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My name is Dan Blows, and my domain is da.nblo.ws, which I thought was the coolest thing ever. Most people are confused or don’t even notice it.


I used to have a mail address along the lines of d@nblows.com

But beware, single letter local parts are not universally supported by web sites.

Microsoft accounts with those mail addresses are possible (they used to be impossible), but recently I stumbled upon two other web sites that didn't like single letter local parts.


I use an email address with a single-letter username (m@...) and have never had a problem with services rejecting it. The only problem is that rarely when I sign up for a service using a random password like gAdlzIBVom4j3Paf, it tells me "your password cannot contain your username" because it contains the letter "m". Hah!


Good old security theatre


Haven't had that problem before, far more of a problem when I try to register with site specific email addresses like d+hn@nblows.com which I've tried to get in the habit of doing.


Why do people use plus addresses when minus/hyphen addresses are much less problematic?

Are there many providers who support one, but not the other?


Some mail providers (eg Gmail) use the plus sign as a label. So your everything still gets routed to d@nblows.com but tagged "hn" or "twitter" or whatever.

It's quite a convenient way to have site specific addresses while still only having a single mailbox to manage.


I get told that my email is invalid by some apps, for using a .so domain. Apple was one that would not let me create an apple ID upon buying a new laptop. Eventually, I set up the machine without Apple ID, and opted to create it after the fact via apple.com which accepted it. It makes me wonder if it is intentionally a "Hard no" during system setup, and then a "well okay if you insist" when the user has installed the system without using an Apple ID as a last resort.


I have the same problem with my .one domain. Even though that TLD is about 7 years old, about 10% of sites won't accept it.


Yes, I did that single letter email way back around 2007-2008 and had it with my Bank (closed account for a company). Now, I can neither change nor login (not valid to them), and I have set a specific filter just to ignore that email from the Bank that keeps sending me newsletter and offers.

I don't use the short oin.am as my primary (which is oinam.com), I have it as a alias domain, allowing me to quickly say/hand-write my email to someone and continue the conversation from my main domain -- say, ß@oin.am.


I literally had a bank tell me my email was invalid today. It was 2 letters before the @, and I think that's why. I'll probably come up with a longer one that I like (I own the domain) later and try again, but it just felt incredibly lame for them to reject my email like that.


Yep, I’ve encountered that problem fairly often. These days, I only use that email for vanity.


Hah I had the email address j@vascri.pt for a little while - same thing, everyone just got confused by it.


Ah! The del.i.cio.us days.


Having lunch with a friend he said something I didn't expect,

> but my C drive crashed and I lost the bookmarks.

There's still a Delicious market.


del.icio.us


Just like old times.

https://web.archive.org/web/20080906141421/http://blog.delic...

>> "So why did we switch to delicious.com? We’ve seen a zillion different confusions and misspellings of “del.icio.us” over the years (for example, “de.licio.us”, “del.icio.us.com”, and “del.licio.us”), so moving to delicious.com will make it easier for people to find the site and share it with their friends. Of course the old del.icio.us domain and all its URLs will continue to work. Also note that the domain change requires a new login cookie, which is why everyone has to log in again."


Also: interview with Joshua Schachter on the Web Masters podcast. One of those rare podcasts where every episode is worth listening to.

https://latonas.com/blog/web-masters-episode-9-joshua-schach...


Delicious is one of those words I have a hard time spelling, let alone remembering where the dots would go.


I wonder if the parent was being sarcastic. I could never remember where the dots went; I suspect I wasn't the only one, and that was probably why they end up changing to delicious.com.


Hi Joshua, when you are here, why did you choose that name, with the dots?


Almost certainly a cheap(er) way to get a cool domain on a startup budget.


when i registered icio.us in 2001 or so, Doing Startups wasn’t a thing. i got it because “icious” suffixed the largest number of words


Reminded me for some reason of mikerowesoft.com - believe the story is that Microsoft sued the guy for infringement and ended up winning. Let's hope a tech company with the name Danblos or something doesn't blow up


Fwiw I also think it's the coolest thing ever


Why not danblo.ws?


Apart from the extra coolness, it also let me have the email d@nblo.ws.


He wanted to be extra cool.




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