You a tight biaatch....very cheap![]()
Try racked.net...You're right, Dale. E.g. Engineers.net - perfect TLD for its function.![]()
[B]top 100 sites[/B]
93 .com 93.00%
1 .net 1.00%
3 .org 3.00%
0 .info 0.00%
0 .biz 0.00%
0 .us 0.00%
[B]top 1k sites[/B]
861 .com 86.10%
25 .net 2.50%
27 .org 2.70%
1 .info 0.10%
1 .biz 0.10%
8 .us 0.80%
[B]top 10k sites[/B]
8113 .com 81.13%
450 .net 4.50%
474 .org 4.74%
41 .info 0.41%
17 .biz 0.17%
65 .us 0.65%
[B]top 100k sites[/B]
77492 .com 77.49%
5414 .net 5.41%
8513 .org 8.51%
762 .info 0.76%
223 .biz 0.22%
477 .us 0.48%
[B]top 1M sites[/B]
749937 .com 74.99%
57874 .net 5.79%
101936 .org 10.19%
9875 .info 0.99%
3522 .biz 0.35%
6038 .us 0.60%
I've found two types of end-users to actually prefer .net over the .com equivalent: (1) high-tech companies (I'm also seeing ".it" in use among IT consulting services), and (2) southeast Asian-based companies, who often to associate .com with the USA.
While the .com version is most valuable most often, don't underestimate the significance of keyword-TLD fit.
Very well stated.The stigma against .NET is mainly a domainer POV. Most end users I have dealt with would much rather have a GreatKeyword.net vs a MediocoreDomain.com
Brad
That's probably because those end-users are not well informed enough to make a smarter decision. It's like when people buy an LCD TV model KNOWN to industry insiders as having poor configurations. Many small business owners don't even know how to send an email with attachments.The stigma against .NET is mainly a domainer POV. Most end users I have dealt with would much rather have a GreatKeyword.net vs a MediocoreDomain.com
Let's hope it won't be a remake of .aero .mobi .museum .pro .travel .coop etcold rules no longer apply.
and when the release of all the new TLD's hit, then you are going to see an acceptance and an adoption of Brand TLD's and Special Interest TLD's.
Not embraced by domainers. Industries? Hardly the case.embraced by their respective industries - it tells you something
No. A relevant ccTLD (e.g. .CA for Canadians) is ALWAYS much better than a totally irrelevant gTLD, like .NET for a restaurant.Saying a .net is overrated is telling someone that using a .ca and .de over a .com is a mistake.
One tricky thing about .NET is that *some* people tend to "interpret" it as about the Internet or as you said, (people) networking. So mylousyrestaurant.net could be justified as the Internet presence of my lousy restaurant, and parttimeeassassins.net a networking group for part-time assassins.One aspect of .net is... well networking :approve:
*the exceptional businesses of our esteemed moderators