Welcome to DNForum.com™ - Domain Sales, Domain Forum, Domain Appraisals, Domain Registrars
If you are new to domains and looking to buy, sell and learn about domains then you have come to the right place. DNForum is the oldest global domain name community on the internet and continues to grow every day. There are over 45,000 domainers on DNForum doing everything from buying domains, selling domains, using our free in-house built tools, learning about domains and discussing domains. Take a minute and Register.
China has always been a massive support to 3 and 4 letter numerical acronyms. This is because the Chinese have used western numerals for centuries and therefore find this much more familiar than our alphabetic characters. The need to represent numbers with more numbers will disappear to a large extent with the adoption of IDN. They will remain brandable, but the upside potential will be greatly diminished.
From what I understand Chinese keyboards have direct, single-key access to all digits (0 through 9) but typing one of the many thousand's of native characters (or 2-character groups) is much more difficult. Can you confirm that?
Can anyone from China tell me what 224 means, if anything? I got some interest from China on this .com but not sure if it means anything.
Numeric names are true IDNs. Numbers are universal in every country, every keyboard, every cell phone and in every language.
That's not completely true. For example, here is a Thai keyboard:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Keyboard_Layout_Thai.png
Armenian:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Keyboard_Layout_Armenian.png
Just a couple of examples, I'm sure there are more.
I do like numeric domains, however...
http://www.dnforum.com/showthread.php?t=184145
Those images only show the main part of the keyboard. Most keyboards also have a numeric keypad on the right, so even those where the top keys aren't 1 through 0 still have single-key access to all (Latin) digits.
True, they may have access, but the claim was that "numbers are universal worldwide". I don't think some people understand that other countries and languages have their own numerals.
True, they may have access, but the claim was that "numbers are universal worldwide". I don't think some people understand that other countries and languages have their own numerals.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.