I know you mean the right thing, but for those who don't know these 
protocols it WILL take a little longer than a matter of hours to get 
it set up and be able to run people's e-mail !_which may be their 
life blood_! properly. I know you know. I must rant thusly:

Let's not kid ourselves, nothing would be worse for the OpenSRS brand
(or e-commerce, ISP's, the Internet, etc., etc.) than a bunch of neophytes setting 
up redirects and POP mail with no redundancy or failsafes, poor security 
procedures and standards...and no means of providing knowledgeable real-time support?

<<shiver>>

I H-A-T-E the idea of these issues being taken lightly. This is precisely
the stuff that makes the lives of technology consumers a living hell. 


............

<blink, blink>



Sorry, I seem to have some unresolved issues to deal with... :-/


Go ahead..... on with the arguing...


Scott Schiller


Get your @ together!
---http://domainalchemy.com---



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of William X. Walsh
Sent: Thursday, October 12, 2000 11:07 PM
To: David Iyoha
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re[2]: New services: forwarding/DNS?


Hello David,

Thursday, October 12, 2000, 9:14:28 AM, you wrote:

> It seems very clear to me that the ONLY reason you have a problem with the
> proposed additions is because you already have them. (I might be wrong here but
> I doubt it)

You are.  Very wrong.  You don't know how wrong.

You are discounting the comments of people who have been in the domain
name registration industry longer than ICANN has been around, and
whose business experience in this market is substantial.

You see this as an easy and cheap way to get these services in the
short term.

You don't have the time to learn a little simple perl and SQL?

Then perhaps you should find another line of work.  We are talking
HOURS, not months.

-- 
Best regards,
 William                            mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Reply via email to