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 October 26, 2000        TIPS to search 200 million Web pages fast!

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Nidhi Taparia

He’s eight months old, gurgles, and doesn’t even have teeth. What he does have, however, is his own domain name and website: www.ekansh.com. Meet Ekansh -- India’s first dotcom kid.

It was a naming-ceremony with a difference. Network Solutions played Pandit, advising Avinash Raghava what to name his baby. Unusual? Yes, but, for Avinash, a net freak, it was the perfect gift for his son.

He, along with his wife, had planned a millennium baby only to miss the deadline by twelve days. "I even did a search on sites like pitara and jnjindia," he says, "before I finally found an appropriate and unusual name at indiaparenting. There were a couple of options, but I first confirmed whether or not the domain name was available, before deciding on the name Ekansh."

The name means ‘a tiny unit’ and Avinash loved it more because of the starting letter ‘e’. That, after all, was in keeping with the e-buzz generated by the Internet.

So, as most people would wonder, what prompted this father -- a knowledge management professional at Trisoft Design, Delhi -- to create the site? He blames it on a lack of information about a baby’s growth in its formative years. "I couldn’t find any site that traced the growth of the baby. So I decided to put down all those minute changes here," he explains. That and the fact that the net remains a vehicle for instant fame and celebrity-dom. Avinash accepts it. "It was the perfect way to make my baby famous even before he grew up." He also hopes that this might actually make it easier for Ekansh to get admission into a high brow Delhi School known for its arduous admission procedure.


While it’s a definite first for Ekansh, Raghava has done this sort of this before, a wedding site for him and his wife no less. It was only after a foreigner started stalking his wife online, sending her love letters, that hubby dearest decided it wasn’t worth the effort.

With Ekansh, however, there have been no problems. The feedback has been very positive so far, with almost a hundred odd visitors logging in daily. "It is all through word of mouth," says Avinash. "The most interesting mail we got was from another girl called Ekansh, who wrote to us complaining that we have taken away her name."

The feedback varies. Some coo over the photographs, others lap up the easy-to read account of Ekansh’s monthly growth pattern, still others shower the child with blessings and a host of suggestions. The father laughs when he says, "There is a five year old boy who actually logs on regularly to give me advice on what we should feed Ekansh, and how we should take care of him. I find that very touching."


Needless to say, the entire process has been very exciting. All this after the palpitations when the domain name was not confirmed even after Ekansh’s cards with the URL were printed out; or the hours spent with friends in putting up the virtual labour of love. "Everybody has contributed. My boss loaned me the digital camera, a friend designed it, others offered their ideas and suggestions."

He rounds off, "It’s a good way of blowing one’s own trumpet. And it sure beats repeating the same thing again and again to friends who want to know more about the baby, and how’s he doing!"

Fathers around the country would nod in complete agreement.

Design: Lynette Menezes