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Date: Sat, 4 Dec 2010 00:01:19 EST-10EDT,10,1,0,7200,4,1,0,7200,3600
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**************************************************
Friday 03 December 2010
 Number  2018
**************************************************

Subjects for today
 
1  Re:  Hosting : TheBarrows <thebarrows at tbg.id.au>
2  Re:  Hosting : Dennis Nolan <dennis at jeg-og dot com>

**= Email   1 ==========================**

Date:  Fri, 03 Dec 2010 07:33:54 +1100
From:  TheBarrows <thebarrows at tbg.id.au>
Subject:  Re:  Hosting

On 2/12/2010 10:47 PM, Peter Moylan wrote:
> Dennis Nolan wrote:
>> Firstly A very Merry Merry Christmas to everyone.
>>
>> Now the reason for this post>
>>
>> An organisation I am a member of (The Australian Photographic Society)
>> has just received a hosting proposal from Net Registry Pty. Ltd. and
>> asked for my comments.
>>
>> Does anyone have any comment on this company?
> I don't know anything about it, but it looks respectable. My feeling,
> though, is that anyone who is sending you hosting proposals is likely to
> be more expensive than anyone you find by searching yourself. There are
> lots of hosting companies around, and the prices are all over the map.
>
> I'm currently going through the same exercise for my choir. After
> checking a number of hosting companies, I am inclined to go for WebCity,
> who has been my domain name registrar for several years and has shown
> every sign of being respectable but inexpensive. (I chose them
> originally because they had better prices for domain name registration
> than other Australian registrars. And I avoided non-Australian
> registrars because there are some very shonky companies out there. (Side
> comment: DO NOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES DEAL WITH THE DOMAIN REGISTRY OF
> AMERICA.) The WebCity prices for hosting are listed here:
>
>     http://hosting.webcity dot com dot au/compare.php
>
> Note that prices go from $6/month for very basic hosting up to $50/month
> for all the bells and whistles. The (more typical) prices from
> NetRegistry are shown here
>
>    http://www dot netregistry dot com dot au/web-hosting/
>
> and these range from $16/month to $300/month. This is a good indication
> of how much price variation there is in the market at the moment. There
> are other companies with even higher prices.
>
> To work out total price, you need to look at these components:
>
>   - the actual hosting, as covered above; medium to high cost,
>     depending on things like how much storage you need.
>
>   - domain name registration (usually cheap - I'm paying
>     about $12/year for my domain)
>
>   - DNS hosting: cheap, and often included in web
>     hosting plans, although I'm finding it a bit of a headache
>     figuring out exactly what is and isn't included.
>
>   - web site design: zero cost if you do it yourself, but can be
>     pretty expensive if you use professional designers.
>
>   - e-commerce facilities if needed (e.g. accepting credit card
>     payments on-line): this can cost more than the hosting
>     itself, e.g. the NetRegistry cheapest package adds an extra
>     $60/month to the basic cost. (But PayPal provides a cut-price
>     solution for this.)
>
> You need to think carefully about what features you want from the
> hosting provider. For my choir the cheapest possible solution should be
> OK - we don't do e-commerce, we don't expect large traffic levels, we
> can live with web pages that aren't too fancy, we don't need more than
> one e-mail address, and we only want a basic presence on the web: 3 or 4
> pages plus perhaps a photo gallery. A 1 Gigabyte disk space should be
> adequate for us, so I'm going to recommend to our committee that we go
> for the WebCity cheapest deal.
>
> I imagine that a photographic society would want to chew up a lot more
> disk space for graphics, so it would want a hosting plan that has
> generous disk space provision. (People in such a society will certainly
> have a better feel than I do for how many photos you can fit per
> gigabyte. Photos are going to be the dominant factor in deciding how
> much disk space you need. The HTML text is insignificant by comparison.)
> Maybe it would also want to use a professional web site designer, but
> note that you can decouple this decision from the hosting decision. Some
> companies offer a "package deal" which is web site design plus hosting,
> but in my opinion that limits your options. Either design your own site,
> or search for a designer who is independent of the hosting company.
>
> I presume that the society would only be doing a limited form of
> e-commerce: things like annual renewal of membership, but not things
> like selling stuff. If so, search around for the most basic sort of
> e-commerce support. (It's not essential to use the solution provided by
> the hosting provider.) If the society does want to sell stuff on-line,
> tread very carefully. I don't have experience in this area, but I know
> that the prices can be frighteningly high. That's why people like
> shareware authors stick to PayPal. It might be basic, but it's cheap.
>
> I have a 5-page OpenOffice document that I prepared for my choir to
> explain what is needed and the likely costs. I don't think this list
> accepts attachments, but I'd be happy to e-mail it to anyone who asks.
> (But note that this is for an economical solution, as befits a small
> community group, not a professional-quality one.) In the next couple of
> days I have to refine that document into the form of a concrete proposal.
>
> Peter
>
Dennis / Peter,
I have been using MDWebhosting dot com dot au for several years for my email. I 
have the ability to set up the website but haven't bothered.
Their prices are similar to Peter's $5 to $38 per month for hosting.
Good Luck in the hunt.
Regards,
Michael Barrow
--------------------------------------------------
 
 http://www./melbpc/  -  The Melbourne OS/2 SIG
===
**= Email   2 ==========================**

Date:  Fri, 03 Dec 2010 09:33:16 +1100
From:  Dennis Nolan <dennis at jeg-og dot com>
Subject:  Re:  Hosting

Thanks Michael and Peter

I was hoping no one was going to come up with a horror story about them.
They were asked to submit a proposal by our new secretary who has had 
previous dealings with them.
Our current hosting company charge $3200pa with no phone support(email 
only) and we had a crash (reported as exceeded traffic limit) which took 
them 3 days to correct.
The new proposal is for a VPS cloud with 1024MN RAM, 2 processor cores, 
100GB SAN storage and 200GB bandwidth per month plus extras is cheaper, 
$2880pa for a 36 month agreement we get a $10 per month discount as well 
as four free months. This is quite a saving over our present hosting 
arrangement.
Things seem to be changing in the hosting world.
The host for my personal domain recently attempted to shift their 
operation into a cloud environment but had to revert when they started 
receiving complaints about network slowdown. From what I could deduct 
they are leasing rack space. The type of operation to avoid, I think.

Merry Christmas

Dennis.


On 3/12/2010 7:33 AM, TheBarrows wrote:
> On 2/12/2010 10:47 PM, Peter Moylan wrote:
>> Dennis Nolan wrote:
>>> Firstly A very Merry Merry Christmas to everyone.
>>>
>>> Now the reason for this post>
>>>
>>> An organisation I am a member of (The Australian Photographic Society)
>>> has just received a hosting proposal from Net Registry Pty. Ltd. and
>>> asked for my comments.
>>>
>>> Does anyone have any comment on this company?
>> I don't know anything about it, but it looks respectable. My feeling,
>> though, is that anyone who is sending you hosting proposals is likely to
>> be more expensive than anyone you find by searching yourself. There are
>> lots of hosting companies around, and the prices are all over the map.
>>
>> I'm currently going through the same exercise for my choir. After
>> checking a number of hosting companies, I am inclined to go for WebCity,
>> who has been my domain name registrar for several years and has shown
>> every sign of being respectable but inexpensive. (I chose them
>> originally because they had better prices for domain name registration
>> than other Australian registrars. And I avoided non-Australian
>> registrars because there are some very shonky companies out there. (Side
>> comment: DO NOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES DEAL WITH THE DOMAIN REGISTRY OF
>> AMERICA.) The WebCity prices for hosting are listed here:
>>
>>     http://hosting.webcity dot com dot au/compare.php
>>
>> Note that prices go from $6/month for very basic hosting up to $50/month
>> for all the bells and whistles. The (more typical) prices from
>> NetRegistry are shown here
>>
>>    http://www dot netregistry dot com dot au/web-hosting/
>>
>> and these range from $16/month to $300/month. This is a good indication
>> of how much price variation there is in the market at the moment. There
>> are other companies with even higher prices.
>>
>> To work out total price, you need to look at these components:
>>
>>   - the actual hosting, as covered above; medium to high cost,
>>     depending on things like how much storage you need.
>>
>>   - domain name registration (usually cheap - I'm paying
>>     about $12/year for my domain)
>>
>>   - DNS hosting: cheap, and often included in web
>>     hosting plans, although I'm finding it a bit of a headache
>>     figuring out exactly what is and isn't included.
>>
>>   - web site design: zero cost if you do it yourself, but can be
>>     pretty expensive if you use professional designers.
>>
>>   - e-commerce facilities if needed (e.g. accepting credit card
>>     payments on-line): this can cost more than the hosting
>>     itself, e.g. the NetRegistry cheapest package adds an extra
>>     $60/month to the basic cost. (But PayPal provides a cut-price
>>     solution for this.)
>>
>> You need to think carefully about what features you want from the
>> hosting provider. For my choir the cheapest possible solution should be
>> OK - we don't do e-commerce, we don't expect large traffic levels, we
>> can live with web pages that aren't too fancy, we don't need more than
>> one e-mail address, and we only want a basic presence on the web: 3 or 4
>> pages plus perhaps a photo gallery. A 1 Gigabyte disk space should be
>> adequate for us, so I'm going to recommend to our committee that we go
>> for the WebCity cheapest deal.
>>
>> I imagine that a photographic society would want to chew up a lot more
>> disk space for graphics, so it would want a hosting plan that has
>> generous disk space provision. (People in such a society will certainly
>> have a better feel than I do for how many photos you can fit per
>> gigabyte. Photos are going to be the dominant factor in deciding how
>> much disk space you need. The HTML text is insignificant by comparison.)
>> Maybe it would also want to use a professional web site designer, but
>> note that you can decouple this decision from the hosting decision. Some
>> companies offer a "package deal" which is web site design plus hosting,
>> but in my opinion that limits your options. Either design your own site,
>> or search for a designer who is independent of the hosting company.
>>
>> I presume that the society would only be doing a limited form of
>> e-commerce: things like annual renewal of membership, but not things
>> like selling stuff. If so, search around for the most basic sort of
>> e-commerce support. (It's not essential to use the solution provided by
>> the hosting provider.) If the society does want to sell stuff on-line,
>> tread very carefully. I don't have experience in this area, but I know
>> that the prices can be frighteningly high. That's why people like
>> shareware authors stick to PayPal. It might be basic, but it's cheap.
>>
>> I have a 5-page OpenOffice document that I prepared for my choir to
>> explain what is needed and the likely costs. I don't think this list
>> accepts attachments, but I'd be happy to e-mail it to anyone who asks.
>> (But note that this is for an economical solution, as befits a small
>> community group, not a professional-quality one.) In the next couple of
>> days I have to refine that document into the form of a concrete 
>> proposal.
>>
>> Peter
>>
> Dennis / Peter,
> I have been using MDWebhosting dot com dot au for several years for my email. 
> I have the ability to set up the website but haven't bothered.
> Their prices are similar to Peter's $5 to $38 per month for hosting.
> Good Luck in the hunt.
> Regards,
> Michael Barrow
> --------------------------------------------------
> 
> http://www./melbpc/  -  The Melbourne OS/2 SIG
===
--------------------------------------------------
 
 http://www./melbpc/  -  The Melbourne OS/2 SIG
===
