Re: WHOIS Reminder Proofreading

From: elliot noss (enoss@tucows.com)
Date: Thu Nov 06 2003 - 08:52:37 EST


Finally my inner pedant can resist no more (I have been fighting
temptation here that is only exceeded by the bag of little halloween
chocolate bars sitting in my basement).

Go to any ICANN meeting and you will hear the DNS referred to as just
that ALL the time in ALL contexts. When you say:

'"my server is part of the DNS" or "my server sent a query to the DNS",
then you're quite right"'

...that is exactly how we use the term internally at Tucows and most
involved in the inner workings of the DNS (notice the bootstrapping) use
the term.

btw I still capitalize Internet and stopped capitalizing web. I am also
indifferent as to one or two spaces. Just fyi. :-)

Now I feel better.

Regards

Robert L Mathews wrote:
> At 11/5/03 6:02 PM, Mark E. Mallett wrote:
>
>
>>>1. In the line "ICANN, the organization responsible for the stable
>>>operation of the Domain Name System...", "Domain Name System" should not
>>>be capitalized.
>>
>>I would capitalize it, as it's a proper name for a specific thing.
>>It's "The Domain Name System" as opposed to "a domain name system."
>
>
> Well, I'd certainly agree about capitalizing proper nouns; I still
> capitalize Internet and Web, both of which are a losing battle, I fear.
>
> I don't think "domain name system" (or its acronym "DNS") is a proper
> noun, though, is it? You rarely see people say "the Domain Name System"
> or "the DNS" in the same way they refer to "the Web" or "the Internet".
>
> If "the DNS" is common usage in phrases like "my server is part of the
> DNS" or "my server sent a query to the DNS", then you're quite right; it
> is a proper noun and should be capitalized. That kind of usage seems
> rare-to-nonexistent to me, though. Hmmmm.
>
> (The phrase "DNS" is correctly always capitalized because it's an
> acronym, of course, but that doesn't necessarily mean it should be
> capitalized when written out in full.)
>
>
>
>>>2. At the end of that sentence, there are two spaces instead of one
>>>between "registration. Please".
>>
>>Supposed to be two spaces between the end of a sentence and the
>>start of the next. Looks proper to me.
>
>
> Some people do use two spaces, mostly because they were taught to do so
> in typewriter classes for typewriter-specific reasons. I guess you could
> make an argument that e-mail also tends to be read in monospaced fonts,
> and therefore should be subject to the same rules as typewriters... but
> even if you buy that argument, the vast majority of people use only a
> single space in e-mail, which means that an extra space would look odd
> compared to the rest of the message a reseller supplies. And things that
> look odd look like typos, which is bad.
>
> (Style guides also say that two spaces is wrong, but they're assuming
> you're going to be using proportional fonts, so I'll concede they might
> not be particularly relevant in this case.)
>
> Anyhoo, based on other messages, the number of spaces between sentences
> appears to be something people feel strongly about, and it's the most
> minor complaint I had. I hereby withdraw my objection to that if OpenSRS
> will fix at least items 3 and 4 of my original list :-)
>

-- 
Elliot Noss
Tucows Inc.
416-538-5494
enoss.blogware.com



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