I'd love to see this site get more attention, more press (well -- press, period), more links on other sites, and so on. But I'm finding that a huge hindrance to all this happening is its name. "fuckMicrosoft.com" just doesn't lend itself to cross-promotion. And I'll be honest with you -- my own parents don't even know I do this website, and nor will it appear on my web portfolio or resume. Which kind of sucks, especially when you consider it's all due to a stupid NAME.
A while ago, I registered a perfectly innocuous, G-rated domain (the .com, the .net, and .org variations, just to be safe) for a possible idea I had of starting a new companion site to this one which would have an ambitious goal, one I planned to seek "angel investor" funding for, etc. I talked with a couple of people and soon realized it was a totally un-fundable idea, so I won't be pursuing it after all. But I still own the domain names, and they would work for this site, I think.
Of course, we lose the nice, clever sting of "fuckMicrosoft.com." Of course, I'd still keep all the current domain names, and they'd all continue to point to this site. It's just that its primary name would no longer be fuckMicrosoft.com, and the site itself would probably have no references to that anymore.
I suppose I could script it in such a way that, depending on the URL the visitor typed in, the appropriate graphics, headers, etc. would be inserted to reflect the site name they expected. And I could have certain links (e.g., fuckMicrosoft.com T-shirts, virtual hosts, e-mail addresses) only be available if they actually entered the fuckMicrosoft.com site.
As for site promotion, submission to other sites, family-friendly naming, and my own portfolio, I'd use the "G-rated" alternate name.
I don't have enough knowledge on how to script all this to make it happen, but it's probably nothing too terribly hard to learn.
So . . . thoughts?