Date: Tue, 24 Feb 1998 08:47:24 +1100 From: Gary R Oliver <gary.oliver§ooo.com.au> Message-ID: <3.0.3.32.19980224084724.00a05d50§mail01.syd.aone.net.au> | So far as the DNS is concerned I don't like people using the analogy of | white pages and yellow pages. Not if carried too far, I agree, but it is a useful starting point. The DNS is a white pages type directory - you have to know exactly what you're looking for (and I mean the organisations domain name, not their company or trading name) in order for the DNS to be useful. It is not the kind of directory that will help you find the domain name if you don't already know it by some other means. That is just like the white pages, if you met someone selling shoebrushes, and want to find their phoen number, the white pages is totally useless, you have to know their name, usually initials, and often have an idea of their address for it to produce a result. For the DNS you have to *know* the domain name. Ideally it would never be used by human entered strings, only by programs acting on information derived from other programs. On the other hand, the yellow pages is the kind of directory that allows you to find information based upon a description of the information wanted. Being printed on paper, it necessarily has limitations on what kinds of searches are possible (I think the on-line vesion is more flexible) but it is at least structured so that searching for information is possible. The Internet has no real directory of that form yet, and it needs one. | I notice MelbIT has also proposed the phone book as a guide. As I understand it, that's for a totally different purpose. | Why can't people just consider the DNS in its own right. We do. | The implementation of the | policies so far, as other have commented before this, has meant that even | if you know the name (exactly) you won't necessarily find the | other information needed to make contact since there are many public and | private companies with trading names and use either one or the other. No, that isn't the policies, that is the nature of the DNS. It simply is not designed to allow that kind of translation, never was, and never will be. To use the DNS you must know the domain name some other way. Its purpose is purely and simply to translate known domain names into other information (mail delivery points, IP addresses, etc). Anything more than that is purely taking wild stabs (occasionally not so wild) and then looking to see if you happened to hit the right place by going there and seeing it it looks to be where you wanted to get, and if not, trying again. That's a pretty stupid way to operate really, when you think about it. kreReceived on Wed Feb 25 1998 - 05:09:12 UTC
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