It's just one of many possible solutions.

You can get a list of the domains you need and hard code them in /etc/hosts, 
and then use an open DNS provider.
I think dnsmasq will allow you to use one upstream DNS server for a certain 
domain tree (e.g. subdomains sharing a common domain) while using the default 
upstream DNS for everything else.
There are probably other DNS programs available that may provide the same or 
more functionality.

As for making such solutions more widely known, the user must be convinced that 
their situation could be remedied. People will give up when they find out 
they're trapped by broken DNS; in reality there may be many easy solutions. If 
they're not aware of how DNS works then they may not see it as problem to begin 
with. So education would be my suggestion :-)

On Oct 23, 2013, at 5:25 PM, Timothy Hart wrote:

> That seems viable. And fairly straightforward. I'll give it a try and let you 
> know how it goes.
> 
> I've seen a fair bit of traffic around similar macports issues, but this is 
> the first mention I've seen for this solution. Did I miss the recommendation? 
> If so, is there something we could do to make this approach a bit more 
> visible to others with the same problem?
> 

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