lazybrick.com lazybrick.com
   Home Page -> About Us -> Privacy Policy -> Terms of Service -> Place Your Link -> Add Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Travel & Accommodation

Careers & Employment

Property & Estate

Business & Companies

Music & Entertainment

Art & Culture

Self Healing

Society & Communities

Sports & Adventure

Games & Play

Healthcare & Treatment

Fitness & Health

Computers & Software

Finance & Investment

Home Family & Garden

Technology & Science

Education & Reference

Relationship & Lifestyle

Children & Teens

Law & Politics

News & Events

Automobiles

Drink & Food

Malls & Shopping

 

Home Page › Computers & Software › Internet Domain Names
 

Internet Basics: Domain Name Forwarding is Like a Hall of Mirrors

 

Ever been in a hall of mirrors at a circus or carnival? You go in, and you think youre heading in one direction only to find out bonk! that was a mirror or glass, and suddenly youre headed in a different direction all together.

Thats what domain name forwarding is like.

Say youre on the Internet and you hear about a great new product and you can find out all about it at newproduct.com. So you type newproduct.com into your browser.

Only you dont end up at newproduct.com. Instead, you somehow end up at othersite.com. Youre not too concerned, because there on the page is the product you were looking for as well as some other products besides.

But how come you didnt end up at newproduct.com? And if the people with the product wanted you to end up at othersite.com, why didnt they put that domain name instead?

To answer the first question, you probably ended up at othersite.com instead of newproduct.com because of domain forwarding. If so, the people who set this up did the following:

They bought the domain name othersite.com and created a website there with all their products.

They bought the domain name newproduct.com and told people thats where the new product info is.

They used domain forwarding so that whoever went to newproduct.com would get forwarded to othersite.com. They could use domain forwarding with other domain names as well, such as bigproduct.com, smallproduct.com, and tinyproduct.com. No matter which domain name you went to, youd end up exactly where they wanted you, which was at othersite.com, where ALL their products are.

To answer the second question, the reasons theyd do this are:

Instead of having different websites for each product, people often put all their products on one site, or at one domain name, but advertise the products individually using product-specific domain names. Why? (see below)

Its more impressive to have a product-specific domain name (e.g., superbike.com) than just a generic domain name (e.g., bikestore.com). Its also more likely youll remember the product-specific domain name.

Now, most of us would only be mildly confused to end up on othersite.com when we thought we were going to newproduct.com. In fact, a lot of us wouldnt even notice we didnt end up at the domain name we thought we were going to not unless we looked at the top of our browser to the URL address of the webpage we ended up on.

But where it can get confusing is this. The people with the domain name newproduct.com could use masked domain forwarding. With masked domain forwarding, youd type in newproduct.com, youd end up at othersite.com, but the fact you were forwarded would be masked. In other words, the URL address at the top of the browser would indicate you were indeed at newproduct.com, when in fact, you were at othersite.com.

And to make things even more confusing, no matter which page you went to on othersite.com (which is where youd really be), the URL at the top of your browser would still read newproduct.com. Now thats confusing!

Either way, masked or unmasked, domain forwarding simply spins the visitor around a bit, moving them this way when they thought theyd be going that way.

And thats why domain name forwarding is like a hall of mirrors.

Author: Grant Pasay
 
Author Bio:

Grant Pasay

Grant Pasay is a professional website copywriter, advertising copywriter, and SEO copywriter serving clients in Vancouver, BC and everywhere. Grant is also the author of the FREE e-book, "The Internet Is Like A Refrigerator."

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Enigma: Rising Tide Review
 
Free Ways to Tackle Threats to Your Computer
 
What is Software Piracy?
 
eBook Solutions
 
Critical Business Procedure - Keep All Email Communications
 
5 Quick Steps For Home Business Newbies To Create Their Own Websites
 
Credit Card Processing - 7 Things You Need to Know Before Opening an Online Merchant Account
 
Email Builds Brands
 
Protecting Your PC for Free
 
Book Yourself Solid, 7 Keys To Getting More Clients Than You Can Handle Even If You Hate Marketing
 
 
 
 
 

Affiliate Marketing as a Balancing Act

Being an affiliate marketer requires some real skill! Not only do you have to be a creative thinker ... - Dave Cooper
 

Google's Paypal Competitor

Paypal has a new competitor in the form of Google Checkout. Loyal Paypal users now have a choice and ... - Matthew Keegan
 

How to Detect Fraudulent Wholesalers and Companies?

This article throws light on the ever worrying issue of dealing with legitimate wholesalers and expl ... - William King
 
 

SEO, the Simplified Version

This is the simply version of SEO. - D. Patel
 

Online Parties - The Latest Trend in Direct Sales

Online ?Home? Parties have become the latest trend in direct sales. Simply put, an online party is s ... - Stefanie Fauquet
 
 
Home Page -> Privacy Policy -> Terms of Service
Copyright © 2008 www.lazybrick.com