I used to use DNS2go.com too. It was a nice service when it was free...I don't know if I'd pay for it since there are so many other options out there. One thing I did like about dns2go was that you could assign an offline site. Say you had to shut off your server...people trying to access your site would get nowhere...but dns2go will let you redirect to another permanent site (like webspace given to you by your ISP or something). That's what I liked about it. The downside to dns2go is that I don't believe you can assign MX servers (mail exchange...like if you want joe_nobody@something.dns2go.com ..but that may not be a big deal)
For $20 a year, you get less at dns2go.com then you get with the one-time $20 at dyndns.org.
All in all, it doesn't make a whole lot of difference. They all do about the same things...just depends on what you feel like paying/doing.
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I'm a professional web developer. I'm good with PHP, Perl, Java/JSP, some RoR, XML, Javascript (AJAX as well), (x)HTML, CSS, etc.. Validated code is good; fully cross-browser code is better (you comply to your users and the software they use, not the other way around. Sorry!)
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