Posts Tagged ‘Web Hosting’

Find out about Types of Web hosting

November 30th, 2009

Intorduction

Web Hosting is a service that runs internet servers, allowing organizations and individuals to serve content to the internet.a type of Internet hosting service that allows individuals and organizations to provide their own website accessible via the World Wide Web. Web hosts are companies that provide space on a server they own or lease for use by their clients as well as providing Internet connectivity, typically in a data center.

Types of Web Hosting Many large companies who are not internet service providers also need a computer permanently connected to the web so they can send email, files, etc. to other sites. They may also use the computer as a website host so they can provide details of their goods and services to anyone interested. Additionally these people may decide to place online orders.

After we know types of web hosting, now you can choose the best web hosting that suitable with your requirement. See you in the next article.

Henry experienced in providing support for ASP hosting clients in his company at WebHostForASP.NET. The company are specialized on providing Web Hosting services for many years.
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What is Web Hosting?

November 28th, 2009

Web hosting is a kind of internet hosting service that allows people to upload their own websites on the internet and make it accessible to the World Wide Web. This hosting service is provided by many internet hosting companies that provide space on online servers which are either owned by them or are on lease for use by their clients. These web hosting servers are mainly used for two purposes i.e., for providing internet connectivity and for providing data centres for uploading websites.

Over the years web hosting has evolved over a broad range in today’s market. There are mainly two types of hosting services namely, shared web hosting and dedicated web hosting and of course there are many hybrids in between. Shared webhosting has become the most common web host service in the market as a large majority of the websites that we come across online are running on this type of platform, so we can call it conventional, regular or normal hosting.

As the name suggests, shared web hosting is an arrangement where you have to share your bandwidth, local disk space and various network resources with all other paying customers. This type of structure is usually a low-cost solution that is very easy and simple to maintain even for the most inexperienced of users. In spite of reasonably low prices these packages do not lack on features and power, as they come loaded with a set of useful features. All these aspects make shared web hosting an ideal option for small companies and most individuals. 

On the other hand the dedicated web hosting service is the exact opposite of the shared web hosting. Instead of sharing all the resources and the server with other customers, in dedicated hosting, the hardware is dedicated exclusively only to your website database, so this provide you with a superior level of control, flexibility and performance. In this kind of web hosting you have the freedom of choosing your own operating system, install all your personal applications and incorporate all the security mechanisms you feel which are best for the protection of your server. Unlike shared web hosting, dedicated servers are not recommended to be handled or maintained by inexperienced users, it requires you to have a certain set of skills. 

These days a new technology has developed which is emerging and has grown popular in hosting market namely virtual private server. A virtual private server, or VPS, represents a technology that is created by software that makes different partitions of a single physical server to establish multiple virtual servers within it so we can perform the same operation form an individual machine again and again; this process is known as virtualisation.  

Web hosting services has evolved as the key for any business and an individual to succeed online on the World Wide Web. Now there are many web hosting services available on the net with a wide variety of options so it has become easy to choose the right web hosting service according to our needs and aspirations.

Abdul Salam is an expert affiliate marketer and also have great knowledge of internet business, domain names and web hosting. Find out more about best web hosting here on http://funcrisp.com/webhosting Read the reviews and user feedbacks about the best web hosting company.
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The Business of Being Green

November 25th, 2009

Does your business take green IT seriously? Well it should, because ignoring climate change could cost you money and harm your credibility.

There are now over 1.1 billion computers in operation worldwide, collectively producing about one billion tonnes of CO2 through their electricity requirements. E-waste is serious headache too with computers, mobile phones and electronic gadgets now accounting for 5% of the world’s garbage (www.unep.org).

But surely small IT companies don’t need to be worrying about that kind of thing? Actually, they do – there are solid reasons why all businesses should be going greener, and not just because of the do-gooder’s warm fuzzy feelings to be had! Over 70% of PCs will not be recycled when disposed of over the next five years, and globally we will dispose of 512 million. We are now legally obliged to dispose of PC equipment properly, and that normally incurs charges. Thankfully there is a free and simple, if underused, alternative; lots of people in the world are in dire need of our “outdated” computers, so donate them to the likes of www.computeraid.org. For safety, I would suggest you scrub your drives first (try dban.sourceforge.net). More regulation info at www.netregs.gov.uk.

Perhaps more importantly, consumers and businesses are increasingly taking note of how the products and services they use impact the environment. Memset (www.memset.com) became the UK’s first “carbon neutral” Web host last Summer and that has definitely helped us win more business, which is also probably why so many other dedicated server hosts are following suit.

Carbon offsetting

Things like travel, electricity usage and product manufacture have a “carbon footprint”; the quantity of greenhouse gases directly or indirectly produced as a result of those activities. Most activities are impossible to make 100% green, but you can offset the effective carbon impact by investing in carbon sequestration projects (eg. planting trees) or in greener power generation facilities (eg. wind farms), thus becoming “carbon neutral”.

Organisations like the CarbonNeutral Company (www.carbonneutral.com) and the Carbon Trust (www.carbontrust.co.uk) can guide you through offsetting, and it is neither expensive nor difficult. For example, an average small office with 10 staff might have equivalent emissions of 20 tonnes CO2/year, which would probably only cost around £200/year to offset.

As well as giving you more credibility in today’s increasingly enviro-friendly world, taking a few hours to review your carbon footprint can lead to some worthwhile cost savings as well. A simple example is turning off (or hibernating if, like me, you hate rebooting and getting back to where you were each morning) your PC at night. A recent study by Fujitsu estimated that the UK alone wastes £123m on electricity powering PCs left on out-of-hours. See www.energysavingtrust.org.uk for general energy-efficiency tips.

Virtually greener

Carbon offsetting is all good stuff, but when it comes to IT power consumption, prevention is better than cure. Demand for high-availability, centralised server resource is growing relentlessly, and high-density computing uses a lot of energy. Even a base-spec 1U rackmount server will burn 100-200 Watts continuously, and once you fill a few racks and add in cooling requirements you are looking at a whopping electricity bill! With energy prices doubling every few years datacentres’ power consumption is fast becoming a major issue for IT business, and is now the main cost underlying server hosting.

The oddity from our perspective is that the vast bulk of servers in our datacentres idle most of the time, with perhaps 90% never getting close to full capacity. While many applications are best hosted on their own dedicated server (better security, for example), few need the full resource of a modern multi-core, gigahertz machine. That is where virtualisation comes in; the latest generation of virtual machines, using the hardware-assisted virtualisation in new AMD and Intel’s chips (eg. www.vmware.com, www.miniserver.com), are operationally indistinguishable from a physical server but use 5-20% of the electricity. The reduced power and hardware costs give you significant savings while not costing anything you actually needed in the first place, and at the same time you are tackling climate change.

It can be argued that all such measures are a dribble in the ocean, and some have serious doubts about the efficacy of our whole approach to climate change. However, being more climate-friendly is not difficult for most IT businesses and almost certainly helps, so can you really afford to ignore the risks, or miss out on the benefits of going greener?

Kate Craig-Wood (kate.craig-wood.com) is MD & co-founder of Memset Ltd, the award-winning dedicated Web host (www.memset.com). Read more of her ramblings at www.katescomment.com.
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The Future of Dedicated Hosting Delivery

November 14th, 2009

For all the hype, over the last few years an increasing number of businesses have started moving not just distribution but more important business processes online in earnest. The main reason this much anticipated migration has dragged its heels is that change takes time, and businesses going online are faced with hurdles of cost, complexity, resourcing, and marketing at every step of the process.

The workhorse in terms of infrastructure of this fundamental change is hosting.

As many businesses now know, hosting has a wide range of options in terms of cost and function, but it’s the growth of Dedicated Hosting that has continued to gather momentum over recent years. The most interesting aspect of this growth is that indicators show that most businesses are at the bottom of the adoption curve and that the most aggressive growth is yet to come.

What customers want

What customers have wanted, but more importantly needed, over the past years has changed considerably. As businesses become leaner and headcounts shrink, so priorities and their drivers have changed. So-called “Have-to-haves” or essential requirements are the issues ones getting any traction, relegating “Nice-to-haves” to the back-burner until they either become irrelevant or are escalated for other reasons.

This phenomenon has seen companies spend less time, resources and money on their online presence than they might have.

Priorities have changed.

Issues that have re-prioritised the importance and investment in online presence and tools now include better brand awareness through greater exposure, increased distribution driving higher sales and new markets, and better processes to increase efficiency and reduce costs.

As customers realise that their commitment to their online tools needs to increase, so too does their requirement for effective development.

Once the development has been defined and is nearing completion, the tool requires a means of delivery, being effective hosting.

Hosting is then divided into two categories: Shared hosting (otherwise known as virtual hosting, as opposed to virtualised hosting) and dedicated hosting.

Dedicated hosting is a requirement once the environment that the developer requires becomes either more complex. or more customised than a vanilla shared hosting environment.

In short, custom development requires the freedom that only a dedicated hosting environment can deliver.

How service providers are meeting customers’ needs

Dedicated hosting has traditionally been delivered by Carriers, Internet Service Providers or Hosting Providers. Of these, it has quickly become apparent that hosting, particularly dedicated hosting, is a specialisation requiring specific skills to deliver the required product offerings.

As dedicated hosting growth gathers momentum, so too does the need for fast, cost effective delivery. Until recently, delivering dedicated hosting has meant a long-winded and complex process for both service provider and customer alike, involving specifying and sourcing the right hardware, burn testing, server OS configuration, application configuration, IDC installation and connectivity configuration and finally a handover to the customer to, only then, start the process of final configuration for production rollout.

The process is long-winded, expensive and complex for all parties concerned.

Issues continue for dedicated hosting servers set up this way as, when the times to upgrade disk, RAM or even the whole server, the process begins again from the start.

Virtualisation: Not as good as, better.

New virtualization technology is now set to deliver dedicated hosting in a way that not only eliminates most of the complexity for both service provider and customer alike, but introduces many additional virtualised hosting benefits that have not previously existed.

For service providers, it allows scalable, profitable and fast delivery of premium dedicated hosting.

For customers, it eliminates hardware, hardware drivers and hardware upgrades. In addition, due to the features included in some server virtualisation technology, it delivers far higher levels of availability and allows clones of production environments to be created for seamless development and rollout.

Virtualisation and virtualisation

As either a service provider or a customer, it’s important to understand that many different flavours of server virtualisation exist, bringing different price points, levels of resource control and base-OS independence.

Apart from resource control and allocation, stability of, and independence from, the underlying OS is essential to realising all the available benefits of server virtualisation technology and quality virtualised hosting.

Of all the current crop of server virtualisation technology, VMware Virtual Infrastructure 3 seems to lead the market against all of the above criteria, combining the highest available resource control with elimination of hardware drivers. Infrastructure 3 also allows intelligent high-availability redistribution of VMs from failed physical servers to the remaining healthy servers in the farm.

Server virtualisation technology is set to expand its market share as it has in the wider server market – it just depends on whether virtualised hosting service providers and customers alike realise the possibilities available for premium virtualised hosting.

Copyright Notice

This article is free for reproduction but must be reproduced in its entirety, including live links & this copyright statement must be included.

Copyright © 2006 Bulletproof Networks Pty Ltd

Lorenzo Modesto started in the Internet industry in 1996 and has held executive positions in sales, marketing and business development. He is a Director of Bulletproof networks that specialise in Dedicated hosting, virtualised hosting & server virtualisation
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