Posts Tagged ‘domain names’

Fabulously Dramatic .tel Names Still Available Dahhhhling!

Monday, September 28th, 2009

It’s fall and we can finally fling off the barbeques and picnics of summer and move into loftier pursuits – like the theatre. I can barely believe that these “front row” dot tel names are yours for the buying.

Farce
Interlude
Playbill
CurtainCall
Ovation
Understudy
Swordfight
Kabuki
Libretto
StandingOvation
LeadingLady
LeadingMan
Macbeth
LadyMacbeth
Soliliquy
Troupe
OffBroadway
Masque
Hiss
Ballad
Disguise
FringeFestival
ComedyFestival
KingLear
Sandbag
Prologue
Rake
Repertory
Offstage
Pantomime

On with the show, this is it!

.TEL News – Superbook is now available for iPhone Users

Monday, May 25th, 2009

iphone-street-handSuperbook is the new iPhone address book application that leverages .TEL to connect you with your contacts instantly.

This .TEL specific application will read any of your contacts who have a .TEL name and make them instantly accessible to you. Superbook searches all your contacts and tells you where they are on a map. Contact the closest ones at the touch of a button. Cool features include the ability to sort your contacts by distance to you (do this under “settings”).

Superbook is available off of Apple’s app store, or you can download it/learn more about it at http://superbook.tel/.

Outlook and .tel – changing jobs just became easier!

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

With the constant stream of grim economic news about layoffs, bankruptcies and closures it’s not difficult to wonder if the axe is going to fall on you next.

So do you jump or do you wait?  If you get laid off, you have to tell all your friends, family members, professional associates and clients that you can no longer be reached at your work email and phone. 

If you are lucky enough to get another job, you have to tell all your friends, family members, professional associates and clients that you can now be reached at your new work email and phone. 
 
I don’t know about you, but I never put people’s email addresses in my Contacts in Outlook anymore.  The nickname or autocomplete feature has taken away the need for that.  I type a letter or two and it shows me a list of names to choose from.

So now I am either at home or at my new office and I have to re-type all of the info into the address bar and send out the email that I can now be reached at the following address and phone.  Sure, I might have been a clever clogs and copied my .nk2 file from my old machine and copied it onto my new machine, thus preserving my nicknames, but how many people remember to do that?

Employed or unemployed, there has to be a better way. .tel shines a much needed beacon of hope onto the whole mess.

I have lisa.tel.  All my friends have laura.tel, dave.tel, suzi.tel etc.  We are “friended” within the Telnic TelHosting system.

I arrive at my new job and I install the .tel Outlook tool (there is a beta version available from Telnic at the time of this writing).  I log in via the tool and all of my friends’ information comes down into my Outlook.  I don’t have to type their addresses in from a list.

But wait – it gets better.  I don’t have to email them that I have a new job. 

When they log into their Outlook in the morning, the .tel Outlook tool goes out to the TelHosting platform and polls to see if there are any changes.  Your new email address that you updated the night before, comes zooming down into their Outlook. 

They might not catch on for weeks that the address they are sending to has changed.  Your name comes up, they email you, you keep responding to dinner invites.

With .tel, staying connected just got easier.

.TEL Popularity on the Rise – Trademark Holders Advised to Pre-book

Thursday, October 30th, 2008
The Ottawa Citizen recently published an excellent article by Gillian Shaw of CanWest News about the upcoming .TEL domain.  Shaw draws a picture of .TEL’s potential to change the way we share contact information and market our businesses, and gets the opinion of “Godfather of .CA” John Demco on the new extension.

Asking a prospective date for a phone number is so last century. Starting soon, it’ll be “what’s your dot.tel?”

There’s a new online gold rush gathering momentum as pre-registration ramps up for the Internet’s new .tel domain that lets individuals, companies and organizations store all their contact information in a virtual phone book for life.

Even though their phone numbers, e-mail or address may change, their .tel remains the same. It can be updated and customized by the user so they can be found by anyone who knows their .tel name. Or not, as the case may be, since the .tel service also lets users decide how much contact information they want to share and who they want to share it with.

It can include everything from a home or office phone number, to a mobile phone, e-mail, Facebook, Twitter or any of the increasing number of ways people choose to stay in touch. Unlike a phone book or a business card that can be outdated the minute someone moves or changes jobs, a .tel identity can be updated anytime.

In a customized twist on the old practice of an unlisted phone number, just like Facebook you can choose to share information with friends, keeping it hidden from others. Or you can share certain contact info with acquaintances and clients, saving your secret home cellphone number for only close friends and family.

For people you really don’t want to hear from or pesky telemarketers, you can send them on a wild-goose chase by giving them bogus contact information. You can also map your location, a plus for businesses that can direct customers straight to their door with nothing more than a .tel name.

“At a fairly straightforward level it is a way for you to give someone your contact information just by giving them your .tel name,” said John Demco, co-found and director of Webnames.ca and the man known as the godfather of .CA for his work in creating the Internet’s .ca country code top-level domain for Canada.

“If you gave me your .tel name, I would be able to put that into my cellphone and I’d be able to contact you automatically with whatever contact information you have put with that.”

Read the rest of the article.

Early indicators suggest .TEL is going to be very popular. In a recent press release the registry operator responsible for .TEL, Telnic.org, announced that more than 100 registrars are either accredited or intend to offer .TEL to the public.

Webnames.ca, an official accredited registrar for .TEL is encouraging prospective registrants, especially trademark holders to pre-book early. Webnames.ca noted that because .TEL names function more like directory listings than websites, it might be difficult for customers to know whether the information provided in a TEL domain is  from the right company. For example, if you hold the trademark for ABC Brand, but neglect to register the corresponding .TEL, a competitor could register ABCBRAND.TEL and divert your customers.

Trademark holders that do not pre-book to register their names during the Sunrise Period risk losing out to competitors during the Landrush and General Availability registration periods. Instead of chasing down .TEL domains in violation of your trademark after the fact, ensure your .TEL domains are protected from the get-go.

Sunrise Regsitration begins December 3, 2008.