Posts Tagged ‘Web Hosting’

เกี่ยวกับความเข้ากันได้เบราว์เซอร์รอส

Sunday, October 17th, 2010

web hosting เกี่ยวกับครอสเบราว์เซอร์ที่เข้ากันได้ในปัจจุบันมีเป็นจำนวนมากเว็บเบราว์เซอร์ที่คุณอาจใช้สำหรับการท่องเว็บและทั้งหมดของพวกเขามีมาตรฐานที่แตกต่างกัน สิ่งที่แตกต่างกันมากระหว่างเบราว์เซอร์มีอะไรบ้าง สิ่งที่พวกเขาใช้ HTML, CSS และจาวาสคริปต์ที่มีความแตกต่างบางอย่างไม่ว่าจะเป็นเพียงเครื่องสำอางหรือวัตถุที่ร้ายแรงซึ่งอาจจะแบ่งเว็บไซต์ นั่นคือเหตุผลที่บางครั้งเว็บไซต์จะทำงานในเบราว์เซอร์หนึ่ง แต่ไม่สามารถโหลดได้ในอีกหนึ่งเพื่อให้นักพัฒนาเว็บควรจะรับมือกับความแตกต่างเหล่านี้อย่างใด และในขณะที่คุณไม่สามารถคาดเดาสิ่งที่เว็บเบราเซอร์ที่แน่นอนคนจะใช้สำหรับการดูหน้าเว็บวิธีแก้ปัญหาคือการทำให้เว็บไซต์อย่างเข้ากันได้ซึ่งหมายความว่ามันจะปรากฏขึ้นมากหรือน้อยเหมือนกันในทุกๆเว็บเบราเซอร์ที่นิยมเช่น Internet Explorer, Firefox, Opera และอื่น ๆ
เบราว์เซอร์รอส เบราว์เซอร์รอส

เบราว์เซอร์รอส

The Security Issues of SaaS

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

web hosting When security issues of SaaS are being discussed, usually two type of threads are mentioned: unauthorized access and physical peril. Each of these issues is very serious and if either of them occurs, your data and your company might be put at risk. In a sense, you are right to be worried that when you use SaaS you don’t have control over the whole process. This is somewhat of a security compromise.

Unauthorized access. Unauthorized access is one of the two greatest data risks, regardless if you use SaaS or not. However, because of the specifics of SaaS – i.e. you store your data on the remote server where your SaaS application is deployed – the risk of unauthorized access increases. Your data can be accessed while in transit over the Internet, or on the remote server where it is stored. The most common risks related to unauthorized access are captured passwords, data viewed by people who shouldn’t view it, and modifications to your data. The worst is that these crimes are stealth and very often you don’t even know about them. SaaS SaaS

SaaS

Web hosting : How we rate the providers

Saturday, August 28th, 2010

Web hosting Web hosting : How we rate the providers We at ireallyhost.com want only the best for our customers and this is why we are meticulous when we list and rate the hosting providers you can find on our site. User reviews are more than welcome but we want to complement this with reviews written by our professionals, the editors working at ireallyhost.com. Their experience, and know-how, of the industry is important to us and they make sure that the web hosts get a fair rating. To make the editorial reviews as transparent as possible we thought that it would be a good idea to present what we look at when we review the providers.
Web hosting

Web hosting

Web Hosting : How Much is 100 Percent?

Saturday, August 21st, 2010

Web Hosting In addition to providing rack space and managing servers and storage, many hosting service providers also look to manage the applications that run on their customers’ Web sites. Reliability is critical in the Web hosting arena, and competitive pressures are even driving a few hosting providers to make unrealistic promises. In February, for example, Electronic Data Systems offered a service level agreement that promised 100 percent availability for Web sites and applications that EDS is hosting. This is raising the bar pretty high.

Other service providers have often promised 99.99 percent (commonly referred to as “four nines”) uptime, which gives them a cushion of about 53 minutes of outage time a year when they can down the servers briefly for regularly scheduled maintenance. A few have even touted “five nines,” or 99.999 percent availability, which narrows the margin for error considerably.

While these claims are suspect in their own right, promising 100 percent uptime seems to be over-reaching a little bit further. Even if you offer “nines to the nth degree” availability, you’re still not going so far as guaranteeing 100 percent availability. One hundred percent availability doesn’t leave much room for mistakes and disasters, especially these days when there’s so much for Webmasters to worry about, from cyberterrorism threats to over-subscribed Webcasts that overload the server.
web hosting web hosting

web hosting

Review on The Hostgator

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Hostgator I am generally very happy with Hostgator. I worked for a company a few years back who used them exclusively, and now I have since moved on and begun using them for my personal and client’s sites as well.

I do have a problem, though, and it’s a pretty major one for anyone who has multiple sites/packages under one account.

Being that I have multiple sites on my account, some I own and some I have for clients, when billing comes it all falls under one umbrella. I have no problem with this, except that if one service does not pay one month (a client doesn’t send payment etc) ALL of my packages are effected.

I just discovered this out, as I set up a new hosting plan on my account and paid for it. (Of course, they took the money). Without any word, two days passed and the server was never setup. They essentially just ignored it once they were paid. I questioned them, and received a timely response (they are very good getting back to people once you submit a ticket) that they couldn’t add a new package until the other was paid up.

This does not make sense to me as I believe they should be separate entities. All are invoiced individually every month, one should have no effect on another. Now, I have one site that will not make it up on time, because another was never paid. hostgator

hostgator