many of their design solutions (requires lots of extra custom java scripting) which are very poor solutions compared to those you can implement when you can add any module that you want.Įxamples JavaScript tabs vs. WYSIWYG (not really- will not reflect your them unless you jury rig a link to a ckEditor CSS file- then all css changes must be added there also- high maintenance). then many issues w/gardens customizations for which you will have no real understanding of how they are laid in and how to remove them until you move to a host that supports all advanced functions & modules you will want to add check the support/user forums of any host before signing up, search for Drupal 7, you will find out what the site users already know (like it will or will not run D7 you have experience to setup a paid host the way you want/need it right the first time if you can export & move anything of value, nothing lost helps you feel free to make a mess and wipe it out if you get side-tracked for a month, or 3 or 6. how to ask the right questions to insure you get it when you move up to paid hosting to prevent buyers remorse what you need and why it is worth paying for! If you are just beginning, using a free host is inexpensive and will teach you some important facts of life: This is my current evaluation (6 months invested looking/testing for a no fuss, inexpensive Drupal host).īacked by several years other html/CMS web design hosting experience, and 25+ years implementing/developing computer application solutions for small businesses). So, I have been testing free resources for start-ups (for profit/non-profit) where they can begin, and then move/grow. (a public website + virtual/back office with all the features & basic configuration a business needs) I have been testing to setup a prefab small business Drupal model Hope this saves others some time and money. When visitors come, you have to start paying. If you do not run too resourceful scripts, you can do that. So, consider a free hosting just an opportunity to build your site, to test it online. But the very minute some considerable traffic arrives (and this is what you are building your site for, is it not?), you are offered a paid upgrade. As long as they do not use much, do not have traffic, there is actually not much they spend of the server resources. They get loads of new customers, who open their websites on these free plans. The reason is, this advertising method suits their business plan. So, why are some hosting companies paying for what you use on a free account? Remember, they want to make money, not get rid of it! And, there are no data centers that would let you colocate your server for free. ![]() There are no electrical companies that would give out free power. Because you see, there are no hardware manufacturers that sell server for nothing. Someone is paying for the server, the electricity and bandwidth. Just think how and why free hosting exists. So whenever you see a cheap hosting account with says it has a lot of resources available, or unlimited, run away as fast as possible. ![]() Number 2) makes more money, and is the normal strategy for cheap hosting (because most people do not use all the resources all the time), but it is not suitable for any version of Drupal. I can either 1) sell 100 accounts with 1GB each for $10 a month, or 2) 250 accounts with 1GB each for $5 a month. More importantly, it means they have to use very limited settings, which are normally no suitable for systems like Drupal.įor example, if I have a server with 100GB on it for hosting. This means often the server is overloaded and runs slower. They have an amount of space, and to sell cheaply they sell more space then they have. Why? Because most cheap hosting companies oversell. In fact, the best hosting accounts are often the ones that offer more limited resources. ![]() It has nothing, absolutely nothing, to do with the level of resources the hosting company offers. The thing that many people don't understand what the difference is between good and bad hosting. It is also the same with Joomla and other CMS systems. However, this is a subject I know something about.
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