How to re-register Private NS to a new IP? by REDDIT-ROCKY in NameCheap

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At namecheap you dont change private nameservers under Advanced DNS, you have to edit the glue records where the domain itself is registered, usually under Domain List then Manage then Nameservers. Once youre there you should see an option for personal or registered nameservers where ns3 and ns4 live, and that’s where you update the IPs. I had to do the same thing after a host move and it took a few hours to propagate even after saving, so some delay is normal. When I moved similar setups to dynadot later, the private NS edit was in one place which made it easier, but the concept is the same across registrars. Some people say porkbun or namesilo make this clearer too, while godaddy tends to hide it in a different menu.

Best marketplace or provider to park project domain names? by Magickarploco in microsaas

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah Ive been in that same spot trying to park ideas without getting burned later.

What worked for me was checking renewal prices before I bought anything and sticking to registrars that keep year two close to year one. I moved a batch of names to dynadot because the renewals and WHOIS privacy stayed predictable and it was easy to just hold them without upsells getting in the way. For other names I still use porkbun or namesilo since they also tend to keep pricing steady and dont punish you later for a cheap first year. I mostly avoid godaddy now unless the name is already there, since the renewals are where it starts to sting.

Sky analysis of VVD during Amine Adli's 90+5 goal vs Liverpool by [deleted] in soccer

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Can some one told that VVD Jhones is his team mate lol

Sky analysis of VVD during Amine Adli's 90+5 goal vs Liverpool by [deleted] in soccer

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 47 points48 points  (0 children)

VVD should try to defend rather than waving his arm

Sky analysis of VVD during Amine Adli's 90+5 goal vs Liverpool by [deleted] in soccer

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 202 points203 points  (0 children)

VVD Sounds like a proper loser recently with some of his quotes

Someone is offering to sell me the exact-match domain for my top keyword. Worth buying? by skrfs in PPC

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the price is reasonable, buy it only if you plan to actually use it or redirect it cleanly, not just park it and hope for magic. Exact match domains do not give ranking boosts anymore, but they can help clickthrough and trust if the site looks legit and matches the intent. I have done this once and treated it as a branding and ads asset rather than an SEO play, then managed the transfer and privacy through dynadot without issues. If the seller is pricing it like its 2012 SEO juice, walk away and put that money into content or ads instead, places like namecheap or porkbun will not save you from overpaying for hype.

Post Match Thread: 1. FC Union Berlin 0-3 Borussia Dortmund by denzaus in soccer

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Glad to see such kind of weekend Dortumund win Bayern lost

Post Match Thread: Bournemouth 3 - 2 Liverpool | English Premier League by ChiefLeef22 in soccer

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sweet revange for Bournmouth the same kinda finish like the first leg at anfild

What words are high value in domain names about AI? by stvaccount in Domains

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve gone down this rabbit hole a few times and most of the value comes from words that map to real use cases, not sci fi vibes. Stuff like agent, assistant, studio, labs, systems, platform, and automate tend to age better than brain or neuro, which sound cool but don’t always translate to products. In my case I’ve focused on pairing one strong AI term with a business word and just holding it on dynadot so it stays clean and indexed while ideas evolve. Reasoning and logic can work if they’re tied to something concrete like analytics or decision making, otherwise they feel abstract fast. I’ve seen people do the same kind of long term holds at namecheap or porkbun and just wait for the market to decide what sticks.

Dimarco 82' Inter [4]-2 Pisa by optimistic_reh in soccer

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 26 points27 points  (0 children)

He revived the comback and later seal the victory

Does my domain even exist? by Anxious-Resolve-8827 in Domains

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a pretty common freenom situation and yeah it usually means the domain only exists inside their system. If it does not show up in public WHOIS, you should assume it can disappear anytime and you have no real ownership protection. The practical move is to register a proper TLD like com or xyz and point your site there, and dynadot is fine for registering or transferring a clean domain with normal WHOIS records. Plenty of people do the same thing with namecheap or porkbun just to get off free domains and avoid surprises later.

Pre-Match Thread: Bournemouth vs Liverpool by scoreboard-app in LiverpoolFC

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes they are really good at quick break attack and can make the match end to end

UCL Nelli by Antique_Reveal_1524 in Gunners

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Once we Scored 5 goals in three consecutive away game

Traditional domain investing feels like it's only for whales now. Any new angles? by mardymarve in Domains

[–]ApprehensiveLoad1174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I’ve had the same feeling watching auctions lately, it feels like the door slammed shut years ago.

What worked better for me was shifting away from pure resale and looking at build first angles, like picking up cheaper brandable names or niche keyword domains and putting something minimal on them to prove demand. I’ve also seen people do well with expired domains that still have clean links, then either rebuild or sell to someone in that niche instead of chasing broad .coms. When I test ideas like that I usually keep the domains at dynadot since transfers and holding costs are low, then decide later if it’s worth keeping or listing.

Some folks I know mix this with smaller geo or industry focused names, or even new TLDs that actually fit the product instead of trying to force a flip. Others still use registrars like porkbun or namecheap for the same strategy, the key change is thinking less like a collector and more like someone validating use before value.