It would be unfair to
say that -- like everything in the electronic ozone -- domains are just a
part of the worldwide web's invisible-yet-omnipresent ether. This is
because while domains are no more tangible than some creepy
middle-aged web-prowler's social-network identity, they happen to make up
the internet's very building blocks. So whether we’re talking about
top-level domains, or generic top-level domains bearing .com, .net and .org
suffixes -- all bring a mighty cyber-kingdom to mind. Theirs is an
electronic realm in which keywords and passwords open gates to the real
world’s vast universe of products and information.
Tucked within the domain names that build
this world-girdling info-highway is just about everything you'd ever need to know or want to get. So if
you’re stuck in the off-line-o-sphere interested in finding out (as some guy on Wikipedia once did) how to
reconnoiter the Eastern and Western shores of Panthalassa for the purpose
of transporting a pair of "amiable tapirs"; or how to
acquire a rare Flushaway JBC60C99 with a domestically-built thermal
invisibility hook-up -- you simply go on-line to find the
appropriate site.
Ditto if you want to build your own unit; and ditto if you want to
read a
paean to the joys of using the Flushaway alone at dawn along a
Panthalassan stream (actually, as you already sense, there is no such
Flushaway – but
you get the idea). After all that, you may want to acquire a domain
or
hostname related to the thing itself.
That’s
what domain registrars are for.
Entirely
unrelated to things that flush away, such domains as
StateBarAssociations.com, UnitedStatesEmbassies.com, MexicoTimeShare.com and RepublicofSouthAfrica.com
including the name for the site you are on, are each available among hundreds of others. This offer is being made for a period
prior to their being offered at auction. Those interested should promptly
email
beaudomain@comcast.net