Can anyone recommend shared hosting company where servers are located at Brazil ?
If should be reliable, economical and Ii would be good if I can host multiple domains.
Also if the hosting company has its site in English or their staff can communicate in English?
if you guys can recommend me some hosts that offer dedicated solutions in Los Angeles?
My requirements -Around $80 / Month -At least 1000GB Transfer -HDD doesn't matter -CPU doesn't matter -Need remote reboot -Good & fast customer support (for times that things go wrong)
Any one happen to know the Brazil NAP Data center address? I found the sales office address on their website but can't seem to quickly find the data center address.
We've tried before several times RAM based hosting (where you have all files on RAM disk). Our systems were crashing, but my guess is that we were putting about 100,000 or so files on it and since it was formatted with ext3 (everywhere else we are using XFS) - this was a reason for crashing.
Since we have a lot of bandwdith in our data center, we are thinking about becoming a mirror for CentOS, gOS and some other distributions. I am thinking again about using RAM disk based hosting (you use 1 Gb/s port 100% no problem with it even on CoreDuo level of CPU).
Anybody has any experince, good or bad of running RAM based hosting? I am talking about dedicated, not VPS environment.
I've been investigating and testing Xen for a few months in order to add Xen VPS to the hosting services I have available. With the recent news re: VMware Server, and my experience with VMware, I've started to look, and easily prefer, using this product over Xen. Has anyone else started to look at it as a possible alternative for hosting purposes?
We have a Windows based application (Win32 app) that we want to host through a browser.
I can't find much information on the web, however I came across these guys who seem to do what I need: [url]
Does anyone know what technology they use to host Windows applications? And can it be used on a Mac or Linux? Does anyone know of anyone else who does this type of thing?
Well I think that I have finally narrowed down my choices to three different possible hosts (leaving room for more suggestions of course)
But I was wondering based on speed - which host would you suggest. I would like to have mp3s load up and start playing as fast as possible.
The choices I was considering were:
knownhost downtownhost hostgator
As for whether to go with a shared or a reseller package, I am still unsure. But it seems that Hostgator offers a huge shared package - I am hoping to keep the cost of all this down to $7 - $10 a month.
I'm trying to find a reputable dedicated host whos datacenter is located in toronto (no Quebec DataCenters plz) and can meet my below requirements:
1) Windows 2003 Server () 2) 1~2 TB Bandwidth 3) allow/offer up to /24 ip block (with IP jurisdiction of course) 4) Private VPN hosting allowed 5) Managed preferred
Does anyone know of a company that can do the above?
Please do not PM me regarding your offers, as I will not check PM that often.
I have a personal web site and am developing an online business that I hope will grow(of course) and am wondering if anyone could give me advice about using an overseas web host.
I am wondering if the extra distance bewteen customer and web host will cause a significant lagtime when they are using my website.
I have a task of converting a current Win Server based apache server from multiple IP based virtual hosts to a full name based virtual hosting.I'm famiilar with the steps but I was wondering if there are any gotchas in Windows that I should be aware of. It seems that now matter what I change in the new config it doesn't work or work as expected.
my friend and i are working on some web-based-commerce ideas and at current we're at godaddy.com. i can only imagine the vitriol they've rightfully earned here, as we decided to be done with them when the $30 SSL license they told us we could get one night quickly became $78 because there was a new "turboSSL server" package we needed, nevermind the guy the first time said with our hosting options we only needed to go through them for the SSL license, so basically, either the first guy lied to us or the second guy tried to hustle us, either way, i dont like companies whose sales model is revealed like the plot in a horror movie, so we're looking to go elsewhere.
basically we're looking for a virtual private server setup, although actually another question i'd love to ask someone is if joomla is better served on unix/linux or windows, with a few dozen accounts needed, and by accounts i mean domains and whatnot, as right now it's basically the blanket idea that you grab the names you need, or might go to if you change your mind on company names...
so basically, with all the people here talking about bad experiences with places, are there any good experience type places where someone can get competent tech support, no hustling in sales pitches, and quality service at a nice solid price?
again, sorry to show up and start asking for things, but i'm not necessarily well versed in these arts yet... rest assured once i have some information i shall contribute to the community and help others who are in my position now
have a number of vps servers with USA based VPS hosts, very happy with these companies but as they are USA based load time could be improved with AU based server. Also search engine considerations as well fictate we need to offer AU based hsoting. So now looking to setup future accounts a little closer to home with australian based vps hosting
Does anyone know of a really good, fast, reliable affordable vps host offering cpanel/whm vps hosting in a top notch australian data centre.
hoping to pay arounf $100 per month, with room to grow when we have more clients on the server...
This is the average package we are on with us based hosts so looking for something as close as possible to this...
$89 Monthly $0 Setup 2 GB Burst RAM 512 MB Guaranteed RAM 20 GB Storage 500 GB Monthly Transfer 4 IP Addresses Unlimited Domains Unlimited User Accounts Cpanel/WHM
Minimum Server Specs Dual Xeon 3 GHz or Better 8 GB Registered ECC RAM U320 SCSI HD in Hardware RAID 10 Zero Downtime During Drive Failure Hot-Swap Drives and Fans Replaceable on the Fly Dual Gigabit Network Interfaces
If anyone can point me in the direction of some reputable companies id be very happy!
Yes i have searched the forum but cant really find mention of good australian based vps hosts.
I use shared web hosting service to get my website online. I'm wondering how many people use dedicated servers or virtual private servers instead and pay from $20 to several hundreds of dollars? Will I face any big problem with shared web hosting package which makes me choose dedicated servers?
I would like to host 1 domain with 2 servers. How would i get both servers to have the same info on them. I have 2 servers and I only have the intended need to host 1 website. How would I do that?
How many people are on future hosting servers and can anyone comment on the performance Last time I had one my loads where very high, access to plesk and ssh was very slow They have a new offer on, 35% off double ram etc.. seems to good to be true
For a small business where there is no colocation facility within any reasonable distance, who needs to host an application on ~5-10 servers in total, would such businesses simply be out of luck - or could they self-host their servers?
What are the reasonable alternatives to colocation? Getting a colocation facility in a different city wouldn't be an option. Neither would going with dedicated/managed hosting (because the business has its own servers and the in-house resources to administer them).
What is the viability of creating your own mini "data center" - by this I don't mean anything like a real data center, but just someplace where you could host 5-10 servers?
Perhaps you could give some advice as to the kinds of things one would have to keep in mind before attempting such a thing. (e.g. physical security, bandwidth, power, etc). The reason I ask is because surely you couldn't just rent a little office space and set up the servers there, right? (Or could you...?)
Do you know anyone who has hosted their own servers, numbering around 10 of them? (How did it turn out?)
Sometimes you have a "shopping" experience which really sets itself apart from the rest... I think this is how "tips" were invented... anyways, I wanted to share my story because I am very pleased with this hosting company.
I am a web designer/developer/marketer. I have worked for big corporations who had in house hosting, to small start-ups using shared hosting. When I was looking for a VPS solution, I bumped into (online) Larry from XSI Hosting. I needed to finalize a host within 2 days to get a large client site live.
Larry spent over 2 hours answering my questions and giving me advice and recommendations. I had been to at least 30 other hosting companies who offer VPS and none of them were willing to spend the time to answer my questions accurately, honestly and correctly.
When I ran into a few "self inflicted" issue, the XSI support team is absolutely phenomenal. Not only have they been available 24/7 (believe me, I have contacted them many times at various times), they respond promptly, professionally, and work VERY quickly to resolve the issue. They even proactively monitor the account and resolve any concerns they have which may lead to an issue.
This is a VERY professional hosting company who provides quality service, quality support, and VERY competitive pricing.
Well haven't managed hosting on vps machines yes so I am wondering that how much this type of machine suit for running a hosting business ? Very honestly I think that people use vps for temporary bases and later they move to individual servers. I will appreciate your opinion.
I'm experiencing some issues that I thought were something normal, or something that you could expect when working like this, but I think that it is something that should NOT happen.
We own a dedicated server, where we host some sites we develop (around 80 right now). We usually host both email and web page in the same server, but recently we had two customers who wanted to host email in a different place. The first one has its own server with proxy, and the second one is waiting the previous company to change DNS values.
The problem shows when we try to send an email from ANY domain hosted in our server, to one of these domains. From Outlook, the error is something like "no such user found", but the REAL problem comes when a PHP script (usually a contact form) tries to send the email. This mails get simply lost, and the customer never receives them.
My question is: What do I configure, or how do I do so my webserver looks for the real DNS, instead of trying to send the mail directly to the local domain?