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web technology blog|I need some info about web hosting if someone could please help me out?
By admin | July 11, 2011
Thank you for your attention,In the blog: Computer Technology ,Not’s about what is a pod?.
Q&A–: I need some info about web hosting if someone could please help me out?
Ive started a photography business but Im completely lost when it comes to web hosting and what I need…I have read so many “plans” but I just dont understand what all the terms mean! Can someone tell me what I need to have included so that my web page will look and act as it should. Id like to have a opening page and also room for a few photo galleries (portfolios of wedding, HS senior, family, etc) also Id like to have a way that a people can look at and order pictures of their wedding where you would need to click on your specific event and then it opens up a new page with all the photos from your event. I’d like to have a “domain” ( i think its called) you know “whatever.com” If someone could please help me with this and answer in non smart people term LOL Im a artist and have no clue when it comes to technology
something like this nttp://www.jessicaclaire.net/ but with out the blog stuff
The answer in the following: (Hint: For answers, no site audit.)
Answer by cen
You will need a host that provides MySQL databases and FTP access so that you can transfer your files to the remote server. You will also need PHP support. You may need permission to make a custom .htaccess file, depending on your needs. Although it’s ridiculous if you ask me, many hosts don’t allow customers to upload or create .htaccess file.
You’re correct about a domain name being something like `whatever.com`. Your domain name, however, is handled separately from your hosting package. For convenience, your domain name registrar *could* be the same company as your host, but this is not necessary.
You’ll need to calculate the amount of storage you’ll require and how much bandwidth you expect to use each month and find a host that will lease you this amount at a price that you deem fair. You don’t want to end up paying for more bandwidth or storage than you need. Of course, you can change your plan later if you find that your needs have changed; it’s just that you may incur surcharges (which we want to avoid).
You may want to look into some pre-made templates for your site. The one that you linked to is based on some blog software or another. You can either hire a professional to design your site or you may use such software. Depending on the software package you choose, your needs may change.
Answer by koreansuperman859
The previous poster is correct in some ways, but I think more detail is needed.
First, you do not need support for mySQL and PHP – this is just one route. You could go with other options, such as using a Windows based machine (and any .NET language). It is just two different things that accomplish the same end goal. Similar to Windows vs. Mac. Most hosts will allow you to select either a linux machine or a windows machine. Linux machines will be set up with PHP, mySQL, etc. while windows machines will be set up with .NET support. To pick between the two depends on what software you want to use.
However, with that said, I think you will probably be looking into installing some third-party software instead of developing it yourself (unless you hire someone). I imagine there is much more PHP software available from my experience, and lots of it is free.
But, based on what you want, you will want some type of database (mySQL, for example). A database basically allows you to store information easily, and a lot of third-party software will require a database to run properly.
I can’t imagine what kind of web service these days doesn’t provide database, FTP (allows you to upload your images to the server easily), and server-side programming (PHP, .NET) – I’m sure some exist, but most hosts these days will have it.
I use godaddy.com for hosting, and they have shared hosting plans for $ 5.00 per month or so, which include everything you need. If you want to set up ordering of photos and things like that, depending on how sophisticated you want that part of the site to be, you may require a dedicated / virtual dedicated server. Shared hosting would work fine for your standard, viewable web site with photo galleries and things like that, but when the site becomes more ‘commercial’ then you need more for security, ease of use, etc. Virtual dedicated server should work fine, and godaddy.com has those for $ 25.00 per month. However, once you start getting into this realm, you really do need to know something about computers and servers, or have someone handle it for you, as you are essentially on your own for maintaining the server (whereas with shared hosting accounts, someone else makes sure it stays running while you just use it).
Domain names cost roughly $ 10.00 per year, and most hosts offer this service as well.
So, I think it depends on exactly what you are looking for, and what your budget is. The more ‘commercial’ your site becomes with making sales and transactions, the more you require people to have individual logins / passwords (rather than every page is viewable by everyone), then you need more when it comes to the server, which will require a larger budget and someone with some knowledge to work on it as creating the website becomes a lot more difficult.
Answer by leelou21uk
Use the above info on implementation.. then
I suggest you have a look at nttp://www.hosting24.com they will register a domain name for free for life and come with unlimited webspace and unlimited data transfer and you can go with them on a monthly basis.
They come with a website wizard and plenty of ready made scripts to accomplish what you are after.
Also when you sign up with them if you enter in a discount code they will give you 25% off their ridiculously cheap hosting plans. code to use is 25OFF
I host all my sites there and have been more than pleased with their help and support which is available by phone support! I hope this helps
Lou
Answer by tak
Like what is said above you need the right amount of bandwidth (which if you don’t know is traffic that gets sent to and from the server that the website is on). You also need the right amount of disk space which can be upgraded if you need more.
Here is a direct link to a page that might help explain things better to you.
http://webhosting.thumbtak.net/web-hosting.html
By the way. They are a really good hosting company so you might want to check them out.
Answer by JackKnows
There’s a very good article about choosing the right host here;
http://www.virgohosting.com/the_right_host.php
Add your own answer in the comments!
web technology blog
Q&A–: How much privacy are Americans willing to give up?
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Is Google’s data grinder dangerous?
It wants to know more about us than we know ourselves.
By Andrew Keen, ANDREW KEEN is the author of “The Cult of the Amateur.” ak@aftertv.com.
July 12, 2007
WHAT DOES Google want? Having successfully become our personal librarian, Google now wants to be our personal oracle. It wants to learn all about us, know us better than we know ourselves, to transform itself from a search engine into a psychoanalyst’s couch or a priest’s confessional.
Google’s search engine is the best place to learn what Google wants. Type “Eric Schmidt London May 22″ into Google, and you can read about a May interview the Google chief executive gave to journalists in London.
Here is how he described what he hoped the search engine would look like in five years: “The goal is to enable Google users to be able to ask the question such as ‘What shall I do tomorrow?’ And ‘What job shall I take?’ ”
Schmidt’s goal is not inconsiderable: By 2012, he wants Google to be able to tell all of us what we want. This technology, what Google co-founder Larry Page calls the “perfect search engine,” might not only replace our shrinks but also all those marketing professionals whose livelihoods are based on predicting — or guessing — consumer desires.
Schmidt acknowledges that Google is still far from this goal. As he told the London journalists: “We cannot even answer the most basic questions because we don’t know enough about you. That is the most important aspect of Google’s expansion.”
So where is Google expanding? How is it planning to know more about us? Many — if not most — users don’t read the user agreement and thus aren’t aware that Google already stores every query we type in.
The next stage is a personalized Web service called iGoogle. Schmidt, who perhaps not coincidentally sits on the board of Apple, regards its success as the key to knowing us better than we know ourselves.
iGoogle is growing into a tightly-knit suite of services — personalized homepage, search engine, blog, e-mail system, mini-program gadgets, Web-browsing history, etc. — that together will create the world’s most intimate information database. On iGoogle, we all get to aggregate our lives, consciously or not, so artificially intelligent software can sort out our desires. It will piece together our recent blog posts, where we’ve been online, our e-commerce history and cultural interests. It will amass so much information about each of us that eventually it will be able to logically determine what we want to do tomorrow and what job we want.
The real question, of course, is whether what Google wants is what we want too. Do we really want Google digesting so much intimate data about us? Could iGoogle actually be a remix of “1984′s” Room 101 — that Orwellian dystopia in which our most secret desires and most repressed fears are revealed?
Any comparison with 20th century, top-down totalitarianism is, perhaps, a little fanciful. After all, nobody can force us to use iGoogle. And — in contrast to Yahoo and Microsoft (which have no limits on how long they hang on to our personal data) — Google has committed to retaining data for only 18 months.
Still, if iGoogle turns out to be half as wise about each of us as Schmidt predicts, then this artificial intelligence will challenge traditional privacy rights as well as provide us with an excuse to deny responsibility for our own actions. What happens, for example, when the government demands access to our iGoogle records? And will we be able to sue iGoogle if it advises us to make an unwise career decision?
Schmidt, I suspect, would like us to imagine Google as a public service, thereby affirming the company’s “do no evil” credo. But Google is not our friend. Schmidt’s iGoogle vision of the future is not altruistic, and his company is not a nonprofit group dedicated to the realization of human self-understanding.
Worth more than $ 150 billion on the public market, Google is by far the dominant Internet advertising outlet — according to Nielsen ratings, it reaches about 70% of the global Internet audience. Just in the first quarter of 2007, Google’s revenue from its online properties was up 76% from the previous year. Personal data are Google’s most valuable currency, its crown jewels. The more Google knows our desires, the more targeted advertising it can serve up to us and the more revenue it can extract from these advertisers.
What does Google really want? Google wants to dominate. Its proposed $ 3.1-billion acquisition of DoubleClick threatens to make the company utterly dominant in the online advertising business. The $ 1.65-billion acquisition of YouTube last year made it by far the dominant player in the online video market. And, with a personalized service like iGoogle, the company is seeking to become the algorithmic monopolist of our online behavior.
So when Eric Schmidt says Google wants to know us better than we know ourselves, he is talking to his shareholders rather than us. As a Silicon Valley old-timer, trust me on this one. I know Google better than it knows itself.
The following is the answer: (Hint: The correct answer provided by the users, does not guarantee the right.)
Answer by lalamlal
100% in multiples. Speaking mathematically it will be absurd. However this will be a perfect answer. Any comment ?
Answer by T.
Your question is WAY to long for me to even consider reading or answering seriously.
Answer by bobanalyst
People’s personal data should be copy righted and user of that data (either personalized or categorically) should pay a fee negotiated between the data generator and the user.
For example, integrating a credit card spending event to a database may require the user to credit a penny to the credit card user, and integrating a larger spending such as a car may require the user to credit, let say, $ 20 to the car buyer’s account.
Give your answer to this question below!
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Eileen and Tim came over the other night. Eileen wanted to set up a blog, so we helped her step through it. It’s so easy that she really didn’t need any help.
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