Sites like the Wikimedia Foundation have many sub-domains attributed to their main domains, usually for specific languages. For example, the main portal to Wikipedia is www.wikipedia.org or wikipedia.org, which then let's you choose the language of your choice, which then redirects you to the sub-domain for the chosen language, such as en.wikipedia.org for English.
The only major domains I can think of that do this is a extensive manner are the Wikimedia Foundation sites, so if you think this applies to a lot of websites on the web and/or think this is just a good idea, then please vote!
Thanks!
1 Comment
The only major domains I can think of that do this is a extensive manner are the Wikimedia Foundation sites, so if you think this applies to a lot of websites on the web and/or think this is just a good idea, then please vote!
Thanks!
1 Comment








I tagged a lot of language-specific Wikipedia sites before I learned that tagging a higher-level domain will affect all of the subdomains as well (unless they are tagged differently).
Thus any tags on "wikipedia.org" will apply to all untagged *.wikipedia.org subdomains, and tagging the latter is unnecessary unless the nature of their content differs significantly.