If you used the example link in the first message of this thread of course your going to get www.jkshdfkljh23sadf.com. Oddly enough, that is a registered site. It's not a DNS redirect.
>> To see if this has been enabled in your area, try visiting {some random string}.com in your Web browser. This feature subverts user preferences set within browsers, which allow the user to select which search engine receives their typos and invalid domains. RoadRunner users can disable this function -- or they can just use OpenDNS. Here is an example RoadRunner results page.
jkshdfkljh23sadf.com is a real site.
http://www.networksolutions.com/whois/results.jsp?domain=jkshdfkljh23sadf.com
The earliest ver of OS2 could run on 16MB. This was pre Warp days. 16 megs of memory probably cost a grand back then too. That was OS/2's bigger problem. More so than IBM relationship with MS.
If you used the example link in the first message of this thread of course your going to get www.jkshdfkljh23sadf.com. Oddly enough, that is a registered site. It's not a DNS redirect.
Whois: http://www.networksolutions.com/whois/results.jsp?domain=jkshdfkljh23sadf.com
>> To see if this has been enabled in your area, try visiting {some random string}.com in your Web browser. This feature subverts user preferences set within browsers, which allow the user to select which search engine receives their typos and invalid domains. RoadRunner users can disable this function -- or they can just use OpenDNS. Here is an example RoadRunner results page. jkshdfkljh23sadf.com is a real site. http://www.networksolutions.com/whois/results.jsp?domain=jkshdfkljh23sadf.com
The earliest ver of OS2 could run on 16MB. This was pre Warp days. 16 megs of memory probably cost a grand back then too. That was OS/2's bigger problem. More so than IBM relationship with MS.