13 Dec 2000
The Millennium Dome's days as a theme park may be drawing to an end, but the Dome experience will live on through its website in a cut-down form next year.
It will take the form of a review of the year from mid-January, with its final destination likely to be as a sub-section within the government's Millennium Commission website later in the year as the original commission runs out in March 2001.
Since December 1998, it has generated 50 million page impressions, including 25 million page impressions between 6 January to 2 November this year.
However, just like the real Dome, the website has suffered a few setbacks lately. A mistake in the transfer of a DNS server between web hosting companies last week left the website down from 7 to 12 December.
Although the Dome switched web hosting firms back in April, a spokesman said the server had not been handed over until it became necessary after the IP addressing for the website's ticketing services was changed.
Now back in operation, it will run in its present form until the new year. The site runs Microsoft IIS4.0 on Windows NT4.
Latest stories from Web
Related articles
Related jobs
Poll
What is the most important IT priority for your company this year?
Hands on with the highly anticipated Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich hybrid tablet
Connect with V3.co.uk
This paper focuses on a series of best practices and techniques for development teams looking to improve their software development processes
Why good data management at all levels is essential in the modern business (video, 6mins)
Project Manager (BI) 6 Months Contract – to...
Desktop Support Manager 3 month contract - to start...
/ Programme Manager / 45k / Significant benefits / London...
Automation Test Manager Selenium London 75k Automation...
Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies. IThound.com brings you over 2,000 white papers, case studies and analyst reports.
Do you agree?