Hi all, David has hit on the most salient point of this whole issue. Domain names only have value when they provide value to the end user. How many technologies have passed into extinction despite last-ditch attempts by supporters to resurrect their value?... 8 Track cartridges... the "Beta" Cam... When the user no longer supports the concept of using domain names to find information on the Internet, then the $ value of this naming convention is gone - and I would suggest that we are further into this than many people in the industry think... perhaps a danger of being "too close" to the issue... however ask any Internet user nowadays (obviously not someone who administers an ISP or sits on an internet governing board!), how they find information on the Internet, and they will tell you... through a Search Engine. Very few people nowadays go through the mental process of "OK, now if I type quantas.com.au (or is that qantas.com.au?), I might find what I am after"... what they do is click "Home" (because 9 out of 10 people set a Search Engine as their homepage), and type "Qantas Australia". They know they will get a selection of matches offering far more choice than by typing single repetitive entries into the URL box. They simply read the brief descriptives, and select the link that best meets their needs - irrespective of the domain name (which may or may not be displayed). Bookmark the page (which refers to the title, not the domain name), and you have the address for life. If anyone doubts the validity of this, then please attend one of the thousands of internet familiarisation courses being run throughout Australia - this is how we are teaching people to use the Internet!... and a further indicator... many companies are now registering acronym's as domains (because the name they want is unavailable)... these acronyms mean nothing to the masses... it might as well be an IP address. Unfortunately I think a few good marketing guru's have grossly overestimated the value and longevity of the DNS system (and yes, we all bought it), but like the .com's... reality will hit hard and a lot of people may be left with worthless virtual real estate. Am I miles off the mark? - interested in your thoughts. Cheers, DonReceived on Tue Feb 20 2001 - 16:10:32 UTC
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