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The Watercooler
dotcom resellers sitting on a dotbomb?
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<blockquote data-quote="mole" data-source="post: 6419" data-attributes="member: 264"><p>Sure. I recognise that .com was the only domain available for businesses that made sense at a time when internet addressing was "take it or leave it"</p><p></p><p>If you base your whole business premise on history, on the past, then I can only wish you well.</p><p></p><p>Welcome to the new economy, where the past is seen as a liability. Where loyalty and emotions to the old, is seen as a weakness.</p><p></p><p>I actually bought into the argument a few years ago that .com was and will be the most prized extension because it represented heritage.</p><p></p><p>Today, I can see that is nothing more than a fallacy created by people to protect their own self-interest, domain industry or any other industry.</p><p></p><p>Dotcom riffraff, yes safesys. You know that, I know that. Truth hurts, and factual evidence hurts.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mole, post: 6419, member: 264"] Sure. I recognise that .com was the only domain available for businesses that made sense at a time when internet addressing was "take it or leave it" If you base your whole business premise on history, on the past, then I can only wish you well. Welcome to the new economy, where the past is seen as a liability. Where loyalty and emotions to the old, is seen as a weakness. I actually bought into the argument a few years ago that .com was and will be the most prized extension because it represented heritage. Today, I can see that is nothing more than a fallacy created by people to protect their own self-interest, domain industry or any other industry. Dotcom riffraff, yes safesys. You know that, I know that. Truth hurts, and factual evidence hurts. [/QUOTE]
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dotcom resellers sitting on a dotbomb?
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