Random Domain Name Surfing 93
Dilbert_ writes "Since most dot com domains of the form www.[common english word].com are taken today, you could theoretically surf around using just a dictionary. Now you can search the web from a page that will will automatically generate a fresh load of links, based on a dictionnary. "
For some reason this amuses me greatly.
Re:it's gone (Score:2)
Not exactly a good way to solve the problem. They could have turned it into good publicity instead.
Url to the ISP [onepine.com]
High View (Score:1)
How come everybody can get to it except me? (Score:1)
The requested URL
There was also some additional information available about the error:
[Sat Sep 18 14:24:34 1999] access to
Additionally, a 404 File Not Found error was encountered while trying to use an ErrorDocument to handle the request.
Re:Not any time soon... but (off-topic) (Score:1)
It supposed to stand for:
If You Don't Know, You Don't Go.
Re:Smurf surf (Score:1)
Re:Monkey names (Score:1)
You know, if I could do that, I'd never... ah, forget it. You've heard it.
Joe
Re:What was scary was... (Score:1)
ask the ISP (Score:1)
www.onepine.com [onepine.com]
I checked the description of their hosting services and I see no usage cap specified...
Re:How come everybody can get to it except me? (Score:1)
Domain Name Generator (Score:2)
Funny, I wrote a stupid tool last week to randomly generate domain names for my boss, then I put it up on twisted.com [twisted.com]. Although it doesn't grab the names from a dictionary, mine lets you use specify which words to use.
Sorry for the plug, but like I had anything else to do on a Saturday afternoon. :)
-Mike
Circumcision (Score:1)
Incorrect (Score:1)
A Web Address can be up to 26 characters long including the four characters used to identify the top-level domain
surfing (Score:1)
Fortunately, I know the person has acess to the domain name of vaginalcream.com. that'd make a perfect email addy
Netscape Smart Surfing (Score:1)
Available for IE as a plug-in
Re:Monkey names (Score:1)
Who would have thought www.*monkey*.com sites would be pornographic?
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Re:Netscape Smart Surfing (Score:1)
"Dictionary of Domains"? (Score:1)
Re:Not any time soon... but (Score:2)
Making the labels longer than 63 characters would require serious re-writing of the protocol.
Re:Domain Name Cheap Fun (Score:1)
Alejo.
speaking of random (Score:1)
[a-zA-Z0-9\.]+.really.fuckingsucks.net
eg.
Bill Gates [fuckingsucks.net]
Non-dictionary words (Score:1)
What was scary was... (Score:1)
I'm just off to register IndoorSticklebacker.com now. What a great domain!
rOD.
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Hey... (Score:3)
http://www.stack.portland.or.us/cgi-bin/dict
Re:Domain dipping (Score:2)
Reminds me of something that happened at my old job once.
A girl I worked with decided to browse online for beauty tips. So she went to altavista and did a search for "facial".
She recieved some rather interesting matches, that could possibly have gotten her fired if managment had ever spotted it.
Domain dipping (Score:2)
These days, www.[adjective][noun].com can provide useful sites, as can www.[verb][noun].com . Of course if the verb is 'blow' and the noun is 'job', it's probably not that employment site for meteorologists that you were looking for, but that's a risk you've got to take.
Alternate use? (Score:1)
one (available) URL it spewed: www.ClayClitoris.com
that's a keeper.
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completely, utterly useless...i'll visit often (Score:1)
Monkey names (Score:2)
http://www.zone8.com/monkey/list/index.html
I'm not sure whom this helps, but more power to you.
not too good (Score:1)
char *stupidsig = "this is my dumb sig";
Not any time soon... but (Score:1)
ok, so this may be a little far off, but is it not theoretically possible to run out of words? Then what??
www."randomtext".com
www.18sxksaw4.com
so easy to remember, huh?....
or will this cause us to just add to Webster's?
sexual related pages (Score:1)
sexual related pages (Score:1)
e-gineer Domainator (Score:4)
http://domainator.e-gineer.com [e-gineer.com]
Re:Non-dictionary words (Score:3)
Once again, the shocking standard of american education shouts to the masses. I realise that we can't all have a gracking vocabulary, but I fojar on a regular basis; it's a perfectly cromulent activity.
n. Slashdot Effect, The (Score:1)
Anyway, if it was up, I would visit it.. I find these highly amusing not only because it is so true, but also because it gives another reason to initiate those 3 new TLD's sooner.. but maybe under a different name, I personally would not buy mrplabs.web or something along those lines - it's just not sane.
But definitley the fight for domain names is becoming more and more heard of, as I have mentioned previously, due to the extreme lack of domain names that are actually available to the general public. Of course, if you have an extra couple thousand laying between your mattress you can surely get a good domain name on eBay or something equivelent.
Anyway, something definitley has to be done about the lack of domain names and especially the Slashdot Effect
Matthew
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Sweet. (Score:1)
More complex; perhaps taken, perhaps not
http://www.spawn.org
http://www.ProfanePolonaise.com
http://www.FlaxerNet.org
http://www.HypochloriteNorm.com
http://www.roentgen.org http://www.PhosphorCentroider.com http://www.InsolventDeals.com http://www.RealProtactinium.com http://www.OpenIncriminate.com http://www.FritzOnline.com
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What a great list! I'm not sure that a squatter would get big bucks for InsolventDeals.com, but Roentogen seems to be free, and who can deny the appeal of FritzOnline, or for the literary fetishist, ProfanePolonaise? Hot damn-- I love this.
What About OTHER Languages/Dictionaries? (Score:2)
So we're all in a rush to buy up every last word and phrase in the English language, for later resale to highest bidders. Gag me with snake-oil! Are we forever stuck with ASCII-ONLY DNS?
The fastest growth on the web now, finally, is non-English [glreach.com] . Please correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like the HTTP:// protocol works only with ASCII-ONLY URL's. When will the web outgrow ascii and into UniCode [unicode.org]? We need URL's in Czech, Chinese, Cyrillic. etc. Anybody know of specific initiatives?
ask slashdot: are any MultiLingual URL Protocols being developed to allow us to record and browse the world in more of its many languages? Where are they?
"ever tried. ever failed. no matter. try again. fail again. fail better." - s. beckett
Re:Non-dictionary words (Score:1)
It's Okay, a quick visit to your neighborhood medical clinic will take care that. Those modern treatments are wonderful. You'll know you ever fojared in a cromulent way. Or even in a non-cromulent way.
Re:Not any time soon... but (Score:2)
From RFC 1034 [ohio-state.edu]:
The labels must follow the rules for ARPANET host names. They must start with a letter, end with a letter or digit, and have as interior characters only letters, digits, and hyphen. There are also some restrictions on the length. Labels must be 63 characters or less.
Then, again, we know this isn't quite right either, since we have, for instance, www.3com.com
That's not going to work ... (Score:1)
D
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Re:Domain dipping (Score:1)
You gotta be careful at work.
Re:What will happen to the .com domain names... (Score:1)
Basically, for Joe Public, the web is the Internet, and he knows that all website URL's start with www. and end in
Re:Not any time soon... but (Score:1)
Re:Not any time soon... but (Score:1)
Sure, you can keep adding tags (subdomains), up to 1024 characters (including the dots). But, the question had to do with the length of the second-level domain portion.
As to why NetSol limits to 26 characters? I cannot answer that. There's no limitation I can find in the protocol that would cause this. Several other registries also have this limitation. A limit of the root-server software? A limit of the registration database? International conspiracy?
they're all taken. All of 'em (Score:1)
Domain Name Cheap Fun (Score:2)
For some reason this amuses me greatly.
Hmmmm. My guess is this "reason" involves a significant amount of eSAB (extreme Saturday Afternoon Boredom).
By the way, now that DN registration goes international (with France Telecom, among others), it might be interesting to port this script over other languages.
www.BarreObliquePoint.org (French version for SlashDot - zis maighte bi véry interestinge)
www.FrischFleisch.net (German Freshmeat - no comment)
www.AltaVista.com (Spanish for High View - but this would be rather silly since there nobody would give a web site such a ridiculously vain name as "high view", would they ?)
www.Youpi.com (French for Yahoo - and the worst is, it actually exists ! Check it out [youpi.com], it's worth the click
Possible extension : add a speech-synthetisis program to pronounce each word - loud and with a Relic-like southern american accent. You might not see the point, but believe me this would be great fun for us little eurokids
URouLette (Score:3)
I don't know if there is any connection between this and the URouLette that was around back when there were just a few thousand web sites out there, but it is pretty cool, and doesn't seem to be limited to what is in the dictionary, and will send you to url's that are more complex then www.foo.com.
Re:Domain dipping (Score:1)
Re:What was scary was... (Score:1)
Found one! (Score:1)
And now they're down... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
My favorites (Score:1)
I got a few choice responses so far:
http://www.IneradicableOnline.com/ A perfect replacement for AOL in case they ever get bored with the name.
http://www.FetusStreet.com/ I'm not sure I even WANT to know about the possibilities of this one.
Doesn't look like the site was slashdotted as there was practically no load time, I'll bet that whoever was admining the server took the script offline due to excessive load.
Maybe it will be back.
-Restil
Re:Smurf surf (Score:1)
this one gave me a good laugh
(i happen to be swedish, not that it matters)
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Re:What About OTHER Languages/Dictionaries? (Score:1)
However, I do agree that non-English languages do have a disadvantage when it comes to communicating on the 'net. The purpose of the internet has been and hopefully will continue to be open and rapid communication and information exchange. Although, people who speak little-used languages (less that 3 million, in my opinion)must realize that readership *will* decline if people restrict their comments to their preferred native tongue.
Can't we all just use the same language? I'm partial to English.
Re:question (Score:1)
Great Idea! (Score:1)
I've spent many an hour just randomly picking words and adding the ol' dot-com to them. This site should be cool (Once it recovers from the Slashdot effect . . ). That is provided it it used for the purposes of good and not evil (porn anyone?)
Re:Not any time soon... but (Score:1)
Actually, I think the "randomtext" part is already happening. Coca-Cola used http://www.iydkydg.com/ [iydkydg.com] for its "Coke Card" promotion this summer. What the hell is an "iydkydg" supposed to be? (I checked -- "iydkydg" isn't in Merriam-Webster [m-w.com].)
Of course, all loyal kibologists know that Kibo's HappyNet [kibo.com] will include all newsgroup names from "*.aaaaa.aaaaa.aaaaa.aaaaa to *.zzzzz.zzzzz.zzzzz.zzzzz". We should probably just put Kibo in charge of the Web while we're at it. He makes more sense than any of Al Gore's plans.
some domains still available (Score:1)
404 (Score:1)
Re:Not any time soon... but (Score:1)
www.theflowershopon54mainstreet.com
www.weputtheuinusedcars.com
www.ohmygodimanagedtoregisteradomainnamebefores
question (Score:2)
Of course, then you have to worry about paranoid system administrators reporting you for attempting to connect to port 80 on "private" boxes (??), not to mention you'd also get a bunch of non-servers. I guess if your goal is finding EVERYTHING this would work better, but slower.
Re:Domain dipping (Score:1)
[slash dot, get it? Slash Dot... badbumpum!]
Okay, okay, I'll shut up now...
Will Paul get his $70's worth? (Score:1)
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