Steve,

I could not have said it better myself and agree with you especially on the 10 
years too late aspect.

Best Regards

Tim

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Stephen Wilcox
Sent: 28 October 2013 15:53
To: Ahmed Abu-Abed
Cc: menog@menog. net; Timothy Roy
Subject: Re: [menog] New Arabic TLD and idea's popularity


Not wishing to sound skeptical, but isnt this all coming about 10 years too 
late and thats the reason for the lack of adoption?

The device of choice is a smartphone or tablet, these are app and icon based.

Being old fashioned I still use a computer but mostly find things, even common 
websites by inputting the common name into a search bar (or browser bar - 
Chrome doesnt distinguish) and the result is a clickable list of search 
results, which will be in the local script and language..

eg the average user never inputs urls anyway, but when they do they likely 
input arabic text directly to the browser for a search term and get a list of 
website titles and then click them. they dont pay attention to the underlying 
URL that much any more

Compare to this address books on mobile phones. In the 90s I could tell you 
anyone's phone number from memory, now I know maybe my own and my Mums and 
thats about it..

Steve




On 28 October 2013 08:38, Ahmed Abu-Abed 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
The Arabic version of "net" would come at the beginning of the domain name, as 
we don't have an equivalent of "www". Thus in Oman's case it would still end in 
.oman in Arabic.

IMO, as techies we may not be the best ones to judge which is better, ie. to 
keep an equivalent of www or drop it. The domain name's marketing staff should 
decide on this, with the aim of gaining more interest to their website if 
promoting an Arabic IDN. Registrar's may provide both options to their 
customers to encourage Arabic IDN adoption.
Regards,
-Ahmed


On 2013-10-28, at 8:05 AM, Timothy Roy 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I believe that the Arabic version of net would cause more confusion. I think 
that keeping simpler is better. I know that here in Oman we have been pushing 
and promoting the .oman(Arabic) IDN quite extensively.

I also believe that for an organization to actually have the Arabic content and 
URL they need to access their market. If they want to reach or promote their 
business to the MENOG regions (or regions of their specific country) that have 
a lesser comprehension of English language then they should go for it.  As a 
registry we are trying to promote it but it is mainly up to the Registrars to 
promote it to obtain more business in this field of domain names.

My quick observations.

Best Regards

Timothy Roy
Regulatory and Compliance Unit
Domain Name Operations
Telecommunications Regulatory Authority.
Tel: +968 24574858<tel:%2B968%2024574858>
Mobile: +968 93551117<tel:%2B968%2093551117>
Email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Office hours: Sunday – Thursday, 7:30am – 3:00pm (Muscat GMT +4)



From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On 
Behalf Of Ahmed Abu-Abed
Sent: 28 October 2013 08:55
To: Fahd Batayneh
Cc: menog@menog. net
Subject: Re: [menog] New Arabic TLD and idea's popularity

I agree, the term “www” may seem redundant at first look, but it certainly 
indicates what is coming next is a web site. In other words, it is like a “Mr.” 
or “Dr.” title that give you a rough idea of the person you are referring to.
Should we have an Arabic “www” equivalent to grab peoples attention to Arabic 
IDN ? Something like نت  (translated into “net”) so instead of عمان.الاردن  the 
website owner should promote   نت.عمان..الاردن

This will likely get more attention to Arabic IDNs.

My 0.02 Dinar thoughts ...

-Ahmed


From: Fahd Batayneh<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, October 28, 2013 12:23 AM
To: Ahmed Abu-Abed<mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: mailto:[email protected]
Subject: RE: [menog] New Arabic TLD and idea's popularity

I have actually seen Arabic URLs posted in public areas in the UAE, yet it is 
not gaining the marketing advantages it seeks.

There have been discussions within New gTLD applicants on whether to encourage 
New gTLD registrants (once these new gTLDs are delegated and are generally 
available) to advertise their online presence using “www” in front of the URL 
or not; i.e. www.menog.anything<http://www.menog.anything> vs. menog.anything. 
For those who might not know, the inventor of the term “www” in front of URLs 
has admitted that such an addition was a mistake in the first place. Yet, after 
thorough discussions, those involved have concluded that in order for people to 
understand what menog.anything is, it is best that “www” is added in front of 
the URL for advertising purposes. I believe this to be the case for IDNs we 
well; i.e. some just don’t understand what مثال.اختبار is.

My 2 cents.

Fahd

From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On 
Behalf Of Ahmed Abu-Abed
Sent: Sunday, October 27, 2013 9:51 PM
To: Tom Paseka
Cc: menog@menog. net
Subject: Re: [menog] New Arabic TLD and idea's popularity

Hi Tom,

Country code TLDs have been available since 2010 for 4 Arab countries at least. 
Unfortunately its not on most peoples priority list for implementing, and I 
have not noticed any advertising for an Arabic URL over the past couple of 
years (I live in the MENOG region).

As for CloudFlares IDNs, it would be good to filter out which are using the 
Arabic alphabet and know how many Arabic IDNs are actually out there. That 
would require a good understanding of Punycode used to translate an IDN into 
Latin characters.

Regards,
-Ahmed


From: Tom Paseka<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, October 27, 2013 7:20 PM
To: Ahmed Abu-Abed<mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: mailto:[email protected]
Subject: Re: [menog] New Arabic TLD and idea's popularity

Hi Ahmed,

I've had a look through CloudFlare's customers and we see thousands of IDN's, 
but this is nothing compared to what exists in pre-existing romanized domains.

For a pre-existing company to move to a IDN, or any new domain in general, they 
have to revamp their presence, re-market to everyone to make sure they visit 
the correct address. I assume this isn't an easy task.

I suspect you'll see new starters coming out from the get-go with an IDN, but 
it'll take a while for the existing content to start adoption.

Cheers,
Tom

On Sun, Oct 27, 2013 at 1:54 AM, Ahmed Abu-Abed 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
ICANN is in the news with the new شبكة  TLD, see 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-24637673

I am yet to see Arabic TLDs widely implemented, although most browsers are 
ready, even on iOS and Android which I tested with an Arabic URL. Any idea on 
why is the delay in implementing Arabic URL by content providers (newspapers, 
etc.) ? People in the region prefer Arabic websites, so I am wondering what’s 
stopping content providers from having Arabic URLs.

Also, anyone know if major portals, like Google or Yahoo, have implemented IDNs 
in any language for their URL ? Something like ياهو.شبكة  (which translates to 
Yahoo.net<http://Yahoo.net> , as I cannot find an equivalent to .com as an 
Arabic TLD).

Best Regards,
Ahmed Abu-Abed


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