Eliminating “www” [Part 2]

By Daniel Miessler on July 26th, 2007: Tagged as Internet | Protocols | Standards
  • http://hewgill.com/ Greg Hewgill

    It’s a bit disappointing to me that the majority of comments to your original post disagreed with the premise of no-www, often on the basis of misunderstanding. “But I can just hit ctrl-enter!” or “The internet isn’t just the web!” or “Not all sites work this way!”. I guess people just don’t read the article in the first place.

    Having said the above, I still believe that in print, one should include either “http://” or “www.” in front of the domain name. Unless you’re specifically targeting a very hip, tech-savvy audience, most people won’t recognise a lone domain name something they can type into their browser.

    Finally, as I mentioned in my reply to your original post, a subdomain of some sort is required when using a CDN like Akamai. I think the most important point to take away from this is that web publishers should use redirection to maintain a consistent web presence under a single name. Be liberal in what you accept, and conservative in what you send.

  • http://hewgill.com Greg Hewgill

    It’s a bit disappointing to me that the majority of comments to your original post disagreed with the premise of no-www, often on the basis of misunderstanding. “But I can just hit ctrl-enter!” or “The internet isn’t just the web!” or “Not all sites work this way!”. I guess people just don’t read the article in the first place.

    Having said the above, I still believe that in print, one should include either “http://” or “www.” in front of the domain name. Unless you’re specifically targeting a very hip, tech-savvy audience, most people won’t recognise a lone domain name something they can type into their browser.

    Finally, as I mentioned in my reply to your original post, a subdomain of some sort is required when using a CDN like Akamai. I think the most important point to take away from this is that web publishers should use redirection to maintain a consistent web presence under a single name. Be liberal in what you accept, and conservative in what you send.

  • http://dmiessler.com/ Daniel Miessler

    Great points, Greg.

  • http://dmiessler.com Daniel Miessler

    Great points, Greg.

  • http://MacThemes.net/ Richard Neal

    Daniel, you’re in the Boston Globe. The Business Filter on Page 2 of Business and Innovation has a blurb about this post!

  • http://MacThemes.net Richard Neal

    Daniel, you’re in the Boston Globe. The Business Filter on Page 2 of Business and Innovation has a blurb about this post!


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