Only 1 site can be registered per URL. You can however have sub-domains where you have a word before the actually URL followed by a dot. You are also able to have extension pages which is where the URL has a "/" after it and it will redirect to more content.
There are a few sites now which will cloak a URL. Use one of the cloaking websites for links to hide the myspace URL for your blogs and other contents.
According to google, there are a lot of URL is available online. There are also steps on how to buy an URL. Some are offering as low as $0.50 per domain name.
You can find many sites with valid URL's on the internet with the help of your favorite search engine.
You can go to the sites like 100.bz to get short url which is common for adding into sites like twitter which have limited space for writing in. You can even earn money...
Yes they are because they have URL and keywords.
Hi, assuming you meant proxies, you go to any variouse proxy sites (search for one on Google) and type the URL of the website you wan't to go to. Hi, assuming you meant proxies, you go to any variouse proxy sites (search for one on Google) and type the URL of the website you wan't to go to.
You can visit the google support site to see how you can change the URL of your site.
Although most people submit a site name rather than a URL, you'll find that putting the URL on Google will provide you with lots of information on the site reached by that URL. For example, you can find not only the main site, but also the Alexa ranking, any YouTube videos, and other sites that may publish articles from that URL.
The URL for the main United States site is www.ebay.com Many other countries have their own local site, such as www.ebay.co.uk www.ebay.de www.ebay.com.au and so on - all sites can be accessed from the foot of the US site homepage
<img src="URL TO IMAGE"> you can get the IMAGE URL from sites like photobucket or tinypic or imageshack
You can simply go onto thewebsite to add your url. They add and update new sites to our index each time they crawl the web, and they invite you to submit your URL here.
No. For a start, URLs are not only used for Web sites, but also for FTP sites and others.But not even all Web sites start with "www"; many have another prefix, or none at all. The use of "www" is just a convention, that is often followed.Look at WikiAnswers for a counterexample - the full URL is http://wiki.answers.com. "http://" is the protocol; but this is not followed by the common "www".