Quote:
Originally Posted by jacksonm
Also, a server with a bunch of websites isn't a network. You really do need to go and read up on the basics.
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If you want to become a professional, you shouldn't carry your textbook with you all the time. No need to worry what is a network or what is not, just build one!
Let me show you how you can own such a "large network" that nobody can even "dreamed of".
-Suppose you want to offer Michael Jackson's music download service for the whole world.
-Suppose you know 100 domainers located in 100 different countries, and each of them owns a server hosting 2,000 park domains.
-Suppose they don't mind your personality and agree to create a virtual server for you from their servers sharing same IPs.
Now, create 100 websites with 100 different languages, one for each of your virtual servers. Network them together and there you go, you have a "large network".
You can also use this "network" to prove RD wrong that creating websites or networks will not need an IP at all.
Now please tell me, which textbook told you the network "hosted on virtual servers (around the world) sharing a single IP with other 2000 park domains" is not a network.
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Obviously, whether or not more and more domains being registered and used will make IPs become a scarce resource depends who you're talking to.
Your view: No, because thousands of your sites in the "Name Based Virtual Hosting" don't require any IP.
My view: Yes, even my small sites use 2 to 10 IPs easily. I use a different server to broadcast video stuff, other servers handdle different jobs. Mind you, serious websites own their own name servers, many use more than 2.
Although domain name owners can rent nameservers (limited sevice) from their Registrars to satisfy the registration requirement without paying extra, still many business don't want their nameservers to be controlled by someone else for many reasons, security reason is one of them.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jacksonm
That's a hobby, child's play. You really have no idea what I've been doing or how long I've been doing it. You probably think I'm half your age. Assumptions really won't serve you very well.
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I am glad you finally acknowledge that "large network" built on "virtual" servers (and therefore park domains in "Virtual" Hosting too) without requiring IPs is "child's play" and thus your view weighs not much.
RD's question involves real IPs (not virtual IPs), it should be answered by people in the real world doing real business using real IPs. You are a domain speculator living in virtual world using non-real IPs, your view is not a reflection of the true reality.
So, let's declare the winner of this debate .... Rubber Duck!