The Picard ManeuverM to [email protected] • 4 months agoIt feels wronglemmy.worldmessage-square166fedilinkarrow-up11.06K
arrow-up11.06KimageIt feels wronglemmy.worldThe Picard ManeuverM to [email protected] • 4 months agomessage-square166fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink14•4 months agoI do not pronounce that part of a URL. Who still does that? Why would you need to do that?
minus-squareJackbyDevlinkfedilinkEnglish15•4 months agoBecause www.example.com and example.com, while the same website nearly all of the time, are technically different and could point to different places.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish3•edit-24 months agoTrue. And there’s also the websites that use “en.” or some other language code, and “www.” just leads to the language selection.
minus-squareJackbyDevlinkfedilinkEnglish4•4 months agoIn the same way that English Wikipedia is https://en.wikipedia.org/ and Spanish is https://es.wikipedia.org/, there is nothing stopping any website from making www.blah.com point to something different than blah.com. It’s just a convention. https://serverfault.com/a/286141/374631
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink7•4 months agoSome people don’t know how to properly DNS, and IIRC some smaller DNS services don’t support CNAMEing the root.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•4 months agoBecause it’s an artifact from a time when having a website for a business was entirely optional, and novel. This wasn’t happening everywhere.
I do not pronounce that part of a URL. Who still does that? Why would you need to do that?
Because
www.example.com
andexample.com
, while the same website nearly all of the time, are technically different and could point to different places.True. And there’s also the websites that use “en.” or some other language code, and “www.” just leads to the language selection.
Please, tell me more
In the same way that English Wikipedia is https://en.wikipedia.org/ and Spanish is https://es.wikipedia.org/, there is nothing stopping any website from making
www.blah.com
point to something different thanblah.com
. It’s just a convention.https://serverfault.com/a/286141/374631
Some people don’t know how to properly DNS, and IIRC some smaller DNS services don’t support CNAMEing the root.
Because it’s an artifact from a time when having a website for a business was entirely optional, and novel. This wasn’t happening everywhere.
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