Posts Tagged ‘between’

Understanding the Difference Between a Free Web Hosting Service and a Paid Web Hosting Service

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

There are basically two forms of web hosting service. One is the free web hosting service and the other one is the paid web hosting service. Today, you can easily come across so many free web hosting services on the internet. You also usually come across paid hosting advertisements which boast of various unique hosting features. There are many web hosting service providers which offer their web hosting packages which are almost the same with regard to pricing. Online websites are growing day by day. We all are aware of the fact that every website needs a web host, in order to get widely exposed on world wide web. Since there is so much of demand for web hosting service, it is the hosting market that is getting more and more crowded with web hosting companies, trying to carve a niche for themselves and thus wanting to earn money through web hosting service. Before one tries to make use of the service of any hosting company, look out for a reliable hosting company.

It becomes a bit difficult at times to decide upon the right web hosting service for your website. We need to understand that free hosting plans are used for personal and non commercial websites. On the other hand, the paid web hosting plan is considered to be suitable for a business related website. The difference between a web hosting service and a paid web hosting service is explained as follows:

1) Restrictions toward hard disk space or storage facility: In a free web hosting plan, there are restrictions in terms of web space. Such a situation is not suitable for any respectable business. A website is considered as a collection of files that are produced on the Internet for viewing. In such a case, it becomes necessary to store them at a particular place for accessing it as and when required. The place where web files are stored is called a web server. This web server is being offered by the web hosting company. Usually, free web hosting solution offer less storage place(Approximately about 500 mb or even less than that). A 500 mb web space, will not be sufficient for a business related website. Even personal websites that has many video and music files, will not be able to accommodate all the files in the concerned web based server. However, if you opt for a paid server, all your web based files can then easily fit on the server space. If you still require more space, you can pay a particular service fee and thus expand the storage facility. In other word a paid server can provide extended storage facility by paying a small extra service fee amount.

2) Restriction towards web traffic: A proper business promotion activity can lead to large amount of traffic towards your website. A free based web hosting service provider will provide limited access with regard to the traffic that is coming towards the concerned website. Free web hosts, usually allow about 5 GB(max) of traffic to your website. Anything beyond that results into no display of website. In other words, in a free web host package, if the traffic towards the concerned website crosses more than 5 GB, you will immediately not be able to see your website on line. In order to make your website appear on line, you will have to call the hosting service provider to rectify the issue in the form of re-setting the web host server or you will have to upgrade your web hosting plan toward paid hosting package. A paid web hosting package gives you the advantage of allowing much greater traffic toward your business related website. This is the basic advantage that you get through a paid hosting service provider.

3) Restriction with regard to email account: Free web hosting service provide about 2 to 5 email accounts. However, if you need email addresses for each employees who are working within the business organization, then in that case you will have to switch towards a paid web hosting service provider who will allow a greater number of user email accounts.

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Do you know if any hosts for sites can register a dot between there domain name?

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

I’m trying to get a domain like www.stock.tech.com. I can not find any site that register’s that domian. The problem is with the dot between stock and tech. Please let me know if there is any sites that support that.

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The Differences Between Domaining And Cybersquatting

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Domainers get bad press. If you do a general search, you can read about the countless complaints that companies have filed against domainers for trademark violations.  This is a serious problem within the industry and there are many malicious people out there who don’t think twice about infringing upon a company’s trademark.

When I first began domaining, I was very naive to this problem.  Even worse, I didn’t have an appreciation for how many terms that I thought were generic were actually trademarked.  The first and only time I had a complaint sent to me about a violation was when I registered a domain name that contained the term “realtor”.  I honestly thought the term was just a generic word used by real estate professionals. After owning the domain for approximately a month I was contacted by a representative from the National Association of Realtors.  I was told that I couldn’t legally develop the website.   In response, I quickly turned the domain back over to the registrar.  Why?  Because I had obviously purchased something that I wasn’t entitled to.

After that incident, I learned that research is important.  I also began to realize the extent of this trademark infringement problem in the domaining world.  If you do a simple search of the domains for sale at eBay, for example, you’ll probably find that 10-20% of the names sold on any given day are clearly infringing upon trademarks of companies.  I think many domainers register these names for quick resells to unsuspecting end users.  I assume people buy these names because they think they can ride the coattails of the larger company so to speak.  They are looking for easy traffic for their developed website.  The problem for these end users is they can never win.  Many cybersquatters have had to pay thousands of dollars in fines for infringing upon a person or company’s trademark.  It simply isn’t worth it.  Here is a list of the latest infringement cases:

http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/casesx/list.jsp?prefix=D&year=2009&seq_min=1&seq_max=199

Real domaining is about speculation.  It is a speculative game, just like real estate and stock investing.  I buy names at a certain price, I market them as best I can, and then I hope to sell them for a profit.  What is hurting the image of domaining are participants in the marketplace that are completely devoid of any business ethics.  Ethics is important to help maintain a set of acceptable business practices.  By purposely registering domains that contain trademarks, these cybersquatters have brought down a lot of heat on the domaining business.  I honestly don’t know what the solution to this problem is.  However, we can all start to help by defending the industry.  Domainers are not cybersquatters.  Domainers don’t knowingly purchase trademarked domain names.  If we all make a better effort to be more professional in our business dealings, we may improve the image of domaining.  All it usually takes is a simple google search to find if a term is trademarked.

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What is the difference between a wordpress hosted blog and a wordpress blog with a domain name?

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

I currently have a free wordpress blog without a domain name it is blogname.wordpress.com I was wondering if I decided later if I could transfer the information from that blog to a blog that has its own domain. I have one more question are there people that will build a blog for you if you give them the information? I just downloaded the publishing kit from wordpress and it looks pretty intimidating.

Thanks

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Is it legal to have a domain name that contains Terrorism word in between?

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

Can I have a domain name like www.terrorism.net? I don;t want to have nything to do with the T word(nor I have anything to do with it).They website is just to store my personal information.

Is it legal?

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Difference Between Free Web Hosting & Paid Hosting

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

There are advantages and disadvantages for both paid and free web hosting. But it actually depends on what ones requirements are and what one is trying to achieve.

Advantages of Free Web Hosting

- As it is free it is the one of the most obvious advantage.

- Free web space can be used to practice programming. Some free web hosting plans support a programming language such as PHP, ASP, CGI/Perl, Cold fusion or JSP but several do not support all the languages.

- For creating a small personal website free web hosting plan is great.

Disadvantages of Free Web Hosting

- The majority of free web hosts cannot afford to offer 24/7 or any support as they are offering free hosting.

- Many free web hosts do not allow FTP access, which is an obstacle if one has many files to upload this one of the major flaws with free web hosts.

- Many free web hosts place their banner and text ads on the website.

- Very few free web hosts with their plans offer control panel.

- Ones website is placed in a sub-domain or a folder with a large number of free hosts, which results in poor search engine rankings most of the time.

- Much disk space or data transfer is not offered by free web hosting plans. This can be a problem if one have a lot of large files or if ones website generates a lot of traffic.

Advantages of Paid Web Hosting

- Most paid web hosts offer 24/7 supports.

- One will not have any unwanted text or banner ads placed on ones website with paid hosting.

- Control panel such as cPanel, Vdeck, Plesk or Ensim which offer features like web stats, the ability to password protect directories, and the ability to create web based email accounts are being offered by a lot of paid web hosting plans.

- One will have ones own domain name (consumerswebsite.com) which will not only result in better search engine rankings, but will also look more professional. Thus ones website will not be placed in a sub-domain or folder.

- As with paid web hosting one gets more disk space and data transfer, one can add more files to ones website and it can also handle more traffic.

- Most paid web hosts are offering FTP access.

- Couple programming languages such as PHP, ASP, CGI/Perl, the majority of paid web hosting plans is supporting Cold fusion and JSP.

Disadvantage of Paid Web Hosting

- It’s not free this is the only major disadvantage of paid web hosting.

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Purchasing space on web hosting. What is the difference between “domain register only” and “build a package”?

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

I’m looking to rent some space on A2 hosting.
I need to have php and postgresql.

But, now that I’m trying to make a purchase, it’s asking me to select “domain register only” or “build a package”???

If I chose “domain register only”, I won’t get php and postgresql??? I’m just gonna own the domain that I make up the name for??? Is that the difference???

And, with “build a package”, I’ll gain access to php and postgresql???

I’m thinking this b/c “build a package” causes more than “domain register only”.

thanks in advance!

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Difference Between Business Hosting and Other Website Hosting

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

Business hosting is alike other types of web hosting, though there are some very important things to be considered when selecting a host for one’s business website.

Few new internet entrepreneurs usually makes an important error of taking advantage of free website hosting offers or web hosting options, which are being offered by their internet service provider as a value- added service.

Free web hosting is best for personal websites that use this service just for sharing memento, photos and family news. On the other hand, for website that is intended to be professional and generating leads and income, vital aspects of business hosting are- speed, reliability, space, and enhanced and up-gradable features.

One’s website is much more than a place on the web, when he/she has an internet-based business.

As it is one’s livelihood, in reality, it is a fact that business hosting is different from other website hosting.

All web hosting, packages are not alike, and when it comes to web hosting, one gets what one pays for. So, there is much more to consider than cost, while choosing a web hosting package for one’s business website.

As free web hosting is not that reliable, it should be avoided completely, it usually uses the web host’s domain name instead of one’s own apart from having limited options.

When one host his/her site with an internet service provider instead of a professional web hosting company, he/she generally has to share bandwidth with many subscribers so his/her website may not be accessible all the time, so web hosting options offered as part of service by one’s internet service provider should be used for personal websites, not business websites as they generally are limited in regard to capabilities and options.

A professional web hosting service, who will host one’s website under his/her own registered domain name should go for business hosting,

Web hosting package provided by web hosts, should have fast servers, secure server capabilities, and adequate web space for one’s current and future needs.

As part of the package, one should also have: -

• Full email services (preferably with IMAP technology),

• Access to reports and raw server logs that will enable one to monitor his/her website’s performance and the results of his/her marketing efforts,

• Access to, an administrative control panel, and

• The ability to transfer files using FTP access.

Business hosting offered by a professional hosting company should be able to offer guaranty, at a minimum, 99% uptime for the greatest reliability.

When one’s web hosting provider’s server is down, his/her website and email will be down and downtime will result in lost of customers, lost sales and hindered revenues, if their web hosting provider’s don’t have alternative servers.

To ensure that one’s website and databases are safe and secure and that data retrieval will not be a problem, if it becomes necessary due to technical failure, Web hosting providers should make available top-quality technical support that is handy when needed and also they should make regular backups of their servers.

Assessing alternatives for hosting one’s business website is not very easy. It takes time, thought and consideration. Though, if one takes the time to evaluate their options and think things throughout before selecting a web hosting plan for his/her business website, he/she will be at an advantage over the long run.

Decideing a web hosting plan for one’s business website is not a decision to be taken without due consideration. In reality, it provides the base upon which one will build both his/her business website and business.

One’s Internet business experience will be much more enjoyable and profitable if he/she makes sure of his/her foundation to be strong and unshakable.

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Choosing Between Windows or UNIX as a Web Hosting OS

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Before you can narrow your search for a web hosting service, the single biggest decision facing you is the type of operating system you are interested in.  This decision alone will narrow the field down of potential provider significantly, and narrow down the packages you will be researching and comparing.

In general, there are several major criteria used when selecting and web hosting service, and these are all impacted by the operating system:

Performance Features Stability Price

Traditionally UNIX was the hosting service of choice due to its advantage in these four areas, but the gap between the two big operating systems as a hosting choice continues to close and get blurred quite often.  Here is a breakdown of where they stand today:

Performance

UNIX systems still tend to win in this area, due to several key factors – memory (RAM) requirements and OS tune ability.  Windows was developed as an operating system to make it easy for wide range of people to use, from the highly skilled to the less computer inclined.  UNIX was developed more for server usage, and the average skilled computer person would not be able to use and manage this OS on a daily basis.  Because of this difference in background, UNIX will perform better as a server than a Windows box on the same hardware – Windows needs more RAM to compete with UNIX, but UNIX will still beat it out due to its ability to tune virtually everything, down the very core of the OS itself.

Let me be clear about this, I am not saying that UNIX is a better OS than Windows, just that it is a better performing hosting environment.  Windows beats UNIX out in usability, development tools, maintainability, and many other areas.

But don’t stop reading here – performance is the least of your concerns when choosing a web hosting service.  Because you will most likely be choosing a shared hosting environment, you have very little control over the resources of the machine as related to your hosted website – you will be sharing memory, hard drive access, CPU, and network bandwidth with hundreds of other websites anyway.  At any given moment in time one of the other websites might be spiking in activity and cause your website to response slowly.

In a virtual private server or a dedicated server, UNIX would be the best choice in the performance category, but in a shared environment the gap is not a factor.

Features

Both Windows and UNIX come fully loaded with a wide range of features, and quite a few are shared between the two.  If you were to manage the machine directly, you would most like choose Windows due to its easier to use interface.  But this is not the case when speaking of a web hosting account.  All hosting companies use a control panel to allow users to manage their account and websites, and all of the control panels are web based, and many are cross-platform.  All of these control panels are identical in functionality – they provide a web user interface to all of the underlying OS, web server, and files on the hosting service.  Both operating systems support remote access (UNIX with telnet/SSH shell, Windows with Remote Desktop) and ftp file management as well.

The biggest difference in features between the two operating systems is the development tools available.  Both support the major scripting languages used to create websites such as PHP, PERL, Python, Ruby, and Java.  Both support extensions popular for adding to websites such as ColdFusion, FrontPage Extensions, Flash, etc.  Both have support for the free MySQL database, which usually resides on a separate machine at the hosting company anyway.  Windows has the advantage here in that is supports ASP, ASP.Net, ASP MVC, and MSSQL databases as well.  These are tools specific to some applications and may be a major requirement for you – obviously making this decision between the two operating systems easy.  Most Windows based web hosting packages will offer, at some price point, unlimited MySQL databases with unlimited disk space, but limited MSSQL databases with limited disk space.  This is due to the licensing requirements of MSSQL causing more expenses on the part of the web hosting service as the use more MSSQL databases for their customers.  MySQL and MSSQL are virtually identical in performance and features – just like the operating systems they differ mainly in the area of price and management abilities.

UNIX does have a slight advantage in many of the scripting languages due to its ability to compile into the web server (Apache, open source) the extensions needed to run the scripting languages.  Windows cannot due this with its web server (IIS) since it is a commercially sold application.  Windows and IIS must run most of the scripting languages as a CGI extension, which means they are launched as an external process to the web server, requiring slightly more startup overhead each time they are needed.  Microsoft has acknowledged this shortcoming with the latest IIS (version 7) and allows these scripting extensions to be more in process.  In the big picture it does not make much difference either way since this is really getting back into the area of performance – refer back to the prior discussion performance as to why it is of not much importance in a shared hosting environment.

UNIX has a slight advantage in available installable applications – most of the open source website projects (blogs, content management systems, shopping carts, web site builders)  install smoother under UNIX since they assume you are using other open source tools (Linux, MySQL, Apache).  Installing some of these on a Windows operating system require extra configuration or help from the web hosting support staff.  With the growth of cross platform control panels, this problem is shrinking over time.  Also there are Windows specific open source projects available for every need of your website that install clean and function nicely – but they may be younger and less developed than the UNIX counterpart.

Windows is the operating system of choice based on features, especially in the shared hosting environment and if you need any of the Microsoft technologies (ASP, ASP.Net, ASP MVC, MSSQL) to run your website.   Be careful if you have a need for one of the older scripting technologies (PHP, PERL, Python, Ruby) on a Windows hosting, they may not be available or perform poorly.

Stability

Windows has traditionally been dinged in the past in this area, but mainly due to its desktop operating systems, not its server operating systems.  Windows hosting packages will be running either Server 2003 or Server 2008, both of which do not have stability problems.  The desktop stability problems are mainly not Microsoft’s fault – almost every desktop Windows user is guilty of installing a wide range of various software packages and drivers, rendering the machine over time to be a blend of software that has never been tested with each other.

UNIX has traditionally and still shines in the area of stability – again due to its background of being developed as a server operating system.  It also has advantages over Windows in that complete server reboots are rarely needed as part of a installation of a third party software package – it has clearly defined system component drivers that can be rebooted without requiring a complete system reboot.

Both operating systems are equal in the area of stability – even in the shared hosting environment they both have adequate safeguards against individual websites on the same machine from causing harm or abruptly stopping the server.

Price

Windows still remains a slightly more expensive operating system to sell hosting accounts out of for two reasons – licensing and RAM requirements.  Web hosting companies have more expenses on a Windows server that hosts 100 websites than it does on a Linux server hosting 100 websites.  Typically companies also carry a Microsoft support agreement with annual expenses as well as the upfront licensing expenses of Windows – even though they all require a staff of knowledgeable and skilled technicians to manage the bank of servers regardless of the operating system.

Windows is also slightly more expensive with database support for you website – most web hosting offer a UNIX hosting package at some price point with unlimited MySQL databases and database disk space, but very few offer a Windows package at any price point with unlimited MSSQL databases and database disk space.  So if your website grows and needs more databases and disk space, you may be locked into paying a higher fee per month with MSSQL and Windows than you would with MySQL.

UNIX has the advantage in pricing, even though some hosting companies do now sell Windows and UNIX based accounts at the same price point, but most still have a slight increase of monthly fees for the Windows packages.

Summary

Let me be clear about this:  the choice of hosting your website in UNIX or Windows has nothing to do with the desktop operating system you use on a daily basis.  It has nothing to do with the management interface you will use to manage your website and hosting account.  It also is not about which operating system is better than the other.  Some people have a religious fervor for one or the other, but they are both just tools in the toolbox.  Which is better, a hammer or a screw driver?  It depends on the job at hand.

So here is a review of how the operating systems are in the four areas of criteria used when selecting and web hosting service:

Performance:  Tie in Virtual or Dedicated server, UNIX in a shared environment Features:  Windows, based on addition of Microsoft technologies Stability:  Tie Price:  UNIX

So, based on this discussion, your decision will be driven two simple questions:

1)      Do you require any of the Microsoft technologies?

2)      Are you willing pay a few extra dollars per month for the Windows and Microsoft technologies?

If you answer yes to the above questions, you should go with a Windows based web hosting package.  Otherwise you should move towards the UNIX based packages since it is a cheaper and faster.

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Sex.com: Between Bankruptcy and Foreclosure

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

Sex.com: Between Bankruptcy and Foreclosure
A lender which claims it is owed millions by the Sex.com domain name operator is asking a U.S. bankruptcy court to dismiss an involuntary bankruptcy case against the company, so it can resume a foreclosure auction, according to new court documents.

Read more on New York Times

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