Automation & tech

DNS & nameservers, without the headache.

A record, CNAME, MX, nameservers – if none of that means anything to you, good. I make sure your domain points where it should.

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DNS & nameserver help

DNS (Domain Name System) is the internet's address book: it translates a readable domain name – like your-company.com – into the IP address of the server where your website lives. Nameservers are the directory servers that manage this address book. Whoever controls the nameserver controls where your domain points.

In practice that means: an A record for your website, an MX record for email, a CNAME for subdomains or third-party tools. Sounds technical – it is. I set the records correctly, check your TTL values and make sure your domain is reliably reachable, no matter where someone accesses it from.

What's included
How it works
  1. You tell me what's not working or what you need to connect – a short message is enough.
  2. I look at your current DNS records and nameserver configuration and identify where the issue is or what's missing.
  3. I correct or create the necessary records (A, CNAME, MX, TXT) – with a plain-language explanation of what I'm doing and why.
  4. We verify together that everything is reachable, and I give you a quick rundown so you're not flying blind in the future.
Who this is for
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between DNS and nameservers?

A nameserver is responsible for which DNS records apply to a domain. DNS (Domain Name System) is the overarching system that translates domain names into IP addresses. You configure at the nameserver level which server your domain points to – DNS then resolves that for every browser worldwide.

How do I connect my domain to a website or tool?

You need an A record (pointing to an IP address) or a CNAME record (pointing to another hostname). I check exactly what your host or tool requires and set the right records at your domain registrar.

Why is my domain not reachable?

Common causes are incorrect A records, a misconfigured nameserver or an expired domain. I go through the records systematically, find the issue and fix it – usually done in under an hour.

How long do DNS changes take?

DNS changes take anywhere from a few minutes to 48 hours to propagate worldwide, depending on the TTL setting. Before making changes I intentionally lower the TTL so updates take effect faster.

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DNS causing headaches? I untangle it. Drop me a quick note about what's wrong.