2005 Looks Like Record Year for Net Growth 97
miller60 writes "Netcraft reports that the Internet grew by 2.7 million sites in June, the second-largest gain in the history of its Web Server Survey. With growth of 10 million sites in the first half of the year, 2005 should easily surpass the existing annual growth record of 16 million sites from the dot-com boom year of 2000. The growth of small business web sites, blogs, domain name businesses and online advertising are all cited as factors in the strong gains."
How many of these... (Score:5, Funny)
eN14Rg3 y0Ur m4N1Lh0oD! or|)3r v!46Ra 70|)4Y!
If you build it... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re: Construction never ends (Score:2)
sitting domains (Score:2)
I recently went domain name hunting and found many good names I wanted to use, but they were all being used by blank pages. Pages that say "under construction" and that's it. And that's all that ever will be until someone buys them from the owner.
Re:How many of these... (Score:2)
If there are two hundred domain names of the form hot-sex-women-frankenfurter.com that all redirect to teenzexpozed.com, does that count as one, or two hundred?
Re:Netcraft confirms it (Score:1)
Hmmph (Score:4, Interesting)
I mean, is this where I toot my own horn and say: I told you so!!?!? [slashdot.org]
Re:Hmmph (Score:3, Funny)
For example: AOL. Broken from birth, IMO.
Re:Hmmph (Score:1, Insightful)
Bluntly, ``growing'' does not mean ``not broken or in need of replacement.'' Cancer grows a lot, too, you know. Want to take a guess at how many of those sites are made by spammers and phishers?
Re:Hmmph (Score:2)
Just because... (Score:2)
I would still argue that, while yes, the web is growing and a lot of good is happening on the Internet, it is still fatally flawed as evident in email, search engine, and blog spam. Putting it simply, the Internet is flawed because there isn't a structure in place for it to pay for itself without annoying advertisements. Google's made a lot of headway in this department, but even they're get
Server trends & commercial blogs (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Server trends & commercial blogs (Score:4, Informative)
And the month before, their change was -0.28%. So what? You need to see an actual trend before you can possibly conclude anything.
Conflicting statistics (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Conflicting statistics (Score:2)
The two survey different sets of sites, so it's not unexpected to see some differences between the two. It's just "noise" .. on the whole they should reveal the same trends. Both reveal a strong and continuing long-term growth of Apache [netcraft.com], and both reveal that IIS's share of the market has been more or less stagnant for some years now - seemingly stuck at around 25%, with a few ups and downs here and there, but not going anywhere - in fact declining very slightly.
Because the total number of servers is growi
Re:Conflicting statistics (Score:1)
Say it ain't so (Score:2)
Sites or hostnames? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Sites or hostnames? (SPAMMERS) (Score:4, Insightful)
So true. Judging by all the throw-away domain names I see in spam everyday (e.g., fqydahwviagra.scam), I wonder what percentage of the domains are real. I also wonder if some of the domain name expansion is just companies protecting themselves with alternate tradename spellings and TLDs
dot-spam :) (Score:2)
What we need is a new TLD, and have all the Spammers get their domains under it. It's easy to block, it's easy for parents to protect their kids from V!a-G-i-kra.
(FYI: This was the same argument for
-M
Re:dot-spam :) (Score:2)
But
Re:Sites or hostnames? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, but in the same respect, how hard is it to have multiple sites per domain name? Not very.
They probably even out quite nicely, in fact it is quite possibly a lot higher than the figures given, with that in mind.
Re:Sites or hostnames? (Score:1)
Link-farms? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Link-farms? (Score:2)
Then you visit that site, and find out there is absolutely nothing related to what you are searching for, but just ads for shitty domain hosting, links to links to other links for shopping, etc?
Re:Link-farms? (Score:2)
Then you visit that site, and find out there is absolutely nothing related to what you are searching for, but just ads for shitty domain hosting, links to links to other links for shopping, etc?
You got it.
Re:Link-farms? (Score:1)
I've always been a strong believer in the strength of google but recently the last few times I've done some deep querying, all I'm presented with is garbage sites. When you look deep into google, all you see is a rising filth of exploitive money making webpages. Google has to get a handle on the situation soon or their relevance as the ki
In Other News... (Score:1)
Personally, I perfer quality to quantity! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Personally, I perfer quality to quantity! (Score:1)
No, but I have seen lots of good websites close (Score:2)
Re:No, but I have seen lots of good websites close (Score:1)
Re:No, but I have seen lots of good websites close (Score:2)
New sites I've come across in '05 (Score:3, Informative)
The Huffington Post [huffingtonpost.com] - a collection of opinionated high-profile bloggers who are already making waves by making the notion of blogs accessible to people outside the "blogosphere"
Bayosphere [bayosphere.com] - citizen journalism in the San Francisco bay a
Re:Personally, I perfer quality to quantity! (Score:2)
It's just a band website, so it's not much use to anyone outside the band.
But it is good, and it only started in 2005!
How many are from China? (Score:2, Interesting)
The real question is: (Score:1)
Re:How many are from China? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Linux/BSD part of the reason for the growth? (Score:1)
This leads me to wonder: Is Linux/BSD part of the reason for the continuing rapid growth of the Internet?
The cost of alternatives like Windows Server is incredibly expensive, at least for smaller companies and individuals.
With the free availability of commercial strength operating systems like Linux and BSD, almost any small company or individual can have a solid presence on the Internet. Not to mention, web hosting providers can keep costs way down by using Linux/BSD.
This is truly an exciting time to li
Re:Linux/BSD part of the reason for the growth? (Score:2)
I just realized that it was almost criminal for me not to mention other free software which makes the Internet possible for a wider range of people:
Thanks are also due to Apache, Tomcat, Java, Perl, Python, Ruby, MySQL, PostgreSQL, the list goes on...
Never heard of GNU? (Score:2, Insightful)
I wonder... (Score:1)
The rise of the blogs (Score:5, Funny)
I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of voices suddenly cried out "Look what I had for breakfast this morning"
Re:The rise of the blogs (Score:2, Funny)
"Domain sponsor" garbage (Score:2)
Ratio 2.1:1 (Score:1)
quality web sites?? where are they???? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the best days of the web are behind us.
When the internet first hit, almost all websites were free. If Joe wanted to tell the world about his love of aviation, he set up a website. People put in lots of hours, with quality information.
But how has the internet evolved?
Money currupted the internet.
For example, try typing in "learn spanish" in google. How many websites are places that want your money? When the internet first started, there were better websites that were free. Not anymore, they got pushed off the web.
I think the web has outlived its usefullness. It is like TV. Too many commercials. I wonder if the next computer will come with a machine to suck in dollar bills. Maybe it can transmit the numbers off a $10 bill and shred it, so that way the bank credits the other end.
Re:quality web sites?? where are they???? (Score:1)
I know this may be hard to believe, but the Internet != the web. Before Mosaic came around people used talk, wais, ftp, etc. The Internet was operational 25+ years before the Web grew on it.
Or I can just point to IM. They're not the web, but they use the Internet.
But you do have a valid point about comme
Wikipedia etc. (Score:3, Insightful)
Nowadays, Joe Aviation-lover probably contributes to aviation articles on Wikipedia.
"When the Internet first hit", people created lots of disparate Web sites all over the place, with little bits of information spread all over. It was hard finding and piecing together all this information if you needed to know more about something, because there would be a hundred different websites on a topic, by a hundred different people, all thin on info. Wikipedia was a stroke of genius - they got those hundred people
I think the problem is Google (Score:2)
Then I found this little search site with an odd name just a demo on a stanford.edu webserver when I first found it, that returned much more relevant results.
But then yahoo search results started getting overwhelmed with garbage, and I turned to another little project out of stanford. And that one has a good run, staying ahead of the garbage pretty
Re:quality web sites?? where are they???? (Score:1)
Re:quality web sites?? where are they???? (Score:1)
How does Netcraft define "site"? (Score:5, Insightful)
How does Netcraft define the word "site"? If it just means domains that resolve to a host, it's not very encouraging. I would like to see a breakdown of the numbers that shows how many of these sites are linkspam farms, redirects and other such junk.
My suspicion is that most of the growth comes from from such "sites". The survey notes read:
While individuals may use ad revenues to subsidize the cost of parking domains while they develop them, the new business model for advertising-filled parked domains and spam-filled "commercial weblogs" means that the amount of junk on the net will increase.
This also means that it's now even more lucrative for domain squatters to hold onto decent domains, which will increase their resources and abilities to register and squat on an even greater number of domains. After all, this is now an acceptable and viable business model that works against those who want to contribute something useful to the Internet. Squatters can now cite ad-revenue squats in arbitration cases.
This isn't a positive development.
Re:How does Netcraft define "site"? (Score:2)
It is hard to find what you want (Score:2)
Re:It is hard to find what you want-FREE! (Score:2)
Re:It is hard to find what you want-FREE! (Score:2)
Re:It is hard to find what you want-FREE! (Score:2)
X11 protocol and xlib probably had decent documentation when you were still wetting your pants!
So maybe thats why.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Problem with IPv4 was running out of IPs, but they must be running out of domain names too?
Also, something should be done about the damn placeholder sites waiting to be bought, with no other purpose. You should not be allowed to have a domain name unless you're going have a REAL SITE there. A good example is the damn "search engines" which you get on as soon as you make a typo in a URL. Another example is
I really hate domain squatters... (Score:3, Interesting)
YEAH, but not economic growth (Score:2)
Re:YEAH, but not economic growth (Score:2)
Between the interest rates not rising fast enough, and the Feds babying real estate as the only thing left. The average joe has to work their ass off in a low salary economy to feed real estate agents and rentlords. Don't blame slashdotters. At least techies have skills. Real estate agents just bullshit for a living.
Re:YEAH, but not economic growth (Score:2)
Economy collapse?! The real estate industry is single handedly holding the economy too high. High-tech is exactly where it should be, go blame the real estate industry.
That's what I am trying to say though. Druing the dot com boom, even though it was over inflated they still created a lot of technology and internet infrastructure that over the long term could promote enough growth to keep the economy from collapsing. This time, all the money is from real-estate, it creates little new technologies, no
Re:YEAH, but not economic growth (Score:2)
Contrary to what economists want to have you believe, economy is not an exact science. It's more akin to psychology in that respect. Many models, all contradictory, most of them wrong. 9 of of 10 predictions by so-called "expert economists" never materialize.
As an example from the late 1990s, for every economist predicting the collapse of the internet bubble, you could find ten who were predicting it to go on for at least a decade.
The e
How many users? (Score:2)
Net or Gross? (Score:2)
How does Netcraft define "relevance"?! (Score:2)
More expensive domain names needed (Score:2)