| 1) Reliable email addresses: If you think about this question for five seconds that is about four too many. Gmail and you're done. (Word to the wise: don't get that account compromised.) 2) Privacy: I really didn't mind having my information theoretically out there until the first time I got a call from a Romanian high school student asking me for advice on setting up his software business. I actually don't mind giving advice to people, but the 4:30 AM wakeup call was unanticipated. Private registration does not mean "the registrar owns your domain". It is quiiiiite the racket for GoDaddy et al, but the overwhelming majority of large-scale domain buyers I'm acquainted with avail themselves of it. Hosting: Orthogonal to who you register the domain with. All registrars will let you change the DNS settings for the domain to point to your DNS server of choice. For example, GoDaddy has all my domains pointed at ns1.slicehost.net, etc. From there I configure what machine the domain resolves to by changing DNS records at Slicehost. Note that changing DNS records is essentially at will but it is not instantaneous. If you do it to a production website you have to take some care to avoid service interruptions. Edited to add: You exhibited some interest in parking. I would not get your hopes up -- the domains which are available for registration these days generally do not generate the level of type-in traffic to make appreciable amounts of income. The folks who make money through parking do it because they control super-premium domain names or portfolios with 100k+ domains in them. Given your current level of understanding of the field, you're not nearly ready to make money merely by possessing domains, so you can get away with not worrying about this factor at all. (Instead, I would suggest putting up a mini-site on the domain and then putting at least one decent link to that site ASAP to start it aging like a fine cheese. This is mostly for SEO reasons.) |
That is definitely one of the most interesting SEO analogies I've read yet.
I'll just add a little bit about what a decent link is: Google is smart enough these days to tell an "artificial" link from a "natural" link. As a result links from the sidebars or blogrolls of other websites, link from signatures and most links from profiles are not decent links and will do very little to affect the rankings of your domain.
However, one or two links in the body of a blog post or web article can be worth hundreds of blogroll links. Note however that the content of the blog post or article must be closely related to whatever the content of the website is.