Internet Domains and (Small) Business

Tuesday, October 09 2007 @ 03:56 PM UTC

The Internet domain name system is probably the most misunderstood aspect of the Internet in the eyes of the small business owner. The questions I get and the problems I've seen have prompted me to write this article to provide some basic information and some pragmatic rules for small business owners to follow.

Most people today see domain names as part of two different facilities, e-mail and web addresses. In an e-mail address, the domain is the part to the right of the @ symbol. In a web address (Universal Resource Locator or URL) it is the part after the "http://" or "ftp://" and before the next "/" so in http://www.pacdat.net/Digital_Rag/ the domain is "www.pacdat.net".

First a bit of history and some basic semantics.

Putting names to computers was invented to give human memory a bit of a break. Internet systems actually address each other using a set of numbers called an Internet Protocol (IP) address - based on 4 sets of digits from 0 to 255 each separated by a period as follows:

1.2.3.4 or 192.168.100.1 or 24.80.116.254 or 255.255.255.255

Back when there were only a few hundred or even a few thousand systems connected to the Internet, there was a simple text file conversion utility that identified a computer with a number. These files of addresses were all kept up to date by hand. As the number of machines grew, keeping the files up to date became a real problem.

Example of a "hosts" file

192.168.100.1              pacdat1
192.168.100.3              portapitt
207.6.141.128              www

Fortunately Dr. Mockapetris and the late Dr. Jonathan Postel, in 1983, saw the need for a more automated and distributed facility and invented the Domain Name Service (DNS).


Richard's Digital Rag Daily
http://blog.pacdat.net/article.php/20071009155624398