Showing posts with label web hosting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label web hosting. Show all posts

Thursday 3 December 2020

Web Hosting Services - What is it and what are the kinds of services available

Web Hosting Services - What is it ?

So, have you ever seen a website and wondered how it got on the internet, where is its data stored or who uploaded it and how are we able to access it from any part of the world? Well the answer to your question (if you ever had) can be answered by Web Hosting services.

If you are familiar with IT related terms, this may not feel alien but if you are new to IT and you want to own your own website for business or whatever purpose you have you need to know that you will need web hosting services.

As per Wikipedia, “A web hosting service is a type of Internet hosting service that allows individuals and organizations to make their website accessible via the World Wide Web.” 

In other words, web hosting is a service of making your website public on the internet for everyone to view and search. You can compare it with something like renting a house or office for use, where you can store all your stuff like files, images, and videos, content but for others to access.


Every website you ever visited, was and is hosted by a host server and the file i.e. website is uploaded on ‘www’.

The thing is you need to hire someone to host your website on the internet because you need very specific knowledge and technologies to do that.

Your website would be stored on a computer on which anyone can access after typing your website name on the search bar. These computers on which the website is stored are called servers. You need to own your individual domain name to make your website uploaded on the internet. 

There are many web hosting service providers available on the internet offering a range of services. You need to make sure you choose the right pack with the right services so that your website visitors have the right experience and you can rock your work. 

Other than giving server space to your site, Hosting service providers likewise offer different types of assistance identified with website management. For example, the assistance services we provide for our clients along with web hosting are:


  1. Linux / Windows hosting platform with unlimited sub-domains capability
  2. Support for popular web technologies & databases
  3. Manage your website with easy-to-use online control panel or FTP access
  4. Web analytics, reporting & backups
  5. High Availability & Security
  6. 24x 7 Technical Supports
  7. Support PHP 4.2.3, ASP, .NET 2.0, Active Perl 5.61
  8. FrontPage Server Extensions 2002 support
  9. Free MySQL & MS Access Database
  10. Free Online Management Console
  11. FTP Access
  12. Web Analytics, Reporting & Backup

Types of Web Hosting Services

 There are different types of web hosting services available that a number of web hosting service provider offer, some of them are: 


  • VPS hosting

Virtual private servers(VPS) or virtual dedicated server(VDS) is a hosting service type in which you share your server space with other websites but you have your own space partitioned so your website and other websites activity does not cross each other.

  • Shared hosting 

As the name suggests, shared hosting is when one site is hosted on the same server with the other websites. That means your website and others website is sharing the same server. 

  • WordPress hosting

Wordpress hosting is a kind of shared hosting but for wordpress site owners. You get many pre-formatted features which can make your work easier.

  • Cloud hosting

In cloud hosting, your service provider will provide you to host your site on multiple interconnected servers. So, in case one server is occupied with heavy traffic, your traffic will get directed to another server. It's a new system and has become everyone's go to hosting service in recent times.

  • Collocated Hosting

In collocated hosting you will have your own server. You need to purchase it and you will buy your own server and have it housed at a web host's offices. 

  • Dedicated Hosting

As the name suggests, you will have a whole server space dedicated to your website. All resources of a server will serve your website. It's expensive and it's recommended to only those whose website attracts a lot of traffic and is unmanageable on a normal shared system.



 

Now that you have an idea of what web hosting service is. You can ponder over how you can avail web hosting service for your website and enjoy the benefits of having your own website traffic. Since for having an online presence and your own website you will need web hosting services and how you avail them is what can decide your websites future.


For more information on web hosting services, you can contact us or call us.    

+91 7049037000

Thursday 4 May 2017

Why Choose WordPress Hosting For Your Website


WordPress is the most popular blogging platform and it is always suggested, particularly to new bloggers, to blog on it. The platform is also used as a powerful website creation tool and millions of website is hosted on it for this reason. It offers good Content Management System and it is easy too.


WordPress hosting platform literally offers thousands of themes and most of those are available for free. Installation and customization is easy and a webmaster can make a website on it according to one's core concept.
It is again to note that most of the customizable tools come for free and there are tons of plugins like gallery and adding contact form to help in enhancing the website.


For beginners it is suggested to opt for WordPress platform and go for shared hosting service instead of VPS or Dedicated web hosting services. One of the greatest advantages is that it is less expensive and a basic blog does not need extra in initial stage. It is the cheapest web hosting solution for small and medium-sized websites or blogs.

However, to take note of some disadvantages too of shared WordPress hosting service. Your site may become slow if too many websites are hosted on the same server under the same shared format. If the hosting service is renowned and reliable, it will not host so many sites on same server. So it is suggested to always take the service from a good host.

Sometimes you may get your email blacklisted as you are sharing the server with many people, probably hundreds of other website owners. It is suggested to route the email through Google Apps for Business and this will save you from such circumstances.

Before buying the package it is suggested to go through the pricing part of the host server carefully to overcome any hidden charges.
refer from seliconindia

Wednesday 3 May 2017

YouTube Starts Rolling Out New Website Design, Dark Mode


YouTube has started to invite its users to preview a new design of its website, which includes a dark mode suitable for nighttime viewing.



The design is also more closely aligned to the look and feel of YouTube’s mobile apps, with YouTube product manager Brian Marquardt promising more consistency across platforms in an announcement blog post.

“Starting today, we’re opening up a preview of the new design to a small group of people from all around the world so we can get feedback,” Marquardt wrote Tuesday. “While we hope you’ll love what we’ve been working on, we’re also really excited to involve the YouTube community so we can make the site even better before sharing it more broadly.”
Users interested in the preview could briefly sign up for it on a special web page Tuesday, but YouTube quickly closed the sign-up after reaching an undisclosed threshold. The Google-owned video site promised to invite additional users in the coming weeks, and plans to eventually make the new look available to all users.

In addition to a night mode, which replaces the white website background with a black theme that’s less jarring when used in low-light situations, the new YouTube also uses a somewhat cleaner design. Two separate menus are being merged into one, and individual menu items are spaced more generously, giving the whole site a lighter look and feel.

But one of the biggest changes may be under the hood: YouTube now uses Polymer, a new scripting technology that’s meant to simplify web development. The result could be that YouTube might be able to change up its site more easily in the future.
refer from-variety

Thursday 27 October 2016

Speed up your websites with HTTP/2

HTTP/2 is another method for making your site stack much speedier by dispensing with numerous wasteful aspects connected with the present adaptation of HTTP. The best thing about it? You don't need to go to much push to get it up and running.
Isn't that right?

WHAT IS HTTP/2?
When HTTP1 and HTTP1.1 were originally developed, the web was very different to what it is today. Websites had fewer resources (JavaScript files, CSS files, images) than today. Connections to the internet weren’t very fast, and users were not very picky with website loading speed.
Users start to get itchy fingers when a site takes longer than 3 seconds to show a response.
You were happy that a website loaded full stop. You might have secretly complained that loading was slow. But you couldn’t really do much about it. That’s because the slow loading time was typically coming from factors which were independent of the web server and technology you were using. Mostly it was the actual internet connection which was the major limiting factor.
Fast forward to today. Great website loading times are measured in milliseconds rather than seconds.

Users start to get itchy fingers when a site takes longer than 3 seconds to show a response. 


In this kind of situation, inefficiencies counted in milliseconds associated with the original versions of HTTP start to make a real difference. That’s why you get so many articles discussing how to make your website faster. Because milliseconds matter.
The new version of HTTP, known as HTTP/2 addresses specific known problems of HTTP. Its goals are to address a number of problems which have become more pronounced as the web has evolved to larger and larger websites with many more CSS, JS and image files than originally anticipated.
But what is wrong with HTTP1.x, and why do we spend so much effort making it faster?

THE PROBLEMS OF HTTP1.X
HTTP1.x has a number of inherent problems. Actually, let’s refrain from calling them problems. HTTP1.x has a number of ways in which it can be more efficient.
HTTP 1.x is text based: originally the idea was that HTTP1.x should be humanly-readable so it was fully text based. By definition all text based protocols have inefficiencies associated with them such as whitespace, link breaks, capitalization, etc.
Only one file is in transfer at any one time: this is one of the biggest problems with the 1.x versions of HTTP. Just imagine being a deliveryman who is only able to deliver one package at a time. They have to go back to base every time they need to deliver the next package.
Hundreds of requests are required for today’s websites:  having more sophisticated themes means that the size of the websites and the number of resources grows. And so does the time it takes to load each resource. Remember our “deliveryman” has to go back to base every time, they are not able to transfer more than one file at a time.
Each connection is a heavy technical operation: Since hundreds of connections are required, it starts to accumulate serious overhead. With loading time being measured in milliseconds, the combined time required to create a connection for hundreds of resources starts to become very significant.
Many times web designers had to implement specific measures to reduce these inefficiencies. Workarounds such as CSS sprites, minification, and the combining of files are meant to overcome issues with loading web sites.
These are — in essence — workarounds rather than fixes.

HOW HTTP/2 SOLVES THE PROBLEMS OF HTTP1.X
HTTP/2 is designed and evolved from SPDY, a protocol designed at Google aimed at making the web 2x faster. It addresses HTTP problems in the following way
HTTP/2 is intended for consumption by machines (your web browser and your website’s web server) rather than humans. It is binary rather than text based making it inherently more efficient. Transfer and parsing of the data is faster using binary protocols.
Multiple files can be transferred simultaneously on the same connection. Fixes were implemented such that you can pipeline resources on the same connection. Rather than having to open a new connection each time (our deliveryman going back to base), all of the resources can be carried on the same connection (our deliveryman dumps everything in a van and takes everything in a single trip).
Server push to send files which will be required by browser. In HTTP1.x it is the web browser who asks the web server for the resources it requires. HTTP Server Push (implemented as part of HTTP/2) allows the server to start sending resources that it knows the web browser will need. For example, you can instruct the server not to  wait for the browser to ask for the CSS, JS and other resources files which the browser is going to need anyway.
HTTP packet Header and other optimizations – these are technical improvements which are designed to improve the actual efficiency of transfers

WHAT IS REQUIRED TO ENABLE HTTP2?
By not supporting HTTP/2 over unencrypted connections, website owners are being strong armed into implementing HTTPs for their website.
Back at the very beginning of the article we said that not much effort is required from your end to enable HTTP/2. Enabling HTTP/2 is something which needs to be done at web server level. Most web servers such as Apache, Nginx, IIS, and other major web servers already have support for HTTP/2.
If you run your own web server, you just need to install and enable the HTTP/2 libraries. If your website is hosted with a hosting company, check with the company whether the web server is already enabled for HTTP/2.

THE CATCH.... SECURE CERTIFICATES
Maybe things were too good to be true. We have just discussed how web servers already fully support HTTP/2.
Most major web browsers also fully support HTTP/2. However, they have also chosen to only support HTTP/2 in encrypted mode. The reason for this is that there has been a strong movement to enable HTTPS (encryption) all over the web. Such initiatives as HTTPS Everywhere strongly push the need for HTTPS on all websites.

By not supporting HTTP/2 over unencrypted connections, website owners are being strong armed into implementing HTTPs for their website.

Of course this is not necessarily a bad thing. Implementing HTTPS has significant security and privacy advantages. With companies coming together to form a Certificate Authority called Let’s Encrypt to allow free secure certificates, the overall cost to actually acquire a certificate and implements HTTPS becomes much cheaper. This was relatively expensive up until some time ago.
Implementing HTTPS is not something you ought to do without give it the necessary due thought. You may probably want to discuss this with your trusted website developer or somebody with enough technical expertise. Most times, your hosting company should be able to guide you through this.
Of course, it’s strongly recommended that you implement HTTPS. Besides the additional security, you’re going to get the ability to enable HTTP/2 and make your website faster. That’s what we call a win-win situation.

ARE OTHER OPTIMIZATION TECHNIQUES STILL NECESSARY?

Certain optimizations aimed at reducing web requests become superfluous. If your site is incurring computation time to “combine” JS, CSS and other files, this has actually become an overhead cost. Any time “wasted” addressing the above mentioned inefficiencies is no longer necessary.
On the other hand such optimizations such as caching, reduction of the size of resources, delivering content over a CDN, choosing a great hosting server, and other optimizations which address different types of inefficiencies should stay in place.
The great thing about HTTP/2 is that not only does it make your website load faster, it’s also pushing you to make your website more secure. There’s no arguing that there are advantages to both of these. HTTP/2 is the next step in making all of the web faster. Let’s all be part of the it and make it happen.
+P and P Infotech : Web Solution, Web Design and development Indore

Reffered From: webdesignerdepot

Thursday 15 September 2016

Which Programming language you like to choose : PHP V/S .Net

Welcome to a battle of two heavyweights. In one corner, we have PHP, the most popular scripting language on the internet with millions of dedicated developers and an even larger legion of fans. In the other corner, we have a ASP.net, a platform backed by Microsoft itself that can use any .NET supported language.

So which is better? In this article, we’ll compare PHP and ASP.net and tell you which platform is better suited for your project. For a more detailed overview of PHP, check out this course on PHP for absolute beginners. If you are partial to ASP.net, take a look at this course to learn ASP.NET MVC.

PHP Overview

PHP stands for Hypertext Preprocessor. PHP originated as a scripting tool that has quickly taken over the internet thanks to its easy learning curve and large developer community. According to one estimate, PHP is installed on over 244 million websites with server support from virtually all major hosts. PHP is also free and boasts a number of frameworks to simplify web development.

Some of the major websites written in PHP include WordPress and Facebook.

ASP.NET Overview

ASP.NET was developed by Microsoft to provide developers with an easy scripting tool for building web pages and web applications. It is a successor to ASP (Active Server Pages), another platform pioneered by Microsoft in the mid-90s. You can code ASP.NET using any .NET supported language, which made it especially popular among .NET developers. Microsoft’s early domination of the web browser market with IE was also responsible for increasing the popularity of ASP.NET.

Some of the major websites that use ASP.NET are PlentyOfFish.com and MySpace.

The question now is: what language should you choose if you are starting out as a programmer?

Costs

This is a no-brainer – PHP is completely free, while ASP.NET is a Microsoft product. This means there are certain costs associated with ASP.NET development, namely:

Buying Windows, since ASP.NET development is possible only on a Windows machine. This shouldn’t be a problem for most people. If you use a Mac or Linux, you can use the Mono project to use ASP.NET on your machine.

ASP.NET requires Windows hosting. Until a few years ago, Windows hosting used to be significantly more expensive than Linux web hosting. This is hardly true today; you can easily find Windows hosts for almost the same price as Linux web hosts.

A development environment. The most popular IDE (Integrated Development Environment) for ASP.NET is Visual Studio. Microsoft also offers a free version of VS called VS Express.

As a beginner, you won’t have to specifically shell out extra for using ASP.NET, but once you upgrade to the professional stage, you will need something like Visual Studio, which can set you back by a few hundred dollars.

PHP, on the other hand, is entirely free, runs on Linux web hosting, can be used on Windows, Mac or Linux, and is supported by a number of free and paid IDEs.

Winner: PHP

Scalability

Both ASP.NET and PHP are highly scalable. Consider that Facebook, the second most heavily trafficked website in the world, was originally built in PHP, while MySpace, the website Facebook dethroned as the world’s favorite social network, was built in ASP.NET. This illustrates that both ASP.Net and PHP are highly scalable, as long as the programmer knows how to scale their application.

Winner: Tie

Performance

Performance for most web applications is a function of the interaction between the script, the database and the server. Most web applications written in PHP follow the LAMP stack – Linux (OS), Apache (server), MySQL (database) and PHP (scripting language). The LAMP stack is extremely popular for web development, and thus, has been optimized extensively for improved performance.

The database used most often with ASP.NET is MSSQL (Microsoft SQL Server), although you can also use MySQL with it. The performance different between a ASP.NET+MSSQL stack and a PHP+MySQL stack are very small with PHP+MySQL edging out ASP.NET.

Another factor that affects performance is the OS and file system used on the server. Most tests indicate that Linux and ext4 file system have better I/O performance than Windows and the NTFS file system. Thus, there’s a good chance a PHP application running on a Linux web host will slightly outperform a similar ASP.NET application running on a Windows host.

Winner: PHP

Support

PHP is free and among the most popular scripting languages online. There’s a huge open source developer community that regularly contributes to PHP development. The open-source community also tends to be very helpful, which is a big bonus for beginners.

ASP.NET, on the other hand, is a Microsoft property. While you’ll find plenty of developer boards run by ASP.NET enthusiasts, the scene is nowhere near as vibrant as PHP’s.

Winner: PHP

Availability of Tools and Editors

Most PHP developers prefer using text editors like VIM and Notepad++ instead of a full-fledged IDE. If you did want to use an IDE, however, you’ll find solid support for PHP in free editors like Eclipse.

ASP.NET is also supported by most IDEs but is mostly used with Microsoft Visual Studio. Microsoft VS is one of the most powerful, feature-rich and flexible IDEs around, even though it is not free. Thus, if you’re willing to shell out the cash, you’ll find that no PHP editor/IDE comes even close to Visual Studio.

Winner: Tie

Using Visual Studio? This course on C# with Visual Studio will help you get started.

Ease of Learning

PHP wins this one, hands down. ASP.NET is usually written in C# (pronounced C ‘Sharp’). C# is built on C which can be difficult to learn for most beginners. Its syntax is complicated and difficult to read, even for experienced programmers. People new to programming will find ASP.NET hard to pick up.

PHP, on the other hand, is very easy to pick up (so much so that most seasoned developers consider PHP coders as ‘newbies’). You can learn a few simple lines of code and start tinkering with WordPress themes almost right away.

Winner: PHP

Language Popularity

According to the TIOBE  Language Index, PHP ranks as the 6th most popular language online. ASP.NET, on the other hand, doesn’t even show-up in the top 20.

Winner: PHP

Conclusion

Unless you are already familiar with the .NET framework or want to stick to Microsoft technologies, there is no discernible need to use ASP.NET over PHP. PHP can do everything that ASP.NET can, and it can do it for free.

Now that you’ve decided to use PHP, take this course to learn PHP programming from scratch.

What do you prefer – PHP or ASP.NET? Let us know in the comments below!

+P and P Infotech : Web Solution, Web Design and development Indore 

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