Edited by author 01-16-2003 10:46 PM
> Uh... Isn't this what LOC tags in DNS zone files are<br>
> spostado?
No, this is about
URLs. It's conceptually similar to DNSLOC, but you don't need to have that level of control over your DNS to make it work -- you don't even need your own domain name. You just need to be able to put some meta tags in your HTML.
You couldn't assign location to a hundred different livejournals with DNSLOC, for example, but you can with GeoURL. And IIRC, DNSLOC is meant to locate the host; this is meant to locate the content of the destination of the URL. If one wanted to, every page on a website could have a different location -- picture a bunch of local restaurant reviews, for example. As a concrete example,
my results tell you where I am -- even though the server they're hosted on is in NYC.