The World Wide Web employs unique numbers referred to as IP addresses and each unit or site that is a part of the Web features this type of an address. It would be pretty hard to remember to visit 123.123.123.123 to load a website though, so a significantly easier system was made in the eighties - domain names. Every single domain contains a primary part plus an extension, to give an example domain.com or domain.co.uk. Numerous extensions exist globally - some of them are given to countries, for example .co.uk in the aforementioned example, which is assigned to the United Kingdom, while others are generic, for example .com or .net. Various extensions are available for registration by every entity and some others have specific requirements - business registration, local presence, etcetera. You're able to acquire a new domain name via a registrar firm like ours and when the extension allows transfers, you are able to transfer an existing domain name between registrars as well.