4 Millionth Domain Name 89
cswiii writes "This Quicken.com news brief states that Network Solutions, the "world leader in domain name registration" (guffaw) has reached the four-million domain milestone. You do the math.
" The internet is really huge (todays wacky understatement)
26 alpha, 10 digits, some random punctuation.
Wonder how long before we run out? We got IPV6, how about
DNSv6. Can I have the .dot TLD?
The solution: open all TLDs which no one can own (Score:1)
.dot TLD (Score:2)
Well, I do not suppose you did not know that, just a sugggestion for others to think about possibility to have our own (I would like to hear somebody's comments on that) alternative TLD.
.cin TLD (Score:1)
I've got one of my machines serving out a
If someone wants to set up a
slashdotcolon://slashdot.dot? (Score:1)
/.::///...? Looks like some kinda weird regexp...
No ipv6, no dnsv6 (Score:1)
Of course, my machines support the
aol users? (Score:1)
.lnx? (Score:1)
How do you get to be a root DNS server owner?
Why unique? (Score:1)
Man, it's like some people never took combinatorics...
First, the question is "how long can a domain name be?". I don't know the answer, but I'm going to guess around 25. Next we ask "how many characters are available for use in a domain name". Alpha/Numeric/SomePunc gives ~40.
So we have 40 C 25 (40 choose 25). We have no stricture on uniqueness (can't I name my domain "rrrrrrrrrrrr.com"?) so this is 40^25 (40 possibilities in each of 25 locations). Now add to that the fact that we can be in one of about 10 different TLDs and we get 10*(40^25).
This is about 1.125899906843e+41.
Not "EUNICHS" either (Score:1)
It's "EUNUCHS".
Great (Score:1)
Heh, How much worse can we get?
http://slashdot.dot
ach tee tee pee colon slash slash slash dot dot dot
Heh. Poor guy. Rofl.. Try to tell it to someone over the phone:
http:///...
eheh
slashdotcolon://slashdot.dot? (Score:1)
John,
Sounds like a great idea! Would like to help me with the implementation of the new slashdotcolon protocol? I would love your assistance =)
heheheheh
*chuckle*
R.
Great (Score:1)
Rofl, I wanted www.dot.com for a while to. Looks like its taken. Oh pooty. Or at least i think it is. Im too tired to check. heh
Still wrong. (Score:1)
You made two errors:
1) Elementary error: Domain names can be more than alphanumeric. There's a few punctuation marks thrown in, like hyphens.
2) As noted in another comment, you forgot to include domain names that are less than 26 characters long.
Great (Score:1)
Rofl, thats a pretty cool idea. =)
**frantically renames all of his directories**
One time I was talking to someone and told them to go into the `root directory' meaning
Heh they kept trying to go to / and couldnt figure why it wasnt there. So I was like no no.. cd
So they kept typing CD /
Anyways =)
EHHE
Rob
Brazil created new "top" level domains in 98 (Score:1)
.art.br -> Art
.ind.br -> industries
.nom.br -> from "nome" (name) for personal pages.
and many others etc.. some are really confusing, like
The moral of the story is: If you can't make it good, don't do it..
Brazil created new "top" level domains in 98 (Score:1)
Now that all .com .net .org domains are taken... (Score:1)
Yeah, but... (Score:1)
.lnx? - taken, sort of (Score:1)
I want to log in to h-t-t-p-colon-slash-slash-slash-dot-dot-dot-slash
Brazil created new "top" level domains in 98 (Score:1)
We should be working to unify the world into some common standard ways of doing things, not trying to find ways to let each individual demographic express their *own* ways of doing the Internet. If we do, we end up fragmenting the Internet and causing much confusion and stress.
Most every computer has some way of expressing letters using the regular Latin alphabet, and since that's how the Internet is run today, it makes sense to keep things like URLs and your basic Internet framework standardized and accessible to everyone.
If you really want to be able to use your local alphabet/character set in URL's, you should convince your browser vendor to accept that character set in the URL string and do some conversions into the Latin alphabet (i.e. Greek theta -> Latin "th"). That way you can give your Russian URL out to all your russian buddies and they can type it in using the russian character sets, but it really ends up resolving to a normal ISO/latin hostname...
Allow all TLDs! (Score:1)
--
sure (Score:1)
--
when's the last time you updated it? (Score:1)
get it right, people! (Score:1)
36 + 36^2 + 36^3 + ... + 36^26
This comes out to approximately 2.9929 * 10^40. Of course this is only assuming there is one TLD. Since there are 5 US (com, org, net, edu, mil, gov), and numerous foreign TLDs, this number is probably 20 or 30 times to small. Considering just the 3 "open" TLDs, 4 million is only 0.0000000000000000000000000000000045491% of the possible domain names.
Don't believe me? Do it yrself.
Log
Great (Score:1)
http://www.dot.com/~tidle/slash/dothtml.html
course then i realized i was poor
Log
running out of domain names (Score:1)
4000000*35 (Score:1)
The question is -- what sort of registry could anyone but Network Solutions run for $140 Million a year?
Hey now! (Score:1)
A related article (Score:1)
http://www.intellectualcapital.com/issues/issue
It's not too terribly long
.dot TLD (Score:1)
Koos (running one of the tinc rootnameservers).
InterNic: Spawn of Satan (Score:1)
Brazil created new "top" level domains in 98 (Score:1)
And what is bad about that? The fact that it can confuse an english speaking person? Why should they care about en english speaking person?
There was some discussion in Russia, that they should use cyrrilic letters in domain names.
I wonder if they have done it.
Well, we all should switch to UNICODE anyway, along with IPv6...
Unicode domain names (Score:1)
yes, Microsoft just had to come up with its own encoding for cyrrilic, inflicting a mess on all Russian language sites - you have to switch between all this encoding etc.
Microsoft should be outlawed in the world. Leave US to deal with it.
Umm (Score:1)
I'd like a small block of static IP addresses for my home computer network. Without spending a huge amount of money.
What are they going to do when scarcity is no longer a valid reason to hoard IP address space?
4.2 billion IP's ......... (Score:1)
running out of domain names (Score:1)
any time soon. 26^10 is over 140 trillion.
-----------------------------------------------
Jamin Philip Gray
jgray@writeme.com
http://students.cec.wustl.edu/~jpg2/
running out of domain names (Score:1)
Most people will be thrilled to have:
cgvbe349345gjgdw.net
or dfgh87nnfs.com
maybe 993245mzt.org will be good.
(ofcourse msie will mistake it for an ip)
---
if only it were possible. (Score:1)
Besides, they won't register any domain with the work fuck anywhere in it. It's not fair! -- whining like a little bitch now.
~PanIc~
That would be fun. (Score:1)
heh, that would really confuse the AOLers.
~PanIc~
Still wrong. (Score:1)
that are less than 26 characters long.
No, the previous poster didn't. That's where the summation (my inbuilt spell checker is outta whack, I'm pretty sure that's not correct) came from. ie. 36^1 for the 1 digit +
Domain name collisions (Score:1)
In theory, the more DN's there are, the more potential for conflict. In fact, if testimony in DC last week is to be credited, there are about 80 alleged TM/DN conflicts for each case reported to NSI. This is credible since NSI policy applies only to exact string conflicts and not near-misses. But since there were 900 invocations of the NSI policy in 1998 (down from 1997), this means that the DN/TM conflicts represent about
The solution: open all TLDs which no one can own (Score:1)
If you allow anything to be used as a TLD, then a whole new crop of trademark problems arise. Lets say that MS wants to have www.windows2000.microsoft. Since the TLD must stay free, then I want dontuse.microsoft, evilempire.microsoft and so on. Im sure Id see MS's cadre of thritysomething lawers breathing fire at that point.
This also could create confusion for end users. Some people I've run across are too dense to include the www and
Yeah, but... (Score:1)
Zagmar
How many servers... (Score:1)
The
Errr ? (running out of domain names) (Score:1)
The answer you are looking for, BTW, is 37^22 (since at present domain names can be no longer than 26 characters total, so there's 22 +
running out of domain names (Score:1)
it's IP's that matter (Score:1)
it's like phone numbers--here we have to dial all ten digits for a local call.
soon ip #'s will run out and we'll have to figure out how to do an overlay or whatever!
you know the drill-remove the spam to email me
Hey...(me too) (Score:1)
two- and three-letter domains still pretty open (Score:1)
http://hesketh.com/schampeo/project s/namespace/ [hesketh.com]
Hmmmm.. (Score:1)
or after NSI loosing a bunch of domains
last week????
----------------------------
Dammit Jim...It's "U-N-I-X",
Not "EUNICHS" either (Score:1)
Thought it looked strange. Thanks fer the
correction.
----------------------------
Dammit Jim...It's "U-N-I-X",
Allow all TLDs! (Score:1)
I tend to believe there's no good reason to create *any* new TLD's, outside of country-specific ones.
Boost your site's straffic! Register internic.net (Score:1)
Here is an interesting way to increase traffic to your web site....
Wait until sunday morning and register internic.net while NSI is 'messed' (with a capital f) up.
Check this one: (I'd think they'd be more careful with IT)
# date
Sun Mar 14 10:04:08 PST 1999
# telnet whois.internic.net 43
Trying 198.41.0.6...
Connected to rs.internic.net.
Escape character is '^]'.
internic.net
No match for "INTERNIC.NET".
The InterNIC Registration Services database contains ONLY
non-military and non-US Government Domains and contacts.
Other associated whois servers:
American Registry for Internet Numbers - whois.arin.net
European IP Address Allocations - whois.ripe.net
Asia Pacific IP Address Allocations - whois.apnic.net
US Military - whois.nic.mil
US Government - whois.nic.gov
Connection closed by foreign host.
# date
Sun Mar 14 10:04:17 PST 1999
#