Web Host Standards


If I would like to go shopping host isp for the site then what can be standards which they follow? For a standard host it has to follow some regulations which can be:
standard pipelining
number of customers
disk space etc. For a standard pipelining the host computer is connected to the Internet backbone typically through T1 and T3 lines. A T1 can carry up to 1.5 MBS, while a T3 can carry 45 MBS. Small ISP hosts sometimes have ISDN connections to the Internet. Look for T3 can, though a T1 isn’t close to its maximum capacity.

The rate of installing enough pipeline to the Internet is the prior barrier to setting up our own Web server computer in our office, telephone and other charges are pretty stiff, rather they can be shared with other businesses another view is that how many customers of that hosting company is sharing that same server or hosting server because it affects the speed of the process. So this is very important to find this number.

Disk space is also matters because ISPs usually assign a certain amount of space to computers. 5 MB is plenty of space for the Web pages and graphics for most business Web sites. A jammed nearly 800 files and graphics into 5 MB. But if mail, log files, and system programs are counted in the 5 MB, these can sometimes take up considerable space.

Cgi bin is another standard for a host because business accounts need to be able to reference programs in a CGI-bin directory, which includes a CGI program that creates the e-mail message sent out by Web page forms. So long as good forms to the email program are available in the host’s main CGI bin, that may be all we need.

Virtual hosting which means allows us to have our own domain name such as http://www.ourcompany.com rather than use our ISP’s domain name with a subdirectory designating our site, such as http://www.isp.com/ourcompany/. So we definitely want virtual hosting.

Another thing is that if they are providing us more than one mail address then it will be better because once we have a virtual domain, we can ask our ISP how many e-mail addresses we are allowed. Many ISPs allow you to set up multiple “aliases” such as sales@ourcompany.com or info@ourcompany.com.We should be free because if the first host is not providing us a proper service then we should have the right to choose another one because it can make us in a proper way.

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