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How
do I evaluate shared business web site hosting
companies?
By Veronica bern
Finding a decent virtual or shared business
web site hosting can only be achieved by conducting
in-depth consumer research and evaluation. Many tools
exist online that can assist the individual and small
business find an extremely reliable business
web site hosting service. With the myriad of
choice available, it is necessary for the consumer to
discriminate. Since shared business web site
hosting is conceived as only a low-end, low-margin
commodity by the industry itself, it is necessary for
the consumer to be very wary. There are literally thousands
of hosts that offer shared and virtual business
web site hosting services. While many provide
extremely good service, others provide service that
is less than desirable. In order to find suitable Web
hosts, consumers must conduct due diligence.
Prospective shared business web site hosting
clients must therefore ensure that they test the technical
capacity of any host thoroughly before they procure
their services. Advanced testing of a potential host
will reveal whether the solutions they provide are reliable
enough for your high-traffic site. Remember that your
business web site hosting must be trusted
to provide solid network infrastructure. If you select
a host that cannot provide robust connectivity, then
your site's availability to the world will suffer. For
this reason, informed consumers will evaluate potential
hosting firms before they sign-up.
Testing ensures that consumers will not waste their
good money on bad services. Reliable testing results
can be obtained through the use of sophisticated network
tools that monitor business web site hosting
performance. Such tools will determine how often a host's
servers experience outages and will generate a list
of probable reasons why business web site hosting
services are unreachable. It is advantageous for you
to use such tools to ensure that the host you select
will provide minimum downtime. Most hosting firms boast
about their relentless commitment to excellent service
and server responsiveness, and usually the crowning
jewel of this commitment is 99 per cent uptime.
But while most hosting operations use this promise of
incredible uptime as a hard sell, few consumers actually
test whether these pledges are true. Smart consumers
of hosting services, on the other hand, are the first
to authenticate these service guarantees. They usually
consult the services of an established server monitoring
services such as NetMechanic, provided by Keynote.com
Systems.
NetMechanic.com provides an integrated suite of tools
that detect problems with your Web site. The company's
"Server Check Pro" product is an excellent
choice for ensuring that your server is up 24 hours
a day. The tool will ping, traceroute and attempt to
access your site via http on a regular basis to verify
that your server is up. For a small fee, the service
monitors your servers constantly, and contacts you by
your choice of pager, cell phone or e-mail when your
server goes down. The tool will also generate specialized
performance statistics in real-time so that you can
monitor outage patterns to ensure you're getting quality
uptime from your host.
You should also routinely attempt to check server response
from your own computer. If you are using a regular 56k
dial-up connection, you should attempt to pull up sites
located with your prospective host during peak and non-peak
hours. A battery of low-cost tests is available on the
network layer level of your operating system. You can
test a potential hosts' network and server responsiveness
from your MS-DOS or UNIX line prompt. In order to obtain
a true representation of the host's services, you should
select Web sites on your host's network that are typical
of the services they render to their normal clients.
You should thus avoid testing the host's main Web site
or premier customers. These sites are mission-critical
to a hosting firm and thus are afforded an extremely
high level of maintenance, which is not always representative
of typical service.
In order to locate a typical client of your prospective
host, execute a "whois" search. Whois is an
application that looks up critical information about
any Internet domain. This information includes ownership,
location of the host, and most importantly, its block
of network numbers. By executing the "whois -a
yourhost.com" command at a UNIX line prompt, you
can search your potential host's entire block of network
numbers, and seek out a normal customer who is hosted
on an individual network address. The customer that
you use should have the approximate services that you
seek. Use the ping and traceroute commands from either
your UNIX or DOS prompt to test server responsiveness.
You also can obtain many free or shareware WYSIWYG (what-you-see-is-what-you-get)
network tools for the Windows platform that can test
server responsiveness. An excellent suite of bundled
network tools is provided free-of-charge by PCS Network
Tools.
Using a line-prompt or WYSIWYG application, attempt
to "ping" sites from the prospective host
on your computer. Ping is the networking equivalent
of sonar. The network tool is used to verify that a
given server is actually reachable, and measures the
delay that occurs when sending a data packet to it and
back again.
Executing a "traceroute" from your computer
is also an interesting and informative experiment to
run on a hosting company. Traceroute applications allow
you to map the direction that data travels over the
Internet. By conducting a traceroute, you can determine
whether the data you have requested from your prospective
host will take a direct or indirect path to you. The
most successful incident of a traceroute is therefore
when data takes the shortest route to your computer.
These tests, conducted manually on a regular 56k connection
will give you a rough indication of your client's response
time if you were to choose the prospective host that
your testing. In essence, these tests determine whether
a host provides the lowest level of network latency,
ensuring that data is passed to browsers and other Internet
applications as quickly as possible. Your aim must be
to ensure that the delay between request and response
from a prospective hosting service is as short as possible.
Making this determination is only possible if you conduct
serious tests on prospective hosts before hosting your
content there.
About
the Author: Veronica bern run a search engine
friendly (seo) company, seosmart.com
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