A domain that you can only use for commercial purposes...
Usage Requirements
.CHANNEL domain names are intended solely for use by creators and publishers to host or redirect to storefronts featuring digital and physical products, and audience-building mechanisms for the purpose of monetisation.That enforcement action including termination may be taken for a domain name that is being used in a manner inconsistent with the .CHANNEL usage Requirements;
vaporeon.computer, if it is available (I didn't check), would be 42€ per year, that's a lot more than my .net domain...
@vaporeon_ my favorite website URL is
so Jeff Gerstmann (video games playing man/former games journalist/former co-creator of Giant Bomb) does a YouTube series where he plays every single NES game and is ranking them on a list. "By the science", he calls it. All his rankings are scientific. (this is a joke and there is no science.)
But someone else made a website for it that displays the list, and it's at 8bitnintendo.science
@vaporeon_ fwiw; one day I do want to have a website, using one of these funny tlds.
But I think the issue is deciding on the domain, rather than the TLD?
Is that the right term? I googled "parts of the URL" and they defined "domain" as the entire www.example.com
but I mean the example part of it
@The_T URLs follow a hierarchical structure, some registry owns .com, potentially some other registry owns .fish, and so on. So now if you want to buy a domain, you buy e.g. the-ti.com or vaporeon.fish from some registrar. The prices are different depending on which TLD you want, and also some countries have requirements that you, for example, have to live there in order to register the domain. I can't get e.g. vaporeon.aq because .aq has the requirement of working in Antarctica or maintaining a remote installation there, I can't get vaporeon.cat because I don't speak Catalan, .fish is more expensive than .net, and so on.
And once you own the-ti.com, you yourself can set whatever sub-domains you want for it assuming that you can set up the DNS properly, e.g. you could have streams.the-ti.com and blog.the-ti.com and whatever.the-ti.com and point them all at different servers or to different web sites on the same server if you wanted
@vaporeon_ right, I know all that.
I just think the-t.anything would be a terrible name. I'd rather it be like... something related to the stream, or like the name of my friend group as a whole, something along those lines.
Less about branding and more about flavor.
(That said, I also need a better name for my YouTube channel. "The T" has poor SEO.)
@The_T Did I misunderstand the question, then, if you know all that?
@vaporeon_ yeah. My question was, in the URL itself
www. example .com
.com is the top-level domain
www is probably something else
example is... do you just call that "the domain" or is there another name for it?
because one site seemed to think "the domain" is the whole thing, from www. to .com
@wallhackio @The_T @vaporeon_ example.com is itself also a subdomain
arguably, even as a root domain, i think .com is regarded as a subdomain of a domain with no name
@aescling @wallhackio @The_T @vaporeon_ So part of the point is that `com.` is not actually a "root domain", although it is called a "top level domain" because it's a domain name, at the top level underneath the root (which, as you say, doesn't have a text representation in DNS). There are nameservers for the root ({a-l}.root-servers.net), while `com.` uses {a-l}.gtld-servers.net. (You can see them in action by running, say, `dig +trace example.com`.)
@aschmitz @aescling @wallhackio @vaporeon_ aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
@vaporeon_ @The_T @aschmitz @wallhackio i think they mean they’re overwhelmed
@aescling @wallhackio @The_T @vaporeon_ (To answer the question earlier in the thread, technically `example.com` would be a second-level domain, but in that domain name, I'm not sure there's a specific term for just `example`. If the subject of "domain names that random other things can be shelved under" is of interest, you may enjoy the Public Suffix List: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Suffix_List and matching "effective top-level domains".)
@wallhackio @The_T @vaporeon_ like, secretly, the actual name of the full domain is
www.example.com., or at least, BIND seems to think so