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Keywords:
Sterling,
Underneath,
Tld,
Suffix,
Yourbusiness
a sub-domain of a second-level domain and precedes the name of the latter
In the domain name system (DNS), third level domains are the next-highest level of the hierarchy underneath the second level domains. In a domain name, it is that portion of the domain name that appears two segments to the left of the top-level domain. For example, the "sterling" in "sterling.va.us." In the case of the domain name "www.yourdomain.net", the third level domain is "www."
Third-level domains would allow you to use our domain name in the format http: //yourbusiness.zerolevity.com. Often this might be preferrable to smaller businesses that don't wish to pay InterNIC fees for a domain name, yet don't want a long website address like http: //users.zerolevity.com/~username.
Domain names are composed of at least two levels, a top-level domain and a second-level domain. The top-level domain, also referred to as TLD, is the suffix or extension attac... Last Modified: 2004-05-13 Number of views: 222
In the Domain Name System (DNS), third-level domains are the next highest level of the hierarchy underneath second-level domains. In a domain name, it is that portion of the domain name that appears two segments to the left of the top-level domain. For example, the "sterling" in "sterling.va.us". Third-level domains are not the portion of an email address that appears in front of the @ symbol-for example, the "web" in "web@neustar.us" is not a third-level domain.
A domain based on the domain names you offer. For example, your domain name is example.com, a user can register third-level domain thirdlevel.example.com. Such domains have the same functionalities as regular domains.
Domain names are composed of at least two levels, a top-level domain and a second-level domain. The top-level domain, also referred to as TLD, is the suffix or extension attached to Internet domain names. There are a limited number of predefined TLDs, such as .com, Net and .org. A second-level domain (SLD) is the portion of a Uniform Resource Locator (URL) that identifies the specific and unique administrative owner associated with an Internet Protocol address (IP address). The second-level domain name includes the top-level domain name
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