Sunday, June 01, 2008

The advantages of web hosting solution

Short Review on web hosting solution

Where did all the free web hosts go?

Wed, 04 Apr 2007 10:33:28 EST
A long, long time ago free web hosts were the coolest thing on the internet
and most, if not all, non-commercial websites were hosted by one. You don't
hear that much about free hosting anymore so I though it would be interesting
to check out what has happened to the free web hosts that I have used.

How To Choose The Right Web Host for Your Small Business

Fri, 09 May 2008 13:40:44 GMT
In order to ensure the success of your on-line business, it is necessary for you to choose a web host that does not compromise any of your site’s functional features.

A little ‘bit of a shorter show this week around to make room for another podcast’s release this week but still have a lot of topics I want to cover one on one just with you, and you, and you over there who doesn’t even like this show but you listen because you know your even going to get something out of it. This podcast is for one and all - from the web hosts to the hosting clients and everyone in between.

This is your Mail Account Maintenance page. Here you can see all the e-mail accounts you have created. If you have not yet created one go to “Add Account” to do so. Here you can fill in the name you want to use (the thing that going before @yourdomain.com), your password and the Quota. By default the setting should be 10 Meg. This stands for 10 Megabytes.

SEO: Lokasi Hosting Menentukan SEO

Sun, 09 Mar 2008 04:07:40 +0000
SEO juga ditentukan oleh lokasi hosting. Untuk hosting IIX ada kelemahannya. Karena IIX cepat untuk Indonesia, sangat lambat buat luar Indonesia, bot-bot dari Google, Yahoo, MSN, Alexa, DMOZ, dll akan mengalami kesulitan mengakses web anda.
Ini ada artikel mengenai SEO ditentukan oleh lokasi hosting:
http://www.comauth.co.nz/the-seo-guys-blog/web-hosting-server-location-seo.html
Copyright © 2007Dapur Hosting(digitalfingerprint: 8f57a6d5215d02f26c482a6410e1682f)Share This

My question to you is - have you done anything like this before

- checking how much a domain name has produced within it’s

lifetime, be it money, or a site with a good Page Rank, and some

traffic to go with it? Did it pay several times it’s fee worth?

Linux vmsplice Local Exploit - How Hosts Responded

Tue, 12 Feb 2008 12:20:12 +1100

SecurityFocus: Linux kernel memory access vulnerabilities, exploit included to get you root account on stock kernels between 2.6.17 and 2.6.24.1. Web hosts respondedHoly !$#&!!! CentOS 5, Ubuntu Edgy-Gutsy, Debian Etch — all these Linux distributions are affected. Basically a local user can gain root access, and with help from vulnerable applications that allow executing arbitrary local code, a remote user might be able to take over the entire system.





It is great to see hosts taking security seriously (especially those providing SSH access to shared hosting accounts). Looking at my list of hosting accounts:




  • SliceHostnot vulnerable as they run Linux 2.6.16.

  • Linodenew kernel images created within 24 hours of security alert.

  • VPSLink — can’t find any discussion on their forums. My VPS there was running 2.6.9 so it should be secure, but I heard there are servers running newer 2.6.18 kernels from OpenVZ.

  • DreamHost — “What security issue? We are still running 2.4 kernels!”

  • NearlyFreeSpeech — “What security issue? FreeBSD ftw!”



A bad bad week for Linux for sure. Time to press that panic button.





Are We Running Out of Storage Space? IDC is Concerned, but Maxell Says Never Fear

Tue, 13 Mar 2007 14:15:00 -0400

I learned about the IDC storage paradox on Zoli Erdos' blog. Zoli mentions this Associated Press article, which cites IDC's estimate that "the world had 185 exabytes of storage available last year and will have 601 exabytes in 2010. But the amount of stuff generated is expected to jump from 161 exabytes last year to 988 exabytes in 2010".



Even more alarmingly, Dan Farber over at ZDNet reports that according to IBM, "the world's information base will be doubling in size every 11 hours" by 2010. Does this mean that on Jan 1, 2011, our 988 exabytes of data will double to 1,976 exabytes by 11am, and 3,952 exabytes by 10pm?



Fortunately, we don't need permanent storage for all the data we generate. For instance, spam accounted for just 8% of all emails in 2001 (said CNet); its volume rose to 36% by 2002 and 66% by 2004 (MSNBC), and is expected to exceed 90% by the end of this year (IT News). That's a huge amount of data that isn't being saved.



Still, Rich D'Ambrise from Maxell says he expects significant growth in data archiving requirements: in 2007, we will back up 75% more data than we did in 2006. But unlike IDC analyst John Gantz, he's not concerned that we'll run out of space. The storage industry is not standing still. Maxell, for instance, is beta testing 300 GB holographic disks that are no bigger than a DVD, but offer 63x more capacity. 800 GB second generation disks should be on the market by next year, and a 1.6 TB version is planned for 2010. And let's not forget stacked volumetric optical discs (SVOD); each 92-micrometer layer stores up to 9.4 GB. Available storage capacity will absolutely keep up with demand; no question about that!



The real issue is, will we store our zettabytes of data on- or offline? Rich is betting on removable media; he'd rather have mission critical data in his own possession than depend on any service provider. Zoli, on the other hand, says online is more efficient. By sharing/linking to files, we won't each need space for our own copies of the same content. Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz says offline storage is greener ("when data's at rest, it consumes no electricity") - and easier to transport on a large scale. (As the New Yorker points out, if you made tiny chariots with DVD wheels and hitched them to snails, you'd get faster data transfer speeds than DSL.)



So, what's this got to do with web hosting? For one, you should probably monitor your oversold disk space closely. At the moment, I'm sure hardly any of GoDaddy's $7 hosting customers are using their entire 100 GB quota. But if you consider Rich's 75% growth projection, the number of customers that same 100 GB is allocated to may have to come down.



PS - Here's a GigaOM post on a 10 more fun storage facts.





Please provide your brief, but concise remarks on this writing about web hosting solution. Of course, it would be preferable for these remarks to be enhancing ones.
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