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Bret Fausett's Internet Printing Press

Bret Fausett's Other Weblog:

Pray For Rain

View Article  Socialsquatting
Denise Howell has an interesting piece on what she is calling "socialsquatting." On the Internet, no one knows you're not really Chris Pirillo?
View Article  Bonds Should Hold Out Until Thursday
Because that's the night I'll be at Dodger Stadium for the boofest.
View Article  RealNames Code
If you're interested in RealNames, the domain name, you'll love Real Names, the code base. See Keith Teare's comment to yesterday's post.
View Article  Hot Typo Names
Every day, 365 days of the year, Pool.com cherry-picks the best of each day's deleting names and features them on a "hot" list on its home page and in emails to Pool.com members. Here's the "hot" list for Sunday, July 29, 2007: girlsfight.com, travolicty.com, exspidia.com, 3dsmax.com, porstarbook.com, travelolcity.com, exdedia.com, travelocy.com, travelolicty.com, travelicty.com.

You got it: 8 of the top 10 "hot" names are typos.
View Article  The Return of RealNames
RealNames has returned...as a domain name up for auction next month at the Domain Roundtable Conference in Seattle (see item no. 151 on the preliminary auction list). Web companies never really die....they just sell their domain name to someone else.
View Article  The Next Big Domain Auction
Name Intelligence is holding an auction next month in conjunction with its Domain Roundtable conference. They just published their first list of names that will go on the auction block. If I were buying, I'd go for autobiography.com (no. 21 on the list). What a terrific name for an online site. To my way of thinking, the potential to build a successful company (and one of those TechCrunchy Web 2.0 companies to boot!) is much greater with autobiography.com than with the other names on the list.

So anyone want to lend me $250,000....?
View Article  Inside My Head
Inside my head, I've always seen domain name registrations as clouds. I took some time earlier this week to illustrate these name clouds. You can see them in today's post on Name Brief. They use pretty colors.
View Article  ICANN NomComm: Leave It Alone
If there's one part of ICANN that is working well, it's the Nominating Committee. It's time for the NomComm's periodic review though, but my input is rather simple: leave it alone. It's working.
View Article  A Week on Typosquatting
If you haven't figured it out yet, I have a new web site covering developments in the domain name industry. It's called Name Brief. You can find it at www.namebrief.com. Today I'm starting a week-long series on domain names composed of typographical errors of other, better known domain names.
View Article  Google is Selling Domain Names
Google is selling domain names for $10/year, which includes the domain name registration, a whois privacy service, email, a start page, and a whole bundle of additional Google applications. Name Brief has the details.
View Article  Praying for Divine Intervention Against Registerfly
From New Orleans' NOLA.com: "Ticket sales for the Randy Travis concert to be held at the Castine Center in Mandeville Sunday abruptly halted Wednesday when the ticketing portal at cornerstonecares.com was hijacked by a domain name registration company operating as Registerfly.com. Cornerstone Church pastor Doug Gilford said he is disheartened.... 'It is a travesty to have such a great opportunity as the Randy Travis concert thwarted by a company's total disregard for others. I am praying that God will show his might at this 11th hour for us,' Gilford said."

If it's a Registerfly problem, this might be a time when Bob Parsons can do more than the Almighty.

This post sponsored by Wondrous.com.
View Article  Why the Apple iPhone Wins All Battles with Windows Mobile
I've been fortunate enough to have spent the last two months using an unlocked, carrier-independent HTC Touch Phone (product specs here), that has much of the 'wow' of the iPhone (with an earlier release date than the iPhone), without some of the iPhone's infamous limitations (AT&T only, no third-party apps, no Skype, heavy weight and size). The HTC Touch runs Windows MobileĀ® 6 Professional and uses Windows Media Player for its music. It's quite nice.

But for all the ways HTC beats Apple in form factor and openness, it's still running Windows. This means my phone crashes from time to time. That's not a joke. It really crashes. It also means I get errors like this one when trying to play music I'm paying for through the Urge music service. Apple has DRM too, but the iPhone would never do this. Apple may have its own walled garden, but at least it covers the wall with ivy and climbing roses and makes you forget it's there.

This post sponsored by Gizimo.com.