Interesting discussion topic, especially for those that either have their own local WebServer or one in a DataCentre somewhere. I feel that it is a bit of a pity that the article Gabba linked to is four years or so old, published 02/03/09 or is that 03/02/09, American or European date formatting. It also looks like the article was based on the UK market and as the author was the CEO of a Hosting Company HastyHost I am left wondering how much of a vested interest he had. I am also left wondering how well the practices and the stats transfer to the NZ marketplace.
A brief Bing internet search for HastyHost found only this website address
http://www.hastyhost.co.uk/ with a single page website containing just this content "Sandbox Server... get your bucket and spade! Sandbox Services. This website is currently used as the Sandbox testing server for Redpandam Group websites. We intend to open Hasty Host in the future to the General Public for low cost Hosting Solutions. Thank you for your time." Seems they are currently not an active ISP or hosting provider. The hyperlink for "Redpandam Group" at the bottom of the page returns a message "Services Suspended". I guess a lot can happen commercially in four years. From a Web Hosting providers review site it looks like they were a "cheap web hosting | shared and reseller hosting" business circa October 2008, also interesting that this review site suggested they were targeting the US market, but hang on a minute they have a UK web address, seems a bit odd?
While the article might have been largely accurate when written an enormous amount of water has as they say gone under the bridge in the intervening four years. Most people involved in the technology sector will tell you that comments in articles of that nature have a pretty short lifespan in an industry that continues to maintain an astronomical rate of change and development. I have been involved with Computer Engineering and Software Development including websites for more than 30 years and unfortunately I am able to confirm this as an all to common occurrence. The Hosting Sector of the IT industry is no exception to this phenomenon. $400.00 for a Terabyte capacity hard drive is pretty steep by todays pricing, I can get a 2TB drive for just $115 and I am sure that datacentres can buy at much better rates than I can. Oh that's right $400,00 was four years ago which just goes to show how quickly data and especially prices in this industry get outdated.
As one who hosts websites of my own and commercially for others as part of my own IT Business I can assure readers that modern Hosting accounts are nothing like what is described in that article, well at least not from us. No over selling here and definitely no hidden small print, well none that we have either seen or know about. Running an ethical business and being straight and honest with clients is core to the way we have always operated, any suggestion otherwise is totally unacceptable and abhorrent. Here is a link to our Gold Hosting plan
http://www.mecount.com/hosting so you can see for yourselves what it offers. No fair use polices in place.
Gold Hosting Package - Key Features
Disk space = Unlimited
Bandwidth (Traffic) = Unlimited
Hosted Domains = 1
Sub-domains = Unlimited
POP3 / IMAP / Webmail accounts = Unlimited
Email Forwarders = Unlimited
Auto Responders = Unlimited
MySQL Databases = Unlimited
FTP Accounts = Unlimited
C Panel = Included
We have not yet experienced a single capacity, performance (Other than caused by DDOS or similar attacks), or bandwidth issue with our Server or any of our hosted websites. We are currently Hosting 33 Websites with 36 MySQL databases, some of these websites are quite big (Several GB of data) and have a significant amount of monthly traffic, much greater that the 5Gb per month suggested in the article. For us and also for our Datacentre Unlimited means just that, unlimited.
We have asked our Hosting provider and Datacentre more than once if there are any limits or caps on our Reseller Hosting account with them and the answer has always been a resounding "No" or "None", only those as detailed in the key features outlined above. One engineer even stated "if you think you might run out of storage then give us a bell or drop us an email and we will just add another disk or array to your server rack", when asked how much the response was "no more than you are currently paying" but isn't that what unlimited actually means?
I host 5 of my own websites and the usage stats for those for July to date are:
****Private****
Stats to date 01.07.2013 to 25.07.2013
Disk Space (MB): 37362
Bandwidth (GB): 37.369
E-Mails: 129
Ftp Accounts: 74
This data does not seem to compare too well with the usage stats suggested in the article but then that was four years or more ago.
Four years ago you where lucky if you could get a home broadband plan in NZ of 20 or 30GB, mine was just 1Gb, now look, uncapped data or telecom 500GB cap, my current Broadband plan is uncapped (Fair use Pooled) and costs little if anything more than the 1Gb plan I was on four years ago.
Four years ago Maxnet who I hosted with until I setup to do my own had a Maximum Linux hosting account of 30Mb, I had a 10Mb account and my website was barely 2Mb, their limit on traffic was 2Gb per month total, you could host 3 domains and they provided 5 email accounts. Compare that with our Gold Plan above, no comparison really, a quantum change in just four years. In this timeframe we have also seen a quantum leap in website functionality and capability, Video, Music downloads, business data entry etc, websites are doing things now that were hardly conceivable four years ago, this will only increase exponentially as we go forward. We have also seen the emergence of cloud based system like Office 365 from Microsoft and Google Docs in the last four years. The pace of change will continue unabated.
As always it is prudent business practice to question and negotiate with any supplier and this should include ISP's and Website Hosting providers, us included. It is unfortunate that some ISP's and website hosting resellers choose to change the features of their product without reference to their customer, that's why it is necessary to question because if you don't ask you don't know.
May the discussion continue but lets please use research data that is current and applicable to our market place.