Quote:
Originally Posted by spiderbait
To make this work you'd need to have a hosting package that permits you to "park" a domain on top of the other one. .
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You don't need a hosting service that parks a domain all you need is a separate DNS service that does that for the second domain to point to the first. You could use a simple service like dyndns.org to do this. There are 100s of them out there, And yes some are free!
This is how we manage domains and subdomains on different hosts.
For instance my images for multiple domains have been hosted on one service (a UNIX system) for 5 years and they have the subdomain images.xxxx.com. This way they all can partipate in a high bandwidth, large backed up storage area without me having to worry about any security issues and taking away processing time from the processor for the webites.
And my main domains are all hosted on an inhouse microsoft server which is behind a firewall.
The DNS records control it all. Simple to implement