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Good grief, you're still "sitting up straight" at a desktop?
Debugging for hours if not days is best done in a recliner with a bankie (Depending on how wintery winter is where the coder be).
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I don't like laptops. I used to use them for years as my primary dev machine. I have a tendency to break them or leave them places and get them stolen.
However, I do have a 55" TV monster hooked up to it so I can sit back on my bed and use it.
Real programmers use butterflies
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honey the codewitch wrote: However, I do have a 55" TV monster hooked up to it so I can sit back on my bed and use it. I suppose your husband sleeps with eye protectors and ear plugs...
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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I have everything dark themed and mute my speakers. He's the one that wanted it in the bedroom.
Knowing I sleep maybe 4 hours a night.
Real programmers use butterflies
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NVMe drive? Good choice!!!
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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Absolutely! 512GB for now but right now a 2TB one can be had for about $200. Frankly, there's no sense in not using them in a modern PC. Windows boot is faster than my post screen i think. it's hard to tell. Everything is instant.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I have two in my Dell XPS. A 256GB for the systems drive and a 1TB for my data. You dare not blink when they are in action, or you may miss something!
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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noice!
I need to try my JSON library on this machine. i bet it's insane.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I am looking for a cheap webhost that have webmail supporting smtp... Any suggestion?
currently using some "professional" one and it's too expensive and I lost interest in developing home website ^^
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Oh... go daddy does it hey?
I have t investigate that! It just so happen that I do the name registration with them! ^^
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GoDaddy's about the worst - really expensive. Cheap come-ons to get in newbies and then they, for the most part, "got 'em" as transferring is beyond what most are willing to do (a well known business axiom). Then they sock it to them with high renewals.
Ravings en masse^ |
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"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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I use NameCheap to host a website (ca. US$ 30/yr) and four domains. Includes free email forwards - even if you don't buy anything from them. They assume you're smarter than a GoDaddy customer so it's a little less straight forward. I adapted to CPanael pretty quickly.
Ravings en masse^ |
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"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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In addition to my earlier reply, this may be useful: 10 Best Web Hosting Services (40+ Hosts Compared) | HostingFacts.com. Don't know if it is any good, since everything on the web is biased by money now, but it may be a good place to start.
Actually, since they recommend HostGator I'd say the list is crap. I had them years ago and their service was abysmal, unless they turned a very tight corner. But the list might still get you started.
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I've used HostGator for years and they have good uptime and decent rates. I agree their customer service has a lot of room for improvement. Then again, I run on their Windows hosting platform. They are obviously more LAMP stack oriented (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP) and their Windows services play second fiddle. But I have worked with several web hosts recently and HostGator is certainly not alone in their shift away from more automated and less personal customer service.
Bud Staniek
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I waited for this answer.
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Ive always liked doing business with <a href="https://www.bluehost.com/track/jakepogo/">BlueHost</a> great service and helpful staff.
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I use Dreamhost [^]
I just run ICMP mail though they support SMTP, and a small static website and a Wordpress site. They are pretty cheap and I've had no issues with them over the years.
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I switched from Godaddy to Arvixe to InterServer - Affordable Unlimited Web Hosting[^].
The InterServer move was more than a year ago and have been thrilled with the speed/level of support and server uptime. The web UI gives me nearly as much control for IIS as I have on my local dev box.
Link is my affiliate link - sign up using that and I get a discount in the future.
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GoDaddy used to be good. It isn't anymore and it is expensive.
NameCheap is good, but I didn't get a plan with email.
Although a little more expensive, Hostway is good. I've been using them, I'd guess, for 20 years.
Web hosting Services & VPS solutions from Hostway[^]
I have 2 domains with Hostway and one with NameCheap
Mike
Retired Independent Consultant
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Look good I might just sign up!
Thanks!
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I am using Linode. I use a full blown (haha!) 5$/month Linux machine but it does ok for my needs
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Here (UK) most hosting is far too cheap. I've used a variety of hosts; they all started absolutely brilliantly, bending over backwards to help, great communications. Once they grow (on the back of good reviews) they have too many clients for the number of support staff they can afford. Service levels plummet, and any sense of being "valued" as a customer goes out of the window.
I had one who, when my client hit the contracted max database size, just deleted the database. (No "would you like to upgrade", no warning). Just came in one morning, no database. And this on a system where we were charging (significant) real money for a real service. Another one "upgraded" the database, again without warning. My (another) client's app went down. I detected (very quickly) they'd switched from MySql to MariaDB. "It's just the new name" they lied. "It's 100% compatible" they lied. Fortunately the app changes weren't great on that occasion, but the site was down for most of a day. This week another host had a problem with their disk storage. After 4 hours downtime, they restored from backup - overwriting the original disk. This was on a RAID setup, the point of which is to mitigate against corruption! Had they restored to a NEW disk, we might have stood a chance of recovering the day's data. Instead my client had to pay 5 staff to re-enter a day's transactions, working until gone midnight and starting again at 7am.
All of these hosts were charging under £5/month ($6USD) and at that price, they can afford to take maybe a 2-minute support call from a client a month. Even if the last incident had restored to a new disk, it wouldn't have been worth it for them to take the time to try and restore one client's data.
So my view now is that, if there is any value at all in the sites you're hosting, it's pointless going with "budget" shared hosting. (All the hosting choices above were my clients', by the way, looking to get "good value".) Am now looking for a reasonable VPS hosting environment (so at least they won't "upgrade" databases / security software etc) but primary consideration is tech support: Are they available, will they actively engage during incidents, and do they have the tech knowledge, authority and even just plain interest to actually do anything when needed?
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