The Steel Lady: DNS Providers

by James Gilbert Pynn

I had the idea the other day to start a website dedicated to the works of Danielle Steel. Some of you will applaud me, most of you will jeer. I accept that. I am not perfect, but I am dedicated. Indeed, I defy any of the naysayers to read the 1977 classic, PASSION’S PROMISE and not be moved to tears. To have a heart is to know the Steel Lady. But I digress. The point here is that I had an excellent idea for a website.

Your first step is the deepest: you have to get hosted. Not like Mr. Roarke on Fantasy Island, but like getting an address. This means you need a catchy website name, like www.steelladyofletters.com. Now, this will effectively be your domain name. “A what?” you ask. Oh, my poor Tattoo, you will learn shortly how the fantasy of a website will become reality. Cut to commercial.

have name, will travel, straight to a host who will essentially “carry” it. Think real estate. You have the plans to your dream home, now you need a piece of land to build on. That piece of land will then be your address. But in this case you will get to actually determine your address. Nifty, no? Yes. This is where a DNS provider makes an entrance like William Shatner, complete with tumbles and jazz hands.

Other than registering (hosting) your domain name, a DNS provider is also responsible for making sure when people type in your URL address your site pops up. So, of course, it stands to reason that you would want to get hosted on a reputable, far-reaching provider. By far-reaching I mean one that has numerous geographical servers located throughout the nation. Worldwide would be even better. This ensures when people in France or Australia type in your website address, it shows up.

One thing to be aware of is that DNS providers share their servers to accommodate the tremendous demands of Web 2.0. It essentially smacks of fractional-reserve banking, you know, what your local bank does when it lends money based on possessing a fraction of the actual loan amount, but the DNS servers are far more reliable than your local bank. If it’s still there these days. Anyway, my point is find a good host. And then hail Lady Steel.

About the Author:

Article Source

Leave a Reply

CommentLuv badge