Subscribe to Jammed: Full into Capacity

Subscribe via RSS readers

Subscribe thru email:

Delivered by FeedBurner

May
16th

I’m Now on a Semi-Dedicated Hosting

Author: Jam | Filed under Hosting, Internet

Last November 2007, I made a switch to paid hosting account from enjoying almost a year of service from my free host for worries of losing my site as I’ve experienced from my previous free hosts.

Recently, this blog and my whole hosting account were on hiatus. I had experienced two account suspensions from my web host (WebHostingBuzz) and as I’ve already stated, site suspension is one of the worst nightmares a blogger could experience. The suspensions were due to server (CPU) resource abuse. Apparently, some poorly-scripted WordPress plugins that I’ve been using caused most of the server resource abuse. It’s painful to see how my blog income abruptly fell from it’s usual over $10 per day to only $6 per day. This has made me decide to upgrade my account to a semi dedicated hosting. It costs me $35 per month, it’s way more expensive that my previous hosting account which costs only $6/month, however the security and assurance of not experiencing another blogger’s nightmare is worth the cost.

What Are The Advantages of a Dedicated Server or a Semi-dedicated server?

The advantages of a dedicated server can best be described by the following analogy:

Suppose you wanted an automobile. You could not afford to buy one for yourself, so you decided to go in with four friends and everyone would own a piece of the automobile. This meant that although it was cheaper for everyone, they all had to share the car. A schedule would be worked out and everyone would abide by the schedule of when they could use the car.

Now suppose, all of a sudden, you got a job where you needed the automobile a lot more often. But you only had access to the car on certain days at certain times and the job would not wait. Because the car is just as much of your friends car as yours, they are also entitled to use it. You end up losing the job opportunity because you cannot use the car all of the time.

The above is similar to the difference between a business using a dedicated server and a shared server. A dedicated server, just as the name implies, is “dedicated” to serving only your business. This means that you do not have to share space and bandwidth with other online business websites.

While a small business or personal website can do well with a shared server, a large or growing business would find a shared server just as much of a disaster as the car analogy illustrated earlier in this article. There is only a certain amount of bandwidth in a server. It can only allow a certain amount of traffic through at a certain time.

Bandwidth can be compared to a toll booth. The toll booth allows a certain amount of traffic through at a time on a scheduled basis. This works out fine, unless everyone decides to leave town at the same time and take the toll road. Then it becomes a disaster as people wait for hours to get through the toll booth.

While you may wait for hours to get through a toll booth if you have to leave town and have no other way to do so, your customers will not wait hours to get to your website if you do not have enough bandwidth. Chances are, that if they try your website once and cannot get on, they will move on never to return again.

You work so hard trying to attract traffic to your website, it is a shame to throw that hard work out the window by not having enough bandwidth to accommodate all of your customers. This is the advantage of having a dedicated server. No longer do you have to share space or bandwidth with other businesses on the server. The server is dedicated only to your business, enabling traffic to flow quickly and smoothly.

Although a dedicated server costs more in monthly fees than a shared server, it may end up saving you money if you are losing customers due to the fact that the cannot get access to your website because your server cannot accommodate the traffic. If you have a large or growing business, a dedicated server is the only way to go.

WebhostingBuzz offers cheap semi-dedicated hosting plans starting at $35/month, 99% uptime. Get your hosting account now!


Tags: , , , , , , ,
Free Advertising

Related Post

Spread the word

Digg this post

Bookmark to delicious

Stumble the post

Add to your technorati favourite

Subscribes to this post

6 responses. Wanna say something?

  1. jhay
    May 17, 2008 at 12:55:32
    #1

    Nice, semi-dedicated hosting na ah. :P
    jhays last blog post..Asus Eee PC 900 Press Launch

  2. Mark
    May 18, 2008 at 16:34:31
    #2

    Dear jhay,
    Very nicely pointed out… Well I guess once the website is growing and you are seeing positive results then you have to start your gradual move from Free Hosting to Semi and then Exclusive Dedicated Hosting.

    As with time the Value of your website becomes more obvious to you your visitors so you can better judge which route to take..

    Mark
    Editor
    http://www.212articles.com

  3. Jessica White
    May 24, 2008 at 11:30:51
    #3

    hi jam, I am planning to launch a full website at the moment I have a blog on Acne
    Treatment
    and am planning to take it to a full website. do you have any suggestion which hosting service should i choose. and if I go for free hosting what are the better options.

    Jessica

  4. Jam
    May 24, 2008 at 16:58:41
    #4

    I have tried http://ej.am. I’ve been freely hosted by them for over 6 months without any service interruptions. They’re good. However, you have to login every week to their forums to prevent account suspension. If you want to try paid hosting, you can try InMotion Hosting, Blue Host, Dream Host or WebhostingBuzz.

    Jams last blog post..How To Kill Writers Block!

  5. Hussein
    Jun 5, 2008 at 14:19:36
    #5

    Wow. Rich kid. Naka semi dedicated. It only means that your blog is a great blog because you got a lot of visitors.

    Another great paid hosting is HostGator :D
    Husseins last blog post..I’m Hacked!

  6. Jam
    Jun 18, 2008 at 18:04:49
    #6

    Kinda costly nga eh. I spend almost Php 2000 per month just for the hosting. Good thing I have other online money resources that could support for it, besides Adsense. But it’s kinda worth it though because I never experienced site suspension ever since with 99% site uptime. Also, this has made my Adsense income stable.

Post a Comment

sour

Comment moderation is enabled. Your comment may take some time to appear.