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Bit.ly Scores a Shorter & Better URL

Written by Marshall Kirkpatrick / September 4, 2009 8:36 AM / 18 Comments

jmplogo.jpgURL shortener and social media analytics service Bit.ly just announced the availability of a new domain for shortening URLs, J.mp. J.mp offers all the same features Bit.ly does, but we believe it has two advantages.

Not only is it shorter, the new name is more literally communicative of what the service does. Click on it and you will J.mp [jump] to a new link. It's nice and literal like the old classic tinyURL, though most people don't know what URLs are. J.mp is so friendly it makes Bit.ly look like a way to catch a bit-delivered virus. J.mp might be the best URL shortener name yet. How do those Bit.ly guys do it?

J.mp was first discovered by Dan Frommer at Business Insider hours before the official announcement and the announcement was retweeted by super news-hunter Atul Arora in under 3 minutes after it went live. Now we've given it just a few moments' thought and posted this account less than 15 minutes after the news was official - the Bit.ly blog displays the age of its posts in minutes.

Such is the nature of the super-fast, perhaps Real Time, social web that Bit.ly is a big part of.

You can visit J.mp and get all the same bookmarklets and tools for the new URL that you've got for Bit.ly (the "sidebar" tool is excellent). We expect that leading Twitter clients like Tweetdeck and Seesmic will likely add J.mp support soon. We wonder if Twitter.com will stop transforming long links into Bit.ly links automatically (a deal that was announced this Spring) and will use J.mp instead.

In case you're curious - .mp comes from the Mariana Islands, which are just South of Japan.

There are a number of efforts in the market to create community-owned URL shorteners, with features serving developers first before the interests of private owners. Most notable among them so far is Tr.im. It would be a shame if enthusiasm for such projects was lost over one fewer letter being taken up by J.mp. That said, this new URL J.mp will likely be just the latest development from a company that's building itself into a strong market leader.


Comments

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  1. u.nu is as same as j.mp when it comes to counting characters in URL.

    Posted by: AA | September 4, 2009 8:56 AM



  2. But what did I Nu? That domain is short but arbitrary.

     Posted by: Marshall Kirkpatrick Author Profile Page | September 4, 2009 9:08 AM



  3. I thought single letter domain names weren't allowed. Can u name any .com domains with a single letter ?

    Posted by: Vin | September 4, 2009 9:43 AM



  4. I don't see why Bit.ly doesn't just default to using j.mp shortened URLS. Especially on Twitter.

    Pretty soon they might have an identity crisis. People might wonder, are they j.mp or bit.ly?

     Posted by: Brant Tedeschi Author Profile Page | September 4, 2009 10:16 AM



  5. I'm so sick of all this URL shortening nonsense. I can't wait for all this companies to go under.

    URLs don't need to be 5 characters. The only reason anyone cares because of Twitter's limit so that messages can be piped through SMS, but the reality is that any phone that's capable of clicking a link is capable of more than just SMS.

    URL shortening is something that should be provided by the domain of a site, not by a third party. If http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/bitly_scores_a_shorter_better_url.php is too long, you should just use http://www.readwriteweb.com/123456789

    I hate that all links on Twitter, and now Facebook and others, are blind.

     Posted by: Aaron Author Profile Page | September 4, 2009 10:39 AM



  6. Link shortening is a sign of the Web Apocalypse. Nothing good can come of this. NOTHING.

    Please beware of reporting on link shortening services as if its good news when a new method comes out, the whole system of link shortening needs to go. The Bit.ly guys are clever and I respect them but they are exacerbating a major flaw with Twitter that is extremely dangerous and costly to everyone else.

    We will all suffer in the link apocalypse. BEWARNED

    Posted by: Ron | September 4, 2009 10:54 AM



  7. I used URL shorteners prior to Twitter -- too many email clients would slice up long URLs and too many people could not re-assemble that sliced up URL. I think the problem still exists and therefore I am happy that the service is around.

    Posted by: James | September 4, 2009 11:25 AM



  8. Obviously it's time to petition for a new one-character root domain whose sole function is URL redirection, and which only supports one real hostname, the root domain server itself.

    So you could just have a site whose entire fully qualified name is "u" for maximum terseness.

    I suppose in most fonts "i" would use fewer pixels, so it might be preferable....

    Posted by: Miramon | September 4, 2009 12:28 PM



  9. This morning, there was about 15 mins, that I was clicking on bitly links and it was trying to redirect to j.mp links but it wasn't working. They must have been amidst a deploy or something. It made me feel kind of helpless. Every link I was clicking on was erroring out.

     Posted by: Justin Author Profile Page | September 4, 2009 1:42 PM



  10. Lovely!

    They must have financed the domain purchase with all that revenue they earn.

    Posted by: Cowardly Skeptic | September 4, 2009 11:48 PM




  11. Didn’t the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority reserve all single letter and single digit domain names in the top level domains? I thought this was supposed to be a safeguard against overloading the registries?
    www.Aafter.com- the new buzzword in URL shorteners!

     Posted by: Paula Author Profile Page | September 5, 2009 2:46 AM



  12. Glad you liked j.mp and remember as stated in our blog post yesterday - http://j.mp/GKOCx - j.mp and bit.ly are interchangeable - In fact, any bit.ly URL also works as a j.mp URL. - so that makes j.mp even cooler! Ok, that's my opinion at least, biased as it may be :P

    Rex
    Community Mgr., Bit.ly

     Posted by: Rex Author Profile Page Posted on FriendFeed   | September 5, 2009 8:50 AM



  13. Have been using 3.ly for over 2 months, its great. Even a direct short cut to twitter from their mainpage once the link has been generated.

    Posted by: Mainlander | September 5, 2009 3:05 PM



  14. You can also try http://bind.to
    I suggest the inclusion of this feature in Apache or MS IIS.

    Posted by: Paulo | September 6, 2009 5:21 AM



  15. As a big promoter of Bit.ly I think it's great they have acquired a new shortener. Up until now they were one of the shortest...I wonder if tracking will be as good on it.

    Posted by: North Platte Web Design | September 6, 2009 10:07 AM



  16. I think twitter should just parse links automatically (and not count them towards the character limit) or have a "link" field. Then it could just attach a hyper linked word to the end of the tweet "Link". Problem solved, bit.ly goes under.

     Posted by: Nicholas Author Profile Page | September 7, 2009 8:58 AM



  17. Have had two friends comment my j.mp links don't open for them; their testing showed that Quest and OpenDNS doesn't resolve the j.mp links to the longer URLs, but the bit.ly ones work fine. Anyone else experiencing this?

    Posted by: Katie | September 16, 2009 12:41 AM



  18. What your article is terrific.
    Have knowledge of new and still stay back. Always read your Blog.
    Thank you very much.

    Posted by: tomhere Author Profile Page | November 29, 2009 4:29 PM



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