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Web hosting articles
Choosing a
Web Hosting company
Do a
Google
search
using
the term
“web
hosting
company”
and
you’ll
get
close to
5
million
results.
How can
you
winnow
down
this
multitude
of
choices
to find
a
company
that
will
serve
your
needs?
There
are many
different
factors
that may
influence
your
choice –
here we
look at
some of
the more
important
ones.
First of
all, you
will
need to
know
exactly
what
your
requirements
are, not
only
now, but
also
what you
may need
in the
future.
This
will
allow
you
start
cutting
down the
number
of
choices
from the
start,
especially
if you
know
that you
will be
using
some of
the more
advanced
features
available
that may
not be
offered
by
smaller
companies.
The
support
provided
by the
hosting
company
is very
important,
especially
for new
or
inexperienced
users.
Try to
see how
quickly
a
company
responds
to you
by
sending
an email
question
to them
– if you
get an
answer
back
within
24 hours
then you
can be
fairly
confident
that
your
questions
will be
answered
quickly.
See if
telephone
support
is
available
too, and
test
that. By
the way,
don’t
expect
telephone
support
to be
free –
some
companies
do
charge
for
that,
though
if they
do then
you
should
expect
that
their
email
support
is
faster
than the
average.
Do some
research
around
the Web.
There
are many
forums,
blogs
and
message
groups
that
discuss
web
hosting.
See what
sort of
reputation
the
company
you are
considering
has
amongst
users.
Remember
though
that
people
complain
far more
easily
than
they
compliment
– don’t
let one
user
sour you
on a
company
that
otherwise
has good
reports.
The
operating
system
that is
used by
the web
host may
matter
to you.
There
are two
choices,
either
Unix/
Linux
based or
Windows
based.
For
some,
either
choice
would be
fine, as
the
end-result
will be
identical.
However,
if for
instance
your
database
used MS
Access,
then a
Windows
based
server
would be
a better
choice
for you.
Similarly
a
database
created
using
MySQL
would be
better
hosted
on a
Linux
server.
Since
Linux is
free,
web
hosts
that
offer
this are
normally
cheaper
than the
Windows
servers.
By the
way,
don’t
let the
type of
software
used to
develop
your
site
influence
your
choice –
sites
built
using
Front
Page
will run
happily
on Linux
servers.
However,
it may
be
easier
to write
and test
scripts
on a
machine
that
runs the
same
type of
software
as the
server
that
runs the
scripts.
Check
what the
company
claims
as its
uptime,
usually
expressed
as a
percentage.
Beware –
some
companies
will
claim
that
their
uptime
is the
time
that the
server
is
powered
on,
rather
than the
time
that the
server
is
actually
connected
to the
Internet.
Take a
close
look at
their
web
site.
See how
responsive
it is –
if the
hosting
company’s
own web
site
seems
slow and
sluggish,
that
does not
bode
well for
yours.
Look at
the
design
and
lay-out
– does
it look
professional,
or is it
full of
misspellings,
mistakes
and dead
links.
If so,
it may
show a
lack of
professionalism
that may
carry
through
the
entire
company. |