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Recently I tried to cancel a set of Exchange services, and instead they cancelled my personal domain. In so doing they knocked out my personal e-mail for 3 weeks while they fumbled around with the problem. I eventually had to switch e-mail providers and fix the problem myself.
Their support is *incredible*. I'm very pleased with them, and they're great for web applications as well as blogs/websites etc.
Our main web stuff is hosted with UltimaHosts. They are the best .NET hoster! They also do PHP & MySQL if you are into that.
Which is exactly how they like it, of course.
If you want to sign up for (mt), you can use the link below which would help me out, I think I get an account credit for each sign up.
http://www.mediatemple.net/go/order/?refdom=mic...
If not, just go to mediatemple.net.
Yes, I've had some outages (not many) - but I'm not using this for business purposes.
Here's a hint: If you're running a company, and you're going to rely on your hosting to give a demo - don't be a freaking cheap-ass. Get a dedicated, or virtual-private server, with an actual SLA.
Yes, that means you need to spend more than USD$100/month on hosting.
BTW, its not so easy to get reliable and unbiased advice on hosting
It's maybe not the wisest decision to host a business on a $10/month server...
This is NOT a rumor!
Robert, the visiting CEO is quite right in not wanting to be named.
I sure as heck wouldn't be investing in a company that's too cheap to buy proper hosting for a business/commercial site.
With over 500,000 domains there are bound to be issues, and we all know that users who've had bad experiences will generally be very vocal...
But since you are so vocal on this today, what services do you suggest? You can't knock one without having others to name as being better. I should say I'm not a "happy Dreamhost customer" but I am evaluating several options right now. Aside from a few places like Textdrive that just cost ridiculous amounts of money I haven't found a good alternative to Dreamhost that doesn't have nearly as many customer complaints. But I would be happy to hear your suggestions.
http://www.dreamhoststatus.com/
Their support is excellent, and when you call them, you *get someone*. No "email us and we might get back to you" bullshit. They have a maintenance blog that they keep current, etc.
Just top - notch all the way around, and that's for shared space or colocation.
At any rate - there is not one 'large' shared, cheap webhost that doesn't have its fair share of negative blog posts. And for their prices vs their overall uptime and feature set, its an amazing bargain.
And like others have said - blogs and personal sites are one thing to be hosted on a shared server - if you are serious about constant uptime and SLA, you have to pay more. Period.
It's simple math, more marketshare, means more issues, even while the overall per capita stats, might be good. You have to put random bloggerria searches in context, with a whole set of external factors. Plus, one or two vocal loudmouth crybaby bloggers (oh say Jeff Jarvis), makes the problem seem much larger than it is. One slighted blogger, with the ego of God, bitches up a storm, and everyone chimes in...and in time, the linkage and whole context gets lost. Enter some dweeb doing a blog search and wow, evil company.
Plus, as others have said, if mission critical, go seriously dedicated server, being a start-up is a feeble excuse. Sucks to be him, but if in a biz, you always need a back-up slash disaster recovery plan. Ones that don't, well, aren't.
Highly Recommended
Personally I say carry on dreamhost, great service for the money.
Just a thought.
Dreamhost offer a cheap, functional and impressively full-featured service for very little money. It's extremely suitable for people hosting personal sites, messing around or running non-critical applications.
That's what they are and what I think everyone understands them to be. For a huge number of people that's all they need from a web host. I had 3 days email downtime from them once last year, and it made me think about getting a dedicated IMAP host for mail (I didn't in the end, and it's been fine ever since) but everyone above who says you get what you pay for is completely right.
Your ‘CEO of a start-up’ has simply made a catastrophic business decision not to invest in his own product. Trying to defend him by blaming his consumer-level webhost and trying to incite a lash of criticism is just pathetic.
If you're trying to run a business, you should know what you're paying for. Clearly he doesn't, so I wish him well in his next endeavour.
[beerco@localhost ~]$ ping sitespaces.net
PING sitespaces.net (69.70.72.211) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from modemcable211.72-70-69.static.videotron.ca (69.70.72.211): icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=1.49 ms
Having the machine in your office is priceless.
Getting a fiber optic line is better but costs 6k per month. When you need a little more, and you are IN THE BUSINESS, you should personally know the folks at the datacenter in the nearest city. I know a bunch of people at Canix in Montreal. When I put up our newest creation, and boy will Google be shocked. I can have it on our own 1U on coloc for only $69 a month with a TB of band.
For a VC funded startup anything less is lunacy.
I wouldn't hinge my business, nor would I host any web app of business value, on a shared web host. Not once I was past the "see-what-I-can-do" phase, and into the "can-this-be-profitable?" phase.
I think Dreamhost receives a lot of flack for being very transparent -- their status page tracks when services are down and they blog about the problems they encounter. Thus, when there are problems, people know about them, talk about them, blog about them. But I don't think Dreamhost offers a lesser service than any other $10/month host.
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchT...
$430 for a decent brand new 1U
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchT...
plus 2 500 GB hdds for 1TB storage at $119 a piece
http://iweb8.com/colocation/
plus $69 a month coloc at iWeb.
It includes a dedicated reboot. It's only 500 GB, but unless you're serving video, you'll never exceed it.
You can throw Ubuntu or FC7 on there and use LAMP as Scoble does. Now you have a brand new enterprise class setup for far under $1000. If you don't have that kind of money, you should consider getting another job until you have the funds to do your startup.
There is one thing that will cause me to switch to another provider when my contract is over. While the server space is generous the processor allotment is not. If you get digg'd or /.'d you'll quickly go over their alloted processor amount. This will result in a warning and if it's not corrected (essentially you have to take your website down) they'll terminate your service. That can be a problem if you're trying to run a business, not just a hobby site.
Want a genuinely reliable service?
Go somewhere else, and pay more.
http://www.dearcali.com/hosting-services/
Dreamhost for me is a dream - great support, very fast even on the weekend, ssh, cronjobs and reliable fast webserving. I may have seen 2-3 outage over the last 2-3 years. How many providers really do use a dedicated other server to inform you about what they are doing?
Additionally their one click installs are gorgeus.
And yes, if I have something like that running to present, I make sure to have more than one option up because murphy is always around.
As said, I am a very satisfied customer for what they are costing and delivering.
you should have slapped your buddy instead for not setting things up a little more thoughtfully.
http://www.web-strategist.com/blog/2007/05/30/m...
I agree fully with Jon Symons.
If you are going to tote an enterprise system worthy of A-list blogger time, act like it.
Ya' just never know ??????
This recent outage was caused by a security breach and it was ugly indeed. But if you host half a million domains (as they apparently do), you attract the attention of the juvenile and criminal elements in our virtual society who think it's cool to destroy other peoples' property.
The perhaps untold story is that in the 2-3 days following this breach, they individually restored a lot of peoples' sites -- including three of mine that were victimized -- with solidly maintained backups that meant few if any real hiccups.
Nobody's perfect, but these guys really shine. You owe them an apology for your initial post, Robert!
Dreamhost does publish a remarkably transparent blog, but that's one reason I like them so much.
They have great hosting. And it is cheap!
http://twodayslate.wordpress.com/2008/06/13/dre...