Reminds me of Slashdot<p>> The name "Slashdot" came from a somewhat "obnoxious parody of a URL" – when Malda registered the domain, he desired to make a name that was "silly and unpronounceable" – try pronouncing out, 'h-t-t-p-colon-slash-slash-slashdot-dot-org'".<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slashdot" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slashdot</a>
I also have a domain just for the cool look of my personal email address.<p>My (family) name has an 'a' in it that I replace with the '@' of the email address, so Rauzy becomes r@uzy. I have the domain "uzy dot me" just for that.<p>A friend of mine saw this at some point, and decided to use the same trick, except his family name ends with the TLD of a country so he could also use that to (not gonna tell his email address here but, e.g., Grahams would be gr@ha.ms).
HN title is broken; it is presumably supposed to have the important "@" symbol.<p>(the website's original title is boring and meaningless)
> I’m still slightly surprised that no-one got there before me!<p>That sentence would be on the page regardless the owner. So someone actually got there before. But it was you!
I‘m using notmyhostna.me as my email address and every time I have to provide it in person or on the phone I kinda regret it because people seem to not know much about TLDs.
I see that they have an lspace.org address. That host doesn't go anywhere, but the much more interesting wiki.lspace.org does - the Discworld and Terry Pratchett Wiki!
I have `sahil@e.email`. Don't know if they still accept new users!<p>It's run by <a href="https://e.foundation/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://e.foundation/</a>
I've been waiting forever and Google still hasn't launched the TLD, but when they do I want to try and snag "put@emailaddress.here"
Shameless ad: For getting your own geeky email address (currently forwarding only) please see <a href="https://www.mailbox.my/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.mailbox.my/</a> (some of them are free)