.mobi
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Image:Dotmobi.gif | |
| Introduced | 2005 |
|---|---|
| TLD type | Sponsored top-level domain |
| Status | Approved |
| Registry | Nokia / Vodafone / Microsoft / Afilias |
| Sponsoring organization | Mobi JV (Mobi TLD) |
| Intended use | Sites intended for mobile device use |
| Actual use | Expected to be available for use in 2006 |
| Registration restrictions | Adherence to mobile-compatibility style guidelines can be enforced by challenge process |
| Structure | Direct second-level registrations will be allowed; selected generic second level domains, such as weather and music, will be reserved for distribution in an equitable manner which may include auction |
| Documents | ICANN New sTLD RFP Application |
| Dispute policies | UDRP |
| Web site | MTLD |
.mobi is a top-level domain approved by ICANN as a sponsored TLD. It will be restricted to mobile devices and sites providing services for them on the Mobile Web. It is sponsored by a consortium of companies including Google, Microsoft, Vodafone, Samsung, Ericsson and Nokia. As of November 2005, the domain had been added to the global internet root and was getting ready for its opening. Starting May 22, 2006 industry members can register a .mobi domain name, June 12 for trademark holders, and Sept. 26 general registration.
Since many of the mobile devices which may use services under this domain are telephones, there is some overlap between the target market of this and the .tel domain, also approved by ICANN in the same round.
Contents |
[edit] Controversy
In its short life, .mobi has already sparked criticism due to allegedly breaking the principles of device independence. Some argue that providing content tailored to particular devices can and should be done by other means than a specific TLD, such as using hostnames within an existing domain, content negotiation through the HTTP protocol, cascading style sheets or other forms of adaptation.
Responding to the early criticism, .mobi engaged with the W3C Mobile Web Initiative (MWI) and took a leading role in formulating the MWI Best Practices for mobile content. The practices outlined a number of ways to achieve good user experiences on mobile Web-enabled devices, and recognised several methods of implementing these practices. The .mobi "Switch On!" guidelines are derived from the W3C Best Practices.
The methods of achieving these Best Practices are used today by major providers of mobile content, including mTLD company's own website mtld.mobi. Their site redirects some clients to pc.mtld.mobi site, which is intended for fixed-Web clients and is unsuitable for mobile browsers.
There is a significant community of users who seek a more consistent and predictable experience when they use their mobile device to access internet content. They claim that .mobi will help the user by requiring that .mobi sites will render acceptably on a mobile device, preventing waste of the user's battery life or data transfer quota.
There are technical solutions that provide this today: compressing/downsampling proxy servers and microbrowsers, like Opera Mobile and Opera Mini which can tailor any website to small display (using Small Screen Rendering technique).
There are also specialised content adaptation solutions, that typically operate on a server, where they employ specialised adaptation techniques to provide optimised representations of Web sites to mobile devices whichever browser that they use.
The W3C is developing new authoring languages, such as DIAL the Device Independent Authoring Language, which aid authors in creating Web sites that can be used on the huge variety of mobile devices available today. Some adaptation solutions already support the use of DIAL and similar languages in creating sites that can be used with .mobi domain names.
The .mobi organisation does not itself mandate any particular technology, but does insist that .mobi sites will produce user experiences consistent with their guidelines.
Additionally, some have pointed out that "mobi" is an unfortunate choice for mobile phone text entry interfaces, requiring ten keystrokes in many common setups, compared to seven for "com", or what could have only been three if the more apt "wap" was used.
The .mobi domain name's application was strongly endorsed by its registry service provider, Afilias, which was able to make a case to the evaluators of ICANN that it would operate the registry in a stable and secure manner, without resorting to special tricks in the DNS.
[edit] External links
[edit] Official sites
[edit] Articles
- The significance of the new .mobi domain suffix
- 'Dot-mobi' domain for mobile devices hits the Web
- Dot Mobi Rebuttal by DIWG
- New Top Level Domains Considered Harmful
[edit] Development
[edit] Register
- .mobi Registration Register .mobi domains from Godaddy
- .mobi Registration Register .mobi domains from Netlynx Technologies
| Generic top-level domains | ||
|---|---|---|
| Unsponsored | .biz .com .edu .gov .info .int .mil .name .net .org | |
| Sponsored | .aero .cat .coop .jobs .mobi .museum .pro .travel | |
| Infrastructure | .arpa .root | |
| Startup phase | .asia .tel | |
| Proposed | .cym .geo .kid .kids .mail .post .sco .web .xxx | |
| Deleted/retired | .nato | |
| Reserved | .example .invalid .localhost .test | |
| Pseudo-domains | .bitnet .csnet .local .onion .uucp | |
| Unofficial | see Alternative DNS roots | |
| See also: Country code top-level domains | ||
be:.mobi cs:.mobi da:.mobi es:.mobi fr:.mobi it:.mobi nl:.mobi pl:.mobi ru:.mobi zh:.mobi

