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by blueflow 1564 days ago
So are absolute domain names, but everyone is using relative domain specifications now, omitting the final dot.

HTTP Transfer-Encoding also got specified, and then collectively mis-implemented.

That its in the standard for decades doesnt mean it will be good when used.

2 comments

This doesn't make sense as an argument. Without TCP DNS, you're stuck with an untenably low limit for how much data can fit in a DNS response. Not having TCP DNS breaks DNS. It's not an aesthetic argument.
I can use absolute domain names just fine in the software I use.