ezimedia said:
HI
well I guess the person got in early and now he has profited from his good luck...
Thanks
Tom Dahne
Getting in early is clearly the key. Technical know how and good anticipation of the markets are probably more attributable to his success than Lady Luck!
Best Regards
Dave Wrixon
mpadc said:
Well would it be worth registering the common english .cn domain names i.e things like bicycle.cn sheeps.cn or whatever
or would it be better taking more of the Chinese oriented domain names.....?
It is unlikely that English Keywords will be of much relevance in the dot cn market, which is essentially a domestic chinese market.
The Chinese are big on acronyms, but I think even the market for PinYin is fairly limited as the adoption of IDN is already fairly well established in China and will almost certainly pick up pace with the release of IE 7.0.
The problem with PinYin is that to represent a Chinese character you need 3-4 alphabetic characters, but these actually do not give much precision of meaning without a numberical digit. This is why all Chinese names appear the same to us, as the chinese pronounciation includes tonality or pitch. This is the reason so many Chinese have the same Surname. Infact they don't but it is just too much trouble to try and explain the differences to us ignorant westerners.
IDN gets around this problem by giving the accurate literal representation, rather than leaving the reader guessing.
The dot CN extension is also available in local characters and software has been widely distributed to support this.
The big difference between the Chinese market and elsewhere is the political support for IDN, which is not only being espoused but government sponsored.
Best Regards
Dave Wrixon