TinyURL.com - where tiny is better!: Make your URLs smaller. I think this is a simple rediection lookup.
“By entering in a URL in the text field below, we will create a tiny URL that will not break in email postings and never expires.”
Entering two URLs immediately after one another resulted in “http://tinyurl.com/h3r6” and “http://tinyurl.com/h3rj”, so they must just have a simple, two-column lookup table. I initially entered the same URL, but they must check for dupes because it generated the same TinyURL for both.
I worry about services like this because what happens if (when?) they go under? A whole lot of URLs around the Internet are going to start breaking. MakeAShorterLink.com does the same thing.
My wife sent a Hallmark eCard to someone today. She picked a format then typed a paragraph or so of text. The length of her prose was nothing out of the ordinary. Hallmark then generated an email to the recipient and CC'd my wife. In this email was…
Web addresses get nip and tuck—and spam: A good article on URL shortening services which we've talked about quite a bit before. Includes an interesting angle on the spam implications. In the hands of spammers, TinyURL has the potential to sag under enormous demand and attract the vociferous complaints that…
If you have a four-digit name (or less), there's a new pastime called "Vanity TinyURL." If you remember, TinyURL is a redirection service that cuts down any URL by keying it to a code at the root of the TinyURL site. They're up to four characters now, so…
TinyURL whacking: We talked about URL shortening services several months ago, but thius guy takes the cake for boredom-induced activities. "Now, the other day, I realised that what was particularly interesting about tinyurl is that you can predict what URLs it gives to other people. All the URLs it gives out…
Cruft-free URLs in Movable Type: Mark Pilgrim has created a great URL scheme in Movable Type for the cleanest URLs I've seen yet. Clean URLs are an anal-retentive obsession with me. I found this via a great page at Brainstorms and Raves devoted to URL beauty. Mark is using…
I just noticed an article in Wired that used a TinyURL URL to link to a long URL at spamassassin.org.
I will stick with old fashioned long URLs
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I use these services all the time. They're great when a URL posted in an email or newsgroup might break in half due to wrapping. If you're concerned about the URL breaking down the line when these things go under, that's legitimate, but it's a reason not to use them on web pages. When I use them in emails or usenet, I usually post both the original, long URL and the shorter link. I don't use them on web pages, as there really isn't any reason.
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R6K.NET allows you to create a short URL that can be effectively used instead of a long URL. Enter a long URL in the textbox below and click "Make Short URL!" to create a short URL. Once you create a short URL, you can not only access the URL you have shortened but almost any page in the site by appending the path after the short URL. R6K.NET is a free and easy way to block the referrer when a visitor clicks a link on your homepage, to prevent unauthorized parties from gathering your personal information and hide your affiliate URLs. It works with every browser.
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Perfect post. Th