Ha, fancy running into you two here. +1 to checking out rootly, they have the friendliest people in the incident business
Do you really <i>own</i> your domain? You're likely dependent on a registrar where you're probably a $10/year (i.e. nearly nothing) paying customer. What if your domain registrar simply fails and loses…
The big difference is that social networks are often the most interesting in the beginning. Novelty makes them a lot more fun. And you can't relive that new social network experience on DVD.
Ha, fancy running into you two here. +1 to checking out rootly, they have the friendliest people in the incident business
Do you really <i>own</i> your domain? You're likely dependent on a registrar where you're probably a $10/year (i.e. nearly nothing) paying customer. What if your domain registrar simply fails and loses…
The big difference is that social networks are often the most interesting in the beginning. Novelty makes them a lot more fun. And you can't relive that new social network experience on DVD.