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Building Websites This section covers all aspects of publishing, developing and maintaining websites. Topics include: website design, graphic design, website programming, web hosting, website marketing (SEO, link exchange, publicity, advertising), monetization & etc.

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  #1  
Old 03-10-2006, 10:51 PM
DomainerZone DomainerZone is offline
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Default What happens when you out grow DSL?

I am using DSL at home and am trying to get my server set up. What happens when my site gets popular enough where DSL can no longer handle it or when I get hosting customers who have more demands? I would like an in house server, but it seems like the cost of a decent connection then would completely kill that idea.
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Old 03-10-2006, 11:24 PM
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Soulwatcher Soulwatcher is offline
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If you want to do webhosting for profit I would co-locate your server with a colo provider. We use www.colostore.com, they offer space for a 1u to 4u or a mid-size tower, and a 1mbps connection for $49.99 per month. Additional 1mbps is $49.99 per month. We have been using them for 7 months (6 months old server 1 month new server)total now and have had a single problem yet.

And then there is www.burst.net, www.steedfastnetworks.com, www.colo4dallas.com ect, There are 100's of places that offer co-location. You just got to pick the right one.

If your dead set on hosting for home you could always get another DSL line and buy a load balancing router. How well they work I don't know.
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Old 03-17-2006, 05:54 PM
Julian Julian is offline
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I would recommend co-location, that way you dont run into problems like you would with a DSL line.
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Old 03-19-2006, 04:34 AM
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Ashley Ashley is offline
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As has been suggested, having your server colocated in a datacenter is the best option.

But if you can't afford it, I suggest cable. Here, you can get cable up to 8mbps - I believe that the maximum ASDL can pump out is around 4megs - and that's if you are next door to the exchange.
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Old 03-19-2006, 07:10 AM
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QBall15j QBall15j is offline
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At the current time ADSLs limit is around 8/1Mbps (down/up). Which is just as fast as cable in most areas, if not faster. Not everyone is going to pay for 8Mbps down, most cable companies severely limit your upload speed anyways. Comcast just recently raised their upload speeds for Gold tier accounts to 765kbps, Silver is still at 356kbps.
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Old 03-22-2006, 09:38 PM
chiefsmurph chiefsmurph is offline
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How do I know when it is time to move my server to a colocation? I'm making about $50 - 75 / month from advertising and from what I've seen (quick glances, I might be way off) it seems to be around there. Is there a certain limit of bandwith I should be moving my server by? When did you decide to move yours?
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Old 03-22-2006, 11:18 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chiefsmurph
How do I know when it is time to move my server to a colocation? I'm making about $50 - 75 / month from advertising and from what I've seen (quick glances, I might be way off) it seems to be around there. Is there a certain limit of bandwith I should be moving my server by? When did you decide to move yours?
I don't think there is no set limit, as long as your not maxing out your bandwidth you should be fine. Do you have mrtg installed on your server? Its a nice tool for monitoring your servers bandwidth. There was no need for moving my server to co-location. I moved it because I wanted to. Tomorrow my server is moving back home for the time being.
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