Shared Domain Hosting

I have a domain with Yahoo but hosting with Godaddy. I have changed DNS,but wht should be the A/CNAME in yahoo
The name servers in Yahoo has been changed as Godaddy says. However, I do also need to change the A record and CNAME record in yahoo. I cannot find what it should be pointing to. I have a shared hosting (Windows) with Godaddy. Should it be the IP - the domain control panel of Godaddy is showing?

take nameservers from Go daddy and set it on Domain control panel of Yahoo!. you don't need to change A/CName records. By pointing nameservers to godaddy, your are already pointing your website and email services to Godaddy. Cheers!!

How do I give away email addresses for my domain?
Is there a script that i can use so that people can sign up for an email address at my domain? I am currently using shared-hosting, would i have to have a dedicated server to do this? alright, sounds like i'll just have to use an old rig for a mail server. i was thinking of ways around the shared-hosting way of creating an account, but it wouldnt be worth it.

well it all depends on what the share host is ready to do. If you have a dedicated server it will be the easiest. I mean you can have as many sub domain registrations and plus people can get access to their emails immediately. Generally share hosts will give you a set number of free emails id you can configure. For this kind of layout a dedicated machine is a better option,

What Is Free Domain Hosting?
What Is Free Domain Hosting? If you want to publish your own personal website, there are ways in which you can do it for free. There are free domain hosting sites available for those who want to share themselves, their interests, and their passions with the world. Of course, the website won’t be the eye-popping, music-blaring, fireworks-blazing websites that many corporate display. Yet, this website will still be a fun, beautifully-designed creation of yours. Free domain hosting is not available to businesses. Rather, it is more of a public service movement by online companies in an effort to spur interest in web. It’s a starter-kit for the amateur web designer. Different free domain hosting sites offer various hosting services. http://yahoodomans.blogspot.com/

Nothing is free. You can get space on the web and guides on how to make a web site from numerous providers including Yahoo GeoCities. The only drawback is that they will post advertising on your site. If you don't mind the ads, go for it. If you can produce a high quality site, you can upload it. If you don't want ads, there are a lot of companies that sell web space very cheap. I have a site that costs me $3 per month and I get everything I need.

Domain? Hosting? Help? Affordable!?!?
Okay so whats the difference from buying a host or buying a domain? Also is this a good deal? http://www.hostgator.com/shared.shtml I might get the "baby" deal, but I'm not sure if it's a smart thing, anyway, i really like graphic arts so i'll be a resource site and personal site for my art. overall, am i getting a good deal and should I buy it?!

Hosting and Domain go together, they're two different things. It's quite complicated to explain but I'll give it one of my best shots. Firstly, web hosting is where your web site will be hosted onto the internet. You upload your files there so other users can see them if they know your web site domain (will explain domains later on). Usually, you're expected to upload an "index.html" file so that would be your main page. Secondly, domain is a URL you purchase. It's basically an address/URL you type into your browser. Eg. you can purchase either one of these or how many you wish; .com, .net, .org and many others, it would then be your URL. Eg. http://www.websitename.com or .net or anything you wish to purchase. And yes, I would say the Hostgator "Baby" package is a very good deal. But they do give you an awful lot of space (the more the better).

Using SSL certificates on shared IP...?
Is there any issue that might arise if one uses multiple SSL certificates for different domains, on a shared IP hosting?

Not at all. SSL certificates are tied to domain names, not IP addresses. As long as each domain has its own certificate, you're good to go. IP addresses are irrelevant with SSL. As a side note, you COULD technically use one cert for multiple domains, but visitors would get warnings about invalid certificates for all the domains that don't match the cert.