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Chapter 5: Find Space For Your Site
Webmaster In A Week!
The simple & cheap method



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For people to see your site, it will have to live on a web server, which is a type of computer that "serves" your site to the Internet. Servers that provide space for other people's webpages are called "hosts" or "web hosts", and what they do is called hosting.

Some people like to run their own web servers. But since this tutorial is about the simple and cheap method, and running your own web server properly is neither, we'll skip that approach for now.

Since you're going to use the Internet to connect to your host, your hosting service can be located anywhere. However, the speed between you and the host counts, so make sure that you can connect to them quickly.

There are a number of terms you should know and options you should be familiar with when it comes to finding a host for your site. Educate yourself here.

Uptime is the amount of time that your server is actually making your site available to visitors. A 99% uptime guarantee sounds good, doesn't it? Get out the calculator.

100% - 99% = 1%
24 hrs x 30 days = 720 hours
720 hrs x 1% = 7.2 hrs downtime a month

Those hours don't even have to be consecutive for a 99% guarantee to hold true. Your site could be down for 5 minutes here, 20 minutes there and so on. Look for a 99.9% uptime guarantee or better.

Paid hosting can be found for around the cost of a paid ISP. As with ISPs, using a paid service will give you access to telephone technical support. Generally speaking, it will also provide a more stable environment for your site than free hosting services, who tend to overload their servers.

Paid hosting allows you to choose the operating system of the server that your site will be hosted on. Some people find various Microsoft Windows servers to be more user-friendly. On the other hand, uNIX servers generally have better uptime.

Other benefits of paid hosting include access to your server logs or a log analysis program. This tells you things about the visitors to your site, like how many there wereand the ability to create more complex and interactive webpages than free hosts generally allow for.

Search these databases to find a host. If you need to find a host outside of the US, typing in a country name where you see 'Keyword' may help. Just make sure to research the host before you make your choice.

http://www.hostfinders.com
http://www.comparewebhosts.com

You'll probably feel a little lost looking at all the choices and will have questions. Click here for a great place to see what others are saying and to ask for help.

Free hosting usually requires that you display an ad on each of your pages or uses ads that pop up when someone comes to your site. However, there are exceptions. Most free web space is for personal use, but you can also find free space for businesses and nonprofit organizations, as well as for specific interests.

Start your free host search here.

NEXT: Creating Your Site





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