In one of our little blog spam pests's visits to my blog, a new set of domains were tried. These were combinations of the target sites, prepended to domains like 8m [dot] com, 4t [dot] com, etc. I traced these to a division of Juno called Netsky. I sent their abuse line an e-mail describing what the owner of these domains was up to. I received this response in a short period of time:
Hello Rich,
Notice that these sites are not active sites, we caught this guy during signup.
Mega Web Services Customer Service
Bravo!
As mentioned in the comments to a previous post (http://dotnetjunkies.com/WebLog/richard.dudley/archive/2005/01/09/42948.aspx), Verio could use another nudge.
Professional DotNetNuke ASP.NET Portals (Amazon.com link)
This guide is a hands-on guide covering various real-world scenarios for developing and administering DotNetNuke. It covers hands-on step by step configuration options on Windows 2003, and discusses some of the issues (Webfarms, capacity planning, databases) when setting up DotNetNuke.
After configuring DNN it provides a step by step instruction on administering DNN and applying DNN in different real-world hosting situations.
The second part of the guide is aimed at DotNetNuke development. DotNetNuke provides the developer with a highly flexible architecture for rapid application development (RAD) of Web applications using the module provider. The book introduces the DotNetNuke application architecture, and then gets into developing modules for the framework. In addition to module development it covers developing skins for your DNN web site using some of the common tools available.
(hat tip: Patrick Santry)