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I am looking at setting up another dedicated hosting machine, and I would like to keep the DNS off of this box. When you host your projects do you just use the DNS provided by your name registrar/web host, or have you used an 3rd party DNS services? Who have you had good luck with?

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is this a duplicate? stackoverflow.com/questions/314267/… – warren Nov 24 '08 at 16:24
Not to mention that it has nothing to do with programming. You'd think our high-rep overlords would do their job here as they've done in so many other places. Maybe they've stopped caring. Enter the cruft. – George Stocker Nov 24 '08 at 16:29
@Gortok: Hosting your web applications has quite a bit to do with programming. It may not be writing code, but deploying and hosting your web applications is a critical part of application development. – Jon Tackabury Nov 24 '08 at 16:50
Things that are tangentially related to programming don't make them fall within the scope of "programming related" here. Maybe he wants to host a webcam of his new puppies. If you have to infer intent, the problem is in the question. – Robert S. Nov 24 '08 at 17:30
@Jon T: There are a monumental amount of websites that deal with these incidental questions. There are very few that pool together the technical talent of programmers into a concise, cruft free system. – George Stocker Nov 24 '08 at 17:53
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dnsmadeeasy has worked for me. doing stuff via their web interface is kinda slow when compared to vi and zonefiles, but that's the way it is.

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I've had a fairly good experience with MyDomain - they're mainly just a 3rd party DNS provider, they'll support domains not registered with them (for free), and they give a decent amount of control. They seem reasonably priced for domains registered with them.

(No connection with them, just a customer).

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I have used both Sitelutions and ZoneEdit both with very good success. Neithier are really flashy, but both do the job and do it well. Sitelutions is free, and ZoneEdit is free for few hits, but a paid service for more traffic.

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everydns. It's free. You're only limited to 20 domains and 200 entries. It provides support for dynamic ip addresses, too.

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I've heard good things about OpenDNS

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I second OpenDNS. – ayaz Nov 24 '08 at 17:14
opendns is intended to be used by end users as their primary DNS server, not by people hosting their own domains. – lucas-insasho Apr 8 at 4:07

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