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showcase Showcase your .si domains (super-intelligence)

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Andreas B.

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Thanks to @Lox we now know, that Microsoft owns the domain copilot .si

SI, clearly, stands for Super Intelligence in this case.


copilot si.png



Do you own any .si domains?


I'll start with the one I have;

Roboter .si


How about you?
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
GoDaddyGoDaddy
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file_00000000df98622fa6644a456f85c777.png

My Two letter (si)๐Ÿ˜ƒ
Nz- New Zealand
What is your opinion?
 
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secured Levi.si and Zro.si
 
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Screenshot_2025-07-28-19-35-12-86_e307a3f9df9f380ebaf106e1dc980bb6.jpg
 
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I think any single dictionary word domain in any extension is automatically accepted on Sapphire
That I thought there was something special๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿคญ๐Ÿซฃ
 
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Some drops may already be published in other sources. Nevertheless:

Cta .si
Dapps .si
Expansion .si
Hyperscale .si
Intangible .si
Lyceum .si
Maxwell .si
Mindmapping .si
Multitasking .si
Nvda .si
Offchain .si
Ord .si
Percept .si
Rails .si
Shareholder .si
Stability .si
Sverige .si
Synonym .si
Tshirts .si
Wheel .si
 
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XA.si 750x450.png

Taking offers for this 2 letter .SI domain.
Send private message with your offer.
 
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Got more drops for you:

Agree .si
Insightful .si
Smartest .si
Thinker .si
 
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Guys, I need your help.

A potential buyer started a discussion about the extension .si. You know these buyers with bargain offers: Either they suffer as poor students, or they want to pay less because the TLD is so incredibly bad.

On the other hand, this buyer seems to be serious and is probably active in the public field of Research/Science. I thought to write a longer answer here which could help us as a sample text for future inquiries. Well, I translated my German draft with Google Translate. Could you please suggest improvements of language and content?

"
Thank you for your interest. I only partially share your assessment of the .si ccTLD. You have to look at where the country comes from. During the Habsburg Monarchy of Austria-Hungary, Slovenia was a small, neglected region within. After World War II, it became part of the communist Tito regime in Yugoslavia. In 1991, Slovenia quickly and skillfully fought for independence during the Yugoslavia Civil War. In 2004, Slovenia joined the European Union.


When the internet began its triumphant advance, Slovenia's infrastructure, economic power, and prosperity were weak. Adoption of the ccTLD was correspondingly slow. Domain registration was initially only available to Slovenian legal entities and international trademark owners. It wasn't until 2008 that it was opened to foreign registrants without a trademark background.

More non-Slovenes have registered and developed domains than you'd imagine. You'll find Spanish and Italian sites (si!), English portals referring to the dozens of meanings of the abbreviation Si, and much more.

Artificial intelligence has only been playing a role at dot.si for about two years, when the general public became aware of the term "superintelligence" during the dispute between OpenAI and Sam Altman. A little over a year ago, the (non-disclosed) acquisition of the domain Copilot.si by Microsoft was discussed, and since then, the number of registrations of .si domains has increased and internationalized disproportionately. The official academic abbreviation for artificial superintelligence is ASI, so the connection to dot .si is obvious.

Since Meta and Mark Zuckerberg have led the talent war to the development of artificial superintelligence, there has been no longer any doubt about the validity of the technical term and the development goal of superintelligence. You're absolutely right: It's not as if all Big Tech and startups in the field of superintelligence switched to dot .si overnight. But that's not surprising. Rome wasn't built in a day.
"
 
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Guys, I need your help.

A potential buyer started a discussion about the extension .si. You know these buyers with bargain offers: Either they suffer as poor students, or they want to pay less because the TLD is so incredibly bad.

On the other hand, this buyer seems to be serious and is probably active in the public field of Research/Science. I thought to write a longer answer here which could help us as a sample text for future inquiries. Well, I translated my German draft with Google Translate. Could you please suggest improvements of language and content?

"
Thank you for your interest. I only partially share your assessment of the .si ccTLD. You have to look at where the country comes from. During the Habsburg Monarchy of Austria-Hungary, Slovenia was a small, neglected region within. After World War II, it became part of the communist Tito regime in Yugoslavia. In 1991, Slovenia quickly and skillfully fought for independence during the Yugoslavia Civil War. In 2004, Slovenia joined the European Union.


When the internet began its triumphant advance, Slovenia's infrastructure, economic power, and prosperity were weak. Adoption of the ccTLD was correspondingly slow. Domain registration was initially only available to Slovenian legal entities and international trademark owners. It wasn't until 2008 that it was opened to foreign registrants without a trademark background.

More non-Slovenes have registered and developed domains than you'd imagine. You'll find Spanish and Italian sites (si!), English portals referring to the dozens of meanings of the abbreviation Si, and much more.

Artificial intelligence has only been playing a role at dot.si for about two years, when the general public became aware of the term "superintelligence" during the dispute between OpenAI and Sam Altman. A little over a year ago, the (non-disclosed) acquisition of the domain Copilot.si by Microsoft was discussed, and since then, the number of registrations of .si domains has increased and internationalized disproportionately. The official academic abbreviation for artificial superintelligence is ASI, so the connection to dot .si is obvious.


Since Meta and Mark Zuckerberg have led the talent war to the development of artificial superintelligence, there has been no longer any doubt about the validity of the technical term and the development goal of superintelligence. You're absolutely right: It's not as if all Big Tech and startups in the field of superintelligence switched to dot .si overnight. But that's not surprising. Rome wasn't built in a day.
"
I don't have any special knowledge about this, but, you can point out that even leading registrars like dynadot register these domain extension

As I know, dynadot was the one that took the lead in .AI in the early stages.
 
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you can point out that even leading registrars like dynadot register these domain extension
Good point. Will add.
As I know, dynadot was the one that took the lead in .AI in the early stages.
I was not aware of this. Valuable info to have this truffle pig registrar as a global first mover, again.
 
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Guys, I need your help.

A potential buyer started a discussion about the extension .si. You know these buyers with bargain offers: Either they suffer as poor students, or they want to pay less because the TLD is so incredibly bad.

On the other hand, this buyer seems to be serious and is probably active in the public field of Research/Science. I thought to write a longer answer here which could help us as a sample text for future inquiries. Well, I translated my German draft with Google Translate. Could you please suggest improvements of language and content?

"
Thank you for your interest. I only partially share your assessment of the .si ccTLD. You have to look at where the country comes from. During the Habsburg Monarchy of Austria-Hungary, Slovenia was a small, neglected region within. After World War II, it became part of the communist Tito regime in Yugoslavia. In 1991, Slovenia quickly and skillfully fought for independence during the Yugoslavia Civil War. In 2004, Slovenia joined the European Union.


When the internet began its triumphant advance, Slovenia's infrastructure, economic power, and prosperity were weak. Adoption of the ccTLD was correspondingly slow. Domain registration was initially only available to Slovenian legal entities and international trademark owners. It wasn't until 2008 that it was opened to foreign registrants without a trademark background.

More non-Slovenes have registered and developed domains than you'd imagine. You'll find Spanish and Italian sites (si!), English portals referring to the dozens of meanings of the abbreviation Si, and much more.

Artificial intelligence has only been playing a role at dot.si for about two years, when the general public became aware of the term "superintelligence" during the dispute between OpenAI and Sam Altman. A little over a year ago, the (non-disclosed) acquisition of the domain Copilot.si by Microsoft was discussed, and since then, the number of registrations of .si domains has increased and internationalized disproportionately. The official academic abbreviation for artificial superintelligence is ASI, so the connection to dot .si is obvious.


Since Meta and Mark Zuckerberg have led the talent war to the development of artificial superintelligence, there has been no longer any doubt about the validity of the technical term and the development goal of superintelligence. You're absolutely right: It's not as if all Big Tech and startups in the field of superintelligence switched to dot .si overnight. But that's not surprising. Rome wasn't built in a day.
"
Keep your comments brief and on point. Skip the long historical backstory (no need to recount wars) and stick to what directly advances the deal. You can assume the other party already knows the context. This applies to any negotiation, not just this TLD.
 
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Keep your comments brief and on point. Skip the long historical backstory (no need to recount wars) and stick to what directly advances the deal. You can assume the other party already knows the context. This applies to any negotiation, not just this TLD.
True, the text is much too long as a reply to a purchase inquiry.

I think a little history is necessary, just a little bit, to counter the argument of slow internet adoption.
There's a difference between a small, young nation starting over in all areas after being subjugated for two thousand years โ€“ before the Habsburgs, by the Romans and the Franks, and a country that's doing well economically and has a history as a major power, like France, Spain, and UK, introducing the internet in the early 1990s almost as an afterthought.

I'm going to radically shorten the history and also talk less in other ways.

Any other suggestions?
 
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True, the text is much too long as a reply to a purchase inquiry.

I think a little history is necessary, just a little bit, to counter the argument of slow internet adoption.
There's a difference between a small, young nation starting over in all areas after being subjugated for two thousand years โ€“ before the Habsburgs, by the Romans and the Franks, and a country that's doing well economically and has a history as a major power, like France, Spain, and UK, introducing the internet in the early 1990s almost as an afterthought.

I'm going to radically shorten the history and also talk less in other ways.

Any other suggestions

.SI is to super intelligence what .AI is to artificial intelligence
 
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I'm going to radically shorten the history and also talk less in other ways.

Any other suggestions?
You shouldn't need to explain yourself at length to a buyer. Instead, get them talking, by asking concise questions to learn more about their needs.
 
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