Feb 20
So, long before our library had a nice and short website URL, we used a rather long one that isn't as easy to remember as one might think:
saratoga.lib.ny.us

Now, we've primarily been using the newer, shorter URL, and have almost all but forgotten about this longer, harder to remember one. Now that we need to move from a purely in-house hosted server to (something else), I need to change the nameservers for each of our domains. The older, longer domain name has lost all related information, possibly during the internal changes at the original .US TLD registrar service. So then, in order to get this back, because it was originally used for US governmental domains, I need to go through a whole slew of forms and bureaucracy with vocabulary that I don't entirely understand, and most of my friends will tell you that I'm quite fluent, at least more so than they are (for the most part).

So, can anyone give me any good reason as to why we should even bother trying to keep this? It's not advertised on any of our marketing material anymore, there are practically no incoming hyperlinks to that domain, and it'll just be a pain in the butt. However, if there's just one good reason as to why we should persist this "thing", I'd gladly go through the trouble of getting access to it back (i.e.: jumping through hoops).

Posted by Brendon Kozlowski

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  1. Mike says:

    No email coming in to that domain? We had a similar situation here, we have now closed down email on the old domain but it still works for web access. As far as I'm concerned, it can go away any time.

  2. Brendon Kozlowski says:

    Nope, no email coming in from that domain, nor any traffic according to our stats. Absolutely everything we're currently running is using our new domain, and there's only a handful (literally, like 7) of old links that even point to that domain -- and most of those that I found point to a specific server set to its own subdomain of that (sub)domain which hasn't existed since I started working here...those links are primarily from publically published mailing lists and/or newsgroups for technical support.

    Basically, I see no technical reason to keep it alive, I can only wonder about any possible accessibility and/or legal issues.

    Thanks for the comment on this - I was hoping you'd reply. ;-)

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