a.) Go to top right and perform a whois search
b.) Scroll to bottom of results page and without putting a domain in the placeholder hit the search button
c.) this will bring up a page that shows a short version of the whois search page without any scrolling
d.) bookmark it or set it to home page.
Thanks Wayne.
I do use the
http://whois.cira.ca/public/ as a shortcut, which is fine for inputting the domain name.
But the results don't show up except below the first 550 pixels.
So, for a private whois domain, you could previously see the complete whois (i.e. the expiry date, suspended or active, and name servers) without scrolling in a partially-opened window of 640 pixels high, which is what I use.
Now, all that is visible in 640 pixels is the domain name and domain name status.
Who designs websites with the secondary pages having the top 2/3 as containing completely unnecessary content?
The important content does not fit in the first screen.
Above quote from link
WebpagesThatSuck.com
Speaking of design, who else designs pages with an ABSOLUTE ZERO left margin - it feels like I need to scroll my page to centre it, which, of course, doesn't change it.
Also, in a partially open window (870 pixels wide), the 213 pixel-high red banner is not designed to show the left side of the banner, but instead reads:
.ca?
key to Canada,
he world.
Is this not website design 101?
I'm surprised they didn't add this nice trailing cursor into the design
http://www.angelfire.com/art/CountryGirl/TrailingCursor.html
Probably paid a brother in law over $50 000 for it.
That's what I thought, although I thought more of someone at CIRA who has a daughter or grand-daughter in junior high.
Why .ca indeed?
If we can take a functional website design and turn it into something like this with our budget, surely your business can too.