Showing posts with label web. Show all posts
Showing posts with label web. Show all posts

2014-05-30

A Short History of Domain Names


The second half of the nineties was a very exciting time for me, I had just begone learning the ins and outs of the world wide web. HTML4 was the hottest thing out there and Geocities was the place to have a personal site. It took little time to get the hang of things and my day job quickly became entirely dedicated to building websites.
As is the case nowadays, one of the most exciting moments of building a website is the go-live date. Publishing the site on a production server where the whole WWW would be able to access it and admire the various, soon to be antiquated, techniques that one has put so much effort into implementing.
However, although many sites offer a shared platform for hosting such as the previously mentioned, now-defunct Geocities or today's more trendy less techie Wordpress.com, these sites do not allow you to fully customize your web address or domain name or URL unless you own a domain name.
That bit of text that you enter into the browser to load your site (ex: www.chemali.org or www.sharplemon.com) is key to many hidden gems.
The shorter the domain name, the more easily recognizable and the more memorable it is, the more value it holds. Naturally, as businesses became aware of this value, the gold rush towards domain names (especially the .com ones) quickly eradicated the highly coveted 2-letter domain names (ex: www.hp.com) followed by the 3-letter ones (ex: www.cnn.com) onto the 4-letter domains which were the ones that lasted the most (until December 2013) until all variations were exhausted.

The web was growing exponentially and with it the need and awareness for uniquely identifiable domain names. Branding companies reached out to us for advice on booking their unique brand names and on defending those domain names against squatters.
Squatting became a common practice that consisted of people buying up interesting names, and holding them "for ransom", until the persons who have real interest in them paid often ridiculously high amounts of money.

Copyright laws were amended, and the governing body in charge of domain names, the ICAAN, set up rules for brands to claim their domains, but this offered only minor deterrence, as not everybody had the clout or the desire to litigate. Many often resorted to paying the money in order to speed up the process. I witnessed this first hand, as an ex colleague of mine, received $1000 USD for a domain he bought for a measly $10 USD.

The awesome folks at DomainTools

During the past three years as I ran Sharp Lemon, a great part of our work involved advising and finding suitable domain names for direct clients of ours, or for branding agencies that reached out and required our assistance. The task is a tedious one, as clients are often hooked on the dot com, and refuse to consider other variations.
The Lebanese local registry (managed out of the American University of Beirut.lb requires a complex procedure and a lot of red tape which makes it counter-intuitive to even consider. Furthermore the wow factor is not there when you are using a .com.lb vs a .com and the jury is unanimous on that.

A few practices that I personally dislike that are being used now to comply with client requirements include:

  • Adding a -lb.com: ex: mycooldomain-lb.com (because it's classier than mycooldomain.com.lb)
  • Splitting the name with dashes: my-cool-domain.com (everybody loves shift key combinations when typing)
  • Going all Web 2.0: instead of sharplemon.com why not shrplmn.com (who needs vowels anyway)
  • Going all domain name Godzilla: thisismycooldomainname.com (so much for readability & SEO)
As many have realized that the .info, .biz and the various tiny variations that have been used were not a sustainable replacement, a shift in paradigm took place which led to the introduction of the New gTLDS (Generic Top Level Domains). Now, you can read a lot of the nitty-gritty details on this here on the ICAAN gTLD site but the idea is simple:
  • You are no longer bound by the .com/net/org....or other country TLDs
  • New extensions can be created at will as long as they fulfill some prerequisites
  • The new extensions can be focused on a city (ex: .nyc) on an industry (ex:.autos) and a plethora of other categories
Well-known domain name registrar, Godaddy, lists 965 TLDs in 19 categories at the time this post has been written. Among the listed domains, I predict unprecedented success for one of them especially: The  .guru .
I am even willing to place some bets on some people who might have invested in such a domain.

Gurus of the World, Unite!

2014-01-30

The Secret Code of the Web Designer

Design...The ultimate frontier crossed by the mind as it materializes abstract thoughts, desires and passions into the visual realm. Our entire daily existence bathes in design. From the shape of leaves on a tree to the ripples on the face of a water puddle, native designs are omnipresent in our surroundings. (Wo)Man-made designs are however a whole different ball game.
We idolize people who can convert thought into shape and stand in awe in front of their skill, and rightfully so. Just imagine Apple products without the design hype that comes with them or a slick Audi being reduced to a metal box and four wheels.
The Web is no different in this aspect. Things have come a long way from the very first hypertext markup lines ever written on a screen, . The Web has moved on from being a geekspace to become a commodity, and like any commodity it requires refining and packaging to better sell its contents.

It was out of this shift in paradigm that a new breed of intrepid warriors emerged: Wielding nothing but a 21" Macbook and a 5 button mouse, the valiant warrior broke through the multitude of lines of code that programmers had erected to keep the average Joe (and Jane) clueless and afraid from the wwworld behind the screen.
With great responsibility also came great show off. Over-interpreting every splash of color and setting the value for a day's work well beyond the entire budget of the project were a necessary evil intended to make the barbaric hordes of non-designers understand how big was the favor they were receiving by getting a web designer to accept their project.

But there is also order in the chaos; Much like the ancient Samurai, Web Designers live by a set of rules only known to them. The Code of the Web Designer is only passed from one generation to another in a secret ceremony shrouded by mystery, Pringles, scarves, Nutella and chants in old Elvish languages that consist mostly of rants on how web developers make their lives so miserable and really, really " just don't get it".

Behold the Secret Code of the Web Designer:

  1. The Web is what you see in the browser. There is no relation between a website's layout and its HTML code.
  2. Because of that,Web Designers do not feel the need to learn HTML, it's the developer's job
  3. Web Designers do not slice any of their designs, because they do not know HTML. What are the web developers doing anyway?
  4. Web Designers think that CSS stands for Cute, Sweet & Simple.
  5. Web Designers do not consult with web developers before suggesting page animations or interactive features. If they can imagine it, then the developer should be able to find a way to do it.
  6. Web Designers can only produce one viable, acceptable layout worth implementing per client.
  7. Any additional layout that the Web Designer is forced to create for that same client, will be as ugly, hideous and repelling as possible, in a way to make the original design seem like a Da Vinci masterpiece.
  8. Web Designers address design and functionality related bugs and mistakes with: "The developers did not execute it the way I asked them to"
  9. Web Designers charge based on the Sting Fiscal System. The Sting fiscal system is based on Sting's mega hit "Every Breath You Take". 
  10. Web Designers payment terms are usually 50% down payment upon commissioning the project and 50% before the client approves the final design.

However, luckily for us, not everybody lives by the code. The Ronins of the Web Designer tribes still offer consolation and hope, mostly by not having an attitude and then some more by simply learning the craft which they choose to be associated with and then doing it well. Alas much like the Ronins, these web designers never stay in one place for too long and often move on where they can do what they like away from all the hype.

Below is a recently discovered haiku describing the web designer...cherish it!

Web Designers splash
colors like having a rash
take a lot of cash

The Haiku of the Web Designer