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I've used many over the years like Media Temple gs, dreamhost, slicehost, and some others that I don't care to remember. But it's pretty hard to find a new host with search engines, because they normally give you those crappy affiliate driven reviews sites.

Which host would you use for:

  • Small personal websites with small traffic.
  • Medium to large websites/applications with medium to large traffic.
  • What host would you use for your assets (large images, media, etc...).
  • Favorite dedicated/vps host.
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46 Answers

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vote up 31 vote down

For small sites, I use NearlyFreeSpeech. It's a great idea (pay only for what you USE, not an arbitrary monthly rate) that is very well executed. I use this for all of my personal LAMP sites and projects. I've had it for 5 months and I've only paid something like 12 bucks to date. Excellent, knowledgeable support, which is rare for the cost.

I think Dreamhost has some of the best support and certainly one of the best user interfaces I've seen on the web (if not the best). Zero confusion - everyone should do what they do. I use it for most of my LAMP needs and my clients absolutely love it.

For ASP.NET, I use CrystalTech and DiscountASP. DiscountASP wins for me, but CrystalTech is very good. DiscountASP has lighting fast support and their support staff are unusually informed. All issues are dealt with in a day and usually within 2-3 hours of the support request. Also, they don't charge me 5 bucks to restore a SQL DB (I'm looking at you CrystalTech).

I build almost exclusively small-to-medium sized web sites and applications. I develop in both ASP.NET and LAMP. My criteria for evaluation are: speed and quality of support, uptime (duh), speed of performance, quality of UI, and amount of Admin features. I've used maybe 30-50 hosts in the past 10 years, these 4 are my favorites.

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vote up 19 vote down

Rather than just telling you my preference, let me teach a man to fish... so to speak. We can all name one or two hosts that we personally think are excellent, but most subjective advice like that won't help you at all, even after 10 or 20 upvotes.

Fact of the matter is, most of the popular web hosting providers are hit-n-miss experiences. IF you happen to end up on one of the 'lucky' servers, that you share with a bunch of static web sites with niche appeal, you'll be getting great uptime, no server crashes and great response times. If you happen to be on an 'unlucky' server, you'll be cursing the name of your web host every single day.

Because of this, for nearly every hosting provider out there, there are ten guys praising it to high heaven and ten other guys ready to burn down the company. What you need isn't a bunch of coders in a shouting match, but the means to finding your way in the hosting jungle.

And here it is: The WebHostingTalk Forum (WHT). That's where web hosting geeks meet to discuss this question - essentially an entire forum dedicated to tracking, analyzing and discussing which web hosts are crooks and which are the 'real deal'. And these guys are good.

What you want to do, is take a few days (or a week if you're serious) to research the latest advice from the WHT forum. They will probably tell you to stay away from all the major players, like BlueHost, GoDaddy, DreamHost, pair Networks, HostGator, Media Temple, etc., and instead lead you to one of five or six slightly smaller providers, most of which you've probably never even heard of. These are the real gems that the pros use, the well-kept secrets of web hosting. The places with 100% uptime, good prices (though not unrealistically so), honest staff and great support, more features than you'll ever need, and very few users per shared server.

Listen to the guys at WHT, and you will not regret it

P.S.: oh, what the hell, I'll tell you my favorite host (by advice from the guys at WHT): InnoHosting

(full disclosure: After moving all my own domains to InnoHosting, I have been praising and recommending them to all my friends and contacts, so now they give me a little discount whenever I refer clients to them. If you don't want that, just use this link instead of the one above: InnoHosting)

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+1 for full disclosure – Ash M Sep 3 at 5:42
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I'm very happy using ASmallOrange. As someone with a very low traffic site, their Tiny plan allows me to get quality hosting for very little.

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Putting in my vote for pair Networks (http://www.pair.com) -- great network, great hardware, great price. And their support's pretty darn good too.

A happy customer for half a dozen years.

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For smaller sites, Dreamhost is pretty good. For larger sites that require more control and industrial-strength, I'd generally recommend going with something like Rackspace. You have dedicated machines, you can tweak them however you need to, and you have ridiculously good support behind the scenes, should you require it.

There are also hosts like EngineYard that are dedicated to a single platform (in that case, Rails) that are worth looking into.

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I definitely need to throw my support for Dreamhost. They offer an unlimited number of subversion repositories, which is a nice bonus. Plus, their storage model is...well, look at this:

Storage

The only issue I've ever had with them is speed; sometimes, it seems like their servers just can't serve data fast enough.

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I'm happy with Webhost4life. The name is annoying, but they've been solid so far.

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In the UK bytemark vps's are favoured by the Free and Open Source Software Communities and I've yet to hear a bad review.

Recently I've had to some terrible service with various hosts so I might be returning to them shortly after a absence of a few years.

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Rackspace for medium to large sites. Had a lot of success with them.

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I've been enjoying Media Temple's (gs) service. My blog was choking on regular shared hosting, but doesn't justify VPS hosting yet. I found the (gs) plan to be a perfect compromise until my traffic grows more.

For shared ASP.NET hosting, I'll second DiscountASP. I've had a site there for awhile, and have no complaints. Compared to other .NET hosts I've used in the past, DiscountASP generally seems to keep pace with new technologies well.

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I'd recommend finding a good local host in your area. Nothing beats being able to deal with your host face-to-face when issues such as DMCA takedown notices or other legal issues arise.

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pair networks or pair lite for a hobby site.

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My preferred webhost for Linux/Unix based hosting is webfaction. They are easily the most flexible host I have ever used. Everything is up front and easy to find, not hidden behind layer upon layer of redirection. The best part is you can host applications running everything from static content, php, ruby, python, even java. You can have whatever libraries you need in your home directory. It is approaching the flexibility of a VPS, without as much management or administrative knowledge required. Their prices are very reasonable as well.

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I have had experience with 4 hosts.

1and1 Pretty basic and cheap. Have had some downtime problems but never for more than a few hours.

Dreamhost Cheap, especially the first year due to the large number of coupons available online. I haven't had downtime but the servers can be very slow. One-click installs are really useful.

Mosso Costs more, the basic plan is at $100. The cool think is it is using a cloud instead of servers so it potentially should scale as your usage goes up. It seems very fast relative to the other web hosting companies I have tried. Since it isn't a real server, it is a little different to use but with the customer service we have been able to install everything we needed to, including Wordpress Multi-user. I have been inpressed so far.

Amazon EC2. This is full virtualized server that you have complete control of. The costs are higher $70/month for a dedicated server plus some bandwidth. But it is very cool and it has the potential to replace a co-location arrangement. Also provides some really interesting scalability options. Well worth a look when you move beyond Dreamhost or 1and1.

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Here are my recommendations based on experience and what I have used:

  • Small Sites - NearlyFreeSpeech.Net
  • Medium Sites - Blue Host
  • Assets - Amazon S3
  • Dedicated - Amazon EC2

Notice that none of the above apply for .Net hosting. I have checked out Media Temple and Mosso and both look decent for .Net.

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I second the vote for NearlyFreeSpeech.net. The pay-as-you-go model has served me quite well for the past 5 months for my grandmother's art website. I've begun to serve up the images from Amazon's S3, which greatly reduces my storage and bandwidth charges (Amazon's are pennies on NFSN's dollar).

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I've been with webhost4life (shared hosting) for a few years now and havn't had any major problems at all, they have a very quick turn around on their online support tickets as well.

Though I am on the look out for virtual private hosting in the near future and may look else where due to cost/features.

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Well ...

Small Website: HostDepartment and 12GBFREE
Lower End of Medium Level Website : DreamHost
Medium Level Dedicated: IWeb and HostMySite and Dedicated Now
Large Level Dedicated: RackSpace

What Would you use for large Images:
Amazon S3 (Works Costly when you have large Data)

Favourite: IWeb They have good Bandwidth to their Dedicated Servers vs Good Price

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As the director at a web design agency, I have tried nearly every host listed above. The very best hosting company of all is

Host Gator at hostgator.com

Best support, highest quality service, great price.

I highly recommend them.

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I use Dreamhost for all my projects and I never had problems with Dreamhost. They have great support, lots of fantastic features, unlimited database and repositories. There is only one problem with Dreamhost; all my websites respond a little bit lately in my country, but there is no problem when I'm in the US.

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I've been super happy with WebFaction for my personal stuff.

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I use secondratehosting.com My site doesn't get a lot of traffic so I don't know how they would handle a large amount of traffic but their 'uptime' is excellent (much better than 1&1 and every other host I have tried).

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I can't recommend anyone better than The Tech Coop. Inexpensive, quality hosting (VPS) with some of the greatest staffers around.

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I'm a fan of Site5. The one downside is that they do not have phone tech support but their email support is top notch. On the other hand I find their administration suite very easy to use and nice to look at (for those, like me, who care about such things).

iPower was my host for a long time, but their support got so bad and their control panel software so out of date that I had to drop them. That was a couple of years ago so I don't know if they've improved since then.

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I've had a great experience with HostMonster. You get a ton of space, inexpensive add-on domains, great management tools, shell access, my server has never gone down, and the customer support is terrific.

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I give a vote for Dreamhost for Linux hosting.

Has anyone had any success with web hosting which offers Linux and Windows hosting in one plan?

I was using this setup with Netfirms but experienced issues with downtime frequently in the past 9 months, therefore I bailed and now am at GoDaddy. Not very happy with GoDaddy, I need to find another ASP.NET host. I am thinking for my Linux hosting I may go back to Dreamhost. They offered everything I needed for Linux hosting. I thought I could simplify my needs for ASP.NET and Linux hosting with Netfirms. Like I said, they weren't very reliable.

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cdn/assests

Anyone use SimpleCDN for their CDN? They have a pretty interesting pricing strategy. You only pay on per file basis. No bandwidth fees.

Anyone use Mosso? I've heard good reviews, but for $100 a month I would be looking at a dedicated/vps service.

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Wise Source - exceptional personalized service - just amazing. Great uptime, very speedy, but the service is what keeps me there.

Ann Arbor Hosting - Nothing beats going local, and they have a good mix of services, including shared, VPS and dedicated. They also have GIT and a few other VCSs, and are reasonable cost. They're touting unmetered disk space and bandwidth plans now, though, so even though my site is fast and I have no issues on that front, I wonder what it's going to be like ultimately (although it's nice to be able to have a cheap place for my HD video...)

-Adam

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In the Netherlands I used Lycos, in South Africa I used RSA Web they were very good. And here in Germany I use 1und1 and so far very happy with them.

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I strongly advocate HostMySite.com for all your hosting needs.

I am not an employee but I did intern there for a while (so maybe a slight bias). They have EXCELLENT customer service for both shared & dedicated hosting. They have their own control panel so you do have to get used to that (for shared accounts). When you call, the phone is answered by a human being before the 4th ring, and they will usually help you right then and there. If not, they get back to you very quickly. They'll even call you back if you prefer that to an email. Server downtime has never been a problem. I also know that many of the people that work there are extremely qualified (overqualified in some cases) to answer the phone and help you with just about any issue you may be having. They're great to have as a hosting provider. They'll even look through your code at times and give you some pointers (make friendly with them first).

I have used a few other web hosts in the past but will never in the future go with anyone other than HostMySite.com.

P.S. I pay full price for my hosting account and would even pay more for the great quality service they provide.

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