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Canadian Government stalls Anti-Spam law

Thursday, January 7, 2010 By: Gabriel
Category: News

As little as 14 days from undergoing the final stage in becoming an Act of Parliament, a Canadian bill promising to cut down on the abusive email marketing practices, known as spam, is being put on hold as the government suspends Parliament until March. According to a report from itbusiness.ca, bill C-27, also known as the Electronic Commerce Protection Act, was approaching senate review before Parliament was suspended by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who asked the Governor General to prorogue (or postpone) Parliament on December 30. Newspaper The Toronto Star notes that prorogation is not uncommon in Canada, and has been used by governments past such as in 2003, when PM Jean Chretien prorogued Parliament partly to delay the release of an auditor’s report on a sponsorship scandal, among other reasons. The Star notes that Harper’s prorogation at the end of last month was an attempt to avoid the opposition’s questions, particularly about the Afghan detainee issue. Caught in the crossfire, however, are several dozen bills that, unless unanimous voted through in the House of Commons, have to start the legislation process over again. The Electronic Commerce Protection Act, which needs to be reviewed by a Senate committee before Parliament to receive Royal Assent and become law, and this work has become jeopardized. With Parliament expected to resume March 3, it is unclear when or if this anti-spam legislation will become operational.

Things to Remember Before Buying Dedicated Hosting

Tuesday, January 5, 2010 By: Gabriel
Category: News

Getting a website for a business, family or ideas is a huge step. Your are adding a new dimension to your life, and this must be done with great thought. All of us so much time on the look of the website, not that it is not important people often overlook the most important part- hosting. The internet is a super shoppe for dedicated servers. It is like going in to WalMart without a shopping list, and getting ripped off. There are many factors that need to be considered before buying a dedicated server, and you need to identify them. Here we help you identify these factors and accost you with how these factors affect your choice. 1. Platform: Unix VS NT? Each platform has their rabid fans, and we are not here to discuss which one is superior. This choice depends your motif and purpose of your website. So, if you’re putting up a basic site with standard HTML, without any server side scripting or database support, then you may choose Unix or NT as both options would be ideal. So what really affects this choice? You choice is weaned by your site’s purpose. If your website is going to evolve in to a large website with Databases or ASP, then we think the NT hosting would be the best choice. If your website, is just a simple website without above mentioned characteristics then Unix would be also suited. 2. Space VS Traffic? Space and traffic are the most dynamic factors as they affect Web Hosts rates. In a majority of cases, sites require only few megabytes of space and thus the amount of traffic should be well compensated in the space rate. Hence, if your website falls in to this category then we advise you not to get flustered by the big numbers. On the other hand, if your website is several hundred pages and is going to have a thousand plus hits a day, then you must give some thought to this factor and choose the wisest option. We say you go with traffic since it is an unpredictable element and not give the Web Host’s to penalize you for exceeding the limits. This is also true if your simple website is made of lot of Flash or Multimedia elements. 3. Email: Limited Vs Unlimited? The most underestimated factor of Dedicated Hosting Packages and we say as emails are the lifelines of online businesses. Make sure that when you choose a package it has enough email accounts for your business and if your business has potential we suggest you look for the unlimited package. So that way hosts don’t have a chance to rip you off by charging an extra few bucks for every new account. We cannot emphasize the importance of this factor because quite often people shift web hosts due to the email factor, and this is a very arduous experience. We hope you don’t get burned in this factor.

DDoS attack on DNS hits Amazon

Thursday, December 31, 2009 By: Gabriel
Category: News

Internet users in Northern California were unable to reach properties including Amazon omeprazole 20 mg cap.com and Amazon Web Services for a time Wednesday evening, as their DNS provider was targeted by a distributed denial-of-service attack. The attack came as North American consumers rushed to finish online shopping ahead of the end-of-year holiday season. Amazon Web Services (AWS) was the first to signal something was amiss. Its status page indicates that at 5:43 p.m. Pacific Time on Wednesday its staff was investigating reports of DNS (Domain Name System) resolution errors from customers trying to reach its S3 cloud storage service. The problem persisted until 6:38 p.m. Pacific Time, but in the meantime the S3 service continued to operate, AWS said. However, staff at Neustar, the owner of Amazon’s DNS provider UltraDNS, was aware of the problem around an hour earlier, at 4:45 p.m. Pacific Time. The company was able to analyze the attack pattern and take steps to limit its effects within minutes of identifying the problem, he said. The outage affected the e-commerce servers of parent company Amazon.com too, and many others: “Tons of sites are offline,” wrote Jeff Barr, Amazon Web Services strategist, in a Twitter message.

Cisco Saves 120,000 dolars with Data Center Airflow Design

Tuesday, December 29, 2009 By: Gabriel
Category: News

Data center technology developer Future Facilities reported last week that Cisco  reached an estimated savings of 120,000 dolars per year in energy costs by simulating a data center using Future Facilities’ Virtual Facility simulation methods. The simulation results were used to design the placement of floor grilles and blanking panels that lowered equipment inlet temperatures and enabled the company to raise its chilled water setpoint by eight degrees Fahrenheit. According to Future Facilities, Cisco applied two techniques for improving energy efficiency to a facility on its San Jose campus that occupies 7,000 square feet and houses 3,202 units of IT equipment, requiring 770 kW of power. The energy bill for the facility included $660,000 per year in cooling energy and $707,000 in IT equipment power, for a total of $1.4 million. The facility has been running since 1999, with limited consideration given to energy efficiency. The VF analysis identified exhaust recirculation within cabinets as the most pressing problem, and informed floor grille ad blanking panel placement in such a way as to reduce hot spots. By enabling the eight degree increase in chilled water set point, says Future Facilities, Cisco was able to reduce power required for cooling by 30 percent, which equated to $120,000 per year. The company is reportedly taking the VF modeling approach to optimizing performance in other facilities.

Web Hosting industry

Thursday, December 24, 2009 By: Gabriel
Category: News

The evolution of industries contains four basic stages: introduction, growth, mature and decline. There has been considerable research done on the subject, but rarely do we see written material specifically addressing the stages as they apply to a specific industry. Most telecommunications industries and the web hosting industry grow under the recurring revenue business model: “Sell it once and collect until it churns”. The evolution of industries occurs at different rates for different reasons. Attempting to quantify the future change in each of the value drivers is the science. The value to each of these stakeholders changes over time through the evolution. It is important to note some industries evolve from the creation of a new technology such as paging, cellular, PCS, Internet access and web hosting, while others evolve from deregulation such as long distance, power suppliers and the CLEC (competitive local exchange carrier). There are winners and losers throughout the entire evolution of an industry. It is important to know how it effects you, whether you are a corporate manager trying to guess the future stability of an industry, an entrepreneur wanting to know the best time to sell your business, or a product or service supplier trying to quantify future demand of its products. There are not many sure things, every path has its risk and return characteristics, all we have is history to guide us throughout our business world

VPS Web Hosting Service

Tuesday, December 22, 2009 By: Gabriel
Category: News

Virtual private server hosting is one of the more popular web hosting service platforms available. Also referred to as ”virtual dedicated server” (VDS) hosting, the solution partitions a physical server into multiple sections so that each has the appearance and capability of running on its own dedicated device. Virtual servers also have the ability to run their own complete operating systems and may be independently rebooted. The lower cost advantages of virtual private server hosting can greatly assist smaller online businesses that cannot justify the expense of dedicated server hosting. For those companies that don’t expect a great deal of growth within a short period of time, VPS is definitely an option to consider for their hosting needs. In addition, with the development of virtualization software, VPS has experienced a resurgence and renaissance as technologies for other architectures become more prevalent.Movie A Dog’s Purpose (2017)

Cloud computing and the virtualization of data centers

Friday, December 18, 2009 By: Gabriel
Category: News

The Cloud Computing concept is increasingly more often lately, and is shaping up to be major technological change that will reshape the majority of data center company. Through this, users will have paid for and scalable computing resources according to needs, high availability and managed automatically by the service provider, these resources will be composed of processor, memory and disk storage space (in the form simplest) or even services. Cloud Computing Services at the stand already a mature technology: virtualization. This allows the achievement of major goals in resource management, mainly to reduce operational costs while ensuring flexibility to otherwise unattainable physical configurations. The benefits of virtualization, consisting mainly of strengthening heterogeneous computing resources: infrastructure, applications, databases, portals, interfaces, and even virtualized desktops. Lowering power consumption per unit of computing, energy saving and ensure proper functioning in a mode of “green computing” is also a point of interest. Virtualization first appeared on the desktop, providing running a second operating system (possibly other than the host) for testing and training. Over time appeared but virtualization able to host multiple virtual machines and physical hardware resources distributed between them according to needs.

Postal services will have its own Internet domain

Wednesday, December 16, 2009 By: Gabriel
Category: News

A new appearance on the market’s Web Hosting. Universal Postal Union (UPU) will manage the Internet domain. “Post”, for which he received the opinion of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). The “. Post” will be functional since mid-2010. “The”. Post “will enable the UPU to fulfill their mission of creating a global space without borders, where personal or business communication is possible in a safe environment,” said Director of the Union. “Industry will serve to facilitate the development of electronic commerce and of international trade, enabling small entrepreneurs to the services more easily,” explained the organization. The new field will establish a connection between the electronic and physical addresses, facilitating legal identity of a person electronically, “added the organization.

A new free DNS service from Google

Friday, December 11, 2009 By: Gabriel
Category: News

Google has developed a new free DNS (Domain Name System) that will enhance browsing speed for users and also make browsing safer. According to them, Google’s technology behind this service will offer more protection against spoofing-type attacks aimed at attracting users to Web sites infected with malware. DNS is the service responsible for “translating” the addresses of sites in IPs and vice versa. By default, DNS is responsible for assigning an IP right, a site name. According to the application of benchmarking namebench Google DNS is 68% faster than similar service offered by RDS. To use Google’s DNS service, you must make some changes to the network.

Hosting Market Segmentation

Tuesday, December 8, 2009 By: Gabriel
Category: News

The subject of hosting market segmentation comes up frequently in the web hosting industry. Specifically, web hosts are often searching for the best market segment or niche for their particular expertise. For anyone who has worked in the web hosting industry, these market segments are well known. To those who are newer to the industry these market segments can seem quite unusual. Here is a brief overview of some specific web hosting market segments, and examples of companies which occupy those segments. Wikipedia describes a market segment as follows: ”A market segment is a subgroup of people or organizations sharing one or more characteristics that cause them to have similar product or service needs. A true market segment meets all of the following criteria: it is distinct from other segments (different segments have different needs), it is homogeneous within the segment (exhibits common needs); it responds similarly to a market stimulus, and it can be reached by a market intervention.” So generally as applied to the hosting market, segments are different groups of customers who will be attracted to the same basic products and services. A common market segmentation that occurs in hosting is that of price. One typically sees three segments of pricing emerge: discounters, mid-tier providers, and premium hosting services. Examples of discounters would be: iPower or GoDaddy. Mid-tier companies are represented by firms like HostMySite.com or NaviSite. Premium hosting is the scope of web hosting companies like Rackspace. Natural market segments arise according to geographic boundaries as well. It is logical that a business based in Germany would prefer a hosting provider whose website is written in German, whose support is conducted in the German language, and who uses the German Mark as the currency of choice for transactions. It is possible to get around some of these boundaries by having multiple versions of a website in multiple languages or currencies.