Support for additional languages

Published: 21 April 2001 y., Saturday
VeriSign, the company charged by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) with registering and administrating the .com, .org., and .net domain names, which act as addresses for Web sites, announced that it has added support for an additional 180 languages, bringing the total number of languages available in which to register domain names to more than 350. Since early November, when VeriSign first began offering multilingual domain names, hundreds of thousands of non-English domains have been registered, with many companies registering the phonetic equivalents of their names in other languages, according to VeriSign. The new domains allow users whose languages do not rely on the Roman system of letters and numbers to create and register domains in their native writing systems, the company said. The new domain options now include the languages used by roughly 80 percent of the world's population, VeriSign said. However, the company did offer one caveat, saying that the multilingual domain-name program is not yet final and that some domains registered now might be invalidated when the program is finalized. Until then, users can start registering domains in Old English, Old Icelandic, Neo-Aramaic, Inner Mongolian, Tamil, Bengali, Armenian, and Esperanto, among others.
Šaltinis: infoworld.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

IBM makes e-commerce software push

IBM will start selling its Web software with enhancements to let companies conduct fully automated electronic commerce on the Internet without people clicking on browsers. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Singapore: 99% Of Businesses Have Net Connections

A massive 98.7 percent of Singapore companies have Internet connections, and business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce is expected to be worth 109 billion Singapore dollars more »

Poland develops NATO e-mail safety codes

Specialists from the State Protection Office (UOP) have developed an e-mail safety code scheme for use in NATO countries' national security systems more »

Microsoft changes licensing

Move may make software pricier for many firms more »

The latest harmful code

The "Homepage" Internet-Worm Does Not Pose a Threat to Kaspersky Anti-Virus Users more »

CRM By Subscription

Bank of America signs with ASP but can license software later more »

Palm Slips, Pocket PC Gains In Europe

Sales of Pocket PCs, and particularly Compaq's iPAQ handheld, surged in Western Europe in the first quarter of 2001 while Psion handhelds lost ground and Palm had mixed results more »

Speak, Aibo, speak

Sony's robot dog is learning some new tricks and, as a true high-tech pet, will be able to fetch e-mail. more »

Microsoft to ship Windows XP in October

MICROSOFT will announce this week that Windows XP is slated to ship in late October more »