As I write this, Apple is finishing the Apple Keynote speech with some really interesting news regarding Apple Music, but as a domainer, I seem to have an ingrained tendency to ask myself "Who Owns the .COM?" I thought I'd share my findings, as I hope that at least one of you out there shares my obsession!
The keynote started with the news of a new Mac OS, called El Capitan, which naturally took me to elcapitan.com. This is owned by El Capitan Sports Center, and I suspect their website may receive their highest amount of traffic ever today.
OSXElCapitan.com was registered today, and it is registered to Apple - although the domain name doesn't resolve. ElCapitanOSX.com is registered by someone with a wit.edu (Wentworth Institute of Technology) email address.
Then came iOS9, with new software features that will be available to download this fall. As developers salivated over new APIs, I navigated to ios9.com. Of course, this name has been registered for quite a while - since 2010 in fact. It currently resolves to a parked page with an enquiry form. iOSNine.com is currently unregistered.
Apple decided to create an iOS9 Public Beta for the first time, using the domain beta.apple.com to advertise their official registration page. I thought that Apple would have bought betaapple.com, just in case any typos occur. They haven't. It was registered in February 2015 by an individual in India, who has created a few blog posts regarding Apple's products.
Craig Federighi then announced that the new "Swift 2" would be Open Source - swift2.com was registered in 2011 by Elite Tech Media LLC, and Swift3.com was registered even earlier - 2006.
After updates about the Apple Watch, and the new Watch OS (watchos.com resolves to a Chinese for sale page), Jimmy Iovine came on stage to unveil Apple Music and Beats1.
AppleMusic.com is owned by Apple and has a registration date of November 1997. Beats1 is Apple's new radio station, with music from DJs in Los Angeles, New York, and London. Apple doesn't own Beats1.com or BeatsOne.com. If the station is going to be available solely on iOS devices, then perhaps these domain names don't matter.
The keynote started with the news of a new Mac OS, called El Capitan, which naturally took me to elcapitan.com. This is owned by El Capitan Sports Center, and I suspect their website may receive their highest amount of traffic ever today.
OSXElCapitan.com was registered today, and it is registered to Apple - although the domain name doesn't resolve. ElCapitanOSX.com is registered by someone with a wit.edu (Wentworth Institute of Technology) email address.
Then came iOS9, with new software features that will be available to download this fall. As developers salivated over new APIs, I navigated to ios9.com. Of course, this name has been registered for quite a while - since 2010 in fact. It currently resolves to a parked page with an enquiry form. iOSNine.com is currently unregistered.
Apple decided to create an iOS9 Public Beta for the first time, using the domain beta.apple.com to advertise their official registration page. I thought that Apple would have bought betaapple.com, just in case any typos occur. They haven't. It was registered in February 2015 by an individual in India, who has created a few blog posts regarding Apple's products.
Craig Federighi then announced that the new "Swift 2" would be Open Source - swift2.com was registered in 2011 by Elite Tech Media LLC, and Swift3.com was registered even earlier - 2006.
After updates about the Apple Watch, and the new Watch OS (watchos.com resolves to a Chinese for sale page), Jimmy Iovine came on stage to unveil Apple Music and Beats1.
AppleMusic.com is owned by Apple and has a registration date of November 1997. Beats1 is Apple's new radio station, with music from DJs in Los Angeles, New York, and London. Apple doesn't own Beats1.com or BeatsOne.com. If the station is going to be available solely on iOS devices, then perhaps these domain names don't matter.