|
Web
Hosting: Which Is The Host With The Most?
So you want to publish a web site do
you? Welcome to the club. These days it seems that almost
everyone has a web site of some kind, and thousands
more continue to be launched every day. It's challenging
enough to design a site and fill it with interesting
content, but when all is said and done another challenge
still remains - where to host it?
A popular choice for newbie webmasters,
and even experienced ones, is to secure a free hosting
plan with a company such as Yahoo! Geocities, Tripod
or Angelfire. While these are easy to setup and free
of charge, they do have limitations. Most free hosts
don't offer all the nice features that paid hosts do
such as FTP access, CGI-BIN, or your own personal domain
name. Instead you’re stuck with minimal features and
a generic URL such as www.freewebhost.com/marcswebsite.
This somewhat limits your web site‘s potential. Most
free hosts also require you to run banners or pop-up
ads on your web site to make it worth their while -
these banners and pop-ups can obstruct the view of your
web page and ultimately annoy visitors and drive them
away. Lastly, most free hosts have a daily bandwidth
limit that is very small, so if you do get a lot of
traffic you'll most likely exceed the allotted bandwidth
and your site will be temporarily disabled. Overall
I would recommend free web hosts for people that are
new to web hosting and want to get a feel for how it
works. I'd also recommend them for web sites that are
personal in nature (such as an online journal) as well
as web sites that don't plan to generate any revenue.
Free web hosts are a great stepping stone to paid web
hosts - I myself starting building web sites 4 years
ago using free hosts, and today I run several high traffic
web sites that are hosted on paid web hosting plans.
Now it's time to get into the good stuff
- paid web hosting. Web hosting companies that charge
money for their services are plentiful on the Internet,
and feature a wide array of hosting packages at various
price points. First we begin with so called "budget"
web hosts, who claim to offer you the world for only
$1 per month. Having used numerous such companies I
feel I must tell you to proceed with caution here, as
these companies aren't all that they are cracked up
to be. Many claim to offer 24/7 e-mail support, which
in my experience turned out to be 0/0 e-mail support.
My e-mails were either never answered or answered a
week after I sent them. Even when I got a response it
was generic in nature and completely unhelpful. Also,
expect frequent outages with these budget web hosts
as they rarely even have their own web servers - often
they are reselling space on someone else's web servers
over which they have no control. One budget web host
I used went down unexpectedly for 6 days, and they didn‘t
even bother to notify their customers. As a result,
my web site was down for 6 days and I lost most of my
visitors as well as my hard-earned search engine rankings.
Lesson learned: if the reliability and success of your
web site is important to you, budget web hosting might
not be the answer. However, this is not to say that
all budget web hosts are bad - 1dollarhosting.com is
one of the leaders in the budget web hosting arena and
has quite a good reputation.
The next type of paid web host is what
I refer to as a "mid-range" web host, meaning
that they offer prices and service that will satisfy
the majority of web sites out there. Mid-range web hosts
like PowWeb, Your-Site.com and iPowerWeb offer packages
ranging from $5 to $8 per month and provide the tools
that most webmasters will need to run a web site, such
as: CGI-BIN, tons of e-mail addresses, FTP support,
visitor statistics and more. These hosts do have monthly
bandwidth limits, but the limits are quite high, and
most web sites will never reach them. However, if your
web site features hundreds of file downloads and gets
decent traffic you may be shocked at how soon you'll
reach those bandwidth limits. When you do, your site
may be temporarily shut down or you'll have to pay bandwidth
overage charges, which can get pricey. Overall though,
mid-range web hosts will be satisfactory for 90% of
the web sites out there, and generally offer excellent
uptime/reliability. In fact, many web-based businesses
are successfully run using a mid-range web host. However,
as mentioned previously, web sites that offer large
files for download or sites that get a huge amount of
traffic may find that a mid-range host doesn’t quite
suit their needs. These types of web sites may require
“high-end” web hosting solutions, the next topic in
our discussion.
High-end web hosts typically service
web sites that are extremely popular, have a high amount
of traffic, and/or require pretty much 100% uptime.
Most businesses rely on high-end web hosts to host their
web sites. Rackspace.com is an example of a well known
high-end web hosting company. Pricing for high-end hosts
varies, but typically runs from about $50 per month
to several hundred dollars per month. Many high-end
hosts give you your own dedicated server (which they
support) that is reserved just for you and your web
site. The mid-range hosts I discussed earlier typically
host many different web sites on the same server - this
is known as “shared” hosting. High-end web hosts offer
stellar reliability, bandwidth, and just about every
tool you’ll ever need to run a successful web site.
Another feature that some high-end web hosts provide
is “co-location” hosting. In this scenario, YOU configure
and provide the web server, but you get to plug it into
their data center/network. This can be very nice because
their data center usually has a fiber-optic connection
directly to the Internet, offering blazing bandwidth
and stellar reliability. People who run web-based businesses
or extremely popular, high traffic web sites are good
candidates for high-end web hosting.
Hopefully this brief overview gives
you a good picture of the various types of web hosts
that exist, and which one might be right for you. When
you begin your search for a web host, always keep in
mind the old adage “You get what you pay for” because
it really does hold true in this case. Before you make
the commitment to host a web site be sure to take some
time and analyze what you want out of the web site,
and decide which factors are most important to its success.
Answering these questions will get you many steps closer
to choosing the web host that’s right for you.
Back
to Articles
|