Ask HN: Who is your go-to web hosting company?
I'm looking for Web hosting (either shared or VPS) for a personal owncloud setup.
All the reviews I've seen online say different things or are obviously sponsored by a particular company so don't give a proper representation of the quality of the services.
Any thoughts or recommendations? What d'yall think of godaddy, hostgator and bluehost compared to AWS for value for money?
45 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 96.8 ms ] threadSource: Have hosted from php/mysql stuff to 350+ requests/second uwsgi-python-flask-postgresql webapp on a 10$/month shared-space.
I challenge every commenter on this thread to find a better host than webfaction!!
Tried AWS and preferred Digital Ocean instead, the $5 servers are quick and it's easy to spin one up to use for various needs.
And it's awesome. A good hosting provider is one you forget about. When you do things right, people won't be sure you've done anything at all. So far, I didn't have any problems, didn't need any support and nothing went wrong. And the reviews, when you finally find them, are usually great.
I remember comparing performance when I made the decision. And basically, all the major players suck big time. GoDaddy, HostGator and BlueHost are shit. AWS works for large scale stuff, for everything else it's shit. If you want quality, go with a small provider. The mom and pop shops of the tech world.
Bigger companies use cost reduction to increase profits and squeeze out every last penny. Small companies and startups are hungry for clients so they focus on great services and products.
Also, you're on a new account. There's also another reply vouching for Vultr on a new account in this thread, albeit without a referral link.
Something smells.
If I were OP I wouldn't even consider vultr.
> https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9118593
> https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9118652
Gets a bunch of referral links.
But thanks for those who've offered good advice, I think I might go for digitalocean.
Just try it, you have 60days money back guarantee. But it's not a complete vps.
I've heard bad things about GoDaddy from various sources, and that's why I opted not to go with them. Not that I'm putting up any content that is infringing or even remotely in a grey area, but I've heard their policy as a company is to take down your site at the smallest complaint and then they only look into the complaint after you ask why your site is down.
All that said, I'm still on the lookout for a hosting stack (hosting provider, OS, and application) that allows me to rapidly prototype new ideas (Drupal looks awful without a lot of customization and I'm not clued up enough for Docker).
Also, at the risk of triggering your "sponsored by a company" radar, here's my promo code, which will get you $10 off:
https://www.digitalocean.com/?refcode=9fad2cc71fbc
https://education.github.com/pack
With DigitalOcean, the SSD will definitely help, but I'd look at the $20 plan just for the RAM. However expect to have to tweak OwnCloud's environment a little to get the best out of it.
In order of price (low to high): DigitalOcean, Linode, AWS.
Take your pick. They're all good.
Would setup be something like:
1. Get DO account 2. Install LAMP 3. Setup multiple sub domains in DO? 4. Create site directories in DO and copy site files into them? 5. Point domains to sub domains?
I have an intel NUC [1] in my house, in the DMZ of my router, and running a script to change it's ip address at my DNS provider when my house ip address changes
I've got a lot of stuff running on that, which can be accessed by me from anywhere, but it lives in my house, and so enjoys more legal protections and physical security than a VPS.
[1] http://www.amazon.com/Intel-Next-Computing-Black-BOXDCCP847D...
AWS kills me on the bandwidth charges. The cost-calculators are practically worthless unless you're really good at estimating your potential bandwidth usage.
The interface is standard WHM/cPanel. No SSH.
I'm up for re-evaluating my hosting soon, but right now I'm through Lithium Hosting. Haven't done much app-related stuff, but they've been fine for regular low-volume hosting stuff, and I pay $10/month (legacy plan). Web-faction sounds nice.
HostGator/BlueHost is a near identical product from the same company (EIG) and the quality is quite low. GoDaddy doesn't have that much better of a reputation but it's really hard to tell sometimes between quality of their service and people who don't like them because of what they've done in the past (sopa, elephant killing, advertising, etc). Doesn't help that they are huge either.
AWS is expensive if you're comparing it to shared hosting. They are nowhere near the same product. AWS is great if you need AWS features and are a technical person who can handle all that (or afford paying a lot for support/someone who can). The other companies are providing management/support. If you goal is installing owncloud my first question would be are you going to install/manage it or not? That generally cuts down which companies might make sense.
N.B: I do not trust any shared hosting company.