Thursday, March 20, 2014

Выбор правильного веб-хостинга


The heart and soul of your website depends on your Web host. So this should be your main focus when you start your new site. Design and content are important, but if your target audience can't reach your site, it doesn't matter how he looks or how relevant your content can be. So it makes sense that you spend enough time researching the right Web host for you.

One of the major mistakes that I believe when you work with Web masters looking for the appropriate hosting plan to put too much weight on the value. Although I can understand that not everyone can afford to pay for dedicated servers with dual Xeon, 4 GB RAM, it does not mean that there are no available alternatives out there that can provide you with quality work, you need and deserve.

I know that some will be quick to point out that there is a free hosting services out there, but it should be noted that nothing is free, and this is especially true in the world of hosting.

A typical free host will either have ads for other products on your website, which we call "traffic diversion» they will slide in the percentage of your traffic and direct it to your own site as payment.

They will also use the so-called sub-domain, which actually gives credit for any incoming links, which you can get to them. A good example of this is Google's blog. You get a subdomain, such as COMPANY.blogspot.com. If you go through the trouble of creating links to it, the actual beneficiary of these links in the long term is a blogspot. You also have an additional opportunity to put off or termination of your account and all of your hard work went down the drain.

While this may be acceptable practice 10 years ago when domains were expensive to register, and there was a lot more bandwidth than it is today, there really is no excuse for it if you're serious about running and development of the Internet business.

There are many types of hosting plans are available there, so you need to know what they are and the differences between them.

At the top of the list will be your dedicated server. A dedicated server is a server dedicated just to you. All the power of disk space, memory and processor is for your Web sites and no one else. This is usually reserved for someone that either has multiple sites, or one resource very intensive Web site.

Next on the list will be your virtual dedicated server or VPS. A common misconception is that a VPS is the same as the virtual server, and nothing could be further from the truth. A good example of a VPS server, if you partition the hard disk on your home computer so that you can run Windows XP and Windows 2000 on the same computer.

You get your own dedicated disk space and RAM and CPU have to allocate only part of your section. The advantages of this include a cost which should be roughly the same as the virtual server and as you have your own resources (RAM, CPU), you can run whatever scripts will not have a negative effect on anyone else, and what others are doing to use of resources will not have a negative effect on you. I typically describe VPS hosting as a method to have the security of a dedicated server with virtual hosting package.

This brings us to the most common hosting plans, shared or virtual servers. Virtual hosting is the most popular primarily because of the cost factor. Unlike the VPS plan you not only share your disk space, RAM and CPU are all shared by however many people can be on the same server. This means that if A client has a script that runs every day at 3 p.m., and customer b script that runs every hour, and customer C has another script that runs every five minutes, there is a good chance that you will experience some delay the loading of your site every day at 15.00. This is especially true when you are dealing with a company that sells them for hosting.

A fairly simple way to find out whether the site that you are considering going for sale is, if they give you a huge amount of disk space, and what appears to be a relatively inordinate amount of bandwidth for $ 3.95 per month, when all you were looking at charging $ 49.95 a month.

These companies do not expect you to come anywhere close to using as they offer, and you can be sure that you close, they will begin managing your service and even temporarily suspend your account until the end of the month in which the time to reset the stats, and the service is restored to the next time you start using more than they bargained for.

As you can see, you usually get what you pay for, which brings us to another problem: customer service.

What happens if your site goes down? What you then do? Who you speak with to restore your website, so your customers can access? There is a live person who speaks your language, you can talk to, or you are limited to submitting a trouble ticket to the system?

The Internet is an operation 24/7/365, and contact your hosting company should be the same. I recommend looking at their contact page and see what options are available. If they have a toll free number, call it and see if they actually answer the phone and can answer your questions. If you can not contact them now, what will happen when you really need them?

In General, there are a few things that are very important in determining the type of server, you need to choose which site to use. In my opinion the most important things to take into consideration when choosing a site are:

# The correct server to work properly: dedicated, VPS or shared.

# Overselling servers.

# To contact your host for emergencies.



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