Home >
Articles
What Are The Different Types of Hosting Solutions?
As the Web hosting industry has matured, hosting offers have split into a few distinct
categories, each with strengths and weaknesses.
It is crucial to understand the differences among the types of hosting offered.
As the Web hosting industry has matured, hosting offers have split into a few distinct
categories, each with strengths and weaknesses.
Shared hosting (sometimes called virtual hosting) means that you are
sharing a server with other clients of that company. The host manages the server
almost completely (though you maintain your site and your account). They can afford
to charge you little since many clients are paying for use of the server.
However, companies other than yours use the resources of that server. That means
heavy traffic to one of the other sites on the server can hammer the performance
of your site. Also, you typically are unable to install special software programs
on these types of machines because the host will need to keep a stable environment
for all of the clients using the server.
Co-located hosting means that you buy a server from a hardware vendor, like
Dell or HP, and you supply this server to the host. The Web host plugs your server
into its network and its redundant power systems. The host is responsible for ensuring
its network is available, and you are responsible for support and maintenance of
your server.
Back to top
Good hosts offer management contracts to their co-location clients so that you can
outsource much of the support to them and come to an arrangement similar to managed
dedicated hosting. Most co-location hosts do not offer this service, however.
Unmanaged dedicated hosting is similar to co-location except that you lease
a server from a host and do not own it yourself. Some very limited support (typically
Web-based only) is included, but the level of support varies widely among unmanaged
dedicated hosts.
This type of server can be had for around $99/month. Support levels typically are
provided only in general terms. Ask the host to go into specifics about what support
it will provide — will it apply security patches to your server? — before signing
up. This service is typically good for gaming servers (like Doom or Counterstrike
servers) or hobbyist servers, but not for serious businesses that need responsive,
expert-level service.
Managed dedicated hosting means leasing a server from a host and having that company
provide a robust level of support and maintenance on the server that is backed by
quality guarantees. This maintenance typically includes services such as server
uptime monitoring, a hardware warranty and security patch updates.
Ensure that your managed dedicated host is specific about its managed services so
that it does not disguise an unmanaged dedicated offering as a managed dedicated
server. This has been known to happen, which is why it is important to do your homework
and ask the right questions.
Back to top