Archive for the ‘Low Cost’ Category

Web Hosting

Wednesday, October 24th, 2007

This information is fresh from October 24th 2007.
Note: This page contains no Affiliate Links nor do we get credit in any other way from the companies listed here.


We have collected information on several prominent web hosting companies, five of which we have had the pleasure (or discomfort) of working with directly. Collecting honest 1st-hand reviews was not trivial due to the unbelievable amount of fake reviews that exist.

Exec Summary

When looking into buying a web hosting package, use these rules of thumb:

  • Buy hosting with a hosting company, and buy a domain name from a registrar.
  • Avoid Review sites that are affiliated with the top chosen companies.
  • If it’s too good to be true, then it isn’t. No one can allow for hundreds of sites to have endless bandwidth/storage/CPU for a buck a month.

This is a summary of the information we found, with our own 2 cents of experience along side.

Rank Name TheyThought WeThought
1 BlueHost logo Great uptime, Great price, Reliable, Reasonable support. Reliable, Solid shared hosting outfit.
2 HostGator logo Good performance, Reliable This site is run on HostGator currently.
3 parcom logo Not much - good or bad. A bit less than reasonable uptime, No money-back guarantee option.
4 1and1 logo Spammers and too many billing issues here. OK performance, Bad Support, Anti-user control panel.
5 HostMonster This is the smaller, bit-cheaper alternative to BlueHost N/A
6 ANHosting logo Downtime seems to be an issue. N/A
7 Yahoo logo Hard to find Yahoo-Hosting Fans out there. Slow, Restrictive (only allows TCP port 80 out of server), Expensive
8 LunarPages logo Too many angry faces ! N/A

Detailed Review

The web hosting business is a rapidly growing and evolving business. There are hundreds of millions of top-level domain names and websites out there, making the domain-name registration and web hosting business a multi billion dollar market.

Web hosting companies provide a service for hosting personal or commercial website and online applications, renting their computation and networking resources as well as technical support and guidance. Every eCommerce site, small and large, is most likely run from some hosting company’s data center.

There are 3 basic types of hosting packages:

Shared Your site runs a computer and shares its resources with tens or even hundreds of other sites.
Virtual A chunk of the machines resources are virtually allocated to you and full control over that space is at your hands. Still this is only virtually true.
Dedicated
You own 100% of the machine’s resources.
For more web hosting terms see: wikipedia, WHIR, aplus.

The list of companies we sought opinions about:
• Yahoo Small Business
• Bluehost
• 1and1
• HostGator
• Parcom.net
• AnHosting
• HostMonster
• LunarPages

More leading brands not covered in this item:
• StartLogic
• PowWeb
• iPowerWeb
• Web.com

1and1

Cons Pros
Unreliable service.
here
Some say they do have good customer support.
here
Many spammers on 1and1.
here
Speed
Many people had billing issues with them.
one, two, three, four.
 
Canceling to be a soft spot for 1and1.
here
 
   
   

BlueHost

Cons Pros
Support congestion
vbulletin.
Bluehost fans:
one, two, three, four
The October 22nd outage.
here and there
Bluehost working behind the scenes.
Electricpolitics
  Control over your site and content.
starting-an-internet-business.com
  99.9% uptime.
WireFan
  We actually thought this speaks positively about the Bluehost support.
here
  Rjfrancisco likes the Bluehsot support.
here

HostGator

Cons Pros
Database and load issues.
here
General positive things:
One, two, three
Site suspension surprises.
here
Reliable
here and here
  Performance
 
 


Yahoo Small Business

Cons Pros
No cpanel,
MySQL confusion.
See DigitalPoint
Practically nothing !
Poor Performance,
Poor Support,
Expensive.
See SitePoint
 
Wordpress trouble,
More MySQL trouble.
See WebHostingTalk
 
Terrible support,
Downtime.
See RealSoftware

Wordpress trouble,
Customer support trouble.
See WordPress



Parcom

Information on this hosting company is scarce - good or bad. Our personal experience with them has been ok aside for two things: price (relative to features) and uptime (about 97% according to our experience).

AnHosting / Midphase

Information on this hosting company is scarce.
There seems to be some talk about downtime, e.g. here, here and here. A somewhat vanilla review is here.

HostMonster

Cons Pros
Cpu limitations.
here
Fans: here and here
Bad Customer support and poor performance.
here and here
Cheap and convenient payments.
here








LunarPages

Epinions.com has a review list here on LunarPages. Most opinions there are outdated from 2005 and back.

Cons Pros
An angry one.
here and here
A happy one here
No J2EE here  
Bad customer support here

performance issues here  
Trouble with getting commissions  
Lunar tricks here and here and here  
Bad Feelings here  
Spam here  

Here’s a quick poll on web hosting, on the DigitalPoint forum:

DigitalPoint Poll On The Worst Shared Hosting BrandUnfortunately the way this poll is run is misleading since the companies’ share is the market is not the equal, making it more likely that the larger companies will have more unsatisfied customers.

A grain of salt: How to properly read online reviews on web hosting packages.

Deceptively Delicious

Tuesday, October 16th, 2007
Deceptively Delicious” by Jessica Seinfeld.
Simple Secrets to Get Your Kids Eating Good Food
Hardcover: 208 pages
Publisher: Harper Collins
Publish Date: October 2007
Language: English
ISBN-13: 978-0061251344
Deceptively Delicious Book Cover

 

Lowest price found at Buy.com: $13.47

This is our first go here and we’re very excited about it. We chose to set afoot with a special book, and it may be just a first-timers’ luck because it seems it’s very popular and highly appraised.

Deceptively Delicious is a cookbook specializing in healthy food that children will like, whether they know it or not.

It was extremely easy to find reviews on this book although it has been published only a week ago. There are literally hundreds of posts and discussion threads about this book and its author, although it’s publicly accessible only for only a couple of weeks.

A word on Jessica Seinfled
Jessica Seinfeld

Jessica aged 36, once a public relations exec now running a non-profit organization she founded called Baby Buggy that provides essentials for infants and children in the NY city area ! Married to Jerry, has three kids.

Jessica recently started a blog here.

What TheyThought ?

Con A very few people didn’t like the book or its concept. Some resented the taste or texture and some questioned its nutritional value. Others didn’t like the deceptive strategy. Samples: 1, 2.

Pro A crushing majority had very good things to say and complements were flying all over. Many admired the the fresh attitude and how it actually works on both children and grown ups. A few nutritionists and paediatricians commended its nutritious value and benefit for the health of kids. The Sneaky Chef also comes up in some discussions but the claim is that JS’s recipes are simpler and easily done. Samples: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.

These opinions are coming from both people who merely saw the Oprah show and had something to say, as well as from brave explorers who actually tried the recipes on themselves.

What WeThought ?

Jessica’s Signature

Kudos to Mrs. Seinfeld. The book seems like a brilliant idea well executed. This makes it the 3rd commendable thing that Jessica can take credit for: her family, her charity and her book.

It’s no wonder this book has rocketed to the top of Amazon, B&N and HarperCollins bestsellers.

Here’s some deceptively delicious eye candy:

Deceptively Delicious Candy Deceptively Delicious CandyDeceptively Delicious Candy

Price

Buy.com $13.47
Amazon $14.97
Target.com $14.97
Barnes & Noble $17.46
HarperCollins $24.95


Further resources