On 9/29/2011 4:44 PM, Tedd Sperling wrote:
David:

In addition to all that was said about other Languages/Customs having access to 
the Internet in their own native Languages, let me add there ARE symbols in the 
English Language. We commonly use math symbols, dingbat characters, grammar, 
and other such symbols in our English language, right?

Yes, but are those characters a wise choice for an easy to remember URL? I get the Chinese characters and that it matters to Chinese speaking people, but for a US business to use a URL of €³.com does not make much sense. Yes, it may be technically possible and a perfectly valid URL, but aside from a handful of geeks you won't find anyone who knows how to enter these characters.


In addition, these symbols are on your keyboard, or can be accessed by your 
keyboard. Just because the Windows environment makes it hard to type a BULLET 
for example, (ALT 0149), it is really a simple thing to do on a Macintosh -- 
it's just option 8 -- one character. The world no longer revolves around M$.

I could make the same complaint. How come that I cannot type easily €³ on a US keyboard, but it is a piece of cake on a German layout keyboard. Why does the world solely revolve around the US? That is even more the point for cyrillic or chinese characters.

As such, in the Safari Browser I can type an option 8 in the address bar and go 
directly to: http://xn--nvg.com the URL will show •.com.

Another example, if a Macintosh user types option v into the Safari Browser 
address bar they will go to √.com (square-root dot com), namely 
http://xn--nvg.com. Incidentally, that site receives over 200 unique Mac users 
per day and that rate is rising.

So how many unique users would it get when it was called squareroot.com? I bet it would be noticeably more. Mac and Safari users exist in negligible numbers. And I use Safari myself and part time a Mac at work, so it isn't that I diss the Apple products in any way.

So, your questions as to "who wants such an URL for business anyway?", let me 
reply if your customers could remember your site by simply typing a single character into 
their address bar, would that sound like a good thing to you? Especially if you were 
selling a Mac product?

It would be a good idea if I sell a Mac product, but the vast majority of the computing industry does not come across Macs or Safari, they are still a niche product. I'm not dissing the products, but the user base is negligible for general purposes. Apple excels more with consumer devices, such as MP3 players and phones and tablets. Those all have no keyboards. I never used an iPad/iPhone (way too expensive for me), so not sure how the text entry works on those, but for that I could see a single character domain being useful.


Keep in mind that while single character domains are not available, it has been 
speculated that they would run into the millions of dollars for each if they 
were. So, what's the value of a single character domain? In that regard, this 
makes a good read:

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/11/28/tech/main1080245.shtml

The price for single character domains would be high, because there is really only a limited number of URLs available - as stated in the article. I get that part.



In addition, these domains can be combined with other domains so that IF the 
user was on a Windows machine, they would go to one site and if they were on a 
Safari browser they could go to the url that would show the domain as a symbol. 
It is simply a redirect and a marketing consideration.

In any event, considering I've been developing software for Apple computers for 
over three decades now, I'm considering using option v (square-root) OR option 
8 (BULLET) as a site to sell my software.

I think it's a neat idea, but I've failed before.  :-)

Cheers,

tedd

As far as the success of a URL is concerned, it is difficult to determine how well it does compared to a different URL. In order to really make a reasonable call both URLs need to be advertised the same way to the same audience. And it depends a lot on the audience. In your case you are solely focused on the Mac users, but do you honestly think that •.com would be a good name for a comany that sells round push buttons? Yea, it is awesome to have the product displayed right in the URL, but it will be odd that online orders come only from 4.6% of potential buyers (the market share of the Safari browser).
I understand that it works for you, but be honest, it is a special case.


David
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