I just started up a site which is just a content site! But it was up for a few days on hostgator shared hosting and it used its bandwidth! I need to be able to support a lot of views because my advertising the site starts soon! Do you have any recommendations? Like updating the shared hosting? Cheap dedicated sever! 50/70$ a month! reseller sever? Or vps? What do you think i should do? And what spec should i have?
What kind of contents are there that used up your bandwidth ? If those are images, you can use free CDNs.
ONe i can already tell you is that when you are looking at dedicated server that cheap that they won't be very good. You pay for what you get. What you can do is go with a cloud instant or a very strong shared host in the cloud. However if i am correct than you couldn't run out of bandwidth at hostgator they have unlimited plans. The right choice for you is a host who looks with you to provide you with the right type of hosting. Try to talk to them i am sure they will help you.
Since you mentioned that "just started up a site" shared hosting will be the most suitable type for now if it doesn't consume lot of resources.
SSD VPS servers from Fastnext are a perfect solution for small to medium-sized businesses, programmers, webmasters and web hosting resellers. The packages will suit your needs, GamePlaceFTW, as the monthly price is less than $50
What amount of bandwidth did you end up using up? Is the burning of bandwidth because of real traffic or are you serving up big files like very large images or even videos? No matter what hosting you take, the bandwidth and the costs and rules for outbound traffic should always be looked at very carefully. For instance, Hostgator has this in their terms. How can something be "unlimited", if you are alloted a monthy allowance? Even worse, you don't even know what amount that allotment is until you actually hit it. What Hostgator is doing is expecting that 99% of their customers won't be driving a lot of traffic with a shared server web space, well, at least not enough to hit the allotment. Only 1% may run into the bandwidth wall and they take that into account. There are always limits to any hosting. There has to be. So all this "unlimited" stuff is just marketing whitewash. Don't believe it one bit and do your reading. Scott
To continue my point, as you can see with Fastnext, their bandwidth limits are posted, which is good. The next thing to look for is the price of bandwidth, should you exceed the limit. That is also very, very important. And I can't find this with Fastnext. If you are serious about getting successful with your web site, and I mean really serious, then you need to know what the limits are and you need to know what happens (what prices you'll be charged), when you exceed those limits. If the hoster doesn't have clear terms on the limits and what to expect when the limits are exceeded, you should ask them about it. If they don't give you a straight answer, avoid them. Better yet, they should have everything spelled out clearly in their terms and pricing. Don't rely on an answer in an email. Scott
Hey, atfirst take your growth rate and think whether VPS will be able to support that growth rate for next 1 year? if the answer is yes then go for VPS, otherwise you can go for cheap Dedicated server.
Good idea. I'd also take into account what your maximum transfer rate will be on top of the growth rate. For instance, if you are an e-commerce site, you'd want to take into account for a flux in traffic at Christmas time or any other time your site's traffic might spike. So, in general, you should be getting a server package with enough power to cover your growth rate AND any spikes in traffic. The worst thing that can happen is for your site to go down, because it is at its busiest moment. Scott
hello there thanks for your really good answers! The site is just a content site of text post! It was the amount of traffic we got! We had 100k pageviews in like 3 days! So I am not sure what to do! I was looking at getting a dedicated sever for 160 at TMD? And seeing what it is like! I am doing some really heavy marketing and i cant risk it going down again! So really need help on what sever company i should pick by the weekend! Thanks very much Oli
Do you know how much traffic you'll be getting over the next several months? Is this a constant kind of traffic, or could it stop overnight? Will it actually grow and do you know how much growth there will be? Scott
I think if you have mainly text on your site the risk going for a VPS should not be to high. Maybe a XEN based one but this is what I would start of with. Did you check your traffic statistics for a whole month to see how much traffic you are using right now? This could give you an indication where it might go assuming an increase of visitors for e.g. 35%.
Well the traffic will grow! Because this is without advertising and the site managed to use all of my bandwidth in 5 days of release of the site! The site was only up 1 week before it went down! I think i should get a 3 month contract for a vps if i need to upgrade after i will go for a dedicated? what do you think? because the advertising starts this week so i want to be safe proof! Thanks oli
As i just said we was only live for a few days and managed to use it all! I think i am going to go for a vps for a few months then dedicated! Do you think that is a smart idea? Thanks Oli
I thinks this is the best way to go but I am wondering if you are hosting the ads on your own server. for normal if you are using advertisement networks the traffic should be on their servers and not on your.
As far as I know, if you move from one VPS to another, that means a migration of all your data. Not sure if the hoster will do that for you for free and if they don't, you'll have to take that work into consideration and for sure it also means down time for your site. If you can cope with down time every three months, you could go that route. The big question is, are you expecting some returns from the site and in what relation are they to the costs to run the site (incl. server costs)? Would downtime cause your users a lot of pain or you loss in income? Can you live with a "slugish" site or a site that stops every now and then? I ask because available bandwidth isn't the only factor to your site being online and being good. Performance of the server is another factor. It could be you have enough traffic allotted to your VPS, but the server itself dies, because it is just working too hard. Scott
The good thing about VPS is if there is free capacity on the node they can give you more resources which won't result in switching the server. Besides most Node Software offers a fairly easy way to transfer VPS servers between all nodes. I know some hosters might still charge you for doing so but it's nothing that you really should be afraid of.
But no matter what, the increase in capacity and the automatic transfer means downtime, doesn't it? How long does each take? Scott
no one has unlimited plans,is just fake,to attract customers,all says that 100% up and unlimited(means that after "the plan" is reached you will have just dreams) so that is the world of sales