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Web Traffic Analysis Tools - Thank You Google

April 15th, 2007 by admin

Up until recenetly, finding out who visits your website, where did they come from and which pages did they visit was a difficult task. Free services such as the Webalizer gave partial results, not very usable or deep enough. Other services, which provided real insights and analysis, were more costly and webmasters were usually required to purchase them in addition to the costs of shared hosting accounts.

 And then came Google. The giant search engine bought Urchin in March 2005, one of the main stats providers, and it released a new free version dubbed as Google Analytics in November 2005. The service allows you to find out very interesting things about people who browse your website - for example, you can tell which pages were viewed by users from a distinct source (such as MSN search). You can alos set up goals (such as online purchase of a product) and then have the ability to slice and dice the data related to that goal.

This service is highly recommended. Easy installation and you will be ready to go! Don’t pay the hosting companies for statistical information - there is a better free tool in town. 

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The Unlimited Nature of Space and Bandwith

April 3rd, 2007 by admin

When you look at the different packages that hosting companies offer, remember that most chances are that you are not going to use most of the features. The average shared hosting account will do well with any package that offers more than 1GB of sapce (almost any respectable hosting company these days). Bandwith should not be an issue to most sites as well, as even some of the sites I support, who have 50,000 unique visitors per month and hundreds of thousands of page views load up nicely on a simple shared gosting plan.

Today Midphase announce they increase accounts size from 25GB to 200GB, and traffic was doubled to 3,000GB of bandwidth a month. Obviously, they would not offer these “deals” if people would actually take advantage of it. Since almost no one reaches these limits, they can keep increasing them as a marketing tool.

So unless you plan to open the next YouTube, disregard space/bandwidth info when you choose a host.  

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PHP or ASP? Unix or Win?

March 30th, 2007 by admin

When it comes to hosting services, you usually need to choose between hosting your website on a Unix based server (58% of the world’s servers run on Apache), or on a server that runs Microsoft platform (IIS). Usually, Unix shared servers are cheaper, and their majority run on free platforms like Apache.

If you just began building websites, you may be better off with IIS. These servers work with the ASP language and support MS Access databases. However, for those who feel comfortable with PHP programming as well as MySQL databases, go for a Unix account. If you need to use ASP on the server, there is an open source project called Mono, which supports ASP / .NET on Unix servers - see if your hosting company offers/allows you to install it.

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Best Unix Hosting

March 27th, 2007 by admin

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Dedicated Hosting

March 20th, 2007 by admin

I’m currently working on a new system that will allow users to vote for dedicated hosting services. In the meantime, I received some inquiries about which web hosting companies are offering reasonable priced and reliable servers. I tried several different companies, and am currently using LayeredTech. They specialize in dedicated servers and have a large selection of programs. It take them a few days to set up a new server, but they will install all the extras that you can ask for (in it’s open source) without charging you more for most applications.   

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“Money Back Guarantee”

March 9th, 2007 by admin

Some companies, not all of them of course, advertise different Money Back guarantees. From my experience, it’s not always so simple to get your money back, even for products/services that you did not use. If you are not sure that the hosting package that you have found is right for you, or if this is the first time that you pay for hosting services, please check our best hosting comparison table.

We continuously update the information in the table. If you had a great (or a negative) experience with one of the hosts, please leave a comment and we’ll add it to the database.

One last tip - even if the first conversation with the customer service rep does not help to get your money back, wait a few minutes and call again. Especially in large companies, every rep has a different approach, and some of them are more flexible than others.

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Does Size Matters?

February 25th, 2007 by admin

When you go to buy pizza, you may prefer that special sauce and the personal attention of the hot cashier at your neighborhood pizzeria, rather than calling Domino’s and asking for a delivery. The hosting market also offers a variety of service providers, some of them are gigantic while others will server only a few clients - their friends and family members.   

From my experience, you better go with a large host. The bigger the better. Here’s why: companies like GoDaddy (1.2 million users) make so much money from hosting services, that they can operate a 24 hours phone support center, plus their sys admins create many layers of software and hardware to ensure that website stay up and running - otherwise their credibility and even their existence in on the line.

These companies tend to use less shady marketing techniques - if you’ll take a look at our best hosting services comparison table, you’ll see that the tricks these companies employ are nothing compared with smaller hosts. From my experience, their billing department is also more flexible than the smaller companies. If you feel that you should receive a refund, you have a better chance to get it from a billing person who works for a large company, than to try to get it out of the cousin/brother of the small host’s owner, who happens to answer billing inquiries - as well as sales, tech support and other questions… 

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