Youre Joking arent you? We should feel sorry for Telemarketers because its THE ONLY JOB THEY CAN GET? C'mon.. There are so many reasons thats a lame argument.. where do you begin.. I hope she is doing something worthwhile now, like suing the Telemarketers for lasting depression brought on by the job!
Actually its my experience that whilst slow. Registering domain names in the.au space is handled much more thoroughly than in the.com or.org or.net space. You actually have to prove you are a commercial entity to get a.COM.AU, you need to prove you are non profit to get.ORG.AU, and.NET.AU only goes to networks. Its a huge ammount of work to enforce these rules which have completely gone by the wayside in the TLD managed by *commercial entities*. We should be saying "thank you!" not "thank god..."
I was reading the doco on the ArrowPoint CSS switch today, and its KeepAlives can use an MD5 checksum on the content of a web page to make sure your server is up. Prior ART.
Youre Joking arent you? We should feel sorry for Telemarketers because its THE ONLY JOB THEY CAN GET? C'mon.. There are so many reasons thats a lame argument.. where do you begin.. I hope she is doing something worthwhile now, like suing the Telemarketers for lasting depression brought on by the job!
Actually its my experience that whilst slow. Registering domain names in the .au space is handled much more thoroughly than in the .com or .org or .net space. You actually have to prove you are a commercial entity to get a .COM.AU, you need to prove you are non profit to get .ORG.AU, and .NET.AU only goes to networks. Its a huge ammount of work to enforce these rules which have completely gone by the wayside in the TLD managed by *commercial entities*. We should be saying "thank you!" not "thank god..."
I was reading the doco on the ArrowPoint CSS switch today, and its KeepAlives can use an MD5 checksum on the content of a web page to make sure your server is up. Prior ART.