Comment #50 described how Mac OS X 10.2 did it.  Here is how Mac OS X
v10.[456] does it. (http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3473).

"As long as your network's DNS server is properly configured, you do not
have to make any changes on your client Mac.

Host names that contain only one label in addition to local, for example
"My-Computer.local", are resolved using Multicast DNS (Bonjour) by
default. Host names that contain two or more labels in addition to
local, for example "server.domain.local", are resolved using a DNS
server by default.

Additionally, Mac OS X v10.6 automatically detects when the local
network operator has set up a name server that will answer name requests
for a domain ending in ".local". It does this by checking to see if
there is a Start Of Authority (SOA) record for the top level domain
"local", which is how a DNS server indicates that it claims to have
authority over a part of the DNS namespace. As long as the DNS server is
properly configured with the required SOA record, Mac OS X v10.6 will
detect this SOA record and automatically use this server to look up all
host names in the domain."

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/327362

Title:
  Some ISPs have .local domain which disables avahi-daemon

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