The World Wide Web uses unique numbers identified as IP addresses and every device or site that is part of the Web has this kind of an address. It would be pretty hard to remember to visit 123.123.123.123 to open a website though, so a significantly quicker structure was created in the 80s - domain names. Each and every domain consists of a primary part and an extension, for instance domain.com or domain.co.uk. Various extensions exist globally - part of them are given to countries, such as .co.uk in the aforementioned example, which is assigned to the United Kingdom, while various others are generic, like .com or .net. A number of extensions are available for registration by any kind of entity and others have specific requirements - company registration, regional presence, and so on. You'll be able to obtain a brand new domain through a registrar organization like ours and when the extension supports domain name transfers, you're able to transfer an existing domain between registrars too.