Scott Howard wrote: > > If you had done even a tiny amount of research, or used a little common > sense, you would have realised why there are so few domains in .AU. > > The .AU top level domain is setup the way DNS was intended - in an > hierarchical fashion. > > .AU contains 8 active domains > .NET.AU contains thousands of domains > .COM.AU contains 10's of thousands of domains > (I'm guessing here, but I'd say those figures are in the right ball-park) Well, I did know that. Thanks for remembering me. > > > Aren't there any Australian company, or organization, which would want > > to > > have its site under its .AU name ? > > There are literally thousands of companies with their sites under .AU, > just not directly under .AU. > > > http://www.ibm.fr > > http://www.lotus.fr > > http://www.apple.fr > > http://www.coca-cola.fr > > ibm.com.au, lotus.com.au, apple.com.au and coke.com.au all exist, all exactly > where they should under .COM.AU Wouldn't it be better for such BIG names to exist directly under .AU ? > > > You'd benefit from a .AU zone really competitive... > > No, we wouldnt. We would benefit from a competitive .COM.AU domain, but I > doubt anyone will argue too hard about that... Mmm. I think you're missing a point : ccTLDs currently are the only "official" alternative to US-managed gTLDs. The more names there will be under ccTLDs (and alternate gTLDs), the better it will be for international DNS management... Names that are directly under a TLD are more "mediatic"... Moreover, if ccTLDs can't compete against gTLDs, there will probably be more ccTLDs hijacked by private interests. Not a good thing for the countries concerned. -- Jean-Christophe PRAUD - LUDEXPRESS http://www.ludexpress.com http://www.nicwine.net http://www.nic.wine 3:213 WINE Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu n'gah Bill R'lyeh Wgah'nagl fhtagnReceived on Tue Jun 23 1998 - 15:22:12 UTC
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