IzquierdoLancaster481

Aus DCPedia
Wechseln zu: Navigation, Suche

How to find a Good Internet hosting Company

There are many different things to consider when selecting a hosting company. So, we chose to provide a basic summary of what you need to search for when picking the perfect webhost for your website. For the sake of brevity, we will focus on Shared Server Hosting.

Shared or Dedicated

There are two main types of hosting: Shared and Dedicated. The large distinction between the two is speed, resource demand, and control. For most small businesses and individuals shared hosting is sufficient. For big companies that need complete control over the whole server, a dedicated server plan enables you to have full root (superuser) access to the server to configure it nevertheless, you want or need. Again, most shared servers are sufficient for common websites. Also, the difference in price could be anywhere from $150-$300 monthly!

Operating-system Type

There are two primary os's you might confront during your search for internet hosting: Linux and Windows. Some of you may have an instantaneous need to choose a Windows server since you are familiar with a Windows PC. However, the interface is not the same as your computer. The main reason to choose a Windows hosting plan's if you use a Microsoft scripting language like ASP.NET (webpages with an .aspx or .asp at the end). Linux is a free and open operating-system making Linux hosting plans cheaper. Also, most Linux plans provide you with an easy-to-use control panel (like cPanel).

Disk Space, Bandwidth, and Databases

Many companies offer "unlimited" disk space, bandwidth, and databases. This is just an advertising and marketing ploy to make it sound like you get a lot more than you absolutely. Actually, it is always smart to browse the hosting company's Relation to Use (TOU). For example, you might have unlimited disk space but have an inode limit. You can imagine inode as an individual file. For big websites, it doesn't take very long to satisfy this limit.

Unlimited bandwidth is another myth because the hosting company will limit this - either by saying you are using a lot of server resources or that you've a script/website that violated part of the TOU. Now, just because a company says "unlimited", that doesn't mean the company is a bad host, but it's a definite flag to tell you "carefully read our TOU."

Uptime

Every webhost must have the absolute minimum uptime guarantee of 99.9%. If the webhost does not say this, make sure to do more research. Afterall, the whole reason for a website is perfect for so that it is seen! If you believe you're having a problem in your current hosting company, you can use a free tool like montastic.com to monitor your website for you personally.

kolokacja

Addon Domains

Addon domains are helpful if you want to make use of the same hosting account for multiple websites. If you only have one website, this is not necessary. However, should you run several websites make sure you check on the number of addon domains are permitted and just how much they cost.

Private SSL

Does your site transmit any potentially personal/private information? You might want to give you a Dedicated IP address along with a Private SSL certificate. Many shared hosting plans incorporate a Shared SSL but we'd definitely spread this because if you utilize it, your users will get a notice online saying something similar to "This connection is untrusted... " or a security alert. Seeing something of that nature is the fastest way to get a person from your website. Private SSL certificates require a dedicated Ip. Some hosts includes this in certain of their plans yet others charge up to $10 monthly.

Customer Support

Having poor customer care may be the fastest method to cripple a webhost. Even if you possess a great webhost, at some point you will have to refer to them as. We've personally seen some hosting companies take fourteen days to accomplish an activity which should take less than two hours and this was entirely caused by poor customer support. A great way to check a hosting company's customer care would be to contact their Technical Support (not Sales!) and get some questions about scripting languages, hardware, FTP, etc. The rate at which they respond and willingness to help can give a good representation from the service you will get afterwards.

There is lots more to choosing the best webhost and every situation is different but hopefully this gives you some understanding of creating a better hosting decision.