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$10/mo intovps.com they're openvz based but otherwise great
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# ? Aug 23, 2012 12:48 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:04 |
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Bob Morales posted:I just canceled my TailoredVPS VPS because even though it was like $4.00 a month ($6.95 - discount from LEB) it was just extra lovely lately. Random reboots, network connectivity dropping... It was fine for a few months but the last month or so it's the worst it's been. I have this same question - I've used a couple budget VPS providers before, and they're all garbage at some point. I don't think I need more than the base Linode instance. I'll check out intovps.com though, if you think they're worthwhile Milkie. xpander fucked around with this message at 19:39 on Aug 23, 2012 |
# ? Aug 23, 2012 18:30 |
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Milkie Galore posted:$10/mo intovps.com ToS says no IRC, any experience on if they enforce that?
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# ? Aug 23, 2012 19:43 |
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Bob Morales posted:ToS says no IRC, any experience on if they enforce that? irc.freenode.net #intovps
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# ? Aug 23, 2012 19:48 |
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Bob Morales posted:ToS says no IRC, any experience on if they enforce that? they mean irc servers, clients are fine (I run a bouncer on mine)
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# ? Aug 23, 2012 21:20 |
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xpander posted:I have this same question - I've used a couple budget VPS providers before, and they're all garbage at some point. I don't think I need more than the base Linode instance. I'll check out intovps.com though, if you think they're worthwhile Milkie. Only other downside (arguably) I can think of is that you may need to send them a scan of your drivers license or whatever if your paypal account isn't verified
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# ? Aug 23, 2012 21:23 |
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What are some good reasonably priced hosting options that can deal with traffic spikes? I'm working with a client who's smallish business is going to be featured on a fairly major tv show (can't say any more). He told me that he was told to expect a massive traffic spike when it airs. However, he's not large enough to be able to afford like $100/month hosting, just something that can deal with the spike.
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# ? Aug 23, 2012 22:17 |
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mmm11105 posted:What are some good reasonably priced hosting options that can deal with traffic spikes? I'm working with a client who's smallish business is going to be featured on a fairly major tv show (can't say any more). He told me that he was told to expect a massive traffic spike when it airs. However, he's not large enough to be able to afford like $100/month hosting, just something that can deal with the spike. You could always use cloudflare (http://www.cloudflare.com/) if it's a temporary spike.
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# ? Aug 23, 2012 23:37 |
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cloudflare's pretty decent at easing the burden of seving static content. You may also need to look at how any databases you have cope under load. For PHP sites I've seen big improvements from installing APC and setting stat=0. What kind of site/software are you running? loadimpact.com is a nice tool for Rufus Ping fucked around with this message at 23:52 on Aug 23, 2012 |
# ? Aug 23, 2012 23:46 |
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Bob Morales posted:I just canceled my TailoredVPS VPS because even though it was like $4.00 a month ($6.95 - discount from LEB) it was just extra lovely lately. Random reboots, network connectivity dropping... It was fine for a few months but the last month or so it's the worst it's been. If you can get service from BuyVM, they've been advertized on LEB from time to time and are pretty good. Outside of scheduled maintenance I've had no problems. They also sell out super-fast (http://www.doesbuyvmhavestock.com/). Prgmr.com is simple and low-resource, but they also fit your price point.
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# ? Aug 24, 2012 04:50 |
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Anaxite posted:If you can get service from BuyVM, they've been advertized on LEB from time to time and are pretty good. Outside of scheduled maintenance I've had no problems. They also sell out super-fast (http://www.doesbuyvmhavestock.com/). My buddy runs BuyVM, he mostly runs openvz and sticks a hell of a lot of vms on each host. He seems to have a lot of happy customers though, so if you're not doing much with your VM it's a good deal.
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# ? Aug 24, 2012 08:54 |
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Anaxite posted:Prgmr.com is simple and low-resource, but they also fit your price point. I was with prgmr for a few years. They were pretty decent but it's a two-man show and some of their servers used to have what seemed like a lot of hardware/network issues.
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# ? Aug 24, 2012 13:23 |
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Milkie Galore posted:I was with prgmr for a few years. They were pretty decent but it's a two-man show and some of their servers used to have what seemed like a lot of hardware/network issues.
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# ? Aug 24, 2012 13:49 |
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Biowarfare posted:Is this before or after they got the gently caress out of HE Fremont I believe that was June 2011 (?) so mainly before (I was with them till August 2011) or am I confusing it with the move from SVTIX to market post tower IDK
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# ? Aug 24, 2012 13:53 |
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MPT is coresite san jose right?
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# ? Aug 24, 2012 14:06 |
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Yeah
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# ? Aug 24, 2012 14:25 |
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Milkie Galore posted:Which domain registrar is my best bet for a .com.au? Had good experiences with aussiehq.com.au. crazydomains.com.au are reputable as well. No idea about the paypal bit as well. Also remember that they are required to verify the business you are buying the domain for, with an ABN, ACN etc (though I seriously doubt any of them really check)
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# ? Aug 24, 2012 23:22 |
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Granite Octopus posted:Had good experiences with aussiehq.com.au. crazydomains.com.au are reputable as well. No idea about the paypal bit as well. Also remember that they are required to verify the business you are buying the domain for, with an ABN, ACN etc (though I seriously doubt any of them really check) thanks for this - netregistry.com.au also looked good. namescout.com allow foreigners to register and don't check ABN, I have no idea how they manage this though
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# ? Aug 25, 2012 02:05 |
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I'm not sure if this is the thread for this, but I'm going to register a domain for my blog that I use to post photos I take and songs I make. Nothing fancy, not concerned with SEO bullshit, but I'm concerned with what domain extension I should go with. The .com and .net options are taken. Should I buy the .org? The other options I was considering were .co and .me. Everything else just feels too esoteric for the regular web surfer.
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 01:31 |
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.co is obnoxious for normal people (and some networks filter .co and .cm due to phishing abuse..) Is it actually nonprofit? can you use a hyphen? etc..
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 02:09 |
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.org is often used for individuals and nonprofit stuff. If your blog isn't commercial then it's not a bad choice.
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 04:12 |
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I'd rather not use any hyphens, as they tend to confuse or get forgotten by the average joe. I'm not really selling anything, so .org would be ok. I've seen quite a few sites with .org domains that sell stuff or have affiliate ads on them anyway...
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 05:05 |
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Best practices though, are that .com is for commercial sites, .net is for network service providers, and .org is for non-profits.
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 06:40 |
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thelightguy posted:Best practices though, are that .com is for commercial sites, .net is for network service providers, and .org is for non-profits. 20 years ago
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 06:49 |
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hypersleep posted:I'd rather not use any hyphens, as they tend to confuse or get forgotten by the average joe. I'm not really selling anything, so .org would be ok. I've seen quite a few sites with .org domains that sell stuff or have affiliate ads on them anyway... The conventions don't really apply that much anymore, and .org is perfectly fine for a personal site. That said, if the URL under .com and/or .net are active sites, a .org variant would probably be more confusing than a hyphenated but unique .com.
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 06:57 |
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rawrr posted:The conventions don't really apply that much anymore, and .org is perfectly fine for a personal site. That said, if the URL under .com and/or .net are active sites, a .org variant would probably be more confusing than a hyphenated but unique .com. The .com is just a default 1&1 page and the .net is a semi-abandoned blog hosted on Blogger. I think I'd be safe with the .org...?
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 08:32 |
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thelightguy posted:Best practices though, are that .com is for commercial sites, .net is for network service providers, and .org is for non-profits. no http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generic_top-level_domain#Unrestricted_gTLD
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 12:25 |
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Bob Morales posted:I just canceled my TailoredVPS VPS because even though it was like $4.00 a month ($6.95 - discount from LEB) it was just extra lovely lately. Random reboots, network connectivity dropping... It was fine for a few months but the last month or so it's the worst it's been. I just set mine up on amazon web services. One EC2 instance on their free tier with an elastic IP pointing to it. My first month's bill was only $1.60 and most of that was probably compute cycles from installing stuff. They also have a new service called Glacier they just put up for low cost storage if you use it for backups, but since it is so new there probably aren't any options for tools to use with it yet.
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 14:29 |
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A lack of enforcement of best practices does not negate the fact that they are still best practices.
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# ? Aug 26, 2012 22:29 |
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edit: I guess this turned into a mini-review; feel free to ask any questions and I will answer or provide screenshots if I can. Well so far my experience on Dediserve seems to be going well. It is quite nice being able to dynamically adjust your VMs out of a common resource pool and their systems seem really fast. I looked at Rackspace, Godaddy, Amazon, etc but they all had limitations to their cloud/virtual setups, like no free backups, no ability to snapshot, no built-in firewall, etc. Some also seem to oversubscribe (eg Godaddy's horrible VPS). I also didn't want to just buy a dedicated server and be subject to hardware failures - the dediserve VMs hot-migrate to other hypervisors for maintenance and automatically reboot on another hypervisor if there is any hardware issue. The dual-redundant SANs are fast - they say they have an SSD caching layer and the performance seems to agree with that. I also like the automatic backup snapshot feature - it takes a weekly snapshot and gives you an interface to download your snapshots as virtual hard drives. You can also take snapshots at-will and convert a snapshot into a system template to deploy additional nodes which is a huge time saver. They claim they will migrate you off your shared hosting/VPS/etc for free, including backup/restore of your DB, installing php, or whatever else... I can't say anything about that as I prefer to keep control of it myself so I didn't use it. Support is excellent with one caveat - a fellow named David Reynolds was working weekend graveyard shift while I was evaluating them and I had several issues but within minutes of my complaining over on web hosting talk an excellent fellow named James contacted me to make sure all my issues were resolved. They seem really eager to help and everyone I've had interactions with (except David) took the time to read my request, understand it, and provide helpful answers. Perhaps David was having a bad day or is new, I have no idea... but everything is working at this point and I have no complaints. They are running a special for half-price for life on 10 nodes in the Dallas datacenter, so that's 200/month for 20 CPU cores, 10 GB RAM, 250GB SAN storage (>150MB/s speeds in my experience), 250GB NAS backup storage, and 7.5 TB of transfer. You can provision that any way you want, all as one machine, as a back-end SQL box with a couple of web front-ends and a load-balancer, or whatever else. They have a pretty good selection of Linux and Windows images but you have to request they enable the Windows images if you have your own licenses. You can dynamically reallocate memory and processors supposedly, but IIRC disk resizes require a reboot of the VM. They have Ireland, London/UK, and Dallas DCs and are bringing Chicago, NYC, German, and California DCs online in the near future. If you need geographic redundancy they offer it, including the ability to fail-over to a spare where they handle all the routing. No idea what that costs as it's a bit too much for my needs right now. They offer a REST API for managing everything and an iOS/Android app for controlling your VMs (for those familiar with the OnApp platform you'll recognize it). You can create multiple users and assign them different permissions, so you can ensure a customer or dev doesn't accidentally delete your production VMs. I myself am using this to give my father his own web VM while we share the SQL back-end and it is much more comfortable knowing he can't mess everything up accidentally. I am using their DNS platform, which is supposedly geographically distributed and scalable... up to 50 domain names are included for free so this didn't cost me anything. I don't have any high-load DNS issues so I can't say how it performs under stress. They also have a CDN deal, which is $6.56/month plus $0.06/GB of usage, but again I haven't used that as of yet so I can't say much about it other than the price seems better than a lot of other hosting providers. Promo Code: DALLAS50OFF Website is here. Signup over here here. *If* you decide to go with dediserve *and* want to give me some discounts on my hosting you can use my referral link but feel free not to. The affiliate program is 10%, but the price is the same to the end-customer regardless of whether you use an affiliate link or not.
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# ? Aug 27, 2012 01:26 |
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thelightguy posted:A lack of enforcement of best practices does not negate the fact that they are still best practices. It's no longer a case of lack of enforcement - it's literally become the official ICANN line on the matter "best practice" doesn't mean poo poo btw, stop saying it If you mean a) .org is less catchy than .com, b) .org may make people think "organisation", say that. These are the real reasons not to choose .org. Not some mystical "best practice" bogeyman horseshit. Cheers
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# ? Aug 27, 2012 02:02 |
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Milkie Galore posted:It's no longer a case of lack of enforcement - it's literally become the official ICANN line on the matter Wow, who pissed in your cheerios? I wonder, do you make RS-485 balanced serial cables with black and white as the signal pair and red as the ground just to spite everyone? Because that is literally what "best practices" is about. Not confusing the gently caress out of everyone else because you want to be a special snowflake and ignore the implied standards. corgski fucked around with this message at 02:35 on Aug 27, 2012 |
# ? Aug 27, 2012 02:28 |
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thelightguy posted:Wow, who pissed in your cheerios? no but he's right on all his points. 1992 called. It wants its best practices back.
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# ? Aug 27, 2012 02:54 |
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DNova posted:no but he's right on all his points. What, that you should really only use .org if you're a non-profit, because that's what everyone expects even though ICANN stopped giving a drat several years ago? Exactly what I said, in other words? We're all saying the same goddamn thing here.
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# ? Aug 27, 2012 03:36 |
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thelightguy posted:What, that you should really only use .org if you're a non-profit, because that's what everyone expects even though ICANN stopped giving a drat several years ago? Exactly what I said, in other words? No not at all.
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# ? Aug 27, 2012 03:46 |
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I have a Mac Mini sitting in a data center that I'm trying to take better advantage of. Currently, all it's doing is hosting email for a single domain. I'd like to potentially host two more websites, and associated SQL databases on the same mini. Can I do all of this across a single IP address, or do I need more IP addresses from my host. What terms should I google to teach myself how to do this? Should I be asking this question in the Mac Software thread?
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# ? Aug 27, 2012 06:18 |
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You can do it all with one IP address. Let's start with the simple stuff: Do you currently have a webserver installed? If so, which one? (Examples: Apache2, lighttpd, nginx) E: Also, while you don't necessarily need it, homebrew gives you access to tons of OS X ports of *nix utilities, servers, and applications. It's a fantastic add-on for any OS X server. corgski fucked around with this message at 06:40 on Aug 27, 2012 |
# ? Aug 27, 2012 06:33 |
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thelightguy posted:You can do it all with one IP address. The mini is running 10.7.4 server and is very close to stock. I believe the only additional piece of software I've installed on the mini is Little Snitch, so I believe it's running the Apache web server.
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# ? Aug 27, 2012 06:42 |
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Try here. In order to run multiple websites off of one apache instance you configure "vhosts" for each domain. And as for a database, MySQL has an installer package for OS X that makes it really easy to set up. http://databases.about.com/od/shareware/ht/Installing-Mysql-On-Mac-Os-X-10-7-Lion.htm
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# ? Aug 27, 2012 06:59 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:04 |
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thelightguy posted:A lack of enforcement of best practices does not negate the fact that they are still best practices. "Best practice is more what you'd call "guidelines" than actual rules." - Jack Sparrow, Pirates of the Caribbean
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# ? Aug 27, 2012 13:35 |