Posts Tagged ‘good’

Begin Your Website With a Good Domain Registrar

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

A domain registrar is the one whom one can say is an agent who can take your information for registration and can reserve your domain name.

If you own a company and wish to make a website, then you must be ready for the cost and effort it would require to give it a perfect look. And once you have invested, you will certainly wish to make it one of the best websites. The domain registrar that you choose must be professional so that you can get the right job. Apart from all this, you must also see that you get superb customer service so that if you are stuck with any problem, then you get it resolved quickly.

In the technology market, you get all sorts of people. There are some registrar companies who will take huge sum of money from you and will never come to you. There have been cases when clients paid a premium price for the domain name and never heard anything from the registrars.

Also in the list are cases where people had to lose their paid domain name just after using it for a small period of time. Such a mishap can prove to be really devastating for your business because it will make you lose your trust in the market as today the image of a company depends on their functional website. That is why there is a need to register your domain name with a professional and approved best domain registrar.

Selecting the best domain registrar might seem to be a daunting task to you but just a little hard work can make you relax while your whole website gets developed. You can also let your domain registrar to do web hosting for you. Getting it done with the registrar will make you achieve low cost hosting rates.

Also if you are just a beginner in a business, you won’t like to invest much into the making of your website. Similarly you won’t love to put huge money into the hosting account as well. So you would prefer having low cost web hosting but that doesn’t mean that you will have to compromise on the quality of the web hosting. By low cost web hosting, we mean to say that you can host your website at a good but cheap hosting.

There are many low cost hosting companies that can give you affordable hosting but you need to be cautious while negotiating the deal. These low cost web site hosting companies might try to lure you by offering more disk space and might try to give more bandwidth also. But innocent buyer doesn’t know that these days because of cheap internet connections, disk space and bandwidth have become cheaper, because of which hosting companies are able to make good deals out of it. So look for a low cost web site hosting company which is reliable and offers good support.

If you wish to avail services in low cost hosting, low cost web hosting, low cost web site hosting and best domain registrars, then you can try for reliance web hosting company like clickwebworks.com

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Have you or anyone you know made good money buying and selling domain names?

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010
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We are looking for a good domain name host.?

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Hello, we (Envy Forums) are looking for a good and reliable domain name host. So far we have seen…

Yahoo.com: 1-year term: $1.99 (special discount for new customers only)

2-year term: $11.94 ($1.99 for your first year, $9.95 for your second year)

3-year term: $21.89 ($1.99 for your first year, $9.95 for your next two years)

5-year term: $41.79 ($1.99 for your first year, $9.95 for your next four years)

Domain.com: Bulk Pricing
.com, .net, .org, .biz, .info
1 to 5 6 to 20 21 to 49 50 to 100 101+
Price /yr* $9.75 $9.50 $9.25 $9.00 $8.75

No-ip.com: Starting At $15.00

BUT.. everyone’s telling us Yahoo has bad review’s. Due to we wanted to go with yahoo. As for what our link looks like now..

http://s1.zetaboards.com/Envyforums/index/

It’s very LONG as you can see. We are looking to buy a domain name in the middle of 2010. After everything slows down after we open. We also wanted something under or around $10 for the length of 10 years or more.

Thank You
Envy Staff
Sorry other post had lots of errors.

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What are some good, free, reliable web hosts?

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

I really want to change my web host from FreeWebs to something else because FreeWebs doesn’t allow PHP. Are there any sites that you reccomend?

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A good web hosting site?

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Hi I’m starting to make websites for people and I would like to find a free good web hosting site. I don’t need a personal domain name I will gladly piggyback off of their name. However I would like to be able to post the content in HTML, XHTML, CSS, PHP, and maybe Java and Javascript. Thanks for answering if you do!!

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Good free web hosting site?

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Hi, can anyone recommend a good free web hosting site with lots of space (500MB +) and a nice web-site building tool? A slide show facility for photos would be ideal. Thanks for your help!

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How to Pick a Good and Reliable Web Host

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

You don’t need a Web host to develop and design a site. You can do it all from your personal computer. However, if you want to publish your site for the world to see, you need some Web server space. Fortunately, server space is abundant and inexpensive. This topic helps you sort through your options.


A Web host owns (or rents) the computer that serves the files of your Web site to your visitors, usually in exchange for a monthly fee. You don’t have to cancel your current Internet account to hire a Web host. In fact, many Web hosts don’t offer Internet service provider (ISP) service.


Those that do need to be local, or it isn’t worth it for you. The great thing about your neighborhood ISP is that it’s in your neighborhood, and it gives you a local dial-up number. You don’t want to have to dial in to Albuquerque whenever you want to browse the Web (unless, of course, you live in Albuquerque).


There’s a good chance you already have a Web host, even if you don’t know it. Many standard Internet accounts come with a healthy amount of server space for personal Web pages. So, the first step in choosing a Web host is to contact your ISP. Find out how much server space comes with your account. If the answer is none, you might want to inform your customer service representative that many of their direct competitors offer this benefit to their subscribers for a lot less than you’re currently paying.


I want to use my Web site for commercial purposes. Can I host my site on the personal Web space that comes with my Internet service?


Why would you want to? For one thing, your ISP usually assigns you a generic Web address, which doesn’t make your business look very professional. For another, you don’t need the typical lags in response time that you find on the servers of large ISPs. Plus, commercial sites are probably against your ISP’s terms of service, and you don’t need the hassle of them closing down your site along with your personal email account and Internet connection.


If you’d prefer not to use your personal server space for your site, just go to your favorite search engine, and look up Web hosting to begin your research. Don’t be surprised if your results number in the millions.


There are many, many, many Web hosts out there. You can’t possibly research them all. You need to narrow your optionsand fast. A good way to start is with the names that you recognize: Yahoo!, Earthlink, Netfirms, perhaps also your phone or cable company. If they don’t have what you need or want, work your way down the list.


Every Web site is different, of course, and only you can make the choice about the right Web host for your particular site. That said, in general, here are a few qualities of good Web hosts:


1) Reasonable monthly charge. Shop around, and see what the competitors are offering. Expect to pay between $10 and $25 a month for a typical personal or small business site. Pay less, and your Web host probably makes up the difference by giving you terrible customer support or tacking advertisements onto your site. Pay more, and you’re probably buying services and features that you don’t need.


2) Domain name registration (preferably free). Many of the better Web hosts offer to register your Web site’s domain name for you. Some even front you the yearly $35 registration service charge. Keep an eye out for these hosts. They’re worth it, even if they tack on a setup charge (as long as it’s less than $35).


3) Reasonable (or no) setup charge. Some Web hosts tack on a special, one-time service charge to set up your account. Others do not. Many perfectly reputable and reliable Web hosts charge setup fees. Many do not. Those that don’t charge setup fees often make up their money elsewhere, so read the fine print. If you go for a fee-charging service, don’t pay more than $35, or you’re probably being soaked. And if you can catch a fee-charging Web host during one of its “fee waived” promotional periods, do it.


4) Upgrade plans. Your site is successful. It grows. You want your Web host to grow with you. Ideally, your host should offer several levels of service at reasonable price points. Start with the cheapest plan and work your way up.


5) Reliable customer service (preferably by phone). You need customer service. Period. And don’t fall for the usual 24/7 customer-service sales pitch. Any fool with an email account can advertise 24/7 customer service. But is the fool actually reading the emailah, that’s the rub. You want a toll-free phone number for customer support. If you don’t have 24/7 access to a live human being by telephone, then you don’t have 24/7 customer support. It’s far better to go with a Web host who offers toll-free phone support during normal business hours than a host who offers 24/7 support by email.


6) Server space. Exactly how much server space do you need? You can figure this out pretty easily. Find out the combined file size of your Web site by examining the properties of its local root folder. If your site is 5 MB, then you need at least 5 MB of server space. Generally, you don’t need huge amounts of server space, unless your site includes lots of heavy multimedia files, such as MP3s.


7) Bandwidth limits. Your Web host measures bandwidth, or the amount of data its computers push to the visitors of your site over a period of time. Typically, you get a monthly limit, and, if you exceed your cap, your host charges you extra. A good data-transfer baseline for a typical personal or small-business Web site is 1 GB. Roughly speaking, one gigabyte of data transfer equals 20,000 page viewsthat’s one person viewing one page of your site 20,000 times, or 5,000 people viewing one page of your site four times, or 20,000 people viewing one page of your site one time. It’s hard to know exactly how much bandwidth you need, so start low. If you exceed your limit regularly, consider upgrading your plan. Keep in mind: If you offer a total of 1 GB of MP3s on your site, you can exceed 1 GB of bandwidth very quickly.

8) POP3 email accounts. You may or may not want extra email accounts for your site. But if you want them, go for a Web host that provides them. Generally, you want POP3 email instead of Web-based email. POP3 email works with client software such as Microsoft Outlook and Eudora, which let you jump on the Internet quickly, download your mail, and answer it offline. Web-based email requires you to be online to write and receive messages. Many Web hosts count the amount of email that you send and receive over their servers as part of your overall transfer limit, so be sure to take this factor into account.


9) Streaming audio/video and other media. If you want to host streaming audio or video files on your site, or even if you want to display Flash animations and other common media types, your Web host needs to be set up to do this. You don’t need special service to host Web images such as JPEG, GIF, and PNG.


10) FrontPage extensions. Heaven forbid, but if your Web site uses the stupid special effects that come with Microsoft FrontPage, you should find a Web host that doesn’t offer FrontPage extensions. This way, the dumb things won’t work, and the quality of your site will improve dramatically.


11) CGI, server-side scripting, and database access. If your site uses server-side technology to connect to a database, you need a Web host who is set up to do this. You don’t have to worry about this level of service if your site sticks to the client side: HTML, JavaScript, and CSS. All the projects in this book are client-side only.


12) Site reports. You want a host that gives you access to the data that the Web server collects about the visitors to your site. You want to see where they’re from, what browsers they’re using, what pages they visit most often, and which sections of the site they seem to be missing. You don’t want this information for evil purposes. You want it to help you improve your site. Definitely check into what kind of site reporting tools the host offers.


One feature that you definitely don’t need is a shopping cart application, “free” or otherwise. Shopping carts that come with Web hosting plans are generic, overpriced, feature-poor, difficult to customize, and next to impossible to integrate into your site.


If you’re serious about launching a Web-based retail storefront, you need to hire a programming team to develop a shopping cart application for you.

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The Bear Marketing System Learn How you can Work at Home and Earn a Good Income

Monday, May 3rd, 2010


Global Domains International, Inc. is the worldwide domain name registry for all .ws (Dot WS) domain names. their product is an incredible $10 per month package that includes your own domain name, hosting accounts, and up to ten email accounts, plus an easy-to-use online web site builder that will allow you to get a professional looking web site on the web as quickly as possible. And the best thing is, you can try out everything they have to offer, starting today, for FREE. They offer a week-long free trial of the entire package, no strings attached. 5-Level Uni-Level Compensation The standard compensation plan works like this, Basically you are paid $1 per month, per domain, that is registered in your 5 level network. A uni-level compensation plan is the most simple plan in network marketing, and the key to GDIs quick growth. You are not limited by width. You can refer as many people as you want to, and so can those people that you refer, and so on. Heres an example. You refer 5 people to our product/program. That pays you $5 per month. No big deal? Hang on, youll see the power of this. Each of those 5 people then refer 5 of their own, so youre now getting paid an additional $25 per month on your second level. Each of those 25 can refer as many as they want, but for consistency well say that they too refer 5 each. Thats $125 in monthly commissions on your 3rd level. If the trend continues, youll have $625 in monthly commissions on your 4th level, and $3125 in monthly

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Do you know of any Good Web Hosting Service Providers?

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Do you know of any Good Web Hosting Service Providers?
just found this list, who is the best from these?
http://www.hostingreviewusa.com

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Expired Good Domain Names Are Real Estate To Keep On Watch Always

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Let’s face it that expired domain names are valuable just like real estates. The biggest problem that will hit e-commerce businesses is the shortage of good dot com names. In the near future all the good ones will be taken.

But wait a minute…we won’t have a problem getting them. Why? You see not all the owners will maintain them and at one point they will abandon them by not renewing them. So, if they expire are they thrown away as garbage since they are unfit for use? Nope, they will be still fit for human use.

Before it’s available for fresh registration, it has to undergo some stages. First there will be a grace period of 30 days and at this period it can be renewed at the normal renewal price. After the grace period is over, it will be placed into 30 days redemption period.

After the redemption period, there will be 5 days on which it will be deleted from registrar records.  ICANN will drop it from its database there after there will be no Whois information regarding it. Now it’s available and anybody can register it to become the rightful owner.

Note that the grace period and redemption period is meant to safeguard the owner from losing it and once it enters this stage the fees to renew it will be significant. Many dealers are keeping their eyes glued on their PC screens. They are watching on good expired domain names that have just been made available for fresh registration. They find them to be viable business.

These dealers use software programs and services that email them daily these domains. After getting them, they appraise and register good ones. They later sell them at high prices.

As a new website owner, it will take time for your site to rank well on search engines. Again, you will be required to do a lot of marketing for it to be popular and this needs a substantial amount of money. Instead of undergoing all this, you can simply buy an expired domain name and use it on your site.

Again, it can be directed to your existing site if you had early on registered a bad quality domain name that is not getting the anticipated results you’re expecting. By doing this your site performance will greatly improve.

But before you rush and buy one, it is better you evaluate it first. Here are the factors to consider:

Consider the type of extension it has. A dot com works best because it’s popular among surfers.

Consider the inbound links. Are they from reputable websites?

Does this name qualify the good traits of a domain name?

Was it used by a site that was regarded as a spam by the search engines? If yes, avoid it.


Why these Domains are Real Estate

It has already been in use for some time and this implies that it’s popular among surfers.  Buying it means you own those surfers.

It is already listed in many directories hence search engines recognize it.

It could be the one that is being discussed on the forums and social book marking sites. Forum users could be seeing it as a valuable one.

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