

wot said:What about ็ฏๆ , will this become more popular as IDN take hold?
wimpu said:Juzi.com Mandarin Orange sold at 100,600 RMB,about $15K
Just now in China.
R9V.com said:Chinese like Fruit .com spelled in english??? Strange...
R9V.com said:that's a good domain name, but i'm not sure if it'll enjoy the traditional advantages to indexing.
if juzi was a popular american search term, that domain would index to the top. but you were saying that it is sold in china. when people use baidu, their searching for terms in mandarin (or other chinese text). that isn't going to lead to a direct match of "juzi"
it was a good domain name, but i dont see it enjoying the traditional advantages to direct-match indexing, since i dont see many people googling/baidu "juzi" in china
R9V.com said:Chinese like Fruit .com spelled in english??? Strange...
Web Master said:Congrats the domain sale!
I know domains' buying and selling are more and more hot in China. This is why more and more international domain registrars want to have a part in the big pie.:wave:
:hi:
R9V.com said:Chinese like Fruit .com spelled in english??? Strange...
R9V.com said:that's a good domain name, but i'm not sure if it'll enjoy the traditional advantages to indexing.
if juzi was a popular american search term, that domain would index to the top. but you were saying that it is sold in china. when people use baidu, their searching for terms in mandarin (or other chinese text). that isn't going to lead to a direct match of "juzi"
it was a good domain name, but i dont see it enjoying the traditional advantages to direct-match indexing, since i dont see many people googling/baidu "juzi" in china
China has another standard, interesting language writing system with Latin characters, ๆฑ่ฏญๆผ้ณ(Hanyu Pinyin). In China, anyone with junior high school education knows ๆฑ่ฏญๆผ้ณ(Hanyu Pinyin)---Most Chinese know ๆฑ่ฏญๆผ้ณ(Hanyu Pinyin). ๆฑ่ฏญๆผ้ณ(Hanyu Pinyin) is widely used for domain registrations, web sites, business applications, and computer science/industry in China. Many good .cn and .com domains with good words in ๆฑ่ฏญๆผ้ณ(Hanyu Pinyin) have been sold at good prices, and are growing in sale prices, steadily.
It looks like still many folks in other countries do not know there are many interesting, advantageous things and developments in China.
Hey, there is a global tendency that more and more people in other countries are starting to learn Chinese, the Biggest Language of the world.ๅฏๅๅฏ่ดบ!:D
PS. There are VERY good (Some are the world first ingenious software!) domaining software systems and tools, as well as other kinds of excellent software, written by Chinese software programmers and engineers who are VERY smart, and many are FREE. If you can read Chinese, just go to some big Chinese software websites to download something that you'll definitely feel happy to get and laugh to your bank when those software increase your business sales faster.
dbtbandit67 said:in china, is the text that goes into the internet browser using english letters or chinese letters?
i think this issue of language/text complicates matters in the business of domaining in china. because if the domain text in china were in english, but everything else wasn't indexed, domains purchased in china wouldn't enjoy the advantages of indexing from having the appropriate domain name.
sites can still index for certain terms, regardless of language, and domain name, but it's still something to consider when thinking about purchasing a domain name for over 10K

