Comparing some of the most popular domain registrars

In this short and simple review i am going to compare some of the most popular domain registrars among masses. Here in this review we are taking the domain extension as .COM. These are as follows:

  1. Godaddy.com
  2. Name.com
  3. namecheap.com
  4. enom.com
  5. register.com

Godaddy

First of all i am starting with Godaddy, the most popular domain registrar. The main reason for this popularity of Godaddy is the coupon system which actually provides discount to the customer during the process of the purchasing the domain. But customers never keep this thing in mind that those coupons can be used only for first purchase, not for renewals. People think that they can also renew the domain at same price but that’s wrong. It’s just a very clever trick  played by Godaddy to cheat customers. Now one question must be coming in all of your minds is that if they are cheating thier customers openly than why still Godaddy is one of the largest registrars. I will answer this question in this way that at the end of term of the domain suppose  a customer becomes aware of the fact they are being cheated by Godaddy  than also they will find transfering a domain from one registrar to other a headache and forcefully decided to shed some extra cents at  Godaddy.

Now the main question is what about the real pricing of a domain purchased from Godaddy.com.

A .COM from Godaddy costs 11.99$+18 cents which is costing about 12.17$ without coupons. If you are lucky than you may get a discount coupon available to be used at Godaddy. Most of the users these days also want private registration (means to hide the information present in the whois) and Godaddy charges a premium amount for this service also i.e. around 2$ making the effective cost of 14.17$for a single .COM.

Name.com

I will not write essay Name.com like i did for Godaddy.

A .COM from Name.com costs around 9.99$ + 2$for private registrations making a total of 11.99$

Namecheap.com

Cables connect server racks in CERN

Cables connect server racks in the computer center of the Cern, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, near Geneva, on Thursday, Oct. 2, 2008. CERN’s in house computer farm will provide only a small percentage of the processor power that is needed to analyze the huge data that the Large Hadron Collider experiment will collect. The rest of the data will be processed with a computer grid, concentrating the calculating power of more that 100 research institutions worldwide.

Finally a step forward in Anti Matter theory

Photo released by CERN on Thursday, Nov 18, 2010 shows an image taken by the ALPHA annihilation detector showing untrapped antihydrogen atoms annihilating on the inner surface of the ALPHA trap. The events are concentrated at the electrode radius of about 22.3 mm. Scientists at the world’s biggest physics lab said they have achieved a breakthrough in the hunt for antimatter. An international team of physicist at the European Organization for Nuclear Research near Geneva say they created an entire atom made of antimatter and then for the first time managed to hold onto it.