domainstosell said:
Aren't you doing the same thing? Just because you were using VOIP 20 years ago, and now it is all the rage, does that mean that people don't want it? Or that it makes their want for it less valid? You said yourself that "dozens of things fell into place at the right time." Well, how is that any different than what is happening now?
Yes. I'm doing exactly the same thing. I'm saying all the factors needs for widespread use of IDNs isn't here yet, just like they weren't for VOIP. I've only heard one valid factor mentioned here and that's IE7. It is one important step, but it is not โthe answerโ.
domainstosell said:
I don't care if you start reg'ing IDNs or not, that's your choice.
Of course you do. For a market to exist there must be a demand. If the demand doesn't exist naturally the best way to create it is by advertising. That's exactly what most of these threads about โthe next hot thingโ are.
If IDNs were all set to take off people would be quietly registering them by the thousands, not trying to convince others to buy them.
domainstosell said:
1. Are there languages other than English in the world?
2. Do the people who speak these other languages use computers and the internet?
3. Do they advertise (i.e. - Do they maintain businesses that spend money)?
4. Are they consumers (i.e. - Do they seek out goods and services online to spend money on)?
5. Would they rather use their own language to navigate the web (the proliferation of native-language sites and ads would suggest yes)?
Those are all valid points. My point is that none of those points are new. The Japanese have been speaking Japanese, advertising, consuming, and surfing since day one. We need new driving factors to push the acceptance of IDNs.
DNWizardX9 said:
Also choose your battles wisely.. Comparing IDNs vs VOIP...... LOL
So please tell us what it should be compared to? Perhaps a domain name related service that only works on 5% of the machines out there such as the massively successful new.net?

LOL all you want. I'll just continue to LATWTTB.
ThaiIDNs said:
1) Email of course will be supported in time. But it isn't even a consideration for Thai site owners in choosing a domain name for a website. For sites that require online support, they use a support form or chat interface.
That may well be. Perhaps IDNs will take off as a sort of grass roots movement bringing much needed native language URLs to the non-English typing masses, and laughing in the face of corporate non-America for it's continued dependence on antiquated technology such as email. I see this as a very likely path for IDNs to take, which closely mirrors the early growth of consumer use of the Internet.
The problem here is that IDN speculation presents an obstacle to this. Individuals and small organisations who can get by using hotmail instead of mail on their domain name aren't going to have the budget to buy names off speculators, which will stifle growth.
ThaiIDNs said:
3) As for why all the great IDNs haven't been eaten up by locals, well you could say the same thing about "great ASCII domains" in 1997. There were many many still unregistered that are now worth five or six figures. Why weren't they all "eaten up" by Americans? And that was when those domains resolved on 100% of computers worldwide.
There were a number of factors why all the good names weren't taken by 97. One is price. Layingout out $200k+ in reg fees for the names I have now simply wasn't an option for me (and many others) in 97. In this respect IDNs should be far more attractive as they are the same (low) price as a any A-Z0-9- name.
The other was uncertainty of the market. No one knew exactly where the market was going. In fact in 97 there was already plenty of talk about the dotcom bubble bursting. This same factor is affecting IDNs now.
ThaiIDNs said:
General lack of interest from locals could also be related to the total dominance of the English language in the decision making bodies on the Net i.e. ICANN, IETF, DNSO, VeriSign. If they debated and published entirely in Farsi, do you think you would get excited in what they were saying, or even know about it? No, probably not. You would be one of the 99.9% of locals that found out about IDNs after IE7.
I don't think that's a fair analogy. The use of English is an artefact of where these technologies were developed, true. But English is used in all sorts of international discussions around the world. I was having a drink at my local a while back and there were 22 different nationalities at the bar. Guess what language we all used to communicate?
I do, however, agree that publishing all these document in a wide range of languages would be a good step in the right direction. Compared to some of the things they waste money on this would be a small sum well spent.
Even if everything was in a language I couldn't read I'd still be aware of IDNs. I was involved with IDNs before the standard was created. I worked with a number of the proposed standards, including some proprietary Asian systems as well as UTF-8 DNS. I supported the latter over punycode precisely because I didn't want to end up where we are today. So I can be pretty confident when I say I'd be aware of IDNs even if all the discussion was in Martian.
ThaiIDNs said:
Also, if Korean or Chinese or Japanese domainers were buying, selling, and discussing IDNs, do you think you would hear about it. Do you think they would turn up at NamePros IDN section? No, of course not. They have their own forums in their own languages which you are blissfully unaware of. That's the thing about languages you see. People like to talk in their own language, not one of your choosing.
I pop into Chinese forums all the time. There's some very interesting stuff going on in the China name scene, albeit not much IDN related. I've seen a few Chinese around NP. I can't say I've seen them hanging around the IDN section. Probably have their hands full dealing with what's making money now. If they are into IDNS they probably know enough to grab the good ones and sit on them for a few years rather than trying to stir up hype amongst speculators.
ThaiIDNs said:
I do agree that IE7 isn't the only thing that is needed to get IDNs becoming accepted in the marketplace. But it seems remarkably logical that going from a state where only 5% of browsers resolve IDNs to potentially 100% is going to the event that will really get the IDN ball rolling. How fast it rolls and how big it gets, we will all find out in the next 12 months.
Let's just hope MS manages to get IE7 released within the next twelve months, let alone we see the impact it has on IDNs
