-db- said:
If you followed the industry in the past couple years you would be aware of the significant players and sales involved in some of the extensions you refer to. You are certainly entitled to your opinion, but calling people "newbies" just because they support extensions outside the com-net-org arena is an insult, and highlights your own lack of knowledge on the topic.
Well, I can tell you that I've "followed" (and been in) the industry for 10 years. I'm also "aware" that every year or two some outfit comes along and starts plugging the "next big thing to wipe out the dot com." It's never happened and never will. The "next big thing" folks vanish, only to later be replaced by other such hawkers. (Over the years I've been told variously that .biz would soon rule all, then .info, and on and on.)
I'm sorry if "newbies" sounds like a gross insult term in your view. I didn't mean it as such, but was accurately describing those who (as you yourself admit) have cropped up in the last couple years. As to significant "sales" happening for awhile, that means very little - lots of people also bought Florida swampland in the 1920s.
It always amuses me to see those (unlike myself) who missed out in the dot com land rush era of the late '90s and early '00s, now frantically trying to pretend that their brand new .whatever ext will soon be better than a .com. Much like imagining a tiny apartment to be superior to a mansion.
"Lack of knowledge"? Hardly, sir. And no lack of key .coms, either.
slobizman said:
(just out today)
Use of ".US" Domain Name Extension Rises Sharply
By Gene J. Koprowski
E-Commerce Times
11/23/05 5:00 AM PT
"Many organizations, especially those based overseas, are strengthening their identity in American markets with a .US domain," said Christian Zouzas...
And so this article appears on yet another thread. But nobody is reading it closely enough. It shows that investors are artificially making it look like there's a general .us bubble happening, when really it's just foreigners trying to make themselves look somehow associated with the United States.
Other nations are not significant in such areas, since they use a comparatively tiny percentage of the net than the US does, and it will always be so, due to our much stronger economic position. Meanwhile, the same article clearly says that in the US by far the top-ranking favorite ext is still, of course, the .com.
End of story. (Literally.)