It is also relevant just how far the Internet economy of those countries had grown prior to opening-up the second level
Absolutely right. I was thinking TLDs like .pe .cr but there are others.
There was .in in 2005 I believe (not sure).
.ae
Later on .im
.co of course.
.pa in progress.
I have lost track of how many -there are more but for sure they cannot be compared to .co.uk.
Personally I think third level domains are remnants of the past. Because I don't like the idea of being cornered into a category, whether COmmercial or ORGanization (non profit) or whatever, what if I just want to say British. The second level is all that you need, like in other countries (not all of them though, the UK is not an exception or oddity).
So I think it should have been done much earlier. Now, I don't know if that makes sense.
As you suggest, .co.uk is so established and pervasive that we are not talking about a mere change of habits here, it's a revolution.
I'm not sure there is any public demand backing this move. That's what matters right ?
To me it sounds like we have a registry that wants to be portrayed in the public light for being innovative and looking forward to the future, I mean they have to come up with ideas to justify their existence and salaries :lol:
In a way it could be argued this is another case of fixing what ain't broken.
But what do I know, I'm not British, just a modest stakeholder in the namespace
