Showing posts with label Domain name. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Domain name. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Happy Birthday Dot-Com

The dot-com era just reached its Silver Anniversary – 25-years ago yesterday the first dot-com on the Internet debuted amidst the beeps and buzzes of dial-up modem users everywhere.

On March 15, 1985, the Symbolics Computer Company registered symbolics.com, making history, changing forever the way we live.

Previously, to go anyplace in cyberspace you had to enter hard to remember Internet Protocol (IP) addresses directly, such as 191.124.1.1. We have it easy now, just think of any company, and generally you can access it simply by typing the company_name.com.

These days, everyone is getting their own names registered as a domain name – there is even a trend among the ultra-nutty-types to register their newborn baby’s name on the Internet within a mere number of days of the child appearing from the womb. You don’t want your son or daughter to grow up not being able to have their namesake online – the horror!

But back in 1985, when big hair bands were rocking out on their synthesizers, while their fans were playing Pac Man, or trying to figure out the Rubik Cube, the Internet was the unimaginable stuff of science fiction.

Development of the Internet was slower than a dial-up connection on a party line, taking over two years to reach 100 dot-com registered names. Within ten years, that number had exploded to 18,000 registered names, in part due to dot-com boom.

Today there are over 80 million dot-com domain names, according to the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF) which keeps track of these things. That doesn’t even come close to just how many registered domain names there are in total, when you consider all the dot-ca, dot-org, dot-biz, dot-tv, dot-gov, dot-this-that-and-the-other-thing . . .

Despite the bust of the dot-com boom in the late 1990’s when investors lost billions of dollars, the Internet has been one of the most steadily growing investments in our life time. Most of that growth has happened just after the failure of the initial dot-com boom, occurring within the past ten years.

Which makes sense – investors learned from their mistakes, and began investing in technologies which could actually be proven. Previously, many invested in what became known as vapourware – someone with a lot of drive and ambition sold them on an idea, which had not been turned into a solid product or service. When that idea turned out to be nothing more than just that – an idea -- that investor lost his shirt.

You can’t do business today unless you are on the Internet – all “real” companies have some sort of presence on the international network of computer networks.

Then again, there are always all those pseudo companies or people telling you about your long lost relative that no one has ever heard of, leaving you an inheritance in the millions. All you have to do is email your banking information to some complete stranger in some third-world country to claim your fortune.

As with all things in our world, just as there are honest people online, there are also dishonest ones too. Internet fraud has tripled over the past five years, according to the Internet Crime Complaint Center, which reported over 337, 000 complaints of losses totalling almost $560 million last year.

However shady some are online, the virtual worlds we create for our entertainment and joy, our business and prosperity, and our friends and family are remarkable.

From surfing the net to catch up on our latest television shows, to participating in highly addictive online games, to just looking up how to cook a turkey or build a solar powered home, to checking out our bank balances, to buying just about anything imaginable online, to sharing pictures of your ski trip with your friends and family on a social networking site, the dot-com world – and all of its dot-brothers and dot-sisters – is fundamentally our world.

Happy 25 birthday dot-com!


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Friday, January 15, 2010

What Your Online Name Says About You

What’s in a name? This timeless question has been asked by many a parent, trying to figure out what to call their future son or daughter, a child that just got a cute puppy dog, and now, by me, trying to figure out my home on the worldwide web.

Recently I bought my own name jordanhgreen.com and jordanhgreen.ca – the thought of having to pay money for my own name is fodder for another blog. It wasn’t really hard coming up with a name for my soon-to-be home on the net. Just use what your mother gave you – so I did.

Where the name question came up was, what first-level domain should I use? Do I want to look all slick and professional with a .com? How about being all patriotic by going under Canada’s country-specific first-level domain .ca? I could sound all big and impressive using .net, or .org. Then there is .biz, .info, .name, .pro, there is even a .me – but no .i.

Careful thought is required here, because once something is up on the Internet, even if you take it down yourself, chances are somewhere, someone has a copy floating around on their computer. The shelf life of the online world never expires.
When the Internet was in its infancy, the choices weren’t as vast as they are today. If you were registering a company, you used .com.

Non-profit organizations would use .org, while primary conduits hosting connecting networks to the Internet (such as America Online, and the once all mighty CompuServe) would use .net. Government organizations kept to .gov, and schools used .edu.

And if the choice isn’t enough to throw you, what each category actually means does. Many getting started in television choose .tv for their online presence, but for those in the know, .tv is actually the country-specific domain for the Polynesian island nation of Tuvalu. Some in Toronto, Canada have opted for .to showing some hometown pride, but .to is actually the country-specific domain for the Kingdom of Tonga, an archipelago of 169 islands in the South Pacific. Confusion about these things is far and wide -- .si has been used by Hispanic websites for it’s translation of “yes” (which is si in Spanish). But .si actually represents Slovenia.

So, based in Toronto, I could have chosen jordanhgreen.to – but many may think I’m actually in Tuvalu. Wanting to sound big and impressive, I may have gone with jordanhgreen.net, but I’m no AOL.

And then there are these online auctions. People with too much time on their hands spend their entire lives online, buying domain names, so that when you search for yours, you have to purchase it an outrageously inflated price.

I originally was nervous typing in my own name into the WHOIS search engines to find out if my own name was available. I was very lucky, and it was – but I had to think of other alternatives just in case.

The last thing you want your online address to be is something like jordanhgreen985321.com – who’s going to remember that?

Other alternatives I came up with were the short and sweet jhg.com, jordangreen.com and the slick jordanhgreenonline.com.

Sometimes, people – often I think in a drunken stupor – create domains for themselves based on a nickname, or some random thought they have in their mind. Homer Simpson once told someone to email him at chunkylover@aol.com.

Phew! It is like naming a kid or a pet. Only you have to contend with all those who may have taken it already, and are willing to put up a financial fight to keep it.

Like the time a few years ago, when some brainiac registered windows.com and computer giant Microsoft lost the domain bid, so the software company followed-up with a law suit to secure that domain because of their Windows operating system.

Shortly after that, Microsoft tried to copyright the term “windows,” but lucky for those of us with windows in our homes, the judge presiding over the case threw it out.

In the end, I went with obviously the best choice – or at least best in my mind’s eye – jordanhgreen.com and jordanhgreen.ca.


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