nowww === Redirects any domain with `www` to the same site without it. * `www.foobar3000.com` -> `foobar3000.com` * `www.helloworld3000.com` -> `helloworld3000.com` See [no-www.org][no-www.org] ![no-www.org][no-www.ico] [no-www.ico]: http://no-www.org/images/blog-button.gif [no-www.org]: http://no-www.org In short: All domains should have a `www` for backwards compatibility with what early adopters of the internet have come to expect (and ctrl+enter adds it). However, those domains should redirect to the root of the domain. * it means we type four fewer charaters * we don't type `http://` anymore, why would we type `www.`? * it's what the cool kids do (i.e. github) * `ftp`, `irc`, `ssh`, etc all have their own *protocols*. Why should the web also have a prefix? Installation === ```bash npm install nowww ``` Usage === ```javascript (function () { 'use strict'; var http = require('http') // (or https / spdy) , connect = require('connect') // or express , nowww = require('./') , app = connect() , server ; app .use(nowww()) .use(require('serve-static')(__dirname + '/public/')) ; server = http.createServer(); server.on('request', app); server.listen(3000, function () { console.log('Listening on ' + server.address().port); }); }()); ```