Wow, while the Canadian Telsters were busy developing business at TelCamp Toronto 1, it looks like there has been some fun going on here.
It gets easier and easier as we go...
.tel is not a website. If you want to develop a website, go build a website.
However, as a developer, if you would like:
- Access to a database that is faster and cheaper than any other database (via web, handheld or otherwise)
- A system that offers a web-based front end for you to interact with the database
- High-end encryption for the database
- A system for managing the people who can view the database
- APIs for developing applications that interact with the database
- Open source applications and free code to speed up development
- A user driven community and responsive tech support
- A top-level domain that you own so your data can be found by who you want it to be found by
- All for $10
Then you may want to consider .tel as an option. .tel domains, in one way or another have been descibed as the above without any of the supposedly misleading claims made by a tiny minority of web developers.
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I just read the FAQ at telsters; a quick note to my friend plaggypig here: I was churning code for the Z80 CPU at a time that you were probably not even born, so to discount the fact that people *did* use computers in the 90's is a serious joke. I first used the Internet the year Steve Jobs launched his "NeXT" computer, so after a little research you should be able to figure out the actual year.
Some FYI, although Plaggy was gracious enough to point out the rebuttal post at Telsters (thank you Plaggy for posting it), I am it's author.
How's this:
- My Apple II+ and Vic 20 would have crushed your Z80 and it's measly monochrome display
- How many BBS door games or extensions were you involved with, I know for me it was more than zero
- I had probably signed more people on to the Internet than you know before you even had Winsock configured
and now I'm taking my ball and going home :P
Feel free to develop your websites with PHP, AJAX and all the other scripts and markup you wish to use; if you don't want to use .tel for any of it, no problem.
MANY people right now are using .tel are and MANY others will, regardless of what the tiny minority of some domainers have to say about it. Most of the target audience for .tel doesn't even know what a "domainer" is, nor do they care. :imho:
As I stated in my post at Telsters, there is still nothing new coming from the anti .tel camp. Maybe the three of you should try doing a TelSucksCamp 1 and try to brainstorm some new points. Better yet, since there seems to be a theme among Telsucksters to reference days past, why not have a love-in or groove-on or whatever. :hearts:
Otherwise, updates about TelCamp Toronto 1 will be coming soon. :D