Quoting Adrian Kinderis on Sunday August 17, 2003: | Before you all go getting a bee in you bonnet.... My humble opinion follows.. I don't have a bee in my bonnet, rather I am a little bemused and also curious if this isn't all rather off target. | 2. The site will have a different resolution on launch. I agree with the | comments made on the list. Make it resolution agnostic if that is a problem... | 4. The term "webname" was chosen due to Market Research conducted by | both AusRegistry and ARES. We are not trying to change the vernacular, | merely introducing a linking noun that is a little more easily | understood as to its purpose. Research like that shown in an early | posting certainly supports this (thanks DPF!). If the use of the term "domain name" is so objectionable, why not use one of the other terms already in common use? As someone said, and in my experience I would agree, "website address" is often a synonym. Yes, it is not correct, but no more incorrect that what is proposed. I have never heard anyone say "webname" before - and my immediate reaction would probably be to do with an instant messenger nickname. But that said, if the aim of the marketing campaign is educating the consumer - I don't see why they are not educated properly with the correct term rather than pseudo-nonsense. This sounds like the kind of education where someone trying to teach people how a car works, starts calling the motor engine the "vroom-machine". | 5. We, AusRegistry have a marketing role as well as a technical one (as | committed to in our tender document). We see this portal as being both | educational and informative and yes, at times, this will seem self | serving but ultimately, hopefully, beneficial to all. I'd like to make a point, tangential to this website, but relates to your "beneficial to all" comment. For me, the success of .au is not strongly linked to the number of domain names sold. For AusRegistry it is - they are there to make as much money as they can over the next 3 years, and ultimately to try and get in a position to secure the best possible advantage in a rebid for the registry. That is a fact of life. For registrars it is all about the money too - and thus number of registrations. For some that may be directly through volume of registrations, for others it may not be at all. It might just be a small but essential component of a much more profitable part of their business. But for everyone else, domain growth is not substantially important. As a consumer, encouraging everyone to register as many domain names as they can at this juncture in time actually harms others down the track. It ultimately limits choice in a finite pool, by exhausting the name supply. If in the year 2003, everyone is encouraged to register variants, generics etc., what happens to all the new businesses in 2013? This will always be a problem but that doesn't mean conservation efforts are futile. There are of course benefits to owning domain names, and educating the public on those is extremely helpful, and I would like to see everyone who would like to have one - have one. I would like to see ".au" to be the viable choice for all Australians, and chosen in preference to other TLDs. I think we should be careful about using the number of domain registrations and domain growth as the benchmark for success. It may be for the shareholders of registries and registrars, but I am not sure who else. I am not saying domain growth is a bad thing - it reflects positively on work auDA has done to improve domain policy, on market deregulation, in general Internet growth, and possibly even education improvements. I also obviously acknowledge there are some consumer benefits through cost reductions on a per-domain basis. | 6. The website is not meant directly for you (DNS list members). The | mere fact you are on this list indicates you have an advanced level of | understanding. We are attempting to take domain names to a different | audience. Therefore, we are catering for the IE browser people... how | many people with a "limited" understanding of the internet do you think | use "other" browsers? Don't tell me, we have done the math and it is not | worth our time. I am not sure if I agree with your argument, but even so, if it had been thought through from the beginning it should have cost no more to do it in a way that works reasonably well on other browsers. | 7. Actually the domain name is "owned" by auDA. It is not an asset of | AusRegistry. This was in response to our Registrars complaining that | using www.ausregistry.com.au was developing too much brand equity and | giving us too much of a start for when(?) we lose the registry in 2006. | We supported this sentiment and wanted auDA to have a neutral name that | we could use that was also marketable (i.e. www.registry.com.au is a | neutral name but no one has any idea as to what it is - for the same | reason we get phone calls every day for people wanting to register a | Marriage...). Therefore the name will stay with the Registry operator. I think I was one of the people who called for any kind of neutral education resource to not have a connection with the registry - but I wouldn't have expected it to be called mywebname.com.au; and certainly the ownership of the domain name seems to be about the only thing distancing it from an AusRegistry touting exercise. If your aim was to relieve a perceived connection to AusRegistry for the registrars, I'd suggest a thorough redesign! kim webname = hotstuff2003Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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