Recommendations for web/email hosting
W9GFO
Posts: 4,010
Every several months I have an issue with my web hosting provider, I want to make a switch.
I don't actually need to host any web pages (possibly one) , just park several domains and a few different email accounts. I just read today that it is possible to have two different service providers, one for the web page and another for the email. I did not know that.
I would appreciate any recommendations.
I don't actually need to host any web pages (possibly one) , just park several domains and a few different email accounts. I just read today that it is possible to have two different service providers, one for the web page and another for the email. I did not know that.
I would appreciate any recommendations.
Comments
I just went through this recently when my current hosting provider made a change that I thought would affect me and force me to change (it didn't). So I did a bit of research into some bigger name hosting providers, like enom and Bluehost. Bluehost has good pricing, support for email, lots of databases (unlimited DBs, actually, just a limit on total table count) and includes SSH support. I'd recommend them.
-Phil
Service provider? How does that even apply to web hosting?
Do you want emails with a different name? Your "service provider" should provide at least one, and if you are hosting a web page or site, then the hosting server should provide you with at least one other, if not many, with a different domain name.
Please describe in more detail
register.com and it used their Partner function, which is because at the time I was using AT&T as my e-mail service provider. From there, I had it running local, because it was installed on a box connected to my service provider, via a router. (I still have the router and the box, but the box isn't being used.) Half the problem I collided with was that the methods to enable the domain name to travel to the AWS site, were complicated. However mail sent to gregg@levine.name will be forwarded to the registered e-mail with this forum.
I bring this up group because I do recommend AWS if anyone does need a service provider. However, an Amazon account is needed.
Of course partner this may not be what you do want but it does explain what I did.
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I have some stuff for work that's on AWS and I can't wait to move it over to digital ocean... Just a matter of finding the time to do the migration.
Work uses AWS but they have high data volumes for downloading videos to customers.
Registration of my domains are with namesilo except for the .com.au which are with netregistry.
I've been using RamNode: it's cheap but requires you to do all setup by hand.
Wow... that's a lot of subsidiaries that they have. I notice Bluehost is on there - the one I almost switched to last week. Have you had any interaction with them? The only interaction I had was chatting with a sales person who very promptly and accurately answered all of my pre-sales questions.
Look up Endurance International Group on, say, Reddit to see what others think about them. Of course they'll answer your pre-sales questions, because they want your business. The two subsidiaries of EIG that I've personally had experience with are HostGator, which used to be good but is now overpriced (after they got bought out by EIG), and IX Web Hosting, whose default 404 page is a blank or nearly blank page with a strange script that doesn't look like it does anything legitimate. I have an uncle who used to use used FatCow, another EIG subsidiary, but he has since switched away.
For hosting your own website and "how do I get started" that's a much bigger topic than I think can be reasonably handled within this thread. It's not hard... and you can probably get all the help you need between Google and these forums... but that's way off topic and not a one-line answer.
Nope. My family used @zemon.name addresses and we don't seem to have any problems with our email being reported as spam
Service provider in this context is the business providing the services, not internet access.
I have several domains. Only one is used for a webpage, the rest are strictly for email. The domain that I use for my main email I have had for over 20 years. Yes, the hosting provider also provides emails, but I have read that you can get email hosting only (using my own domain) while having a different provider handle the webpage hosting for that same domain name.
My needs are very light, nothing advanced or fancy at all is desired. Just plain old reliable email service using the domains that I already own.
Bluehost is who I use now. I currently can log into my bluehost account, but cannot log into the cPanel portion which uses the exact same username and password. I am sure that spending some time with tech support will clear it up but I would rather not have to face this issue once or twice a year as I have been. I've been with bluehost a few years, I have had more email problems with them then all the previous years combined.
The last time I had a problem was when they shut down my email service because thousands of emails were being sent out from it daily. I asked how that was possible and they told me it was "spoofing" and to just change my password. When I asked how someone else got my password they got indignant and kept repeating that it was not "hacked" but was just "spoofing". Spoofing as I understand it is when an email "appears" to come from a source that it did not - not when mass quantities of emails are sent using my login credentials. Before that their solution was to increase my quota, I had to tell a couple people, repeatedly, that I did not want my quota increased because it was not me trying to send out vast quantities of emails.
This time, the problem is that I can receive email (most of the time) but cannot send. If I could log in to my cPanel I could probably tell why - but I can't.
Also free site forwarding so what you have to pay, is the domain name only.
https://shop.whois.com/domain-registration/domain-registration-price.php