I agree,

With all the re-directs and server-side stuff needed, it's an awful lot of
overhead. If you need counters, and get lots of traffic to the sites, expect
delays and slow-downs.

On top of it, meta-redirect only works 99% of the time. Meta refresh has
been known to not work 100%, especially if the visitor has lots of 3rd party
toolbars installed on their browser, popup killer, etc...

Too much is dependant on the client!

Rick


> Exactly!  What's the point of hosting your site at
>
> www.some-cool-domain.com
>
> if you always have to tell people who come to your site to go to
>
> www.some-cool-domain.com/some-other-junk-to-make-it-work
>
> Unless of course you're going to build a "splash page" listing the
> different companies on the homepage of the root directory for the domain.
>
> My opinion....
>
> Your client should just sell to the highest bidder, or divide the domain
> into subdomains.
>
> /John
>
>
> Roland A. Dumas wrote:
>
> >
> > On Nov 3, 2003, at 10:25 AM, Dan Stein wrote:
> >
> >> Ben,
> >>
> >> I don't see the problem. The DNS points to the domain we want
> >> everyone to
> >> see.  Then all we are doing is loading a different web site depending
> >> on how
> >> they come in but hiding all the links through frames or forms so the
> >> browser
> >> URL address  always remains the same.
> >>
> >
> >
> > the key is "depending on how they come in"
> > - how would each company's visitors come in differently from  other
> > companies' visitors?
> >
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>
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