Yes, and these rats will take your money and suggest you have renewed -- then
quietly return the money with advising you that your renewal has bombed.

Last I put through a trasfer I discovered that you need to take them up on the
stay offer during the 72 hours you have to approve. After that, the deal is
off. Incidently, they could care less if you even get the confirming e-mail,
and often you don't. Rather than allow the transfer to time-out you can renew
during that 72 hours even if fail to get the confirmation. 

Another note is that NSI changed their default to 2 years. What you do to get
around that is go to "multi-year" renewal and there you can select 1 year. You
can also fill, process, confirm, and go "back" to renew a second, third, etc.
domain without refilling in all data over and over.

Best, Loren

Tom McDonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


Monday, July 7, 2003, 9:28:39 AM, you wrote:

 The URL I last saw work was:   http://www.stayoffer.com/    This will
 redirect you to some NSI site.  But they've changed things a bit.
 First, they now require 2 years.  And second, if you have not
 requested a transfer, they will take your renewal but not actually
 process it or charge you the full rate.  I was able to remedy this with a
 phone call to NSI and a claim that I did indeed request a transfer
 first.  Whatev... it does seem to be around still.

 -tom

J> I saw a link once, where you could renew a domain a network solutions 
J> for $15.00. I thought it was discount.networksolutions.com or 
J> renewal.networksolutions.com..

J> Does have the correct link?

J> ~jb





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