More efficient search facility

Published: 8 May 1999 y., Saturday
Domain name registrar Network Solutions Inc. (NSI) is embarking on a new life, and it plans to take its customers along. The company was the only Internet domain name registrar for .com, .org, and .net addresses in the world -- under a contract with the U.S. government -- until this week. Monday saw competition open up to five rivals including America Online, the largest ISP in the world. A flood of others registrars is due to follow in July. But NSI has plans beyond straight registration. The company aims to launch a service in June called the dot com directory. It is expected to offer a search facility, which, NSI said, will be a lot more efficient than a search engine. NSI senior vice president sales and marketing Douglas Wolford said the dot com directory would allow searches based on company name or the name of a product, or a phone number. It was built on NSI_s database of 4.2 million customers, all of whom will get a free listing in the directory unless they opted out, Wolford said.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Annual evaluation of "Top 100 Sites"

LITHUANIAN WEBSITE – BEST IN THE WORLD more »

The increasing sophistication of the attacks

Hacker Attacks Continue To Rise In Korea - Study more »

The latest version of database program

Behold Oracle's Sexy, 'Cheap' DB more »

Be careful...

Virus lures with hint of bootleg McVeigh video more »

‘AOL virus': Joke's on you

Created as a spoof of the recent sulfnbk.exe hoax, a joke warning people of a virus named AOL.exe has some deleting the Internet program from their computers. more »

429 Million Online Worldwide

The First Quarter 2001 Global Internet Trends report from Nielsen//NetRatings measured Internet use in 27 countries around the world and found 429 million people have Internet access. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Viruses may soon be on a handheld near you

Though there have only been 12 viruses that specifically target handheld devices like mobile phones and PDAs, the next year or two is likely to see an explosion of viruses for these platforms more »

Philippines reopens 'I Love You' virus case

The case against Onel de Guzman -- the alleged author of the "I Love You" virus -- has been reopened after the Philippine National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) filed a motion for reconsideration at the Prosecutor's Office of the Department of Justice more »

Site puts private cell calls on Web

Your next cellphone call in Ottawa could be a source of voyeuristic entertainment for Web surfers around the world. more »