing called the Internet, you create a hyperlink (bare with me). What this does is take what's between the open and close anchor tag and link that to where you tell it."
0 Comments. Comments Closed!