Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login
Tell HN: I'm giving 4 domains away to a good home (alek.posterous.com)
24 points by andr on March 31, 2010 | hide | past | favorite | 29 comments



I gave away a bunch of domains a few months back (I posted about them here). Of what I gave away, I don't think any has been put to good use, and one of them has been used to spam my own damn site.. Sorta lost the will to give on that one anymore.

(Update: Of course, if someone came to me and begged me for a domain I was just sitting on.. I'd probably be OK with giving it up!)


hi petercooper - sorry to hear that the great domain giveway I sparked (referenced elsewhere in these comments) didn't pan out for you.

Failed for me too, as it happens - no one wanted anything I had to give away, and I had such specific target markets in mind that I just couldn't find one that I could use -- basically the same issue that meant I couldn't find a good unregistered domain in the first place


While the idea of giving away a domain to an interested person sounds nice, the quote that goes something like 'if the world is worth saving, it is worth saving at a price' comes to mind - anyone with any really good use for a domain will very likely be willing to pay you your costs, at least.


Your post got me interested: Do you think that HN could pull of another thread like this: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=652952


massivedebate.com:

One big 72pt bold, binary question at the top (i.e. "Should the US healthcare reform bill have been passed?)

Two columns.

You can scroll down the page and read the top-rated arguments on both sides, then choose to type into either the "for" or "against" column field, and once you've made your argument, you can go back up the column (and into the "new arguments" view) and vote up and down only the side that you chose.

After a few days, the question rotates, and it starts all over again.


I developed a site similar to that for a friend of mine: http://nooges.com

Basically he posts a daily comment through a backend forum, and then people can agree or disagree or talk smack or whatever. You don't have to be registered to post, but if you're registered under the forums and logged in and post, it'll show your username.

I do like the name massivedebate.com, I'll suggest it to him to see if he's interested in it.


If you post your request/pitch as a comment here you'll get bonus points for courage.


I don't need any more domains or side projects, but I've always thought that large-scale online conversations (Slashdot, Huff Po, etc) are still yet to be done that well. MassiveDebate.com could be a suitable domain for someone tackling the problem.

As a reader, one problem is in getting an overall feel for the 'lean' of the conversation. There must be a way to incorporate this in large discussions, or to categorise posts by theme ('Thinks murder sentence given was too short', 'Thinks sentence given too long', 'Discussing increased police attention for bikie gangs', etc).

Or identify key contributors by post volume or karma within a thread.

Or provide ways for a reader to seek out arguments with people they disagree with, or to mostly see like-minded commentors (confirmation bias).

Another problem for readers is knowing where to start. Oldest topics first or newest? Randomised order? I've wondered (half-baked idea) about topics along a horizontal axis with responses hanging down the vertical axis from each parent topic. Might be something in that, or could just be a usability disaster. Or maybe the viewport is fixed (no horiz scrollbar) but you hit arrows to each side to browse top-level topics? Each sub-topic could have a header that included info about the originator, key contributors within, general lean of the contents ('Strongly favours those that think the sentence was too light.').

Another issue is in finding the most worthwhile comments (Slashdot has moderation and so on that can be helpful but I've only ever used it as a set-and-forget thing to browse at +2 with Funny discounted heavily). The biggest news network in Australia doesn't even have this (or threading, or anything useful) in its commenting system. It's flat, no notifications, no ownership of an alias, no prevention of people impersonating others, no up/down vote - and it's been like that for years!

As a contributor, a big problem is the perception and reality that a lot of comments are drive-bys. Forcing, encouraging or using a default setting of email notification could help there, but in a way that doesn't leave you diving for the off-switch once the replies start getting heavy. I think the PHP BB (or maybe it's a competing forum I'm thinking of) system of sending one alert only until you return to view the thread has merit. Providing quality tools/experience for regular contributors could encourage people to hang around and build up their karma within the system, etc.

How do you tackle a 500+-post conversation? Is it even possible?


Wasn't there someone on here a while back working on a system that can extract topics from text - he was wondering what to do with it.

Perhaps a site with some kind of personal Bayesian filtering to categorize posts - the sort of thing I do in my head when reading comments on the BBC site (where most posts fall into my "Foaming at mouth Daily Mail reader" and "Naive Socialist" categories).


I dislike the way that massive debates turn into selective replies, and think it would be good to try a debate of 2 sides, instead of a debate of 500 serial replies.

When you visit the site, you see the current state, and you can look down the points and rebuttals on either side and contribute to those bits specifically and 'push' the center line one way or the other.

Tug-o-war style, not HN comment style.

Not sure how well it would work in reality - I'm guessing a bit tediously.


What about some measure of negative karma for not responding to a point? You could either concede that your opponent had made a strong point and/or respond with a counterpoint. If you left a point unanswered, it'd show a hit against your profile and sit in your dashboard of unanswered points.


This was my thinking too... pick (or have users submit) some option A or option B news stories and then give then let people post debate comments/points for either choice.

Upvotes should hopefully drag good comments to the top - then perhaps a "show of hands" to decide the issue

Fighting trolls would be hard.


I own wantrepreneur.net and I can't think of anything to do with it. If anyone wants to use it, let me know and I can transfer it over to you (just need an account at namecheap)

comment if you have any ideas for it, or shoot me an email m[]mikeyur[]com


I'd like to have coolthingtodo.com and host a site where people could share cool things to do in different situations.

For example:

* When you're drunk and think you got a cool new domain name on your mind -> Write it down on some note and only buy it the next morning


Not being funny, but these are pretty terrible domains IMHO Why did you register them?!


I'd like to make an experimental semantic relevance matcher for twitter on TWANQ. The plan is to analyze and relate tweets using OpenCYC (or even WordNET at first, but I want to try and drop OpenCYC in the mix). It would enable you to possibly start meaningful conversations with people in your extended social graph (the degree of separation would probably be set by a computational limitation on the server-side).

Edit: If anyone has experience with OpenCYC or is interested in collaborating, please get in touch via srdjan@filmit.si


If I pick up any more side projects my wife will kill me :-) With that being said, I bet someone could do something pretty cool and unique with some of those.


My domain onyourcell.com is expiring soon and I do not plan on renewing it. Let me know if anyone wants it before it expires.


Why not try selling it on sedo.com - I purchased a domain there last year and was fairly happy with the way things worked out.


Honestly, not worth the time/effort. I highly doubt anyone will give me $100+ for it. Plus I hate domain-squatters. I don't want to do anything remotely similar to them.

Lots of folks here on HN make phone apps. I've had onyourcell.com for 7+ yrs now and many of the things I originally wanted to do with it are being done by Google for free (restaurant listing, directions etc.) So if someone wants to do anything interesting with it, you are more than welcome to take it off my hands at no charge.


I'd like to make dateahipster a soft redirect to chatroulette.


Good idea. I'd have loved someone to have taken it and turned into a story-based episodic webcomic poking fun at hipsters looking for love and their place in society.That takes real talent and hardwork though so I guess it's best to direct it to chatroulette...


Done! Should kick in after DNS updates.


.Hah! Awesome. If only I could be on the other end when someone first discovers what it really means to 'dateahipster'.


Well I can imagine the weirdest thing ever: just because you are giving away the domains for free, some cool kid will get an idea for a startup.


As has been said a billion times before, the idea is the easy bit.


I own slickforms.com. You're welcome to take it for free.


I'll throw mine in also: sansvowels.com


I love the concept of dateahipster.com, however its been my experience that hipsters hate other hipsters.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: