Posts Tagged ‘Package’

3 Very Important Steps In Selecting A Reseller Hosting Package

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

When you are hunting for that reseller host that fits your need, you must take care to research the host’s reliability and read reviews from previous customers. You will want to take a look at the various reviews coming from customers that have been in the same situation. Paying hundred’s of dollars for a terrible host can lead you down the red-inked road of no profits.


First, I highly recommend that you research the host and their background on the web. Find your favorite search engine and search by the host’s name. Find reviews and what people are buzzing about. You will find that previous experience is always the best when selecting a Reseller Host.


Second, you are going to be needing to make a profit from hosting sites so you need to select the best “bang for the buck”. Does the reseller have all the reseller hosting software provided to you at no additional cost? Are you looking for a budget reseller? Take all this into consideration when you actually plug in your credit card number. I have found that budget resellers offer good variety of services and software preloaded like WHM CPanel manager.


Third, are you hosting your own websites or someone else’s? My experience with reseller packages is that if you are planning on doing multiple web projects and even designing websites, you will find that reselling can be an added profit. If you are a web designer you can build the site for your client and host it for them too! To illustrate, you designed a website for a local pizza shop for $600. Instead of uploading the site to another host and have them pay for it, just offer to host it for them for $20 a month. The price you pay to host 200 websites is $50 a month via a reseller. You just made almost half your money back from ONE DEAL. If you designed 10 websites a month and hosted all of them for your clients you would be getting revenue of $400 to cover that $50. The key to being successful at reseller hosting is the selling point or the return on investment in the hosting package. Your benefit of picking a good hosting company that is reliable and perfectly priced can lead to more profits the easy way.


You can easily make hundreds of dollars a month reselling your hosting bundled with other services. The possibilities are endless in marketing your space. By selecting a host that allows a good amount of space (start with at least 5GB), your business will thrive.


Another easy trick I how I use reseller hosting is setting up multiple niches and purchasing domain names that fit the niche you are trying to conquer. After you found the niche that you can make serious money in, choose a good reseller host to put all your purchased domain names. WHM Cpanel Manager (Web Host Manager) allows you to make separate cpanel accounts for each domain.


Now as far as selecting the best reseller host, I have listed several of my favorite and the most reliable I have come across. You can find these below.

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Cheap hosting package! – Cheap hosting reseller! – video

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010


www.Get-Unlimited-Hosting.com Find best web server information to help you stay ahead of the times. Unlimited disk storage is a standard feature. Affordable web hosting solutions for a percentage of the price. Find any hosting solution answer by contacting a reputable agent about best web site hosting! Visit www.Get-Unlimited-Hosting.com

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Ultimate Small Business Start-up Package Giveaway from RingCentral

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

Ultimate Small Business Start-up Package Giveaway from RingCentral
RingCentral has chosen The Gadgeteer and 24 other blogs (see list after the jump) to host their Ultimate Small Business Start-up Package Giveaway. Each of these 25 sites will give away one (1) account for 12 months’ free service of RingCentral Mobile ($300 value) to the winner of each of our individual contests. From [...] Filed in categories: Contests Tagged: Ultimate Small Business Start-up …

Read more on The Gadgeteer

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I have a hosting package and a domain name, how do I get my website up?

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

I purchased a web hosting package and a domain name from networksolutions.com. What do I have to do to make it so that when you go to www.thompsonscountrymarket.com (my domain name), the website appears. I uploaded the files using the FTP program, but I don’t understand what else I have to do to make it appear. Please help!

Thanks.

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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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Help to find out the best web hosting package and provider?

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

I would like to discuss web hosting plans and providers I placed at my web page www.andreyknure.narod.ru Have you ever dealt with these companies. What are your opinions about them? What is the most affordable web hosting provider?

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How-To Understand Web Hosting Package Features

Monday, April 5th, 2010

The options available with a web hosting package are very wide ranging, and can be a bit confusing to understand – especially since the options are presenting in a large number of ways, and condensed in various ways, while shopping for a package online.  Hopefully I can give you a breakdown of the categories these features fall into and help you to focus on the features that are important to you.

I break the features down into 10 categories, and will discuss the categories one by one to give you a firm grasp of the options and make an informed purchasing decision.

10 Categories of Web Hosting Package Features

Operating System Web Server Bandwidth Disk Space Domains Email FTP Database Control Panel Applications / Programming

1.  Operating System

The operating system is the underlying software that runs on the host.  It manages the physical hardware of the server and attempts to optimize the use of RAM, disk space, network, and CPU for the requests coming into the machine.  The underlying OS does not have to be the same as your desktop or even the OS you use to develop your website.  In fact, due to most of the management functions being driven thru a web GUI, you might never know or care what the server operating system is.

The predominant operating systems you will find while shopping for a web hosting service are Windows and UNIX.  With Windows you will see versions available such as Server 2003 or Server 2008, and with UNIX you will see many brands of Linux, usually CentOS, Debian, or Redhat.  Choosing between UNIX and Windows is an important decision, and involves a lot of variables, but in the end it simply means deciding if you want to build your website with open source technology or with Microsoft technology.  A more complete write-up of the choice is available on www.HostGraphs.com in the How-To section on this subject.

Research the application you want to use or run as your website and check to see if it has any Microsoft technology requirements (MSSQL database, MSAccess database, ASP, ASP.Net).  If you find no pressing reason to use Windows, then UNIX will most likely be a better choice for you.  UNIX runs the open source scripting languages slightly faster and is also slightly cheaper than Windows.

There are a few specific sub-features of the operating system that may be of importance to you.

Do you need a virtual private server?  This gives you a dedicated virtual operating system all to yourself instead of you sharing the OS with others.  You still share a machine with others, but there are stricter walls in place to guarantee you bandwidth, CPU, and memory even if a website on the same machine is getting heavily hit.  It also gives you great configuration choices with everything since it is your own OS.  These packages are more expensive than the shared options, but are worth if as your site grows.  The VPS packages mainly vary is the amount of RAM dedicated to you, so I would recommend going with the smallest package and monitoring the RAM usage over time and upgrading into a bigger package as needed.

Do you need a dedicated SSL certificate?  Most sites offer a shared SSL certificate, which is fine for some smaller sites, but if you are running a medium or large ecommerce site you will need a dedicated certificate.  Some buyers justifiably will not send in their personal and credit card information without a guaranteed valid SSL private certificate.  Also some shopping cart applications require the dedicated certificate as well.  Be careful when shopping for this – some hosting services say they give a SSL certificate with all their hosting plans but do not explicitly tell you that it is a shared certificate.  If the plan does not include a dedicated IP, then it is a shared certificate.

To directly remotely administer your site, you may need to either shell into with UNIX or Remote Desktop in with Windows.  The UNIX shell option is sometimes referred to as SSH Shell, Secure Shell, or telnet.  These options are only useful to you if you intend to do low level maintenance and tweaking, mainly in the VPS packages.  With a good hosting package with a high powered control panel, you will not need either of these.

You may see mention for the ability to schedule cron jobs – this is the UNIX version of scheduled tasks.  This ability is only needed if you wish to run scheduled tasks at set times, such as a nightly backup.  Most of the good control panels provide an interface for the cron job entry, but they also provide interfaces for performing maintenance tasks such as backups.  You will probably never need this feature.

2.  Web Server

The web hosting companies usually offer Microsoft IIS or UNIX Apache web servers.  Both have their plusses and minuses, and it will only make a difference to you if the website you are developing or the application you are running requires one or the other.  Apache, being open source itself, has slightly better hooks in it to run many of the open source content management systems and blog engines based on PHP, PERL, and Python, so go with Apache if that is all you need.  The Windows IIS also has quite good open source content management systems and blog engines based on ASP and ASP.Net, but I would suggest not going with a PHP/PERL/Python web application on Windows IIS – see the above discussion of the operating system as to why.

The SSL certificate is hosted by the web server, and the web server has to do extra processing of SSL HTTPS requests – it has to encrypt/decrypt and verify data passing between the client and the server.  For this reason, some would argue that you should shy away from web hosting packages that offer free SSL shared certificates to everyone.  You might end up sharing a server with 100s of other websites that overtax the server.  A well run website will only go into HTTPS SSL mode for the actual entering of credit card data, not for the entire website – but you do not know if the other websites on your server are well run.

3.  Bandwidth

This is a measure of the amount of data transmitted in/out of you website, usually on a monthly basis.  Keep in mind that a typical website only transmits a very small amount of the content to each user, and even though a package only offers a few gigs of transfer a month, you will most likely not overshoot your allotment.  If you do, then your website is really popular with thousands of visitors, and you should be generating a nice revenue stream.  Most of the web hosting companies will spell out what the penalty is for overshooting your allotment – it is usually a dollar to two per gig, which makes it cheaper to upgrade to the next highest package of course.  If your website is heavy on images or multimedia, you may need a bigger allotment of monthly bandwidth immediately.  Fortunately they all offer a monthly meter to watch your bandwidth usage so that you can plan accordingly as your site grows in popularity.

Some hosting companies offer an unlimited bandwidth package – be wary of this.  There is no such thing as unlimited bandwidth, so what they are selling is unmetered bandwidth.  Many of them with unmetered offerings will inform you after you purchase an account of what their acceptable use policy is concerning bandwidth and disk space, disallowing you from performing nightly 500gig backups of your personal computer and such activities.  In fact, many of these policies also stipulate that you must upgrade to bigger packages if your website begins to infringe on the bandwidth of others on a shared hosted machine.  Once again, this is not a bad policy; if you get notified of infringement due to the activity of your website, then it is so popular that your revenue stream covers the additional expense of a bigger package.

4.  Disk Space

This is the allotment of bytes on the hard drive given to you for your website.  A large website with 100s of pages can easily fit into a gigabyte of space, so you actually do not need that much for a typical website.  If you website has a catalog of thousands of items for sale, stored in a database with several images apiece, then you will need a significant upgrade in disk space.  Usually as your site grows in popularity and content, you will be upgrading for bandwidth first, and get more disk space along with the upgraded package.

Some of the hosting companies will include your database space and your email space in this disk space allotment, so plan according to how they segregate the space.

As it was with bandwidth, many web hosting providers offer unlimited disk space, and there is no such thing as unlimited disk space.  What they are selling is unmetered disk space, with an acceptable use policy.  It is difficult to breach their acceptable use policy with a normal website, only by doing something outside the norm, such as hosting and anonymous ftp site of spurious files.

5.  Domains

This is the number of web addresses that can point into your web hosting account.  Almost all of the providers offer sub domains, where your main site is YourSite.com and you have sub domains of www.YourSite.com and files.YourSite.com.  Many will allow you to point externally hosted DNS entries pointed into your account s folder, but some do not.  This may be referred to as Add-on domains, and most will offer in one of their packages multiple add-on domains.  This allows you to purchase additional domains and point it into separate folders within your hosted account.  This way you can run multiple websites, which appear completely unrelated, to be physically located and managed together.

Many of the web hosting providers offer a single or even multiple free domains with their accounts.  Some even offer lifetime free domains, saving you the 10 dollars a year for the domain.  Be sure and shop for that option if you want to save a few dollars a year.

6.  Email

Almost all of the web hosting providers offer email accounts, which gives you an email address of YourName@YourSite.com.  Most of them also offer web based email, POP and IMAP access, and spam filtering.  Where they will differ is the number of emails accounts they provide, the disk space total or per mailbox, and advanced features such as mail list management.  It is up to you as to how important email is to you and your website – there are plenty of free email providers on the internet so this has never been an important set of features for me.

Many of the web hosting providers offer unlimited emails, but again there is no such thing.  As your email accounts grow, the bandwidth and disk space used will also grow, and neither of those is unlimited.  So you eventually break their acceptable use policies and are forced to upgrade into a bigger package – again, not a bad thing if it is your website that is growing and creating revenue for you.

7.  FTP

FTP is the file transfer protocol used to send and receive files back and forth to your website.  This feature may or may not be important to you, depending on if you wish to server files up to anonymous people through this protocol.  Most websites today deliver files through HTTP through your website, which allows you to manage access and users through your website instead of through the FTP accounts.

8.  Database

A database is server package that structures data into an easy to store and retrieve manner.  The database is one of the items used to create dynamic websites such as content management systems and blog engines.  You will want to take advantage of the database also if you intend to create any sort of ecommerce website to store your user’s information, catalogs of items for sale, and orders placed.  Separation of applications into distinct database instances is important.

MSSQL is available on most of the Windows hosting packages, but is usually slightly more expensive due to its commercial licensing restrictions, and usually has lower instances and disk space available.  But some website applications are built to take advantage of its feature set, so you may require this as your database.  You could still take advantage of MySQL with as many applications as you could, there is not any reason a single website could not use multiple different databases.

MSAccess is the openly available database for Windows that is more of a file level database and not a dedicated server running it.  It provides adequate storage for lighter database usage, but would not be sufficient for any larger data storage needs.

Researching the needs of the applications you intend to run on your website, and planning the database requirements needed for each, will drive you to a conclusion of which hosting package to use based on these database needs.

9.  Control Panel

The control panel will be the location you will manage all of the details of your web hosting account.  All of the providers give you a web based control panel that is easy to use and provide sufficient help to understanding all of its features so that you can avoid calling them for help.

The web hosting providers will vary in the type of control panel they provide, however.  The two main control panels are cPanel and Plesk, which are found on about 80% of the providers.  The remaining 20% give you a custom built control panel.  cPanel and Plesk are so popular because they provide feature rich management utilities right out of the box and both can be branded to appear like the host provider’s pages, but they are expensive to license.  Both work on UNIX and Windows hosted accounts and allow for complete management of the underlying operating system configuration, web server configuration, web site configuration, email ,ftp, DNS, etc.

If you are new to web hosting then it really does not matter with control panel you choose, but if you are familiar with cPanel or Plesk you may prefer to go with a hosting provider which provides you with the control panel you are comfortable with.

If you are interested in getting into being a hosting reseller, then you will want to ensure you get licenses provided to you for your reseller account through the web hosting provider so that you can brand it and give it to your sub-hosted customers (and not have them call you with configuration needs).

Many on the internet recommend removing cPanel and Plesk from your virtual private server since both can be major bandwidth, CPU, and disk space hogs.  One of the great benefits of a virtual private server is being able to login as root or administrator and manage the operating system and web server directly, removing the need to obfuscate into a web GUI those tasks.  Of course you would need to be a lot more technically keen on doing those tasks yourself, or you could pay a few dollars more a month and get a managed VPS package.

10.  Applications / Programming

No matter the type of website you plan to build, you will most likely use a few pre built packages as the foundation of your site.  The pre built packages are built with some sort of programming or scripting language.  They may be using PHP, PERL, Python, Java, Ruby, ASP, ASP.Net, or Coldfusion.  Most of these languages run on any operating system, except for ASP and ASP.Net, both of which are Microsoft technologies requiring windows (and application probably requires IIS and MSSQL database as well).  PHP, PERL, Python, and Java are cross platform, but UNIX runs them slightly faster than Windows and is usually a slightly cheaper package.  Ruby is a UNIX only language, and it may be referred to as Ruby on Rails.  Not all web hosting providers give access to all of these languages with all of their packages – make sure you shop it carefully to ensure the host and the package you purchase has the language you need.

The applications you decide run will tell you what their requirements are.  In fact, the web hosting provider will give you the tools you need to install the applications from the control panel, which makes it a breeze to get up and running with the base installation of whatever application you choose.  These days all of the web hosting providers allow you to get up and running with the base installation of the most common blog engines and content management systems within minutes after purchasing.

If you are interested in a blog, read up on WordPress and BlogEngine.Net.  If you are interested in a content management system, read up on Joomla, Drupal, DotNetNuke, and mojoPortal.  For a message forum, read up on PHPBB and YetAnotherForum applications.  There are many more pre built applications to help you get up and running including shopping carts, mail list management, web authoring tools, and catalog databases.

Conclusion

I hope that this article provides you with enough understanding to make a wise decision when selecting a web hosting package.  Happy shopping!

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Which package of the Yahoo Web Hosting for owning a domain is the best?

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

Just receive a mail from Yahoo, offering $1.99/1year for a domain name. I also checked the website which offering another $8.99/first 3 years for a domain name. What is the different? How can I check? Which one is the best?

Thank you very much

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Web Hosting Choosing Your Package

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

General order of use is not to give blessing up for yearly netting
hosting plans. Instead, carry out review works
where you can unsubscribe from on the aid spell when you are not happy with the service. That is, if you ended up with an unreliable web hosting company in the first place.

Here is a standard channel that can be young
meet to commonplace netting
sites:

–Web Space–

Expect a paltry website to advantage maturation 10 and 100 MB. Considering that you may requirement to advance your website in the future future, it is advisable to end a mesh hosting process with considerable web space.

Make categorical that you be cognizant your needs before you build looking for your lacework host. Not every web hosting work can be upgraded or customised. More than often, webmasters follow through not actualize the nub they fervor and are not able to customise their web hosting features.

–Monthly Traffic–

Data siphon per bit are typically referred to as bandwidth. It is the price of inside story hump that occurs between your website and visitors. A small or underpinning
netting
country consign consume between 1 and 5GB of data transfer per month. Larger, commercial or popular websites often consume more than 5GB of monthly data transfer and sometimes, exceeding 100GB of monthly data transfer.

Before you dispose on a interlacing hosting plan, be hard to grant this:

- What is the organ word
transfer/ bandwidth allowed?

- Will you be passionate if your website exceeds its limit?

- Are you powerful to upgrade/add on your bandwidth?

–Connection Speed–

Visitors to your mesh property cede repeatedly cement via 56K modems or ADSL modems but your net lessor provider should have a incomparably faster connection. Your website should have animated lacework site connections that are approximately 1000 high speed (56 Kilobytes per second) modems combined- T3 fiber optic connections.

In the least days of the Internet, T1- effect was special a active connection. The fastest predominance available are T3 importance that are used by Internet Service Providers and major corps.

Lester Boey factory in an Australian SEO and Web Design task (Australian Search Engine Optimization and Web Designs Company).

The author writes about a number of different topics. For more information on web hosting visit http://www.hostmulti.net and also visit the article pages: http://www.hostmulti.net/Articles Directory.html By NeoOne

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Can Yahoo offer a smaller web hosting package for small business. Something between the domain and webhosting?

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010
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