I am not sure if this questions belongs in this group or another group??

Please recommend which group to post this to, if this is the wrong group.
Thanks.

My domain name registrar offers three choices for Nameservers:

1-If we are hosting with them, we leave it to default
2-If we don't have a webpage, we can use their parked DNS Servers.
3-Choose your own NS Server or NS Server of the hosting company.

For right now, I just put the same Nameservers ns95.worldnic.com,
ns96.worldnic.com which I am using from my old domain, which is still
active, registrar. I am the one hosting my own website from my old domain.

I understand Nameservers control how a domain name is resolved, translates
the IP to the Domain name (I think ???).

My ultimate question is, what is the proper information about namedservers
on the registrar that I registered my domain name with.

RE: NameServer by TharangaLakmal

TharangaLakmal
Thu Apr 06 01:15:02 CDT 2006

Hi

Ideal place to post this question is Windows Server 2003/ DNS section.

Anyway, name servers are actually ised to translate host name to IP
addresses. If you can be more specific about what exactly you want to achieve?

Warm regards

"msw" wrote:

> I am not sure if this questions belongs in this group or another group??
>
> Please recommend which group to post this to, if this is the wrong group.
> Thanks.
>
> My domain name registrar offers three choices for Nameservers:
>
> 1-If we are hosting with them, we leave it to default
> 2-If we don't have a webpage, we can use their parked DNS Servers.
> 3-Choose your own NS Server or NS Server of the hosting company.
>
> For right now, I just put the same Nameservers ns95.worldnic.com,
> ns96.worldnic.com which I am using from my old domain, which is still
> active, registrar. I am the one hosting my own website from my old domain.
>
> I understand Nameservers control how a domain name is resolved, translates
> the IP to the Domain name (I think ???).
>
> My ultimate question is, what is the proper information about namedservers
> on the registrar that I registered my domain name with.
>
>
>