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Hi,

I'm developing a project, and I'm debating if I should get plain old regular hosting, or something more expensive, like VPS. Here are my needs:

  • Zend Framework
  • Sphinx Search
  • jQuery
  • ImageMagick/GraphicsMagick/GD
  • PHP 5 + MySQL

At what point do I need VPS? I'd rather obviously to pick the cheapest option..

Thanks.

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Do I Hear 'ServerFault'? – Chacha102 Jul 27 at 17:40
Dreamhost has a good solution for VPS - you pay based on memory need/use. – Joshua Jul 27 at 17:47
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I would steer clear of dreamhost... I know a lot of people love 'em, but I also know a lot more people that hate 'em (never used them myself, so take this with a grain of salt ;) – Ian Selby Jul 27 at 17:49
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Same experience as Ian. – Tom Jul 27 at 18:16

2 Answers

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Honestly, the best kind of hosting is always the one that gives you the most flexibility. However, the right answer also depends on how comfortable you are with server configuration / the command line.

If you don't have any problems setting things up for yourself, slicehost and rackspace cloudservers are both great, low-cost cloud-based hosting solutions (www.slicehost.com and www.rackspacecloud.com). Given that you want Sphinx and ImageMagick, I would think this may be the best route for you to go, as I don't know of many (if any) shared hosting providers that will have Sphinx available for you. I've used both of the suggested providers and have been quite satisfied with them... it's the best of both worlds: VPS (technically that's all they are despite the cloud aspect) and cheap :)

Only drawback, as I mentioned, is that you're responsible for setting everything up (PHP, Apache, MySQL, etc.)... Slicehost has great docs that walk you through doing so, however, so it's not necessarily a terrible thing.

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Very much agreed. – Tom Jul 27 at 17:44
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For development, Slicehost gives you the best bang for your buck, so to speak.

http://www.slicehost.com/

They allow root access to the server.

If you are comfortable with the command line, this is the best route to go given your requirements.

We've been using them for a while now without any complaints.

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Beat me to the punch :) – Ian Selby Jul 27 at 17:44
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Next Question: "How To Get Comfortable With The Command Line" – Chacha102 Jul 27 at 17:49
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Depends on your style of learning: A good linux book might help but I tend to look towards the internwebs for tutorials. Free is my kind of price ;-) Slicehost has a good starting point which will really help out: articles.slicehost.com/sitemap – Tom Jul 27 at 18:06

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