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webhosting for dotnet applications

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  • B BryanFazekas

    I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

    J Offline
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    JohnThornley
    wrote on last edited by
    #12

    I have a couple of .net applications hosted on http://appharbor.com and I can't recommend it highly enough. If your requirements are simple you may even get away with using their free options, but if not it remains cheap, versatile and scalable

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    • B BryanFazekas

      I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

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      Paulo_JCG
      wrote on last edited by
      #13

      How about a Azure Web App (there's a free tier for up to 60 compute mins a day) associated with a Azure storage account for the files. Azure Calculator

      Paulo Gomes Measuring programming progress by lines of code is like measuring aircraft building progress by weight. —Bill Gates Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler. —Albert Einstein

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      • B BryanFazekas

        I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

        B Offline
        B Offline
        Blue Iguana
        wrote on last edited by
        #14

        I have used GoDaddy for clients that need a lot of hand holding. Their customer support is geared towards clients that need a lot of assistance. Takes the load off me. Not the cheapest option for them, but definitely for you.

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        • B BryanFazekas

          I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

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          zaiboot
          wrote on last edited by
          #15

          I know is a long shot. But .netcore runs in Linux. You might want to look into Digital Ocean. I did some early development with aspnet core 1.0 and it was fast and responsive with a Debian droplet. All experimental. It was interesting.

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          • B Blue Iguana

            I have used GoDaddy for clients that need a lot of hand holding. Their customer support is geared towards clients that need a lot of assistance. Takes the load off me. Not the cheapest option for them, but definitely for you.

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            rnbergren
            wrote on last edited by
            #16

            I agree about GoDaddy. Fairly easy to manage and it does just work. If the application is fairly small should be fine Azure is nice but almost requires that a person know how to manage servers kind of. So Not sure that would be best for you after hearing aobut the client.

            To err is human to really mess up you need a computer

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            • B BryanFazekas

              I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

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              K Offline
              KC CahabaGBA
              wrote on last edited by
              #17

              Arvixe I use a good bit. Very reasonable and while it requires that you have some reasonable level of knowledge. They have been the most cost effective .NET host provider I've run into. When there has been a real problem they were capable and resolved issues in a reasonable length of time. www.arvixe.com They have both shared and dedicated hosting at various levels based on your need and very quickly get to unlimited storage and SQL backends. MySQL is provided by default with all of their packages.

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              • B BryanFazekas

                I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

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                Steve Naidamast
                wrote on last edited by
                #18

                WinHost.com is a very good and affordable option with good support as well. It has all of the tools and more for .NET developers who want or need to support hosted .NET web applications...

                Steve Naidamast Sr. Software Engineer Black Falcon Software, Inc. blackfalconsoftware@outlook.com

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                • B BryanFazekas

                  I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

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                  Jaime Premy
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #19

                  Smarterasp.net. Been using it for several clients for years now. Very affordable, easy to use and decent support.

                  The perfect woman: cooks good food and never says no in the middle of the night.

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                  • P PIEBALDconsult

                    Step 0 : Roll your own. Step 1 : Profit.

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                    U Offline
                    User 10025056
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #20

                    I do that. I offer Plesk based webhosting with not too many restrictions. One .com-Domain included, from $30 each year. Service includes user level ssh-access, custom dns-settings and much more. Just send me a PM and we may talk about it.

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                    • B BryanFazekas

                      I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

                      N Offline
                      N Offline
                      nightsoul94
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #21

                      I also use SmarterAsp.net. I use webhostforasp.net as a secondary provider. I received free package deals for both and have kept them around because why get rid of free, but that was back when they were just starting out. I have had good luck with both of them. Easy control panels, easy to load sites and fairly easy to manage. I would recommend you look at Azure as well. I wouldn't look in any other direction if you are using a .net application as you will probably have too many problems maintaining everything. That is my practical experience, anyway. The problem I have with all of the Cloud solutions is the true hidden cost. If you purchase a hosting account through one of the providers above, you get x space, with y sites, with z databases and everything is spelled out. The last time I looked at Cloud solutions you get some of the same but some of the billing is based on usage volume, number of Mbytes written to the disk or along the lan etc. Before recommending either or choosing a direction, I would see if you could get a true hard fixed, per month cost. That may help. Your client isn't going to care about "if I use this much volume in March, it costs $100, if I use this much volume in April it will cost $200", they are just going to be pissed when their bill doubles. Plus, I have a golden rule that I always use for applications, and that is they will always grow. If you are only using a little bit now, give it a couple years and that will be significantly larger.

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                      • U User 10025056

                        I do that. I offer Plesk based webhosting with not too many restrictions. One .com-Domain included, from $30 each year. Service includes user level ssh-access, custom dns-settings and much more. Just send me a PM and we may talk about it.

                        B Offline
                        B Offline
                        BryanFazekas
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #22

                        Thanks, but I'm not interested in running the hosting. Just looking for a setup for customers which is stable, easy to use (for them), and hassle free (for me).

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                        • M Marc Clifton

                          BryanFazekas wrote:

                          The app is not a robust one, it simply collects information from a single source and serves the information out to customers each day.

                          Heh. Sounds like it could be implemented on an rPi sitting in the janitor's closet. Seriously, they don't need to know anything about hosting, sounds like all you need to do is set up a box for them that runs a web server, configure the router to for port 443, set up an SSL certificate and auto-renewal, register a domain, point it to their static IP, ... Ah, ok, I see your point. ;) Marc

                          Latest Article - Class-less Coding - Minimalist C# and Why F# and Function Programming Has Some Advantages Learning to code with python is like learning to swim with those little arm floaties. It gives you undeserved confidence and will eventually drown you. - DangerBunny Artificial intelligence is the only remedy for natural stupidity. - CDP1802

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                          BryanFazekas
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #23

                          Marc Clifton wrote:

                          Seriously, they don't need to know anything about hosting, sounds like all you need to do is set up a box for them that runs a web server, configure the router to for port 443, set up an SSL certificate and auto-renewal, register a domain, point it to their static IP, ...

                          ;P Yup! This could run on a PI3, probably a Pi Zero. For this client I don't think that's the best choice, but I'm keeping that in mind. I've got one of each (PI3, zero W) and need to play more with them.

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                          • M Mycroft Holmes

                            I just watched this [Build apps faster with Azure Serverless - YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnJt4qfsfOc&MC=JavaScript&MC=Windows&MC=Vstudio&MC=MSAzure&MC=MobileDev) from the MSDN news letter, seems it may meet your requirements. I know a demo like that glosses over all the difficult bits but it may be worth investigating. I do note there is no discussion of cost :~

                            Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

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                            BryanFazekas
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #24

                            Thanks! I was thinking of Azure ... but cost is an issue, so I need to check that. This is for one client, but I'm also thinking longer range for other small clients.

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                            • Z zaiboot

                              I know is a long shot. But .netcore runs in Linux. You might want to look into Digital Ocean. I did some early development with aspnet core 1.0 and it was fast and responsive with a Debian droplet. All experimental. It was interesting.

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                              B Offline
                              BryanFazekas
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #25

                              Thanks for the suggestion, but I need stable, not experimental. A Raspberry PI was suggested up stream, and THAT is an entertaining thought ... and dirt cheap for the client. But they need something reliable so some type of service is better for everyone. However, some time down the road when I've had a chance to experiment with my PI's ... I may choose otherwise.

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                              • N nightsoul94

                                I also use SmarterAsp.net. I use webhostforasp.net as a secondary provider. I received free package deals for both and have kept them around because why get rid of free, but that was back when they were just starting out. I have had good luck with both of them. Easy control panels, easy to load sites and fairly easy to manage. I would recommend you look at Azure as well. I wouldn't look in any other direction if you are using a .net application as you will probably have too many problems maintaining everything. That is my practical experience, anyway. The problem I have with all of the Cloud solutions is the true hidden cost. If you purchase a hosting account through one of the providers above, you get x space, with y sites, with z databases and everything is spelled out. The last time I looked at Cloud solutions you get some of the same but some of the billing is based on usage volume, number of Mbytes written to the disk or along the lan etc. Before recommending either or choosing a direction, I would see if you could get a true hard fixed, per month cost. That may help. Your client isn't going to care about "if I use this much volume in March, it costs $100, if I use this much volume in April it will cost $200", they are just going to be pissed when their bill doubles. Plus, I have a golden rule that I always use for applications, and that is they will always grow. If you are only using a little bit now, give it a couple years and that will be significantly larger.

                                B Offline
                                B Offline
                                BryanFazekas
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #26

                                nightsoul94 wrote:

                                The problem I have with all of the Cloud solutions is the true hidden cost.

                                YUP! Costs are a driver, but hidden costs are a more dangerous point in general. I'm thinking of not only hosting costs, but my time to manage anything they can't (which appears likely). I expect the client will be willing to pay a bit more for stable service that doesn't cost them for my time -- which will be cheaper for them. [Plus I long ago lost interest in waking up at 2 AM to handle a production problem. :laugh: ]

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                                • B BryanFazekas

                                  I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

                                  B Offline
                                  B Offline
                                  BryanFazekas
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #27

                                  Thanks for all the suggestions! I have some research to do ....

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • B BryanFazekas

                                    I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

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                                    G Offline
                                    GoTexans
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #28

                                    Try Linode.com - you can get a small VPS for $5 /month and can also create high-available and load balancing if you have 2 or more.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • N nightsoul94

                                      I also use SmarterAsp.net. I use webhostforasp.net as a secondary provider. I received free package deals for both and have kept them around because why get rid of free, but that was back when they were just starting out. I have had good luck with both of them. Easy control panels, easy to load sites and fairly easy to manage. I would recommend you look at Azure as well. I wouldn't look in any other direction if you are using a .net application as you will probably have too many problems maintaining everything. That is my practical experience, anyway. The problem I have with all of the Cloud solutions is the true hidden cost. If you purchase a hosting account through one of the providers above, you get x space, with y sites, with z databases and everything is spelled out. The last time I looked at Cloud solutions you get some of the same but some of the billing is based on usage volume, number of Mbytes written to the disk or along the lan etc. Before recommending either or choosing a direction, I would see if you could get a true hard fixed, per month cost. That may help. Your client isn't going to care about "if I use this much volume in March, it costs $100, if I use this much volume in April it will cost $200", they are just going to be pissed when their bill doubles. Plus, I have a golden rule that I always use for applications, and that is they will always grow. If you are only using a little bit now, give it a couple years and that will be significantly larger.

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                                      M Offline
                                      MadMyche
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #29

                                      I have some "business card" sites that are hosted on SmarterAsp / MyWindowsHosting as the price is right. They do have a IIS Application Sleep that is a little slow to respond which I took care of by setting up a Pingdom account to hit the site every 5 minutes. I use to use CrystalTech without issue, actually preferred them but they started bumping up their prices and getting out of shared hosting.


                                      Director of Transmogrification Services Shinobi of Query Language Master of Yoda Conditional

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                                      • B BryanFazekas

                                        Thanks, but I'm not interested in running the hosting. Just looking for a setup for customers which is stable, easy to use (for them), and hassle free (for me).

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                                        U Offline
                                        User 10025056
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #30

                                        Yes, that's exactly what you'd get. There's a demo account to try it out: https://cumulu.org:8443/ Username: demo Password: showcase

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                                        • B BryanFazekas

                                          I have a potential USA-based client, a small business, that has a need for a web application. Their application will have roughly 50 users, essentially a server for small files. I'm researching hosts that are stable, have good support, are easy to deal with, and relatively inexpensive. Can I get recommendations? Thanks! [Yeah, I know I'm asking for the sun, the moon, and the stars -- and will probably have to settle for something less. :-D ]

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                                          Ted D Wagner
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #31

                                          Azure offers a free tier for hosting, using their app hosting service. No need for deploying server, just deploy your .net app right to azure. https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/pricing/details/app-service/

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