I’ve been using Google Chrome since the day it came out and to tell you it has simplified my browsing habits would be an understatement. Here are few features I can’t live without:
1. I tend to visit certain sites few times a day. Domaining.com , Moniker , CNN , and a couple of others. Since these are the more frequent sites I visit, when I enter the first letter, Google Chrome automatically picks up the most likely domain I would type. For example, to visit Domaining.com all I need to do is type D and enter. To visit Moniker.com it is a M and enter. This saves me lots of typing and clicking to get to the sites I like most. Since the posting on 23 October 2008 of the Draft Applicant Guidebook for New Generic Top-Level Domains , ICANN has been receiving valuable comments from the Internet community. Several of the comments and questions have been focused on the proposed gTLD base agreement. Via LifeHacker :“New web service Nombray is out to help folks establish their online identity by registering their name-based domain. Enter your name into the Nombray search engine and register the various available combinations of vanity URL available. (For example, a search for my name returns GinaTrapani.name, GinaTrapani.us, GTrapani.com, etc.) Then, register the URLs of your choice for $20 apiece, and use Nombray’s simple web page designer and hosting service to link to the various social networks and profiles you’ve set up across the web.”
Via NamePros , DomainBits , and DNForum :
“Over 1,000 high quality domains have been stolen by a thief in Iran. He has brazenly set up a website to sell the domains - LuxaryDomains.com. As well, he is sending out lots of emails to domainers informing them of the domains he has available. Here is a partial list of domains stolen: * Three members of the ICANN Board of Directors * Three At Large Advisory Committee (ALAC) representatives (one each from Africa, Asia/Australia/Pacific and Latin America & Caribbean regions) * Two members of the Council of the Generic Names Supporting Organization (GNSO) * One member of the Council of the Country-Code Names Supporting Organization (ccNSO) Global Internet Number Resource Policies are defined by the ASO MOU - between ICANN and the NRO - as "Internet number resource policies that have the agreement of all RIRs according to their policy development processes and ICANN, and require specific actions or outcomes on the part of IANA or any other external ICANN-related body in order to be implemented". Attachment A of this MOU describes the Development Process of Global Internet Number Resource Policies, including the adoption by every RIR of a global policy to be forwarded to the ICANN Board by the ASO, as well as its ratification by the ICANN Board. In this context, the ICANN Board adopted its own Procedures for the Review of Internet Number Resource Policies Forwarded by the ASO for Ratification.
In June 2005, a balding, slightly overweight, perpetually T-shirt-clad
26-year-old computer consultant named Dan Kaminsky decided to get in
shape. He began by scanning the Internet for workout tips and read that
five minutes of sprinting was the equivalent of a half-hour jog. This
seemed like a great shortcut -- an elegant exercise hack -- so he
bought some running shoes at the nearest Niketown. That same afternoon,
he laced up his new kicks and burst out the front door of his Seattle
apartment building for his first five-minute workout. He took a few
strides, slipped on a concrete ramp and crashed to the sidewalk,
shattering his left elbow.
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