Web hosting hell - what to do? [modified]
-
After my recent experience with 1&1, I'm no fan of shared hosting either! Not that I was a total fan to begin with, but... If I had $100 a month to spare on a web server, I'd do that. It's really the only way to get a website to do _exactly_ what you want. Especially if you want to take full advantage of ASP.NET... Mike
Well, you can always find others to share one with you. From all the posts here in CP looking for web hosts, you might be able to team up with a dozen other CPians and split the cost. It would cost each of you about $10 or so. Not bad to be one a server only shared with 11 others ;) For about $20 extra you can get the Plesk or Helm control panels to run the server as a professional hosting server and just host out a few accounts. Currently, there cheapest Windows 2003 server (not web version) is only $115 per month with the control panel (all Windows servers allow you full access via terminal services, the control panel is for clients).
Rocky <>< Latest Code Blog Post: OpenID - More thought - Great system if.. Latest Tech Blog Post: Frustrated Total Internal Reflection-FTIR = Cool!
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
I like DiscountASP.NET (www.discountasp.net) for shared hosting. 1. Affordable ($10/month for the basic package) 2. Support is really good (usually I get a reply to technical questions within a few hours, it has never taken more than 12 hours) 3. Always running the latest stuff (they already have .NET 3.0 and you can try IIS 7.0 beta if you like) 4. Lots of free ASP.NET components, making it a great hosting provider if you are an MS developer. Their KB has many dev samples, too. 5. I've never had any reliability issues for 4 years. They warn you far in advance if there is update to email service or maintenance of anything like that. Roel
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
-
gilabite wrote:
Run your own webserver.
IMO, that it the most expensive solution.
Ericos Georgiades
-
A lot depends on what your needs happen to be. I have been using Server Beach for a dedicated server for four years or so with hardly any issues. Of course, it is a dedicated server so they have considerable cost (my current server is $118 per month), but you have a full Windows 2003 server (not web version) box without any retrictions other than your bandwidth which is currently 2,000 GB per month. You can host as many sites as you wish and install any kind of software you wish. They recently bought out by Peer1, but it has meant mostly good things. I personally am not a fan of shared hosting!
Rocky <>< Latest Code Blog Post: OpenID - More thought - Great system if.. Latest Tech Blog Post: Frustrated Total Internal Reflection-FTIR = Cool!
What kind of box do you get for $118 and do you have full control over it including wiping and reinstalling it?
regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa
Shog9 wrote:
And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute, furry animals flocking around the grassy hillside where he sat coding Ruby on his Mac...
-
Still got to host it in a datacenter (under your desk doesn't cut it unless your desk is in a datacenter) and datacenters have support problems too :(
regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa
Shog9 wrote:
And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute, furry animals flocking around the grassy hillside where he sat coding Ruby on his Mac...
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
In South Africa the better overseas companies invest here first. The hosting firm Hetzner (from Germany) started here a few years ago. These guys have cheap packages, but the price refects the customer services and features. In 4 years we had no downtime dispite South Africa's questionable communication infrastructure.
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
I've just started using www.netfirms.com...any comments, good or bad?
73
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
John, I've been using ixwebhosting (www.ixwebhosting.com) for at least 3 years now. The prices are excellent as is their service. HTH, -CB :)
-
A lot depends on what your needs happen to be. I have been using Server Beach for a dedicated server for four years or so with hardly any issues. Of course, it is a dedicated server so they have considerable cost (my current server is $118 per month), but you have a full Windows 2003 server (not web version) box without any retrictions other than your bandwidth which is currently 2,000 GB per month. You can host as many sites as you wish and install any kind of software you wish. They recently bought out by Peer1, but it has meant mostly good things. I personally am not a fan of shared hosting!
Rocky <>< Latest Code Blog Post: OpenID - More thought - Great system if.. Latest Tech Blog Post: Frustrated Total Internal Reflection-FTIR = Cool!
I am not a fan of shared hosting either, but for some of my smaller clients, they need the shared hosting especially if their not digging into the bigger development solutions. I had a big problem with gate.com a while back and I posted a bad review about them on my blog. If I were referring someone on shared hosting, I would push for GoDaddy, they seem to be a little bit safer although shared control of the hosting space is not all that impressive. But then again, I'm talking about shared hosting, not dedicated. John Wooton Professional ASP.net developer Check out my blog
-
I agree, I've used Server Beach for the last couple years... my current server there is $189 a month... but it is worth every penny since I have total control and lots of bandwidth. The downside is administration and maintenance -- if you don't know how to properly admin and lock down a server, don't get a dedicated one or you will be in a pickle very shortly.
achimera wrote:
if you don't know how to properly admin and lock down a server, don't get a dedicated one
What's the best way to learn? Any books you'd recommend?
David Veeneman www.veeneman.com
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
Well I did type out a large recommendation for Rackspace.com but the message wasn't posted. The short of it is: 1. they take care of all the hardware and software stuff. 2. will assist you on anything under the sun. 3. Are there 24/7/356, by phone, email, and perfect helpdesk. 4. Multiple locations, Multiple backbones...etc. 5. Every thing is under your control,you are the boss. 6. you can be up and running in 24 hours. 7. Contracts range from 6 months, to 2 years and you can go on month to month are the contract ends. Give them a Call
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
If you want windows hosting, go for DotNetPark.com it's cheap, they allow multiple domains, and their customer service is excellent. Their deal is that you pay for disk space, but it is well worth it. Gate.com is another good one.
"Half this game is ninety percent mental." - Yogi Berra If you can read thank a teacher, if you can read in English, thank a Marine.
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
Try Brinkster at www.brinkster.com. Brinkster sets the standard for technical support. I've been subscribing for web host services for 3 years and they never let me down.
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
The problems described with texh-support after buyouts are nothing new. All companies want to do is cut costs but all they land up doing is cutting their own throats. In any event, I have been using WebHost4Life for years and have never had a problem with their support. They have a variety of plans and I am only paying $20.00 a month for a shared server. However, they do have dedicated equipment if desired. I would at least look at them. I understand "Pair.com" is supposed to be quite good as well.
Steve Naidamast Black Falcon Software, Inc. blackfalconsoftware@ix.netcom.com
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
-
A lot depends on what your needs happen to be. I have been using Server Beach for a dedicated server for four years or so with hardly any issues. Of course, it is a dedicated server so they have considerable cost (my current server is $118 per month), but you have a full Windows 2003 server (not web version) box without any retrictions other than your bandwidth which is currently 2,000 GB per month. You can host as many sites as you wish and install any kind of software you wish. They recently bought out by Peer1, but it has meant mostly good things. I personally am not a fan of shared hosting!
Rocky <>< Latest Code Blog Post: OpenID - More thought - Great system if.. Latest Tech Blog Post: Frustrated Total Internal Reflection-FTIR = Cool!
I have to throw myself in with the OP on this. A partner and I have a consulting company on the side and provide a variety of tech services; one of which is web hosting. Right now we're on HostDepartment's premier reseller plan because frankly it has the most freedom we've seen when it comes to choosing how we resell. We really hate the "referral programs." HostDepartment gives us near infinite freedom in plan pricing and features, as well as unlimited domains, and plans. Most importantly, we set our own prices and the H-Sphere back-end takes care of the billing for us, and we have finely tuned control over credits, refunds, debits etc. Now the downside: It has absolutely horrible customer support (livechat only), the pings to our servers are 2 to 3 times more than acceptible, the mail servers seem to be out 2 or three times a day, and they don't allow ColdFusion and PHP on the same server, so we have clients who have to have 2 different hosting plans because they need both. I wish we could find a provider with H-sphere hosting on either a VPS or dedicated server. ColdFusion MX6+ (prefferably 7) is a must.
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
-
For the second time in a dozen years a web host we use that was previously good and got good ratings etc has been bought out or merged and service and support has gone to hell. (Hypermart years ago, now Netnation). In both cases they were humming along nicely, we never had any issues, then all of the sudden we start losing email, our websites get restored from old backups without warning, tech support can't seem to pin down major problems like we can't connect to our mail server etc. Curiously this happened in both cases just after a buyout or a merger of the hosting company. I'm checking for web hosts on "the google" and I find a billion plus a zillion web host review sites and other thinly veiled marketing scams and little else in the way of objective information. How in the world are you supposed to find a web host, are there any objective sources of information? Are there any web hosts that *don't* try to be the cheapest any more but focus instead on uptime and reliability and good customer service? Is there anyone big enough that they won't get bought out or merged? -- modified at 16:48 Friday 6th April, 2007 Thank you to everyone that responded, I've checked them out and Server Beach seems to be the closest match for our requirements. Now I just have to decide if it's worth the time and effort to learn how to setup what we need and the ongoing maintenance.
"110%" - it's the new 70%
John, I'm using Netnation too. Service has been fine for me. I can't find anything about a merger - who bought them out?
-
John, I'm using Netnation too. Service has been fine for me. I can't find anything about a merger - who bought them out?
I'm not sure, but a few months back we started having all sorts of problems and when we phoned support it wasn't the guys in Vancouver any more it was back east in the US somewhere and when we asked what happened they said it was a "merger". We have three different sites with them, one a pretty heavy traffic site. The majority of the problems lately have been with email. We have 15 minutes or less response time to emails we receive for tech support and there have been times in the last few months when their email server goes snaky and we don't get emails until hours after they were sent. When we call it's because their server is "overloaded" processing email. Last week we couldn't send any email at all, their smtp server refused any connection despite no changes at our end. Their support told us it was probably our local ISP that we get our internet connection from (shaw cable, no other options here). We spent all day trying to work it out and then mysteriously it started working about 8 hours after it had stopped. We had finally narrowed it down working with netnation to their email server and then it just started working on it's own and they had no explanation. Yesterday we discovered that all the changes that we had spent hours making to our website the day before were gone and it had reverted. The problem was that there were a lot of small things changed and it's a big website so we can't just upload the whole thing again so again, hours were wasted picking over and comparing our website to our local copy. When we called them they said there was a problem on our server and they had to restore from backup, when we asked why we weren't notified they said "it was only a few hours". We freaked at them on the phone and said we expect that if they ever restore our server or are planning it we want a call so we know. If it had been a more subtle change the day before like a price change or an update to one of our software components we might not have noticed until it caused us all sorts of trouble and inconvenienced our customers. That was the last straw for us.
"110%" - it's the new 70%