

At the moment, the .eu ccTLD on a country by country breakdown is between 5% and 18% of of those country's ccTLD and gTLD footprint. It is typically 10% of a country's ccTLD so it is unlikely to rival .uk or .de in the next five years or so. Based on a comparison of Irish websites over ie/com/net/org/biz/info/eu that I did last week, the .eu usage most closely resembles that of .biz gTLD websites. Despite all the Brussels propaganda, the .eu is not commonly used in the EU - the EU still relies on ccTLDs and .com and that's unlikely to change much.Any chance .eu will ever get close to .co.uk or .de in registrations?
At the moment, the .eu ccTLD on a country by country breakdown is between 5% and 18% of of those country's ccTLD and gTLD footprint. It is typically 10% of a country's ccTLD so it is unlikely to rival .uk or .de in the next five years or so. Based on a comparison of Irish websites over ie/com/net/org/biz/info/eu that I did last week, the .eu usage most closely resembles that of .biz gTLD websites. Despite all the Brussels propaganda, the .eu is not commonly used in the EU - the EU still relies on ccTLDs and .com and that's unlikely to change much.
Regards...jmcc
Not quite .mobi - more like somewhere between .org and .net. (Well at least that's where it is on Irish domains as of 01/June/2010.Thanks (Repped!)...so it seems .EU is headed in the ".mobi direction"
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There should be a common "European Region" extension, not just for European Union countries :imho:
Really ? A TLD for one end user ?They should make a .UN (United Nations).
are you joking about "dead"? i'm getting offers every week or so on sedo. right now I have 2 bidding threads going, both >1K eur. .eu is rocking - more and more real websites on it, that's my impression.




