I
just registered my domain name. Why does it still show up as "available"?
Registering a domain was fairly easy, wasn't it? That's because we made
it simple. However, when you clicked on the order confirmation, you set
a rather extensive process in motion.
Upon receipt of your payment, we submit a registration template to the registrar.
Within a few minutes to a couple of hours, depending on its workload, the
registrar registers the domain name and send us an acknowledgment that the
registration has been accepted. However, at this point, the domain name
is not yet usable.
First, the registrar needs to enter the domain information, such as the
domain name, the domain owner name and address, the names of the administrative,
billing, and technical contacts, and information about where the domain
will be parked in its database. When the database is updated, it is then
published on the web and searchable in the Registrars' Shared Registry "whois"
database. This tends to take another day or so. Is the domain usable now?
Almost.
The database with your new domain name must now be distributed worldwide.
This is called propagation. This can take up to a few days as some smaller
ISP's do not always update their databases frequently. On average, however,
the elapsed time between your order and your domain being available worldwide
is about 2 - 3 days.
Note that a domain reservation alone does not make it possible for you to
post your pages on the web. A domain reservation is exactly what the term
says: a reservation to use a domain name to be attached to a web site. (Or,
in some cases, to ensure that nobody else can use that same name for their
website).
To post pages on the web, you need a virtual website, i.e. physical storage
space on the Internet. AZC.COM, has several plans to choose from and from
the service plan page you can upgrade your domain to a virtual hosting plan.