Agroplex said:
You're wrong. It's #1 because it's actually laden with keywords in the meta tags, something that no .tel domain has.
Google indexes .tel keywords. Does it matter they're from the page body rather than META tags? I believe Telnic has microformats somewhere on the roadmap anyway, so in the future everything Google reads from .tel will be semantic. Alternatively they could query DNS instead of scraping from the web.
Agroplex said:
My experiment proves it - refer to my blog about my CPA's last name as a .tel - at #35 in Google while his oddbal .net is #1.
Yeah, even mine isn't #1. The problem is the social networks I'm on have PageRank, and my .tel does not (speaking rhetorically, why should you expect it to?). But my .tel IS the most authoritative thing about me on the internet. So who's problem is that? Search engines need to find new approaches to this problem.
Agroplex said:
I wonder how many clueless people got .tel domains at landrush, only to find out they cannot park them, they cannot develop them, they cannot host them.
Caveat emptor. The pitch from the very beginning has been about how different it is from other TLDs. How anybody could have been oblivious to that is beyond me.
Agroplex said:
Any addition since launch to the .tel features is a "hack".
Some of the best things in life are hacks.. even the Internet itself.
But nothing is ever finished. Telnic is running development cycles on an approximate monthly basis - the next TelHosting release is due next week, with some nice
feature upgrades.
Agroplex said:
Want to be considered a real TLD Registry, TelNic? Offer a feature to turn off your purple button and allow owners of .tel to switch their DNS. Until then, "development" and ".tel" don't go together.
Considering .tel's purpose, what are the merits of this suggestion? If you can't articulate any, why should we bother to take you seriously, especially since I've already given you a damned good reason why it's a bad idea, and yet you still persist.
Agroplex said:
It's also interesting that TelNic chooses the word "service" instead of "domain" when referring to their own .tel
I think of .tel as a platform.. all sorts of exciting services can be DEVELOPED on top :hearts:
This discussion is stale and no longer interests me, unless you manage to concede something and move the argument along onto pastures new.