| <H1> | <H2> | <H3> | <H4> | <H5> | <H6> |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 3 | 18 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| <H1> ITU-AJ </H1> |
| <H1> お知らせ </H1> |
| <H2> The ITU Association of Japan </H2> |
ITU-AJ - The ITU Association of Japan
ituaj.jp/
The ITU Association of Japan
9 ALT attributes are empty or missing.
| https://www.ituaj.jp/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/main_img1.png |
| https://www.ituaj.jp/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/1-1.jpg |
| https://www.ituaj.jp/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/itu-nwc24_cover_ituajbanner.jpg |
| Text content size | 2711 bytes |
| Total HTML size | 36739 bytes |
Your webpage size is 36 KB, could be compressed upto 9 KB using GZIP (74.6 % size savings)
Domain Age: Not Available
Created Date: Not Available
Updated Date: Not Available
Expiry Date: Not Available
| [ JPRS database provides information on network administration. Its use is ] |
| [ restricted to network administration purposes. For further information, ] |
| [ use 'whois -h whois.jprs.jp help'. To suppress Japanese output, add'/e' ] |
| [ at the end of command, e.g. 'whois -h whois.jprs.jp xxx/e'. ] |
| Domain Information: [ドメイン情報] |
| Domains (TLD) | Status |
|---|---|
| ituaj.com | Available |
| ituaj.net | Available |
| ituaj.org | Already Registered |
| ituaj.biz | Already Registered |
| ituaj.us | Available |
| Domains (TLD) | Status |
|---|---|
| utuaj.jp | Available |
| jtuaj.jp | Available |
| ktuaj.jp | Available |
| ltuaj.jp | Available |
| otuaj.jp | Available |
| Server IP | Server Location | Service Provider |
|---|---|---|
| 49.212.215.202 | Not Available | Not Available |
Too bad, your website has too many CSS files.
Too bad, your website has too many JavaScript files.
Perfect, your website doesn't use nested tables.
Too bad, your website is using inline styles.
| Anchor | Type | Follow |
|---|---|---|
| お問い合せ先 | Internal Links | Dofollow |
| サイトマップ | Internal Links | Dofollow |
| 特定商取引法表示 | Internal Links | Dofollow |
| English | Internal Links | Dofollow |
| https://www.ituaj.jp/ | Internal Links | Dofollow |
Social
Social Data
Cost and overhead previously rendered this semi-public form of communication unfeasible.
But advances in social networking technology from 2004-2010 has made broader concepts of sharing possible.