Max.rk
So the question is when will there be a global system for domains with nono-english characters, not if there will ever be one. At sometime all internasjonal search engines probably will list domains in any given character set, but when? Six monts? 2 years? 50 years?
But even major West-European languages like German, French, and Spanish have several special characters in common words.
Suppose you are the webmaster of a 50-year old local amateur soccer team in Germany. You cannot register the team name because it contains an umlauted vowel (ä, ö, or ü) or eszett (ß). Or you cannot register the name of a village school, because it contains an accent aigu (acute "´"), accent circonflex (circumflex "^") or tilde ("~") which is quite common in French resp. Spanish. The pages will be in the local language anyway. So why would you need to replace the eszett by "ss" for the domain name? That doesn't make sense in 2003.
The number of Non-English users of Google grew from 33% to 50% in the last 2 years (see the graph Languages Used to Access Google March 2001 - April 2003 at Google Zeitgeist [google.com]). There are now more mobile phones in China than in the USA. In March, South Korea and the USA had the same number of xDSL subscribers (both 6.5 million), and Japan had 7.5 million at the end of April. So the influence of English on internet will only get smaller.
BTW, Google already indexed lots of pages with special characters in the URL. So Google won't have problems with a special character in the domain name once it starts to become normal. Google can find pages that match the Japanese, Thai, Arabic or Russian words entered in the search string. So internally Google most likely will index these words in 16-bit unicode instead of 7-bit ASCII. And so will the other major search engines.
There are several possible workarounds for this problem.
In many of the major search engines you can already choose only to list pages in a particular language. It is also possible for the search engines to serve different results based on ip-adress, or browser sniffing. However when when someone enters a query like "bølgen blå", it is very likely that that person is Norwegian or Danish. It would be the samething for chinese, hebrew or arabic queries. I have no doubt that international search engines someday will be truly international, but the question is when. When will it be safe to use non-english domains?
Since a few weeks ago - if you enter one of the æøå-domains, like Carlsberg's www.øl.com, in Internet Explorer - you'll get a screen saying "welcome, are you trying to visit www.øl.com?". You can then choose to download Verisign's plug-in or visit the page without downloading anything.
The remarkable thing is that this even works with my old IE4, which hasn't been upgraded for years.
For Netscape I can only guess that the browser follows the DNS specs and knows DNS can not have encoded characters, so it doesn't even try. Mean while IE just blindly tries.
Hope that answers your question.
It said the number of Internet users in the world totaled 670.8 million at the end of 2002. The Asia-Pacific region accounted for 32.1% of the total, surpassing Europe as the world's largest user by region for the first time. Europe had a 31.9% share.(Yahoo Asia [asia.news.yahoo.com])
>> It said ...
The article refers to the research method as being an online questionnaire. The firm doing the research was Impress. Is it possible that you could provide some extra info, to better judge the validity of the figures:
Is that the media company Impress Group? How were the respondents recruited? Was it a random pop-up like the ones you see everywhere? How many respondents answered the questionnaire? What was the geograpcical scope of the recruitment and how representative was it across countries?
I realize it's a lot of questions, but the article doesn't answer a single one of them, and i'm not able to conduct a search in Japanese myself (lack of language skills)
News articles rarely mention such "technical details". It is, however, such questions that decide if the outcome can be trusted at all or not. I hope you can help me to get an answer to at least a few of them, as it is not often that i see figures on that scale.
Thanks
/claus
My feeling is that they compiled the international figures by using reliable data from other countries combined with their own information about Japan.
I don't have this 400-page book so I'm afraid I cannot answer the other questions. Some more information can be found in the thread: Broadband customers in Japan 10 or 20 Million? [webmasterworld.com] Besides, it would be off topic in this thread.