
The auction for Hot.net is live on Sedo.Hot.net domain name received one bid of 56,700 EUR and has less than five days until the auction will close.
Another interesting domain name in the auction is Vasectomies.com,which attracted eight difference bidders and has been pushed up to $1,825.
The auction features at the moment 119 domain names .90 of the 119 domain names included in the auction have bids so far.
Other interesting domain names in the auction include :
HappiVille.com Current Bid $4,500
Flexible.co Current Bid $2,850
Accuracy.in Current Bid $2,000
FreeMobileApps.com Current Bid $1,750
BollerWagen.com Current Bid 1,800 EUR
Ancona.de Current Bid 1,300 EUR
TicketsFights.com Current Bid $1,200
FloridaCarInsurance.org Current Bid $1,000
Best-Internet.com Current Bid $1,000
You can see the entire inventory and place your bids here .
The system of Internet highways and byways is being reconfigured to cope with the size and shape of traffic heading over it, while Internet companies are dreaming up fresh approaches to avoid.
It’s an old story with a new twist. The big fret among users was once the idea that the Internet would run out of bandwidth before the end of the 2000s, or that its IP address space was soon to be exhausted. Not every techno-prophet subscribed to these notions, but most agreed that the somewhat haphazard fashion in which the Internet was built-out in the 1990s and 2000s did not take account of the traffic demands that it faces in the 2010s.
The IP address availability issue rumbles on still, as the remedy – migration from the legacy IPv4 protocol to IPv6 – is only just getting going in most regions. The core bandwidth issue – that is, whether the existing Internet infrastructure can manage with the proliferating volumes of traffic being loaded onto it – has largely been sorted out by advances in switch/router technology and ingenious innovations by the networking companies for obtaining greater capacity from the available routes.
To read this report in Engineering and Technology Magazine in full, see:
eandt.theiet.org/magazine/2012/03/internet-jams.cfm